To accomodate more complex translations, you can create a hierarchical set of rules to add to the default. Each rule is divided into three parts: base, filter, and substitution.
The Base:
The base begins with the number of components in the principal name (excluding the realm), followed by a colon, and the pattern for building the username from the sections of the principal name. In the pattern section
$0
translates to the realm,$1
translates to the first component and$2
to the second component.For example:
[1:$1@$0]
translatesmyusername@APACHE.ORG
tomyusername@APACHE.ORG
[2:$1]
translatesmyusername/admin@APACHE.ORG
tomyusername
[2:$1%$2]
translatesmyusername/admin@APACHE.ORG
to “myusername%admin
The Filter:
The filter consists of a regex in a parentheses that must match the generated string for the rule to apply.
For example:
(.*%admin)
matches any string that ends in%admin
(.*@SOME.DOMAIN)
matches any string that ends in@SOME.DOMAIN
The Substitution:
The substitution is a sed rule that translates a regex into a fixed string.
For example:
s/@ACME\.COM//
removes the first instance of@SOME.DOMAIN
.s/@[A-Z]*\.COM//
removes the first instance of@
followed by a name followed byCOM
.s/X/Y/g
replaces all of theX
in the name withY