1Net::Telnet::Cisco(3) User Contributed Perl DocumentationNet::Telnet::Cisco(3)
2
3
4
6 Net::Telnet::Cisco - interact with a Cisco router
7
9 use Net::Telnet::Cisco;
10
11 my $session = Net::Telnet::Cisco->new(Host => '123.123.123.123');
12 $session->login('login', 'password');
13
14 # Execute a command
15 my @output = $session->cmd('show version');
16 print @output;
17
18 # Enable mode
19 if ($session->enable("enable_password") ) {
20 @output = $session->cmd('show privilege');
21 print "My privileges: @output\n";
22 } else {
23 warn "Can't enable: " . $session->errmsg;
24 }
25
26 $session->close;
27
29 Net::Telnet::Cisco provides additional functionality to Net::Telnet for
30 dealing with Cisco routers.
31
32 cmd() parses router-generated error messages - the kind that begin with
33 a '%' - and stows them in $obj->errmsg(), so that errmode can be used
34 to perform automatic error-handling actions.
35
37 Before you use Net::Telnet::Cisco, you should have a good understanding
38 of Net::Telnet, so read it's documentation first, and then come back
39 here to see the improvements.
40
41 Some things are easier to accomplish with UCD's C-based SNMP module, or
42 the all-perl Net::SNMP. SNMP has three advantages: it's faster, handles
43 errors better, and doesn't use any VTYs on the router. SNMP does have
44 some limitations, so for anything you can't accomplish with SNMP,
45 there's Net::Telnet::Cisco.
46
48 new - create new Net::Telnet::Cisco object
49 $session = Net::Telnet::Cisco->new(
50 [Always_waitfor_prompt => $boolean,] # 1
51 [Autopage => $boolean,] # 1
52 [Ignore_warnings => $boolean,] # 0
53 [More_prompt => $matchop,] # '/(?m:^\s*--More--)/',
54 [Normalize_cmd => $boolean,] # 1
55 [Send_wakeup => $when,] # 0
56 [Waitfor_pause => $milliseconds,] # 0.1
57 [Warnings => $matchop,] # see docs
58
59 # Net::Telnet arguments
60 );
61
62 Creates a new object. Read `perldoc perlboot` if you don't
63 understand that.
64
65 login - login to a router
66 $ok = $obj->login($username, $password);
67
68 $ok = $obj->login([Name => $username,]
69 [Password => $password,]
70 [Passcode => $passcode,] # for Secur-ID/XTACACS
71 [Prompt => $match,]
72 [Timeout => $secs,]);
73
74 All arguments are optional as of v1.05. Some routers don't ask for
75 a username, they start the login conversation with a password
76 request.
77
78 cmd - send a command
79 $ok = $obj->cmd($string);
80 $ok = $obj->cmd(String => $string,
81 [Output => $ref,]
82 [Prompt => $match,]
83 [Timeout => $secs,]
84 [Cmd_remove_mode => $mode,]);
85
86 @output = $obj->cmd($string);
87 @output = $obj->cmd(String => $string,
88 [Output => $ref,]
89 [Prompt => $match,]
90 [Timeout => $secs,]
91 [Cmd_remove_mode => $mode,]
92 [Normalize_cmd => $boolean,]);
93
94 Normalize_cmd has been added to the default Net::Telnet args. It
95 lets you temporarily change whether backspace, delete, and kill
96 characters are parsed in the command output. (This is performed by
97 default)
98
99 prompt - return control to the program whenever this string occurs in
100 router output
101 $matchop = $obj->prompt;
102
103 $prev = $obj->prompt($matchop);
104
105 The default cmd_prompt changed in v1.05. It's suitable for matching
106 prompts like "router$ ", "router# ", "router> (enable) ", and
107 "router(config-if)# "
108
109 Let's take a closer look, shall we?
110
111 (?m: # Net::Telnet doesn't accept quoted regexen (i.e. qr//)
112 # so we need to use an embedded pattern-match modifier
113 # to treat the input as a multiline buffer.
