There *has* to be an elegant way to do this in Expect...
I have a command that returns lines of numbers. Like:
prompt% mycommand --loop=5
9 4956 4951 4951 4956
9 4960 4951 4951 4956
9 4956 4951 4951 4956
9 4956 4951 4951 4956
9 4956 4951 4951 4956
prompt%
All numbers must be... (0 Replies)
Hello to all...this is my first post (so please go easy). :)
I feel pretty solid at expect scripting, but I'm running into an issue that I'm not able to wrap my head around. I wrote a script that is a little advanced for logging into a remote Linux machine and changing text in a file using sed.... (2 Replies)
This Expect script provides expect with a list of IP addresses to Cisco IPS sensors and commands to configure Cisco IPS sensors. The user, password, IP addresses, prompt regex, etc. have been anonymized. In general this script will log into the sensors and send commands successfully but there are... (1 Reply)
Hi I have a working expect script below. The script continues to log cisco router configurations until all the ip addresses in the "routerlist1" has been read. Problem will start to happen when one of the ip address is not reacheable via ssh or telnet. The script will stop to read the rest of the... (2 Replies)
Hi,
I am trying to write an expect script. Being a newbie in expect, maybee this is a silly doubt but i am stuck here.
So essentially , i want the o/p of one router command to be captured . Its something like this
Stats
Input Rx : 1234
Input Bytes : 3456
My expect script looks ... (5 Replies)
Hello,
I tried to use expect to catch information from my nagios and send me a call but i have nothing when i execute the script :
0 - add : account SIP
1 - trext : information from nagios
text2wav : conversion text to wav ( text to speech )
pjsua : connection thru the SIP
... (0 Replies)
I was wondering if I could do this a bit better.
another script calls this script and logs into a device, does the relavant "show commands" and then saves those to a file.
My problem is that the buffer isn't large enough to the output of some of the commands.
here is an excerpt of what i'm... (0 Replies)
Hi
I am new to IP configuration and using expect script
I have a requirement like
I need to write a expect script that can ssh to a remote machine(linux1) using password which already has IP, once logged inside machine need to reboot remote machine(linux1) and again login to same remote... (1 Reply)
I'm fairly new to scripting so this might not be possible.
I am using Expect with Cisco switches and need to capture the string after finding the expect request. For example, when I issue "show version" on a Nexus switch, I'm looking to capture the current firmware version:
#show version
... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: IBGaryA
0 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
tcpser
TCPSER(1) General Commands Manual TCPSER(1)NAME
tcpser - emulate a Hayes compatible modem
SYNOPSIS
tcpser -d dev -s speed [-l log_level -t tracing_options] ...
tcpser -v port [-l log_level -t tracing_options] ...
DESCRIPTION
This manual page documents briefly the tcpser command.
tcpser turns a PC serial port into an emulated Hayes compatible modem that uses TCP/IP for incoming and outgoing connections. It can be
used to allow older applications and systems designed for modem use to operate on the Internet. tcpser supports all standard Hayes com-
mands, and understands extended and vendor proprietary commands (though it does not implement many of them). tcpser can be used for both
inbound and outbound connections.
OPTIONS
A summary of options is included below.
-h Show summary of options.
-p Port to listen on (defaults to 6400).
-t Trace flags: (can be combined)
s modem input
S modem output
i IP input
I IP output
-l Log level: 0 (NONE), 1 (FATAL) - 7 (DEBUG_X) (defaults to 0).
-L Log file (defaults to stderr).
The following can be repeated for each modem desired (-s, -S, and -i will apply to any subsequent device if not set again):
-d Serial device (e.g. /dev/ttyS0). Cannot be used with -v
-v TCP port for VICE RS232 (e.g. 25232). Cannot be used with -d
-s Serial port speed (defaults to 38400).
-S Speed modem will report (defaults to -s value).
-I Invert DCD pin.
-n Add phone entry (number=replacement).
-a Filename to send to local side upon answer.
-A Filename to send to remote side upon answer.
-c Filename to send to local side upon connect.
-C Filename to send to remote side upon connect.
-N Filename to send when no answer.
-B Filename to send when modem(s) busy.
-T Filename to send upon inactivity timeout.
-i Modem init string (defaults to `', leave off `at' prefix when specifying).
-D Direct connection (follow with hostname:port for caller, : for receiver).
AUTHOR
tcpser was written by Jim Brain <brain@jbrain.com>.
This manual page was written by Peter Collingbourne <pcc03@doc.ic.ac.uk>, for the Debian project (but may be used by others).
July 5, 2006 TCPSER(1)