On Wed, Feb 02, 2005 at 09:49:31PM +0100, Andreas Metzler wrote: > > > For what concern proftpd, it does not use libpam-mysql at all, > > so I see no problem for that. > > Hello, > Ehh. As maintainer of a PAM-using application you usually have no > control which PAM modules are used. You just ship the application with > a /etc/pam.d/foo using > > @include common-<whatever> > > and the *end-user* can (and probably will, if he installs stuff like > libpam-mysql) change these defaults to use modules of his choice. > cu andreas
That's clear. I did mean proftpd-mysql does not use PAM to authenticate against mysql, it uses mysql API directly... Of course a PAM module can be used by user, but that's not of interest for licensing compatibility. -- Francesco P. Lovergine -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]