114
115 ^ # beginning of line
116
117 [\w.-]+ # router hostname
118
119 \s? # optional space
120
121 (?: # Strings like "(config)" and "(config-if)", "(config-line)",
122 # and "(config-router)" indicate that we're in privileged
123 \(config[^\)]*\) # EXEC mode (i.e. we're enabled).
124 )? # The middle backslash is only there to appear my syntax
125 # highlighter.
126
127 \s? # more optional space
128
129 [\$#>] # Prompts typically end with "$", "#", or ">". Backslash
130 # for syntax-highlighter.
131
132 \s? # more space padding
133
134 (?: # Catalyst switches print "(enable)" when in privileged
135 \(enable\) # EXEC mode.
136 )?
137
138 \s* # spaces before the end-of-line aren't important to us.
139
140 $ # end of line
141
142 ) # end of (?m:
143
144 The default prompt published in 1.03 was
145 "/^\s*[\w().-]*[\$#>]\s?(?:\(enable\))?\s*$/". As you can see, the
146 prompt was drastically overhauled in 1.05. If your code suddenly
147 starts timing out after upgrading Net::Telnet::Cisco, this is the
148 first thing to investigate.
149
150 enable - enter enabled mode
151 $ok = $obj->enable;
152
153 $ok = $obj->enable($password);
154
155 $ok = $obj->enable([Name => $name,] [Password => $password,]
156 [Passcode => $passcode,] [Level => $level,]);
157
158 This method changes privilege level to enabled mode, (i.e. root)
159
160 If a single argument is provided by the caller, it will be used as
161 a password. For more control, including the ability to set the
162 privilege-level, you must use the named-argument scheme.
163
164 enable() returns 1 on success and undef on failure.
165
166 is_enabled - Am I root?
167 $bool = $obj->is_enabled;
168
169 A trivial check to see whether we have a root-style prompt, with
170 either the word "(enable)" in it, or a trailing "#".
171
172 Warning: this method will return false positives if your prompt has
173 "#"s in it. You may be better off calling "$obj->cmd("show
174 privilege")" instead.
175
176 disable - leave enabled mode
177 $ok = $obj->disable;
178
179 This method exits the router's privileged mode.
180
181 fhopen - use already open filehandle for I/O
182 $ok = $obj->fhopen($fh);
183
184 This method associates the open filehandle $fh with $obj for
185 further I/O. Filehandle $fh must already be opened.
186
187 The value 1 is returned success, the error mode action is performed
188 on failure.
189
190 ios_break - send a break (control-^)
191 $ok = $obj->ios_break;
192
193 You may have to use errmode(), fork, or threads to break at the an
194 appropriate time.
195
196 last_cmd - displays the last command
197 $match = $obj->last_cmd;
198
199 last_cmd() will return '' if the program does not yet have a last
200 command.
201
202 last_prompt - displays the last prompt matched by prompt()
203 $match = $obj->last_prompt;
204
205 last_prompt() will return '' if the program has not yet matched a
206 prompt.
207
208 always_waitfor_prompt - waitfor and cmd prompt behaviour
209 $boolean = $obj->always_waitfor_prompt;
210
211 $boolean = $obj->always_waitfor_prompt($boolean);
212
213 Default value: 1
214
215 If you pass a Prompt argument to cmd() or waitfor() a String or
216 Match, they will return control on a successful match of your
217 argument(s) or the default prompt. Set always_waitfor_prompt to 0
218 to return control only for your arguments.
219
220 This method has no effect on login(). login() will always wait for
221 a prompt.
222
223 waitfor_pause - insert a small delay before waitfor()
224 $boolean = $obj->waitfor_pause;
225
226 $boolean = $obj->waitfor_pause($milliseconds);
227
228 Default value: 0.1
229
230 In rare circumstances, the last_prompt is set incorrectly. By
231 adding a very small delay before calling the parent class's
232 waitfor(), this bug is eliminated. If you ever find reason to
233 modify this from it's default setting, please let me know.
