Common Test specific layer on top of Telnet client ct_telnet_client.erl
Common Test specific layer on top of Telnet client
ct_telnet_client.erl.
Use this module to set up Telnet connections, send commands, and
perform string matching on the result. For information about how to use
ct_telnet and configure connections, specifically for UNIX hosts,
see the
unix_telnet manual page.
Default values defined in ct_telnet:
Connection timeout (time to wait for connection) = 10 seconds
Command timeout (time to wait for a command to return) = 10 seconds
Max number of reconnection attempts = 3
Reconnection interval (time to wait in between reconnection attempts) = 5 seconds
Keep alive (sends NOP to the server every 8 sec if connection is idle) =
truePolling limit (max number of times to poll to get a remaining string terminated) = 0
Polling interval (sleep time between polls) = 1 second
The TCP_NODELAY option for the telnet socket is disabled (set to
false) per default
These parameters can be modified by the user with the following configuration term:
{telnet_settings, [{connect_timeout,Millisec}, {command_timeout,Millisec}, {reconnection_attempts,N}, {reconnection_interval,Millisec}, {keep_alive,Bool}, {poll_limit,N}, {poll_interval,Millisec}, {tcp_nodelay,Bool}]}.
Millisec = integer(), N = integer()
Enter the telnet_settings term in a configuration file included
in the test and ct_telnet retrieves the information
automatically.
keep_alive can be specified per connection, if necessary. For
details, see
unix_telnet.
Logging
The default logging behavior of ct_telnet is to print information
about performed operations, commands, and their corresponding results to
the test case HTML log. The following is not printed to the HTML
log: text strings sent from the Telnet server that are not explicitly
received by a ct_telnet function, such as expect/3.
However, ct_telnet can be configured to use a special purpose
event handler, implemented in ct_conn_log_h, for logging
all Telnet traffic. To use this handler, install a Common
Test hook named cth_conn_log. Example (using the test suite
information function):
suite() -> [{ct_hooks, [{cth_conn_log, [{conn_mod(),hook_options()}]}]}].
conn_mod() is the name of the Common Test module
implementing the connection protocol, that is, ct_telnet.
The cth_conn_log hook performs unformatted logging of Telnet
data to a separate text file. All Telnet communication is captured and
printed, including any data sent from the server. The link to
this text file is located at the top of the test case HTML log.
By default, data for all Telnet connections is logged in one common
file (named default), which can get messy, for example, if
multiple Telnet sessions are running in parallel. Therefore a separate
log file can be created for each connection. To configure this, use hook
option hosts and list the names of the servers/connections
to be used in the suite. The connections must be named for this to
work (see
ct_telnet:open/1,2,3,4).
Hook option log_type can be used to change the
cth_conn_log behavior. The default value of this option is
raw, which results in the behavior described above. If the value
is set to html, all Telnet communication is printed to the test
case HTML log instead.
All cth_conn_log hook options described can also be
specified in a configuration file with configuration variable
ct_conn_log.
Example:
{ct_conn_log, [{ct_telnet,[{log_type,raw}, {hosts,[key_or_name()]}]}]}
Note!
Hook options specified in a configuration file overwrite any hard-coded hook options in the test suite.
Logging Example:
The following ct_hooks statement causes printing of Telnet
traffic to separate logs for the connections server1 and
server2. Traffic for any other connections is logged in the
default Telnet log.
suite() -> [{ct_hooks, [{cth_conn_log, [{ct_telnet,[{hosts,[server1,server2]}]}]}]}].
As previously explained, this specification can also be provided by an entry like the following in a configuration file:
{ct_conn_log, [{ct_telnet,[{hosts,[server1,server2]}]}]}.
In this case the ct_hooks statement in the test suite can look
as follows:
suite() -> [{ct_hooks, [{cth_conn_log, []}]}].
Data Types
connection() = handle() | {target_name(), connection_type()} | target_name()For target_name(), see module
ct.
connection_type() = telnet | ts1 | ts2handle() = handle()Handle for a specific Telnet connection, see module
ct.
prompt_regexp() = string()Regular expression matching all possible prompts for a specific
target type. regexp must not have any groups, that is, when
matching, re:run/3 (in STDLIB) must return a list with
one single element.
