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319 lines
8.6 KiB
Markdown
319 lines
8.6 KiB
Markdown
---
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category: tool
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tool: ShutIt
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contributors:
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- ["Ian Miell", "http://ian.meirionconsulting.tk"]
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filename: learnshutit.html
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---
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## ShutIt
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ShutIt is an shell automation framework designed to be easy to use.
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It is a wrapper around a Python-based expect clone (pexpect).
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You can look at it as 'expect without the pain'.
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It is available as a pip install.
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## Hello World
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Starting with the simplest example. Create a file called example.py:
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```python
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import shutit
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session = shutit.create_session('bash')
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session.send('echo Hello World', echo=True)
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```
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Running this with:
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```bash
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python example.py
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```
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outputs:
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```bash
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$ python example.py
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echo "Hello World"
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echo "Hello World"
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Hello World
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Ians-MacBook-Air.local:ORIGIN_ENV:RhuebR2T#
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```
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The first argument to 'send' is the command you want to run. The 'echo'
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argument outputs the terminal interactions. By default ShutIt is silent.
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'send' takes care of all the messing around with prompts and 'expects' that
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you might be familiar with from expect.
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## Log Into a Server
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Let's say you want to log into a server and run a command. Change example.py
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to:
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```python
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import shutit
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session = shutit.create_session('bash')
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session.login('ssh you@example.com', user='you', password='mypassword')
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session.send('hostname', echo=True)
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session.logout()
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```
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which will log you into your server (if you replace with your details) and
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output the hostname.
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```
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$ python example.py
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hostname
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hostname
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example.com
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example.com:cgoIsdVv:heDa77HB#
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```
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Obviously that's insecure! Instead you can run:
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```python
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import shutit
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session = shutit.create_session('bash')
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password = session.get_input('', ispass=True)
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session.login('ssh you@example.com', user='you', password=password)
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session.send('hostname', echo=True)
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session.logout()
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```
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which forces you to input the password:
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```
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$ python example.py
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Input Secret:
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hostname
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hostname
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example.com
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example.com:cgoIsdVv:heDa77HB#
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```
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Again, the 'login' method handles the changing prompt from a login. You give
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ShutIt the login command, the user you expect to log in as, and a password
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(if needed), and ShutIt takes care of the rest.
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'logout' handles the ending of a 'login', handling any changes to the prompt
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for you.
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## Log Into Multiple Servers
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Let's say you have a server farm of two servers, and want to log onto both.
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Just create two sessions and run similar login and send commands:
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```python
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import shutit
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session1 = shutit.create_session('bash')
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session2 = shutit.create_session('bash')
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password1 = session1.get_input('Password for server1', ispass=True)
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password2 = session2.get_input('Password for server2', ispass=True)
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session1.login('ssh you@one.example.com', user='you', password=password1)
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session2.login('ssh you@two.example.com', user='you', password=password2)
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session1.send('hostname', echo=True)
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session2.send('hostname', echo=True)
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session1.logout()
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session2.logout()
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```
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would output:
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```bash
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$ python example.py
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Password for server1
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Input Secret:
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Password for server2
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Input Secret:
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hostname
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hostname
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one.example.com
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one.example.com:Fnh2pyFj:qkrsmUNs# hostname
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hostname
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two.example.com
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two.example.com:Gl2lldEo:D3FavQjA#
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```
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## Example: Monitor Multiple Servers
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We can turn the above into a simple monitoring tool by adding some logic to
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examine the output of a command:
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```python
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import shutit
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capacity_command="""df / | awk '{print $5}' | tail -1 | sed s/[^0-9]//"""
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session1 = shutit.create_session('bash')
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session2 = shutit.create_session('bash')
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password1 = session.get_input('Password for server1', ispass=True)
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password2 = session.get_input('Password for server2', ispass=True)
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session1.login('ssh you@one.example.com', user='you', password=password1)
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session2.login('ssh you@two.example.com', user='you', password=password2)
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capacity = session1.send_and_get_output(capacity_command)
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if int(capacity) < 10:
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print('RUNNING OUT OF SPACE ON server1!')
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capacity = session2.send_and_get_output(capacity_command)
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if int(capacity) < 10:
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print('RUNNING OUT OF SPACE ON server2!')
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session1.logout()
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session2.logout()
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```
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Here you use the 'send\_and\_get\_output' method to retrieve the output of the
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capacity command (df).
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There are much more elegant ways to do the above (e.g. have a dictionary of the
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servers to iterate over), but it's up to you how clever you need the Python to
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be.
