>
> Well, the defaults are (.+@.+) and ([^@]+), i.e., if there's @ in the
> login, treat it as friend, if there's no @, use kerberos.  A leading or
> trailing @ would cause neither to match, or if the strings are too short,
> but that's about it.


That's what it looked like.

These are just normal uniqnames that sometimes work and sometimes don't.

Liam


On Thu, May 29, 2014 at 4:16 PM, Wesley Craig <wescr...@gmail.com> wrote:

> On 29 May 2014, at 16:04, Liam Hoekenga <li...@umich.edu> wrote:
> > Nope.  We're just using the compile-time defaults.
>
> Well, the defaults are (.+@.+) and ([^@]+), i.e., if there's @ in the
> login, treat it as friend, if there's no @, use kerberos.  A leading or
> trailing @ would cause neither to match, or if the strings are too short,
> but that's about it.
>
> :wes
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