234
235 autopage - Turn autopaging on and off
236 $boolean = $obj->autopage;
237
238 $boolean = $obj->autopage($boolean);
239
240 Default value: 1
241
242 IOS pages output by default. It expects human eyes to be reading
243 the output, not programs. Humans hit the spacebar to scroll page by
244 page so autopage() mimicks that behaviour. This is the slow way to
245 handle paging. See the Paging EXAMPLE for a faster way.
246
247 normalize_cmd - Turn normalization on and off
248 $boolean = $obj->normalize_cmd;
249
250 $boolean = $obj->normalize_cmd($boolean);
251
252 Default value: 1
253
254 IOS clears '--More--' prompts with backspaces (e.g. ^H). If you're
255 excited by the thought of having raw control characters like ^H
256 (backspace), ^? (delete), and ^U (kill) in your command output,
257 turn this feature off.
258
259 Logging is unaffected by this setting.
260
261 more_prompt - Matchop used by autopage()
262 $matchop = $obj->prompt;
263
264 $prev = $obj->prompt($matchop);
265
266 Default value: '/(?m:\s*--More--)/'.
267
268 Please email me if you find others.
269
270 send_wakeup - send a newline to the router at login time
271 $when = $obj->send_wakeup;
272
273 $when = $obj->send_wakeup( 'connect' );
274 $when = $obj->send_wakeup( 'timeout' );
275 $when = $obj->send_wakeup( 0 );
276
277 Default value: 0
278
279 Some routers quietly allow you to connect but don't display the
280 expected login prompts. Sends a newline in the hopes that this
281 spurs the routers to print something.
282
283 'connect' sends a newline immediately upon connection. 'timeout'
284 sends a newline if the connection timeouts. 0 turns this feature
285 off.
286
287 I understand this works with Livingston Portmasters.
288
289 ignore_warnings - Don't call error() for warnings
290 $boolean = $obj->ignore_warnings;
291
292 $boolean = $obj->ignore_warnings($boolean);
293
294 Default value: 0
295
296 Not all strings that begin with a '%' are really errors. Some are
297 just warnings. By setting this, you are ignoring them. This will
298 show up in the logs, but that's it.
299
300 warnings - Matchop used by ignore_warnings().
301 $boolean = $obj->warnings;
302
303 $boolean = $obj->warnings($matchop);
304
305 Default value:
306
307 /(?mx:^% Unknown VPN
308 |^%IP routing table VRF.* does not exist. Create first$
309 |^%No CEF interface information
310 |^%No matching route to delete$
311 |^%Not all config may be removed and may reappear after reactivating
312 )/
313
314 Not all strings that begin with a '%' are really errors. Some are
315 just warnings. Cisco calls these the CIPMIOSWarningExpressions.
316
318 Paging
319 v1.08 added internal autopaging support to cmd(). Whenever a '--Page--'
320 prompt appears on the screen, we send a space right back. It works, but
321 it's slow. You'd be better off sending one of the following commands
322 just after login():
323
324 # To a router
325 $session->cmd('terminal length 0');
326
327 # To a switch
328 $session->cmd('set length 0');
329
330 Logging
331 Want to see the session transcript? Just call input_log().
332
333 e.g.
334 my $session = Net::Telnet::Cisco->new(Host => $router,
335 Input_log => "input.log",
336 );
337
338 See input_log() in Net::Telnet for info.
339
340 Input logs are easy-to-read translated transcripts with all of the
341 control characters and telnet escapes cleaned up. If you want to view
342 the raw session, see dump_log() in Net::Telnet. If you're getting
343 tricky and using print() in addition to cmd(), you may also want to use
344 output_log().
345
346 Big output
347 Trying to dump the entire BGP table? (e.g. "show ip bgp") The default
348 buffer size is 1MB, so you'll have to increase it.
349
350 my $MB = 1024 * 1024;
351 $session->max_buffer_length(5 * $MB);
352
353 Sending multiple lines at once
354 Some commands like "extended ping" and "copy" prompt for several lines
355 of data. It's not necessary to change the prompt for each line.