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## More Intricate IO - Expecting
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Let's say you have an interaction with an interactive command line application
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you want to automate. Here we will use telnet as a trivial example:
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```python
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import shutit
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session = shutit.create_session('bash')
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session.send('telnet', expect='elnet>', echo=True)
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session.send('open google.com 80', expect='scape character', echo=True)
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session.send('GET /', echo=True, check_exit=False)
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session.logout()
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```
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Note the 'expect' argument. You only need to give a subset of telnet's
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prompt to match and continue.
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Note also the 'check\_exit' argument in the above, which is new. We'll come back
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to that. The output of the above is:
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```bash
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$ python example.py
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telnet
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telnet> open google.com 80
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Trying 216.58.214.14...
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Connected to google.com.
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Escape character is '^]'.
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GET /
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HTTP/1.0 302 Found
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Cache-Control: private
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Content-Type: text/html; charset=UTF-8
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Referrer-Policy: no-referrer
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Location: http://www.google.co.uk/?gfe_rd=cr&ei=huczWcj3GfTW8gfq0paQDA
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Content-Length: 261
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Date: Sun, 04 Jun 2017 10:57:10 GMT
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<HTML><HEAD><meta http-equiv="content-type" content="text/html;charset=utf-8">
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<TITLE>302 Moved</TITLE></HEAD><BODY>
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<H1>302 Moved</H1>
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The document has moved
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<A HREF="http://www.google.co.uk/?gfe_rd=cr&ei=huczWcj3GfTW8gfq0paQDA">
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here
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</A>.
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</BODY></HTML>
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Connection closed by foreign host.
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```
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Now back to 'check\_exit=False'. Since the telnet command returns a failure exit
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code (1) and we don't want the script to fail, you set 'check\_exit=False' to
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let ShutIt know you don't care about the exit code.
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If you didn't pass that argument in, ShutIt gives you an interactive terminal
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if there is a terminal to communicate with. This is called a 'pause point'.
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## Pause Points
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You can trigger a 'pause point' at any point by calling
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```python
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[...]
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session.pause_point('This is a pause point')
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[...]
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```
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within your script, and then continue with the script by hitting CTRL and ']'
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at the same time. This is great for debugging: add a pause point, have a look
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around, then continue. Try this:
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```python
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import shutit
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session = shutit.create_session('bash')
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session.pause_point('Have a look around!')
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session.send('echo "Did you enjoy your pause point?"', echo=True)
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```
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with output like this:
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```bash
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$ python example.py
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Have a look around!
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Ians-Air.home:ORIGIN_ENV:I00LA1Mq# bash
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imiell@Ians-Air:/space/git/shutit ⑂ master +
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CTRL-] caught, continuing with run...
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2017-06-05 15:12:33,577 INFO: Sending: exit
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2017-06-05 15:12:33,633 INFO: Output (squashed): exitexitIans-Air.home:ORIGIN_ENV:I00LA1Mq# [...]
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echo "Did you enjoy your pause point?"
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echo "Did you enjoy your pause point?"
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Did you enjoy your pause point?
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Ians-Air.home:ORIGIN_ENV:I00LA1Mq#
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```
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## More Intricate IO - Backgrounding
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Returning to our 'monitoring multiple servers' example, let's imagine we
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have a long-running task that we want to run on each server. By default, ShutIt
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works serially which would take a long time. But we can run tasks in the
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background to speed things up.
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Here you can try an example with the trivial command: 'sleep 60'.
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```python
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import shutit
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import time
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long_command="""sleep 60"""
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session1 = shutit.create_session('bash')
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session2 = shutit.create_session('bash')
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password1 = session1.get_input('Password for server1', ispass=True)
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password2 = session2.get_input('Password for server2', ispass=True)
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session1.login('ssh you@one.example.com', user='you', password=password1)
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session2.login('ssh you@two.example.com', user='you', password=password2)
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start = time.time()
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session1.send(long_command, background=True)
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session2.send(long_command, background=True)
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print('That took: ' + str(time.time() - start) + ' seconds to fire')
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session1.wait()
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session2.wait()
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print('That took: ' + str(time.time() - start) + ' seconds to complete')
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```
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My laptop says it took 0.5 seconds to run fire those two commands, and then just
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over a minute to complete (using the 'wait' method).
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Again, this is trivial, but imagine you have hundreds of servers to manage like
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this and you can see the power it can bring in a few lines of code and one
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Python import.
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## Learn More
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There's a lot more that can be done with ShutIt.
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To learn more, see:
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[ShutIt](https://ianmiell.github.io/shutit/)
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[GitHub](https://github.com/ianmiell/shutit/blob/master/README.md)
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It's a broader automation framework, and the above is its 'standalone mode'.
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Feedback, feature requests, 'how do I?'s highly appreciated! Reach me at
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[@ianmiell](https://twitter.com/ianmiell)
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