<sect2><title> </title><para> </para></sect2> <sect2> <title>Installation of Shadow Password Suite</title> <para>The <userinput>login</userinput>, <userinput>getty</userinput> and <userinput>init</userinput> programs (and some others) maintain a number of logfiles to record who are and who were logged in to the system. These programs, however, don't create these logfiles when they don't exist, so if you want this logging to occur you will have to create the files yourself. To let the Shadow package (that is installed next) detect these files in their proper place, create them now, with their proper permissions:</para> <para>Create these files with their proper permissions by running the following commands:</para> <para><screen><userinput>touch /var/run/utmp /var/log/{btmp,lastlog,wtmp} chmod 644 /var/run/utmp /var/log/{btmp,lastlog,wtmp}</userinput></screen></para> <para>The <filename>/var/run/utmp</filename> file lists the users that are currently logged in, the <filename>/var/log/wtmp</filename> file who <emphasis>were</emphasis> logged in and when. The <filename>/var/log/lastlog</filename> file shows for each user when he or she last logged in, and the <filename>/var/log/btmp</filename> lists the bad login attempts.</para> <para>Shadow hard-wires the path to the <userinput>passwd</userinput> binary within the binary itself, but does this the wrong way. If a <userinput>passwd</userinput> binary is not present before installing Shadow, the package incorrectly assumes it is going to be located at <filename>/bin/passwd</filename>, but then installs it in <filename>/usr/bin/passwd</filename>. This will lead to errors about not finding <filename>/bin/passwd</filename>. To work around this bug, create a dummy <filename>passwd</filename> file, so that it gets hard-wired properly:</para> <para><screen><userinput>touch /usr/bin/passwd</userinput></screen></para> <para>The current shadow suite has a problem in the newgrp command which causes it to fail. The following patch (also appearing in Shadow's CVS code) fixes this problem.</para> <para><screen><userinput>patch -Np1 -i ../&shadow-patch;</userinput></screen></para> <para>Now prepare Shadow for compilation:</para> <para><screen><userinput>./configure --prefix=/usr --libdir=/usr/lib --enable-shared</userinput></screen></para> <para>Compile the package:</para> <para><screen><userinput>make</userinput></screen></para> <para>And install it:</para> <para><screen><userinput>make install</userinput></screen></para> <para>Shadow uses two files to configure authentication settings for the system. Install these two config files:</para> <para><screen><userinput>cp etc/{limits,login.access} /etc</userinput></screen></para> <para>We want to change the password method to enable MD5 passwords which are theoretically more secure than the default "crypt" method and also allow password lengths greater than 8 characters. We also need to change the old <filename class="directory">/var/spool/mail</filename> location for user mailboxes to the current location at <filename class="directory">/var/mail</filename>. We do this by changing the relevant configuration file while copying it to its destination:</para> <para><screen><userinput>sed -e 's%/var/spool/mail%/var/mail%' \ -e 's%#MD5_CRYPT_ENAB.no%MD5_CRYPT_ENAB yes%' \ etc/login.defs.linux > /etc/login.defs</userinput></screen></para> <note><para>Be extra careful when typing all of the above. It is probably safer to cut-and-paste it rather than try and type it all in.</para></note> <para>According to the man page of <userinput>vipw</userinput>, a <userinput>vigr</userinput> program should exist too. Since the installation procedure doesn't create this program, create a symlink manually:</para> <para><screen><userinput>ln -s vipw /usr/sbin/vigr</userinput></screen></para> <para>As the <filename>/bin/vipw</filename> symlink is redundant (and even pointing to a non-existent file), remove it:</para> <para><screen><userinput>rm /bin/vipw</userinput></screen></para> <para>Now move the <userinput>sg</userinput> program to its proper place:</para> <para><screen><userinput>mv /bin/sg /usr/bin</userinput></screen></para> <para>And move Shadow's dynamic libraries to a more appropriate location:</para> <para><screen><userinput>mv /usr/lib/lib{shadow,misc}.so.0* /lib</userinput></screen></para> <para>As some packages expect to find the just-moved libraries in <filename>/usr/lib</filename>, create the following symlinks:</para> <para><screen><userinput>ln -sf ../../lib/libshadow.so.0 /usr/lib/libshadow.so ln -sf ../../lib/libmisc.so.0 /usr/lib/libmisc.so</userinput></screen></para> <para>Coreutils has already installed a <userinput>groups</userinput> program in <filename>/usr/bin</filename>. If you wish, you can remove the one installed by Shadow:</para> <para><screen><userinput>rm /bin/groups</userinput></screen></para> </sect2>