356 Instead, send everything at once, separated by newlines.
357
358 For:
359
360 router# ping
361 Protocol [ip]:
362 Target IP address: 10.0.0.1
363 Repeat count [5]: 10
364 Datagram size [100]: 1500
365 Timeout in seconds [2]:
366 Extended commands [n]:
367 Sweep range of sizes [n]:
368
369 Try this:
370
371 my $protocol = ''; # default value
372 my $ip = '10.0.0.1';
373 my $repeat = 10;
374 my $datagram = 1500;
375 my $timeout = ''; # default value
376 my $extended = ''; # default value
377 my $sweep = ''; # default value
378
379 $session->cmd(
380 "ping
381 $protocol
382 $ip
383 $repeat
384 $datagram
385 $timeout
386 $extended
387 $sweep
388 ");
389
390 If you prefer, you can put the cmd on a single line and replace every
391 static newline with the "\n" character.
392
393 e.g.
394
395 $session->cmd("ping\n$protocol\n$ip\n$repeat\n$datagram\n"
396 . "$timeout\n$extended\n$sweep\n");
397
398 Backup via TFTP
399 Backs up the running-confg to a TFTP server. Backup file is in the form
400 "router-confg". Make sure that file exists on the TFTP server or the
401 transfer will fail!
402
403 my $backup_host = "tftpserver.somewhere.net";
404 my $device = "cisco.somewhere.net";
405 my $type = "router"; # or "switch";
406 my $ios_version = 12;
407
408 my @out;
409 if ($type eq "router") {
410 if ($ios_version >= 12) {
411 @out = $session->cmd("copy system:/running-config "
412 . "tftp://$backup_host/$device-confg\n\n\n");
413 } elsif ($ios_version >= 11) {
414 @out = $session->cmd("copy running-config tftp\n$backup_host\n"
415 . "$device-confg\n");
416 } elsif ($ios_version >= 10) {
417 @out = $session->cmd("write net\n$backup_host\n$device-confg\n\n");
418 }
419 } elsif ($type eq "switch") {
420 @out = $session->cmd("copy system:/running-config "
421 . "tftp://$backup_host/$device-confg\n\n\n");
422 }
423
425 http://NetTelnetCisco.sourceforge.net/
426
427 Mailing lists
428 nettelnetcisco-announce is for important security bulletins and
429 upgrades. Very low traffic, no spam, HIGHLY RECOMMENDED!
430 http://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/nettelnetcisco-announce
431
432 nettelnetcisco-users is for usage discussion, help, tips, tricks, etc.
433 http://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/nettelnetcisco-users
434
435 nettelnetcisco-devel is for uber-hackers; you know who you are.
436 http://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/nettelnetcisco-devel
437
438 Help/discussion forums
439 http://sourceforge.net/forum/?group_id=48856
440
441 Bug tracker
442 http://sourceforge.net/tracker/?group_id=48856
443
445 Net::Telnet
446
447 Net::SNMP
448
449 UCD NetSNMP - http://www.netsnmp.org/
450
451 RAT/NCAT - http://ncat.sourceforge.net/
452
454 Joshua_Keroes@eli.net $Date: 2002/06/18 17:17:03 $
455
456 It would greatly amuse the author if you would send email to him and
457 tell him how you are using Net::Telnet::Cisco.
458
459 As of Mar 2002, 170 people have emailed me. N::T::C is used to help
460 manage over 14,000 machines! Keep the email rolling in!
461
463 The following people understand what Open Source Software is all about.
464 Thanks Brian Landers, Aaron Racine, Niels van Dijke, Tony Mueller,
465 Frank Eickholt, Al Sorrell, Jebi Punnoose, Christian Alfsen, Niels van
466 Dijke, Kevin der Kinderen, Ian Batterbee, Leonardo Cont, Steve Meier,
467 and Andre Bonhote.
468
469 Institutions: infobot.org #perl, perlmonks.org, sourceforge.net, the
470 geeks at geekhouse.org, and eli.net.
471
472 Send in a patch and we can make the world a better place.
473
475 Copyright (c) 2000-2002 Joshua Keroes, Electric Lightwave Inc. All
476 rights reserved. This program is free software; you can redistribute it
477 and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
478
479
480
481perl v5.32.0 2020-07-28 Net::Telnet::Cisco(3)