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pam_timestamp_check - Check to see if the default timestamp is valid

Author

       pam_timestamp was written by Nalin Dahyabhai.

Linux-PAM                                          07/03/2025                             PAM_TIMESTAMP_CHECK(8)

Description

       With no arguments pam_timestamp_check will check to see if the default timestamp is valid, or optionally
       remove it.

Examples

           auth sufficient pam_timestamp.so verbose
           auth required   pam_unix.so

           session required pam_unix.so
           session optional pam_timestamp.so

Files

       /var/run/sudo/...
           timestamp files and directories

Name

       pam_timestamp_check - Check to see if the default timestamp is valid

Notes

       Users can get confused when they are not always asked for passwords when running a given program. Some
       users reflexively begin typing information before noticing that it is not being asked for.

Options

       -k
           Instead of checking the validity of a timestamp, remove it. This is analogous to sudo's -k option.

       -d
           Instead of returning validity using an exit status, loop indefinitely, polling regularly and printing
           the status on standard output.

       target_user
           By default pam_timestamp_check checks or removes timestamps generated by pam_timestamp when users
           authenticate as themselves. When the user authenticates as a different user, the name of the
           timestamp file changes to accommodate this.  target_user allows one to specify this user name.

Return Values

       0
           The timestamp is valid.

       2
           The binary is not setuid root.

       3
           Invalid invocation.

       4
           User is unknown.

       5
           Permissions error.

       6
           Invalid controlling tty.

       7
           Timestamp is not valid.

See Also

pam_timestamp_check(8), pam.conf(5), pam.d(5), pam(7)

Synopsis

pam_timestamp_check [-k] [-d] [target_user]

See Also