Provided by: libnet-cli-interact-perl_2.133420-1_all bug

NAME

       Net::CLI::Interact::Manual::Tutorial - Guide for new users

Introduction

       Automating command line interface (CLI) interactions is not a new idea, but can be tricky
       to implement. Net::CLI::Interact aims to provide a simple and manageable interface to CLI
       interactions, supporting:

       •   SSH, Telnet and Serial-Line connections

       •   Unix and Windows support

       •   Reusable device command phrasebooks

       The module exists to support developers of applications and libraries which must interact
       with a command line interface. The SYNOPSIS section of Net::CLI::Interact has an overview
       of the commands demonstrated in this document.

Getting Started

       Like many other Perl modules, you need to load the module and then create a new
       Net::CLI::Interact instance (which is $s in the example, below):

        use Net::CLI::Interact;

        my $s = Net::CLI::Interact->new({
            transport   => 'Serial',
            personality => 'cisco',
        });

       Your application can have multiple independent instances (that is, connect to different
       devices at the same time); simply repeat the above example more times for variables other
       than $s.

       Note that at the time you create the instance, as in the example above, the module does
       not connect to the device. That comes later.

       There were two options provided to the "new" call, above, both of which are required for
       all new instances. Let's look at them in turn:

       transport
           How do you want to connect to your CLI? The current choices are Telnet, SSH and a
           Serial line (that is, a console cable). In this option you need to tell the module
           which underlying transport is to be used.

           Some of the transports have additional options that are either required, or optional.
           For example, the Telnet and SSH transports both need to know which post name or IP
           address should be contacted. You pass this in another option to "new", like so:

            my $s = Net::CLI::Interact->new({
                transport       => 'Telnet',
                connect_options => { host => 'my.server.example.com' },

                personality     => 'cisco',
            });

           See the manual page of the transport module for the option details.

       personality
           What language does the connected device speak?  In this option you need to pass the
           name of a personality that's used to load a Phrasebook.  For instance one common
           format is Cisco's IOS, which is widely cloned on other vendor equipment CLIs.

           A phrasebook is simply a library, or dictionary, of pre-configured phrases you can use
           on the CLI. This makes life simple, because Net::CLI::Interact then can automate some
           of the more difficult tasks. For example, if you issue a command and the output is
           "paged" so you hit Space or Return to see the next page, the phrasebook can tell
           Net::CLI::Interact how to slurp all these pages into one body of output before
           returning it to you.

           This module ships with many phrasebooks which have been contributed by other users
           over the years. You can also write and use your own phrasebooks, which might replace,
           or add to, those shipped with the module. See the Phrasebook user guide for a list of
           phrasebooks shipped with this distribution, and their corresponding "personality"
           names. See also the "add_library" option to "new()" for specifying a path to your own
           phrasebooks.

Connecting

       This is done automatically for you the first time you send a command to the device, so
       skip this step and move on!

Sending Commands

   But first, Prompts
       The idea of sending a command is, usually, to see some output. The most important part of
       this process is knowing when the output has all been sent, otherwise the module would sit
       forever, waiting to gather more text!

       Between each command sent, the connected device prints a CLI Prompt. This prompt is where
       you type commands, and it's what tells us that all the output has been sent from our last
       command. Prompts are loaded in the phrasebook, and given friendly names.

       If your personality's phrasebook is sufficiently mature, then the prompts might be fully
       automated, and just like the Connecting step above, you can skip doing anything manually.
       Consult the Phrasebook user guide for details.

       However if you need to set it manually, do the following:

        $s->set_prompt('friendly_name');

       Sometimes you might not know what state the CLI is in; typically this applies to Serial
       lines. In that case you can ask to find the matching prompt:

        $s->find_prompt($wake_up);

       This method gets some output from the connected session and then tries to match it against
       any loaded prompts, returning if successful. If not successful, and the $wake_up value is
       non-zero, then "find_prompt" will "hit the return key" to try to get some output. This
       process is retried according to the value of $wake_up (i.e. 1, 2, 3, etc), and of not
       successful will die.

   Literal Commands
       There's not a lot to it. Remember that with a mature personality loaded, you were probably
       able to skip the previous prompt step and go straight to:

        my $output = $s->cmd('show ip interfaces brief');

       Here you will get all the output from the command together in one variable, $output. If
       you prefer an array where each item is one line of output, simply use @output instead in
       the above example.

   Macros
       Life gets more complicated when your command has things like confirmation steps (e.g.
       reboot), other prompts (e.g. extended ping), etc. For these situations we have Macros in
       the phrasebook.

       A macro is simply a sequence of commands we could issue using "$s->cmd()", bundled
       together and given a friendly name. Macros are also smart enough either to handle simple
       confirmation steps themselves, or to allow you to pass in parameters. Some examples
       probably help:

        # saves config, accepting the default "startup-config" when prompted
        $s->macro('write_mem');

        # logs in, passing a username and password at the prompts
        $s->macro('to_user_exec', {
            params => ['my_username', 'my_password'],
        });

        # simply a parameterized command
        $s->macro('show_interfaces_x', {
            params => ['GigabitEthernet 3/4'],
        });

Slurping Output

       As mentioned above, output at the CLI is often "paged" with the user hitting Space or
       Return to show the next page. Most macros can deal with this automatically if well
       implemented.

       If the Phrasebook user guide says your personality has a named default Continuation for
       handling paged output, then set it like so:

        $s->set_default_continuation('friendly_name');

Disconnecting

       This is nothing more fancy than issuing the appropriate CLI commands to close the network
       connection. In the case of the Serial line transport you can usually only log out, and not
       fully disconnect. Simply end your application and the module will tidy things up as best
       it can.