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Special Forums Cybersecurity Role based access and security Post 302968525 by Peasant on Thursday 10th of March 2016 09:02:30 AM
Old 03-10-2016
If you don't require super user privilege (root), ACL is definitely a way and not sudo.

Sudo can be a big security hole if not properly configured and it rarely is.

Best regards
Peasant.
 

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pam_stack(8)						   System Administrator's Manual					      pam_stack(8)

NAME
pam_stack - recurse into other PAM stacks SYNOPSIS
auth required /lib/security/pam_stack.so service=foo session optional /lib/security/pam_stack.so service=foo password optional /lib/security/pam_stack.so service=foo account optional /lib/security/pam_stack.so service=foo DESCRIPTION
In a nutshell, pam_stack lets you "call", from inside of the stack for a particular service, the stack defined for any another service. The intention is to allow multiple services to "include" a system-wide setup, so that when that setup needs to be changed, it need only be changed in one place. ARGUMENTS
debug turns on debugging via syslog(3). service=name tells pam_stack.so to execute the stack defined for the service name, which will usually be another file in /etc/pam.d. EXAMPLE
/etc/pam.d/imap: auth required /lib/security/pam_stack.so service=system-auth auth required /lib/security/pam_shells.so /etc/pam.d/system-auth: auth sufficient /lib/security/pam_krb5.so auth sufficient /lib/security/pam_unix.so shadow nullok auth required /lib/security/pam_deny.so CAVEAT
Because recursion is fully supported, there is potential to really break things by having a stack call itself either directly or via mutual recursion. BUGS
Let's hope not, but if you find any, please email the author. AUTHOR
Nalin Dahyabhai <nalin@redhat.com> Red Hat Linux 2001/01/30 pam_stack(8)
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