Net::CLI::Interact - Toolkit for CLI Automation
This module exists to support developers of applications and libraries which must interact with a command line interface.
use Net::CLI::Interact;
my $s = Net::CLI::Interact->new({
personality => 'cisco',
transport => 'Telnet',
connect_options => { host => '192.0.2.1' },
});
# respond to a usename/password prompt
$s->macro('to_user_exec', {
params => ['my_username', 'my_password'],
});
my $interfaces = $s->cmd('show ip interfaces brief');
$s->macro('to_priv_exec', {
params => ['my_password'],
});
# matched prompt is updated automatically
# paged output is slurped into one response
$s->macro('show_run');
my $config = $s->last_response;
Automating command line interface (CLI) interactions is not a new idea, but can be tricky to implement. This module aims to provide a simple and manageable interface to CLI interactions, supporting:
- SSH, Telnet and Serial-Line connections
- Unix and Windows support
- Reuseable device command phrasebooks
If you're a new user, please read the Tutorial. There's also a Cookbook and a Phrasebook Listing. For a more complete worked example check out the Net::Appliance::Session distribution, for which this module was written.
Prepares a new session for you, but will not connect to any device. On
Windows platforms, you must download the plink.exe
program, and pass
its location to the app
parameter. Other options are:
-
personality => $name
(required)The family of device command phrasebooks to load. There is a built-in library within this module, or you can provide a search path to other libraries. See Net::CLI::Interact::Manual::Phrasebook for further details.
-
transport => $backend
(required)The name of the transport backend used for the session, which may be one of Telnet, SSH, or Serial.
-
connect_options => \%options
If the transport backend can take any options (for example the target hostname), then pass those options in this value as a hash ref. See the respective manual pages for each transport backend for further details.
-
log_at => $log_level
To make using the
logger
somewhat easier, you can pass this argument the name of a log level (such asdebug
,info
, etc) and all logging in the library will be enabled at that level. Usedebug
to learn about how the library is working internally. See Net::CLI::Interact::Logger for a list of the valid level names. -
timeout => $seconds
Configures a default timeout value, in seconds, for interaction with the remote device. The default is 10 seconds. You can also set timeout on a per-command or per-macro call (see below).
Note that this does not (currently) apply to the initial connection.
Execute a single command statement on the connected device, and consume output until there is a match with the current prompt. The statement is executed verbatim on the device, with a newline appended.
In scalar context the last_response
is returned (see below). In list
context the gathered response is returned as a list of lines. In both cases
your local platform's newline character will end all lines.
Execute the commands contained within the named Macro, which must be loaded
from a Phrasebook. Options to control the output, including variables for
substitution into the Macro, are passed in the %options
hash reference.
In scalar context the last_response
is returned (see below). In list
context the gathered response is returned as a list of lines. In both cases
your local platform's newline character will end all lines.
Returns the gathered output after the most recent cmd
or macro
. In
scalar context all data is returned. In list context the gathered response is
returned as a list of lines. In both cases your local platform's newline
character will end all lines.
Returns the Transport backend which was
loaded based on the transport
option to new
. See the
Telnet,
SSH, or
Serial documentation for further
details.
Returns the Phrasebook object which was loaded based on the personality
option given to new
. See Net::CLI::Interact::Phrasebook for further
details.
Allows you to (re-)configure the loaded phrasebook, perhaps changing the
personality or library, or other properties. The %options
Hash ref should
be any parameters from the Phrasebook
module, but at a minimum must include a personality
.
Briefly, a Continuation handles the slurping of paged output from commands. See the Net::CLI::Interact::Phrasebook documentation for further details.
Pass in the name of a defined Contination (Macro) to enable paging handling as a default for all sent commands. This is an alternative to describing the Continuation format in each Macro.
To unset the default Continuation, call the clear_default_continuation
method.
This is the application's Logger object. A powerful logging subsystem is available to your application, built upon the Log::Dispatch distribution. You can enable logging of this module's processes at various levels, or add your own logging statements.
To make using the logger
somewhat easier, you can pass this method the
name of a log level (such as debug
, info
, etc) and all logging in the
library will be enabled at that level. Use debug
to learn about how the
library is working internally. See Net::CLI::Interact::Logger for a list of
the valid level names.
Whenever a command statement is issued, output is slurped until a matching prompt is seen in that output. Control of the Prompts is shared between the definitions in Net::CLI::Interact::Phrasebook dictionaries, and methods of the Net::CLI::Interact::Role::Prompt core component. See that module's documentation for further details.
All commands and macros are composed from their phrasebook definitions into Actions and ActionSets (iterable sequences of Actions). See those modules' documentation for further details, in case you wish to introspect their structures.
See the following for further interface details:
Oliver Gorwits oliver@cpan.org
This software is copyright (c) 2017 by Oliver Gorwits.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.