expect – Executes a command and responds to prompts.

New in version 2.0.

Synopsis

  • The expect module executes a command and responds to prompts.
  • The given command will be executed on all selected nodes. It will not be processed through the shell, so variables like $HOME and operations like "<", ">", "|", and "&" will not work.

Requirements

The below requirements are needed on the host that executes this module.

  • python >= 2.6
  • pexpect >= 3.3

Parameters

Parameter Choices/Defaults Comments
chdir
-
Change into this directory before running the command.
command
- / required
The command module takes command to run.
creates
-
A filename, when it already exists, this step will not be run.
echo
-
Default:
"no"
Whether or not to echo out your response strings.
removes
-
A filename, when it does not exist, this step will not be run.
responses
- / required
Mapping of expected string/regex and string to respond with. If the response is a list, successive matches return successive responses. List functionality is new in 2.1.
timeout
-
Default:
30
Amount of time in seconds to wait for the expected strings. Use null to disable timeout.

Notes

Note

  • If you want to run a command through the shell (say you are using <, >, |, etc), you must specify a shell in the command such as /bin/bash -c "/path/to/something | grep else".
  • The question, or key, under responses is a python regex match. Case insensitive searches are indicated with a prefix of ?i.
  • By default, if a question is encountered multiple times, its string response will be repeated. If you need different responses for successive question matches, instead of a string response, use a list of strings as the response. The list functionality is new in 2.1.
  • The expect module is designed for simple scenarios. For more complex needs, consider the use of expect code with the shell or script modules. (An example is part of the shell module documentation)

Examples

- name: Case insensitive password string match
  expect:
    command: passwd username
    responses:
      (?i)password: "MySekretPa$$word"
  # you don't want to show passwords in your logs
  no_log: true

- name: Generic question with multiple different responses
  expect:
    command: /path/to/custom/command
    responses:
      Question:
        - response1
        - response2
        - response3

Status

Authors

  • Matt Martz (@sivel)

Hint

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