Expect::Simple - wrapper around the Expect module
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, "\n";
print $obj->match_idx, "\n";
print $obj->error_expect;
print $obj->error;
$expect_object = $obj->expect_handle;
"Expect::Simple" is a wrapper
around the "Expect" module which should
suffice for simple applications. It hides most of the
"Expect" machinery; the
"Expect" object is available for tweaking
if need be.
Generally, one starts by creating an Expect::Simple object
using new. This will start up the target program, and will wait until
one of the specified prompts is output by the target. At that point the
caller should send() commands to the program; the results are
available via the before, after, match_str, and
match_idx methods. Since Expect simulates a terminal, there
will be extra "\r" characters at the end
of each line in the result (on UNIX at least). This is easily fixed:
($res = $obj->before) =~ tr/\r//d;
@lines = split( "\n", $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.
- 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 => 'prompt\d+>\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.
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.
This software is released under the GNU General Public License.
You may find a copy at
http://www.fsf.org/copyleft/gpl.html
Diab Jerius (djerius@cpan.org)