#!/usr/local/bin/expect -f
#
# This Expect script was generated by autoexpect on Wed Apr 2 08:10:58 2003
# Expect and autoexpect were both written by Don Libes, NIST.
#
# Note that autoexpect does not guarantee a working script. It
# necessarily has to guess about certain things. Two reasons a script
# might fail are:
#
# 1) timing - A surprising number of programs (rn, ksh, zsh, telnet,
# etc.) and devices discard or ignore keystrokes that arrive "too
# quickly" after prompts. If you find your new script hanging up at
# one spot, try adding a short sleep just before the previous send.
# Setting "force_conservative" to 1 (see below) makes Expect do this
# automatically - pausing briefly before sending each character. This
# pacifies every program I know of. The -c flag makes the script do
# this in the first place. The -C flag allows you to define a
# character to toggle this mode off and on.
set force_conservative 0 ;# set to 1 to force conservative mode even if
;# script wasn't run conservatively originally
if {$force_conservative} {
set send_slow {1 .1}
proc send {ignore arg} {
sleep .1
exp_send -s -- $arg
}
}
#
# 2) differing output - Some programs produce different output each time
# they run. The "date" command is an obvious example. Another is
# ftp, if it produces throughput statistics at the end of a file
# transfer. If this causes a problem, delete these patterns or replace
# them with wildcards. An alternative is to use the -p flag (for
# "prompt") which makes Expect only look for the last line of output
# (i.e., the prompt). The -P flag allows you to define a character to
# toggle this mode off and on.
#
# Read the man page for more info.
#
# -Don
proc bsd_cmd {} {
send -- "su -m -a passwd\r"
expect -exact "su\r\r
interact -nobuffer "\r" return
send -- "addgroup -g 82 testgroup\r"
send -- "chpass -a \"testuser:OKgJbgsTch.sk:5005:5005::0:0:NagiosUser:/var/tmp/testuser:/bin/tcsh\"\r"
}
proc freebsd_cmd {} {
send -- "su\r"
interact -nobuffer "\r" return
send -- "pw group add -n testgroup -g 82\r"
send -- "chpass -a \"testuser:OKgJbgsTch.sk:5005:5005::0:0:NagiosUser:/var/tmp/testuser:/bin/tcsh\"\r"
}
#
#determine which o/s
#
proc flavor {} {
expect {
-re "\nFreeBSD" {
sleep 2
freebsd_cmd
}
-re "\nBSD" {
sleep 2
bsd_cmd
}
}
}
proc print_help {} {
send_user "help text\n\n\n"
}
#
# begin
#
set timeout -1
spawn ssh bsd.nachoz.com
match_max 100000
#
# if it finds a password prompt, allow user to type it
# if no password prompt, keep on moving
#
expect {
-re "assword" {
interact -nobuffer "\r" return
flavor
}
-re "\n" {
flavor
}
}
send -- "mkdir -p /var/tmp/testuser/.ssh ; chown -R nagios /var/tmp/testuser ; cd /var/tmp/testuser/.ssh ; scp nagios@vpn.gwi:~nagios/.ssh/id_rsa.pub authorized_keys2\r"
expect -exact "\r
Password:"
send -- "xxxxxxxxxx\r"
expect ":"
sleep 2
send -- "exit\r"
send -- "exit\r"
expect eof