+++ /dev/null
-#%PAM-1.0
-# Sample /etc/pam.d/sudo file for RedHat 9 / Fedora Core.
-# For other Linux distributions you may want to
-# use /etc/pam.d/sshd or /etc/pam.d/su as a guide.
-#
-# There are two basic ways to configure PAM, either via pam_stack
-# or by explicitly specifying the various methods to use.
-#
-# Here we use pam_stack
-auth required pam_stack.so service=system-auth
-account required pam_stack.so service=system-auth
-password required pam_stack.so service=system-auth
-session required pam_stack.so service=system-auth
-#
-# Alternately, you can specify the authentication method directly.
-# Here we use pam_unix for normal password authentication.
-#auth required pam_env.so
-#auth sufficient pam_unix.so
-#account required pam_unix.so
-#password required pam_cracklib.so retry=3 type=
-#password required pam_unix.so nullok use_authtok md5 shadow
-#session required pam_limits.so
-#session required pam_unix.so
-#
-# Another option is to use SMB for authentication.
-#auth required pam_env.so
-#auth sufficient pam_smb_auth.so
-#account required pam_smb_auth.so
-#password required pam_smb_auth.so
-#session required pam_limits.so