NAME
IPC::Open3::Callback::Command - A utility class that provides subroutines for building shell command strings.
VERSION
version 1.15
SYNOPSIS
use IPC::Open3::Callback::Command qw(command batch_command mkdir_command pipe_command rm_command sed_command);
my $command = command( 'echo' ); # echo
# ssh foo "echo"
$command = command( 'echo', command_options( hostname=>'foo' ) );
# ssh bar@foo "echo"
$command = command( 'echo', command_options( username=>'bar',hostname=>'foo' ) );
# plink -l bar foo "echo"
$command = command( 'echo', command_options( username=>'bar',hostname=>'foo',ssh=>'plink' ) );
# cd foo;cd bar
$command = batch_command( 'cd foo', 'cd bar' );
# ssh baz "cd foo;cd bar"
$command = batch_command( 'cd foo', 'cd bar', command_options( hostname=>'baz' ) );
# ssh baz "bash -c \"sudo cd foo;sudo cd bar\""
$command = batch_command( 'cd foo', 'cd bar', {subshell => 'bash -c' }, command_options( hostname=>'baz',sudo_username=>'' ) );
# ssh baz "mkdir -p \"foo\" \"bar\""
$command = mkdir_command( 'foo', 'bar', command_options( hostname=>'baz' ) );
# cat abc|ssh baz "dd of=def"
$command = pipe_command(
'cat abc',
command( 'dd of=def', command_options( hostname=>'baz' ) )
);
# ssh fred@baz "sudo -u joe rm -rf \"foo\" \"bar\""
$command = rm_command( 'foo', 'bar', command_options( username=>'fred',hostname=>'baz',sudo_username=>'joe' ) );
# sed -e 's/foo/bar/'
$command = sed_command( 's/foo/bar/' );
# curl http://www.google.com|sed -e \'s/google/gaggle/g\'|ssh fred@baz "sudo -u joe dd of=\"/tmp/gaggle.com\"";ssh fred@baz "sudo -u joe rm -rf \"/tmp/google.com\"";
my $command_options = command_options( username=>'fred',hostname=>'baz',sudo_username=>'joe' );
$command = batch_command(
pipe_command(
'curl http://www.google.com',
sed_command( {replace_map=>{google=>'gaggle'}} ),
command( 'dd of="/tmp/gaggle.com"', $command_options )
),
rm_command( '/tmp/google.com', $command_options )
);
DESCRIPTION
The subroutines exported by this module can build shell command strings that can be executed by IPC::Open3::Callback, IPC::Open3::Callback::CommandRunner, ``, system(), or even plain old open 1, 2, or 3. There is not much point to shelling out for commands locally as there is almost certainly a perl function/library capable of doing whatever you need in perl code. However, If you are designing a footprintless agent that will run commands on remote machines using existing tools (gnu/powershell/bash...) these utilities can be very helpful. All functions in this module can take a command_options
hash defining who/where/how to run the command.
OPTIONS
FUNCTIONS
batch_command( $command1, $command2, ..., $commandN, [\%batch_options], [$command_options] )
This will join all the commands with a ;
and apply the supplied command_options
to the result. The supported batch_options
are:
- subshell
-
The subshell to run the commands under, must end with
-c
. (ex:'bash -c'
)
command( $command, [$command_options] )
This wraps the supplied command with all the destination options. If no options are supplied, $command is returned.
