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The $T control sequence is used to change the current rewrite rule tag. The rewrite rule tag is prepended to all rewrite rule patterns before they are looked up in the configuration file and domain database. Text following the $T, up until either an at sign, percent sign, $N, $M, $Q, $C, $T, or $? is taken to be the new tag.
Tags are useful in handling special addressing forms where the entire nature of an address is changed when a certain component is encountered. For example, suppose that the special host name internet
, when found in a source route, should be removed from the address and the resulting address forcibly matched against the TCP-DAEMON channel. This could be implemented with rules like the following (localhost
is assumed to be the official name of the local host):
internet $S$U@localhost$Tmtcp-force| mtcp-force|. $U%$H@TCP-DAEMON |
internet
if it appears in the source route. It forcibly matches internet
against the local channel, which insures that it will be removed from
the address. A rewrite tag is then set. Rewriting proceeds, but no
regular rule will match because of the tag. Finally, the default rule
is tried with the tag, and the second rule of this set fires, forcibly
matching the address against the TCP-DAEMON channel regardless of any
other criteria.
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