Sponsored Content
Top Forums UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers Extracting some part of Perl's Expect Buffer Post 303035890 by suneet17 on Friday 7th of June 2019 01:31:08 AM
Old 06-07-2019
Extracting some part of Perl's Expect Buffer

Hi,

I am capturing command's output on remote host using Expect. The problem is that the command line arguments also getting print with the output in file and also need to print last two relevant columns (percentage used and its mounted point).

The output of $exp->before() buffer is :
Code:
df
Filesystem      1K-blocks     Used Available Use%     Mounted on
devtmpfs         4063064        8   4063056    1%            /dev
tmpfs            4074272        0   4074272       0%             /dev/shm
tmpfs            4074272   141132   3933140     4%             /run
tmpfs            4074272        0   4074272        0%           /sys/fs/cgroup
/dev/sda1       20510332 15487436   3974372  80%       /
/dev/sdb1       10189112   964776   8700100    10%        /var/log
tmpfs             814856        0    814856            0%           /run/user/107
tmpfs             814856        0    814856          0%             /run/user/0

I need following output. Deleted first line (df) and only last two columns interchanged:


Code:
Mounted on     Use%  
/dev                       1%
/dev/shm             0%
/run                      4%
/sys/fs/cgroup   0%
/ 	                     80%
/var/log              10%
/run/user/107    0%
/run/user/0       0%

Thanks

Moderator's Comments:
Mod Comment
Please wrap all code, files, input & output/errors in CODE tags.
It makes it far easier to read and preserves spaces for indenting or fixed-width/tabulated data.

Last edited by rbatte1; 06-07-2019 at 07:05 AM..
 

10 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Shell Programming and Scripting

Extracting part of the basename

Hi, I was wondering if there is an easy way to strip off the required basename. I have a script called apb0110021.sh and the contents of the script are typeset -u MScript=`basename $0 | cut -d. -f1` scriptname=sys.Audit.ksh parms="PROJECT1 dsAudit $MScript 1 BEGIN" $SCRIPTS/$scriptname... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: madhunk
3 Replies

2. Shell Programming and Scripting

Expect buffer size increase, please help

Hi Group, I am struggling to increase buffer size of expect, sometimes after increasing the buffer size, expect captures all my expected output, sometimes not, :-( I tried match_max 700000 set expect_out(buffer) {} Could anybody guide me for any solution. HTH,... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: jaduks
1 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

need help extracting this part

JADE TRADER 143W MYPEN 40 HC M X10 28 7 1 0 MYPEN 20 GP X X10 15 2 1 0 MYPEN 40 GP X X10 28 7 1 0 MYPEN 20... (6 Replies)
Discussion started by: finalight
6 Replies

4. Shell Programming and Scripting

awk: Extracting part of the buffer

Hi, I am trying to extract part of a line using "awk". My requirement is to extract the value $6 (which is the last parameter) from a line. As the sixth value contains some space, i am getting only part of the string. so i am trying to extract from $6 to the end of the buffer. How to do it... (7 Replies)
Discussion started by: venkat_k
7 Replies

5. Shell Programming and Scripting

Expect: How to read buffer for spawn

Hi All, I have to write one expect script to login to one system. I am using set timeout -1 match_max 100000 spawn ssh root@hostname Now when I do spawn ssh to that host it send some warning message and one challenge Challenge: 111-2345 I need to read this challenge value and has... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Lokesh Agrawal
1 Replies

6. Shell Programming and Scripting

EXPECT help with full buffer(?), or other available solutions

First, to level set: I'm proficient enough with basic BASH scripting for simple things (say, 4 out of 10), but this current project really requires a higher understanding of EXPECT than I have. I have an interactive-only control application residing locally on a database server that I would... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: toeharp
2 Replies

7. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

Extracting part of a word

I have the code message={TP=2012:09:23:00:00:00:GMT,SD=2012:09:23:00:00:00:GMT,SP=2,FT=CCGT,FG=3605} I want to extract the FG=3605 parts of this. Please help. I am trying to do this using awk or unix. (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: JenniferTopham
5 Replies

8. Shell Programming and Scripting

Filtering escape character from expect buffer

I have written an application in Tcl-Expect which spawns minicom and sends and receives data via the serial port. Sometimes i see that the application receives control characters along with human readable data. A search on the internet tells me that the control characters are nothing but the VT... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: cityprince143
0 Replies

9. Shell Programming and Scripting

Extracting a part of a string

Hi, I needed to extract some specific characters from a string based on user input. For example: After the script executes the user enters the following details: Please enter the string: This is a shell script Please enter the starting position: 11 Please enter the number of characters to be... (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: ChandanN
4 Replies