command_options( %options )
Returns a command_options
object to be supplied to other commands. All commands can be supplied with command_options
. command_options
control who/where/how to run the command. The supported options are:
- ssh
-
The ssh command to use, defaults to
ssh
. You can use this to specify other commands likeplink
for windows or an implementation ofssh
that is not in your path. - sudo_username
-
Prefixes your command thusly:
sudo -u $sudo_username $command
. If combined with a remote hostname, thesudo
will be executed on the remote system. For example:ssh $hostname "sudo -u $sudo_user \"$command\""
. - username
-
The username to
ssh
with. If usingssh
, this will result in,ssh $username@$hostname
but if usingplink
it will result inplink -l $username $hostname
. - hostname
-
The hostname/IP of the server to run this command on. If localhost, and no username is specified, the command will not be wrapped in
ssh
cp_command( $source_path, [$source_command_options], $destination_path, [$destination_command_options], %cp_options )
This generates a command for copying files or directories from a source to a destination. Both source and destination have optional command_options
, and the cp_command
itself has the following options:
- archive
-
If specified and set to 'zip', then zip will be used to archive the source before sending it to the destination. Otherwise, tar will be used. Note, that if
file => 1
then this is ignored. - compress
-
If supplied and true, then the source data will be compressed before sending to the destination where it will be uncompressed before writing out. Note, that if you use
archive => 'zip'
then this is ignored as zip implies compression. - file
-
If supplied and true, then this is a file copy, otherwise it is a directory copy.
- status
-
If supplied, a status indicator will be printed to STDERR. This option uses the unix
pv
command which is typically not installed by default. Also, this option only works witharchive
set to tar (the default), andfile
set to false (the default).
mkdir_command( $path1, $path2, ..., $pathN, [$command_options] )
Results in mkdir -p $path1 $path2 ... $pathN
with the command_options
applied.
pipe_command( $command1, $command2, ..., $commandN, [$command_options] )
Identical to batch_command except uses \|
to separate the commands instead of ;
.
rm_command( $path1, $path2, ..., $pathN, [$command_options] )
Results in rm -rf $path1 $path2 ... $pathN
with the command_options
applied. This is a VERY dangerous command and should be used with care.
sed_command( $expression1, $expression2, ..., $expressionN, [$command_options] )
Constructs a sed command
- files
-
An arrayref of files to apply the sed expressions to. For use when not piping from another command.
- in_place
-
If specified, the
-i
option will be supplied tosed
thus modifying the file argument in place. Not useful for piping commands together, but can be useful if you copy a file to a temp directory, modify it in place, then transfer the file and delete the temp directory. It would be more secure to follow this approach when using sed to fill in passwords in config files. For example, if you wanted to use sed substitions to set passwords in a config file template and then transfer that config file to a remote server:/my/config/passwords.cfg
app1.username=foo app1.password=##APP1_PASSWORD## app2.username=bar app2.password=##APP2_PASSWORD##
deploy_passwords.pl
use IPC::Open3::Callback::Command qw(batch_command command pipe_command sed_command); use IPC::Open3::Callback::CommandRunner; use File::Temp; my $temp_dir = File::Temp->newdir(); my $temp_script_file = File::Temp->new(); IPC::Open3::Callback::CommandRunner->new()->run_or_die( batch_command( "cp /my/config/passwords.cfg $temp_dir->filename()/passwords.cfg", sed_command( "s/##APP1_PASSWORD##/set4app1/g", "s/##APP2_PASSWORD##/set4app2/g", { in_place=>1, temp_script_file=>$temp_script_file, files=>[$temp_dir->filename()/passwords.cfg] } ), pipe_command( "cat $temp_dir->filename()/passwords.cfg", command( "dd of='/remote/config/passwords.cfg'", {hostname=>'remote_host'} ) ); ) );
- replace_map
-
A map used to construct a sed expression where the key is the match portion and the value is the replace portion. For example:
{'key'=>'value'}
would result in's/key/value/g'
. - temp_script_file
-
Specifies a file to write the sed script to rather than using the console. This is useful for avoiding generating commands that would get executed in the console that have protected information like passwords. If passwords are issued on the console, they might show up in the command history...
write_command( $filename, @lines, [\%write_options], [$command_options])
Will write @lines
to $filename
. The supported write options are:
- mode
-
The file mode to set for
$filename
. - line_separator
-
The the separator to use between lines (default:
\n
).
AUTHORS
Lucas Theisen <lucastheisen@pastdev.com>
Alceu Rodrigues de Freitas Junior <arfreitas@cpan.org>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
This software is copyright (c) 2013 by Lucas Theisen.
This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.
SEE ALSO
Please see those modules/websites for more information related to this module.