I am using proftpd with my first Centos 5 box. Although it appears to be working, I see the following errors in my logwatch reports.
Deprecated pam_stack module called from service "proftpd" pam_unix(proftpd:session): session opened for user steve by (uid=0) Deprecated pam_stack module called from service "proftpd" Deprecated pam_stack module called from service "proftpd" pam_env(proftpd:setcred): Unable to open config file: /etc/security/pam_env.conf: No such file or directory
The file /etc/security/pam_env.conf does exist, but is owned by root with 644 permissions. I may change those, but for now I would like to hear from anyone before I do. I have googled to no avail, although I find a lot of references to this - just no definitive answer.
I'm running the rpms 1.3.1-5 that I picked up from Dag's site.
I tried here before and saw no replies, so pardon me for attempting again or if I missed previous postings.
Thanks for any assistance.
Steve Campbell
Steve Campbell wrote:
I am using proftpd with my first Centos 5 box. Although it appears to be working, I see the following errors in my logwatch reports.
Deprecated pam_stack module called from service "proftpd" pam_unix(proftpd:session): session opened for user steve by (uid=0) Deprecated pam_stack module called from service "proftpd" Deprecated pam_stack module called from service "proftpd" pam_env(proftpd:setcred): Unable to open config file: /etc/security/pam_env.conf: No such file or directory
The file /etc/security/pam_env.conf does exist, but is owned by root with 644 permissions. I may change those, but for now I would like to hear from anyone before I do. I have googled to no avail, although I find a lot of references to this - just no definitive answer.
I'm running the rpms 1.3.1-5 that I picked up from Dag's site.
I tried here before and saw no replies, so pardon me for attempting again or if I missed previous postings.
Thanks for any assistance.
Steve Campbell
Steve,
Maybe I can prime the pump. I do not have an answer, but the same errors appear when using proftpd with Fedora Core 6 and do not seem detrimental.
Bob...