- (djm) [README README.privsep] Mention FreeBSD and NetBSD as being

supported by privsep. Requested by des AT des.no
This commit is contained in:
Damien Miller 2005-06-05 09:21:41 +10:00
parent 6a45f3dab4
commit c0e014d5be
2 changed files with 7 additions and 6 deletions

7
README
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@ -56,9 +56,10 @@ References -
[2] http://www.aet.tu-cottbus.de/personen/jaenicke/postfix_tls/prngd.html
[3] http://www.gzip.org/zlib/
[4] http://www.openssl.org/
[5] http://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/libs/pam/ (PAM is standard on Solaris
and HP-UX 11)
[5] http://www.openpam.org
http://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/libs/pam/
(PAM also is standard on Solaris and HP-UX 11)
[6] http://www.openbsd.org/cgi-bin/man.cgi?query=style&sektion=9
[7] http://www.openssh.com/faq.html
$Id: README,v 1.58 2005/05/29 23:58:40 dtucker Exp $
$Id: README,v 1.59 2005/06/04 23:21:41 djm Exp $

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@ -38,8 +38,8 @@ privsep user and chroot directory:
Privsep requires operating system support for file descriptor passing.
Compression will be disabled on systems without a working mmap MAP_ANON.
PAM-enabled OpenSSH is known to function with privsep on AIX, HP-UX
(including Trusted Mode), Linux and Solaris.
PAM-enabled OpenSSH is known to function with privsep on AIX, FreeBSD,
HP-UX (including Trusted Mode), Linux, NetBSD and Solaris.
On Cygwin, Tru64 Unix, OpenServer, and Unicos only the pre-authentication
part of privsep is supported. Post-authentication privsep is disabled
@ -60,4 +60,4 @@ process 1005 is the sshd process listening for new connections.
process 6917 is the privileged monitor process, 6919 is the user owned
sshd process and 6921 is the shell process.
$Id: README.privsep,v 1.15 2004/10/06 10:09:32 dtucker Exp $
$Id: README.privsep,v 1.16 2005/06/04 23:21:41 djm Exp $