NAME
Net::SSH::Expect - SSH wrapper to execute remote commands
SYNOPSIS
use Net::SSH::Expect;
# configures the ssh connection and authentication
my $ssh = Net::SSH::Expect->new (host => "myserver.com", password=> 'pass87word', user => 'bnegrao');
# establishes the ssh connection,
# authenticating with that user and password
$ssh->connect();
# runs arbitrary commands
my $ls = $ssh->exec("ls -l /");
print($ls);
my $who = $ssh->exec("who");
print ($who);
# closes the ssh connection
$ssh->close();
DESCRIPTION
This module is a wrapper to the ssh executable that is available in your system's $PATH. Use this module to execute commands on the remote SSH server. It authenticates with the user and password you passed in the constructor's attributes user
and password
.
Once an ssh connection was started using the connect()
method it will remain open until you call the close()
method. This allows you execute how many commands you want with the exec()
method using only one connection. This is a better approach over other ssh wrapper implementations, i.e: Net::SCP, Net::SSH and Net::SCP::Expect, that start a new ssh connection each time a remote command is issued or a file is transfered.
It uses Expect.pm module to interact with the SSH server. A get_expect()
method is provided so you can obtain the internal Expect
object connected to the SSH server. Use this only if you have some special need that you can't do with the exec()
method.
This module was inspired by Net::SCP::Expect http://search.cpan.org/~djberg/Net-SCP-Expect-0.12/Expect.pm was designed to be its counterpart. Their API's are very similar, and sometimes identical. I'll refer to the documentation of Net::SCP::Expect anytime their functionality is the same.
EXPORT
None by default.
CONSTRUCTOR ATTRIBUTES
The constructor accepts all the following attributes that can be set in the form of attribute => 'value' pairs.
- user
-
the username to login.
- password
-
the password used to login.
- host
-
the address(dns name/ip) to the ssh server
- terminator
-
the line terminator in use on the SSH server, this will added at the end of each command passed to the
exec()
method. The default is\r
. - verbose
-
Prints on the STDOUT all the conversation between this client and the SSH server. It also passes the option '-v' (verbose) to the wrapped ssh command, what will cause some ssh debugging messages to be displayed too. Useful for debugging.
- timeout
-
The maximum time in seconds to wait for a command to return to the PROMPT. The default is 10 seconds. Remember to increase this attribute with the
timeout()
method before you run a command that takes a long time to return. - error_handler
-
TODO
- cipher
-
TODO
- port
-
alternate ssh port. default is 22.
- protocol
-
TODO
- identity_file
-
TODO
- log_file
-
Path to a file to save all the ssh conversation. Default is no log file.
METHODS
- connect()
- exec($remote_cmd [, $block])
- returns:
-
undef: if after running 'cmd_string' and waiting for 'timeout' seconds the prompt still didn't return. This can happen if 'cmd_string' takes a long time to conclude.
empty string: if the command sent doesn't have output.
string: a string containing all the output of the command ran. it can be a non readable character if this was the output. This can be memory intensive depending on the size of the output.
- dies:
-
IllegalState: if this there is no valid ssh connection established
IllegalArgument: if no argument (no command string) is passed to this method.
RemotePromptUnavailable: if the prompt is not available for execution of $remote_cmd
Net::SCP::Expect, Net::SCP, Net::SSH::Perl, Expect
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AUTHOR
Bruno Negrao Guimaraes Zica. <bnegrao@cpan.org>.
THANKS
Daniel Berger, author of Net::SCP::Expect
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright (C) 2007 by Bruno Negrao Guimaraes Zica
This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself, either Perl version 5.8.3 or, at your option, any later version of Perl 5 you may have available.
2 POD Errors
The following errors were encountered while parsing the POD:
- Around line 465:
'=item' outside of any '=over'
- Around line 506:
=back doesn't take any parameters, but you said =back =head1 SEE ALSO