Functions
Connection = connection()Reason = term()
Closes the Telnet connection and stops the process managing it.
A connection can be associated with a target name and/or a handle.
If Connection has no associated target name, it can only
be closed with the handle value (see
ct_telnet:open/4).
Equivalent to
ct_telnet:cmd(Connection, Cmd,
[]).
Connection = connection()Cmd = string()Opts = [Opt]Opt = {timeout, timeout()} | {newline, boolean() | string()}Data = [string()]Reason = term()
Sends a command through Telnet and waits for prompt.
By default, this function adds "\n" to the end of the
specified command. If this is not desired, use option
{newline,false}. This is necessary, for example, when
sending Telnet command sequences prefixed with character
Interpret As Command (IAC). Option {newline,string()}
can also be used if a different line end than "\n" is
required, for instance {newline,"\r\n"}, to add both
carriage return and newline characters.
Option timeout specifies how long the client must wait
for prompt. If the time expires, the function returns
{error,timeout}. For information about the default value
for the command timeout, see the
list of default values
in the beginning of this module.
Equivalent to
ct_telnet:cmdf(Connection, CmdFormat,
Args, []).
Connection = connection()CmdFormat = string()Args = list()Opts = [Opt]Opt = {timeout, timeout()} | {newline, boolean() | string()}Data = [string()]Reason = term()
Sends a Telnet command and waits for prompt (uses a format string and a list of arguments to build the command).
For details, see
ct_telnet:cmd/3.
Equivalent to
ct_telnet:expect(Connections,
Patterns, []).
Connection = connection()Patterns = Pattern | [Pattern]Pattern = string() | {Tag, string()} | prompt | {prompt, Prompt}Prompt = string()Tag = term()Opts = [Opt]Opt = {idle_timeout, IdleTimeout} | {total_timeout, TotalTimeout} | repeat | {repeat, N} | sequence | {halt, HaltPatterns} | ignore_prompt | no_prompt_check | wait_for_prompt | {wait_for_prompt, Prompt}IdleTimeout = infinity | integer()TotalTimeout = infinity | integer()N = integer()HaltPatterns = PatternsMatchList = [Match]Match = RxMatch | {Tag, RxMatch} | {prompt, Prompt}RxMatch = [string()]HaltReason = done | MatchReason = timeout | {prompt, Prompt}
Gets data from Telnet and waits for the expected pattern.
Pattern can be a POSIX regular expression. The function
returns when a pattern is successfully matched (at least one, in
the case of multiple patterns).
RxMatch is a list of matched strings. It looks as
follows [FullMatch, SubMatch1, SubMatch2, ...], where
FullMatch is the string matched by the whole regular
expression, and SubMatchN is the string that matched
subexpression number N. Subexpressions are denoted with
'(' ')' in the regular expression.
If a Tag is specified, the returned Match also
includes the matched Tag. Otherwise, only RxMatch
is returned.
Options:
idle_timeoutIndicates that the function must return if the Telnet
client is idle (that is, if no data is received) for more than
IdleTimeout milliseconds. Default time-out is 10
seconds.
total_timeoutSets a time limit for the complete expect operation.
After TotalTimeout milliseconds, {error,timeout}
is returned. Default is infinity (that is, no time
limit).
ignore_prompt | no_prompt_check>The function returns when a prompt is received, even if
no pattern has yet been matched, and
{error,{prompt,Prompt}} is returned. However, this
behavior can be modified with option ignore_prompt or
option no_prompt_check, which tells expect to
return only when a match is found or after a time-out.
ignore_promptct_telnet ignores any prompt found. This option is
useful if data sent by the server can include a pattern
matching prompt regexp (as returned by
TargedMod:get_prompt_regexp/0), but is not to not cause
the function to return.
no_prompt_checkct_telnet does not search for a prompt at all. This
is useful if, for example, Pattern itself matches the
prompt.
wait_for_promptForces ct_telnet to wait until the prompt string
is received before returning (even if a pattern has already been
matched). This is equal to calling
expect(Conn, Patterns++[{prompt,Prompt}], [sequence|Opts]).
