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Full Discussion: AIX system logs files
Operating Systems AIX AIX system logs files Post 302967049 by Bolou on Friday 19th of February 2016 03:45:23 AM
Old 02-19-2016
Quote:
Originally Posted by SkySmart
errpt is a good command to use.

also, for the location of the log file where you can find records of the items listed, look in /var/adm/. in this directory, you'll find most files you need to look into.
thks you very much, i'll see in this directory and i'll come back to you if i have to know others thing...

---------- Post updated at 03:45 AM ---------- Previous update was at 03:35 AM ----------

Quote:
Originally Posted by bakunin
There are no logs as these are single commands which have a return code (and some diagnostic messages in case something goes wrong). You might want to write some script wrapper for them and write a log file yourself.

ok, but are not there a default log file locally for this ? am i neccesary obliged to make a script before ?

This is not clear enough. The fact that a password is changed is noted in /etc/security/passwd, a file in stanza format, with a lastupdate= entry. Note that this only pertains to locally authenticated users. LDAP-, Kerberos-, ... -users where the AIX system relies on some external system for the authentication do not have password-information on the system and therefore no pasword-update-information.

You might want to read up about "LAM" ("loadable authentication modules") for details.



That depends on what you want to know. The lsuser command provides information about the attributes "unsuccessful_login_count". "host_last_unsuccessful_login" and some others (issue lsuser root as root for a complete list of user attributes). You can also configure some authentication mechanisms to use the syslog facilities to write logs. There is nothing out of the box, though, because "authentication" is a loadable, configurable and quasi-external service for AIX.



Is logged in the error log. As a root user enter errpt for an overview and errpt -a for a detailed description of every entry (including shutdown/boot events).

ok, thks
I hope this helps.

bakunin
thks you for all your replies, i understand aix system logs file more and more.....
 

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PAM_UNIX(8)						    BSD System Manager's Manual 					       PAM_UNIX(8)

NAME
pam_unix -- UNIX PAM module SYNOPSIS
[service-name] module-type control-flag pam_unix [options] DESCRIPTION
The UNIX authentication service module for PAM, pam_unix provides functionality for three PAM categories: authentication, account management, and password management. In terms of the module-type parameter, they are the ``auth'', ``account'', and ``password'' features. It also pro- vides a null function for session management. UNIX Authentication Module The UNIX authentication component provides functions to verify the identity of a user (pam_sm_authenticate()), which obtains the relevant passwd(5) entry. It prompts the user for a password and verifies that this is correct with crypt(3). The following options may be passed to the authentication module: debug syslog(3) debugging information at LOG_DEBUG level. use_first_pass If the authentication module is not the first in the stack, and a previous module obtained the user's password, that password is used to authenticate the user. If this fails, the authentication module returns failure without prompting the user for a password. This option has no effect if the authentication module is the first in the stack, or if no previous modules obtained the user's password. try_first_pass This option is similar to the use_first_pass option, except that if the previously obtained password fails, the user is prompted for another password. auth_as_self This option will require the user to authenticate themselves as themselves, not as the account they are attempting to access. This is primarily for services like su(1), where the user's ability to retype their own password might be deemed sufficient. nullok If the password database has no password for the entity being authenticated, then this option will forgo password prompting, and silently allow authentication to succeed. NOTE: If pam_unix is invoked by a process that does not have the privileges required to access the password database (in most cases, this means root privileges), the nullok option may cause pam_unix to allow any user to log in with any password. local_pass Use only the local password database, even if NIS is in use. This will cause an authentication failure if the system is con- figured to only use NIS. nis_pass Use only the NIS password database. This will cause an authentication failure if the system is not configured to use NIS. UNIX Account Management Module The UNIX account management component provides a function to perform account management, pam_sm_acct_mgmt(). The function verifies that the authenticated user is allowed to log into the local user account by checking the following criteria: - locked status of the account compatible with pw(8) lock; - the password expiry date from passwd(5); - login.conf(5) restrictions on the remote host, login time, and tty. The following options may be passed to the management module: debug syslog(3) debugging information at LOG_DEBUG level. UNIX Password Management Module The UNIX password management component provides a function to perform password management, pam_sm_chauthtok(). The function changes the user's password. The following options may be passed to the password module: debug syslog(3) debugging information at LOG_DEBUG level. no_warn suppress warning messages to the user. These messages include reasons why the user's authentication attempt was declined. local_pass forces the password module to change a local password in favour of a NIS one. nis_pass forces the password module to change a NIS password in favour of a local one. FILES
/etc/master.passwd default UNIX password database. SEE ALSO
passwd(1), getlogin(2), crypt(3), getpwent(3), syslog(3), nsswitch.conf(5), passwd(5), pam(8), pw(8), yp(8) BUGS
The pam_unix module ignores the PAM_CHANGE_EXPIRED_AUTHTOK flag. BSD
June 20, 2009 BSD
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