Information
The deny=<n> option will deny access if the number of consecutive authentication failures for this user during the recent interval exceeds
.
Locking out user IDs after
n
unsuccessful consecutive login attempts mitigates brute force password attacks against your systems.
Solution
Create or edit the following line in /etc/security/faillock.conf setting the deny option to 5 or less:
deny = 5
Run the following script to remove the deny argument from the pam_faillock.so module in the PAM files:
#!/usr/bin/env bash
{
for l_pam_file in system-auth password-auth; do
l_authselect_file="/etc/authselect/$(head -1 /etc/authselect/authselect.conf | grep 'custom/')/$l_pam_file"
sed -ri 's/(^s*auths+(requisite|required|sufficient)s+pam_faillock.so.*)(s+denys*=s*S+)(.*$)/14/' "$l_authselect_file"
done
authselect apply-changes
}