Notice that option idle_timeout and total_timeout
can abort the operation of waiting for prompt.
repeat | repeat, NThe pattern(s) must be matched multiple times. If N
is specified, the pattern(s) are matched N times, and
the function returns HaltReason = done. This option can be
interrupted by one or more HaltPatterns. MatchList
is always returned, that is, a list of Match instead of
only one Match. Also HaltReason is returned.
sequenceAll patterns must be matched in a sequence. A match is not
concluded until all patterns are matched. This option can be
interrupted by one or more HaltPatterns. MatchList
is always returned, that is, a list of Match instead of
only one Match. Also HaltReason is returned.
Example 1:
expect(Connection,[{abc,"ABC"},{xyz,"XYZ"}],[sequence,{halt,[{nnn,"NNN"}]}])
First this tries to match "ABC", and then "XYZ", but
if "NNN" appears, the function returns
{error,{nnn,["NNN"]}}. If both "ABC" and "XYZ"
are matched, the function returns {ok,[AbcMatch,XyzMatch]}.
Example 2:
expect(Connection,[{abc,"ABC"},{xyz,"XYZ"}],[{repeat,2},{halt,[{nnn,"NNN"}]}])
This tries to match "ABC" or "XYZ" twice. If
"NNN" appears, the function returns
HaltReason = {nnn,["NNN"]}.
Options repeat and sequence can be combined to
match a sequence multiple times.
Connection = connection()Data = [string()]Reason = term()
Gets all data received by the Telnet client since the last command was sent. Only newline-terminated strings are returned. If the last received string has not yet been terminated, the connection can be polled automatically until the string is complete.
The polling feature is controlled by the configuration values
poll_limit and poll_interval and is by default
disabled. This means that the function immediately returns all
complete strings received and saves a remaining non-terminated
string for a later get_data call.
Equivalent to
ct_telnet:open(Name,
telnet).
Name = target_name()ConnType = connection_type()Handle = handle()Reason = term()
Opens a Telnet connection to the specified target host.
Equivalent to
ct_telnet:ct_telnet:open(KeyOrName,
ConnType, TargetMod, []).
KeyOrName = Key | NameKey = atom()Name = target_name()ConnType = connection_type()TargetMod = atom()Extra = term()Handle = handle()Reason = term()
Opens a Telnet connection to the specified target host.
The target data must exist in a configuration file. The connection
can be associated with Name and/or the returned Handle.
To allocate a name for the target, use one of the following
alternatives:
ct:require/2in a test caseA
requirestatement in the suite information function (suite/0)A
requirestatement in a test case information function
If you want the connection to be associated with Handle only
(if you, for example, need to open multiple connections to a host),
use Key, the configuration variable name, to specify the
target. Notice that a connection without an associated target name
can only be closed with the Handle value.
TargetMod is a module that exports the functions
connect(Ip, Port, KeepAlive, Extra) and
get_prompt_regexp() for the specified TargetType
(for example, unix_telnet).
For target_name(), see module
ct.
See also
ct:require/2.
Equivalent to
ct_telnet:send(Connection, Cmd,
[]).
Connection = connection()Cmd = string()Opts = [Opt]Opt = {newline, boolean() | string()}Reason = term()
Sends a Telnet command and returns immediately.
By default, this function adds "\n" to the end of the
specified command. If this is not desired, option
{newline,false} can be used. This is necessary, for example,
when sending Telnet command sequences prefixed with character
Interpret As Command (IAC). Option {newline,string()}
can also be used if a different line end than "\n" is
required, for instance {newline,"\r\n"}, to add both
carriage return and newline characters.
The resulting output from the command can be read with
ct_telnet:get_data/2 or
ct_telnet:expect/2,3.
Equivalent to
ct_telnet:sendf(Connection, CmdFormat,
Args, []).
Connection = connection()CmdFormat = string()Args = list()Opts = [Opt]Opt = {newline, boolean() | string()}Reason = term()
Sends a Telnet command and returns immediately (uses a format string and a list of arguments to build the command).
For details, see
ct_telnet:send/3.