A conversation with the autopackage team


 
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Old 01-17-2008
A conversation with the autopackage team

Thu, 17 Jan 2008 21:00:00 GMT
Curtis Knight, Isak Savo, and Taj Morton are the lead maintainers and developers of autopackage, a set of tools designed to let developers build and distribute distribution-neutral installation packages. In this interview, they share their vision of the project and where Linux packaging in general is going.


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PAM_START(3)						  Application Programmers' Manual					      PAM_START(3)

NAME
pam_start, pam_end - activating Linux-PAM SYNOPSIS
#include <security/pam_appl.h> int pam_start(const char *service, const char *user, const struct pam_conv *conv, pam_handle_t **pamh_p); int pam_end(pam_handle_t *pamh, int pam_status); DESCRIPTION
pam_start Initialize the Linux-PAM library. Identifying the application with a particular service name. The username can take the value NULL, if not known at the time the interface is initialized. The conversation structure is passed to the library via the conv argu- ment. (For a complete description of this and other structures the reader is directed to the more verbose Linux-PAM application developers' guide). Upon successful initialization, an opaque pointer-handle for future access to the library is returned through the contents of the pamh_p pointer. pam_end Terminate the Linux-PAM library. The service application associated with the pamh handle, is terminated. The argument, pam_status, passes the value most recently returned to the application from the library; it indicates the manner in which the library should be shutdown. Besides carrying a return value, this argument may be logically OR'd with PAM_DATA_SILENT to indicate that the module should not treat the call too seriously. It is generally used to indicate that the current closing of the library is in a fork(2)ed process, and that the parent will take care of cleaning up things that exist outside of the current process space (files etc.). RETURN VALUE
pam_start pam_end On success, PAM_SUCCESS is returned ERRORS
May be translated to text with pam_strerror(3). CONFORMING TO
DCE-RFC 86.0, October 1995. Note, the PAM_DATA_SILENT flag is pending acceptance with the DCE (as of 1996/12/4). BUGS
None known. SEE ALSO
fork(2), pam_authenticate(3), pam_acct_mgmt(3), pam_open_session(3), and pam_chauthtok(3). Also, see the three Linux-PAM Guides, for System administrators, module developers, and application developers. Linux-PAM 0.56 1997 Feb 15 PAM_START(3)