Expectrl is a tool for automating terminal applications.
Expectrl is a rust module for spawning child applications and controlling them and responding to expected patterns in process's output. Expectrl works like Don Libes' Expect. Expectrl allows your script to spawn a child application and control it as if a human were typing commands.
Using the library you can:
- Spawn process
- Control process
- Interact with process's IO(input/output).
expectrl
like original expect
may shine when you're working with interactive applications.
If your application is not interactive you may not find the library the best choise.
Add expectrl
to your Cargo.toml.
# Cargo.toml
[dependencies]
expectrl = "0.7"
An example where the program simulates a used interacting with ftp
.
use expectrl::{Regex, Eof, Error, Expect};
fn main() -> Result<(), Error> {
let mut p = expectrl::spawn("ftp speedtest.tele2.net")?;
p.expect(Regex("Name \\(.*\\):"))?;
p.send_line("anonymous")?;
p.expect("Password")?;
p.send_line("test")?;
p.expect("ftp>")?;
p.send_line("cd upload")?;
p.expect("successfully changed.\r\nftp>")?;
p.send_line("pwd")?;
p.expect(Regex("[0-9]+ \"/upload\""))?;
p.send_line("exit")?;
p.expect(Eof)?;
Ok(())
}
The same example but the password will be read from stdin.
use std::io::stdout;
use expectrl::{
interact::{actions::lookup::Lookup, InteractSession},
stream::stdin::Stdin,
ControlCode, Error, Expect, Regex,
};
fn main() -> Result<(), Error> {
let mut p = expectrl::spawn("ftp bks4-speedtest-1.tele2.net")?;
let mut auth = false;
let mut login_lookup = Lookup::new();
let mut stdin = Stdin::open()?;
InteractSession::new(&mut p, &mut stdin, stdout(), &mut auth)
.set_output_action(move |ctx| {
if login_lookup
.on(ctx.buf, ctx.eof, "Login successful")?
.is_some()
{
**ctx.state = true;
return Ok(true);
}
Ok(false)
})
.spawn()?;
stdin.close()?;
if !auth {
println!("An authefication was not passed");
return Ok(());
}
p.expect("ftp>")?;
p.send_line("cd upload")?;
p.expect("successfully changed.")?;
p.send_line("pwd")?;
p.expect(Regex("[0-9]+ \"/upload\""))?;
p.send(ControlCode::EndOfTransmission)?;
p.expect("Goodbye.")?;
Ok(())
}
- It has an
async
support (To enable them you must turn on anasync
feature). - It supports logging.
- It supports interact function.
- It works on windows.
It was originally inspired by philippkeller/rexpect and pexpect.
Licensed under MIT License