10. Shell Programming and Scripting

Extracting the part of string

I have a string: 2015-04-16 07:30:05,625000 +0900 xxxx.com I just want to extract the time from the above line I am using the below syntax x=~ /(.*) (\d+)\:(\d+)\:(\d+),(.*)\.com/ $time = $2 . ':' . $3 . ':' . $4; print $time But it is not working. Can some1 please help (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: karan8810
2 Replies
Expect::Simple(3pm)					User Contributed Perl Documentation				       Expect::Simple(3pm)

NAME
Expect::Simple - wrapper around the Expect module SYNOPSIS
use Expect::Simple; my $obj = new Expect::Simple { Cmd => [ dmcoords => 'verbose=1', "infile=$infile"], Prompt => [ -re => 'dmcoords>:s+' ], DisconnectCmd => 'q', Verbose => 0, Debug => 0, Timeout => 100 }; $obj->send( $cmd ); print $obj->before; print $obj->after; print $obj->match_str, " "; print $obj->match_idx, " "; print $obj->error_expect; print $obj->error; $expect_object = $obj->expect_handle; DESCRIPTION
"Expect::Simple" is a wrapper around the "Expect" module which should suffice for simple applications. It hides most of the "Expect" machinery; the "Expect" object is available for tweaking if need be. Generally, one starts by creating an Expect::Simple object using new. This will start up the target program, and will wait until one of the specified prompts is output by the target. At that point the caller should send() commands to the program; the results are available via the before, after, match_str, and match_idx methods. Since Expect simulates a terminal, there will be extra " " characters at the end of each line in the result (on UNIX at least). This is easily fixed: ($res = $obj->before) =~ tr/ //d; @lines = split( " ", $res ); This is not done automatically. Exceptions will be thrown on error (match with "/Expect::Simple/"). Errors from Expect are available via the error_expect method. More human readable errors are available via the error method. The connection is automatically broken (by sending the specified disconnect command to the target) when the Expect::Simple object is destroyed. Methods new $obj = Expect::Simple->new( \%attr ); This creates a new object, starting up the program with which to communicate (using the Expect spawn method) and waiting for a prompt. The passed hash reference must contain at least the Prompt, DisconnectCmd, and Cmd elements. The available attributes are: Cmd Cmd => $command, Cmd => [ $command, $arg1, $arg2, ... ], The command to which to connect. The passed command may either be a scalar or an array. Prompt This specifies one or more prompts to scan for. For a single prompt, the value may be a scalar; for more, or for matching of regular expressions, it should be an array reference. For example, Prompt => 'prompt1> ', Prompt => [ 'prompt1> ', 'prompt2> ', -re => 'promptd+>s+' ] All prompts are taken literally, unless immediately preceded by a "-re" flag, in which case they are regular expressions. DisconnectCmd This is the command to be sent to the target program which will cause it to exit. RawPty If set, then underlying Expect object's pty mode is set to raw mode (see Expect::raw_pty()). Timeout The time in seconds to wait until giving up on the target program responding. This is used during program startup and when any commands are sent to the program. It defaults to 1000 seconds. Debug The value is passed to Expect via its debug method. Verbose This results in various messages printed to the STDERR stream. If greater than 3, it turns on Expect's logging to STDOUT (via the log_stdout Expect method. send $obj->send( $cmd ); $obj->send( @cmds ); Send one or more commands to the target. After each command is sent, it waits for a prompt from the target. Only the output resulting from the last command is available via the after, before, etc. methods. match_idx This returns a unary based index indicating which prompt (in the list of prompts specified via the "Prompt" attribute to the new method) was received after the last command was sent. It will be undef if none was returned. match_str This returns the prompt which was matched after the last command was sent. before This returns the string received before the prompt. If no prompt was seen, it returns all output accumulated. This is usually what the caller wants to parse. Note that the first line will (usually) be the command that was sent to the target, because of echoing. Check this out to be sure! after This returns the 'after' string. Please read the Expect docs for more enlightenment. error This returns a cleaned up, more humanly readable version of the errors from Expect. It'll be undef if there was no error. error_expect This returns the original Expect error. expect_handle This returns the Expect object, in case further tweaking is necessary. BUGS
If the command to be run does not exist (or not in the current execution path), it's quite possible that the new method will not throw an exception. It's up to the caller to make sure that the command will run! There's no known workaround for this. LICENSE
This software is released under the GNU General Public License. You may find a copy at http://www.fsf.org/copyleft/gpl.html AUTHOR
Diab Jerius (djerius@cpan.org) perl v5.12.4 2008-05-06 Expect::Simple(3pm)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 09:29 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy