Tricks of the trade when using Expect
This is how you send ctrl+C through expect: send \003
Because of the potential for name conflicts in the global namespace, [send] command is also available as [exp_send], a longer name which is less likely to conflict with other package commands. Likewise, various other Expect commands are also available via longer names.
When working with an extended Tcl, such as Tk, it's often necessary to use the longer names, since, for example, Tk has its own send command
If Expect had been written for ten-year-old Tcl, rather than being the first extension ever discovered, it of course would rely on namespaces to avoid name conflicts."
D. J. Hagberg rightly writes, "Here's the BIG RULE for Expect: Every exp_spawn requires a call to exp_close *and* exp_wait."
RJ 2007-06-21: Yeah, I don't know. I've only ever ran across a single issue that required an exp_close/exp_wait to deal with it. That was a script that was testing how many processes I could spawn before running into memory problems on a Solaris station. I ran out of ptys first, and that hung the Xserver and dumped a huge core file. But I've never needed to close/wait - the script exits and the processes go away, unless you loop a spawn command too many times. I've never seen that in a real-use script, aside from multixterm.
When programmatic access to some facility is available, it is often preferable to driving a command-line program with Expect:
[http]: from [tcllib]
Note: FTP sends passwords in clear text, so be sure to firt build a secure tunnel and use FTP over that. See CL's notes on FTP automation . Likewise, make sure not to send e-mail passwords as plain text, either.
CL: recently mentioned on comp.lang.tcl that expect has a $HOME/.expectrc file that can be used to predefine procs, variables, etc. that one uses regularly.
$TERM must be set correctly in the environment. In one case the terminal was [screen] , but $TERM was set to xterm, causing unexpected results. Setting it to screen solved the problem.
To turn on messages from Expect that help explain what it is doing:
exp_internal 1
[CL needs to explain inband_ftp, Expect philosophy, and vivid cat-based example. Also, how to handle sensitive information (passwords) embedded in plain-text Expect scripts.] <=== RJ 2004-08-08: To whomever authored this request, see Secure expect.
CL's personal view: Expect's old. Expect disappoints and frustrates some newcomers, because it's done well in the style of 1992-1994. With PHP, for example, if you have a question or a need for explanation, you're likely to find http://www.php.net/ rewarding. That's not how Expect is managed, at least not now (mid-2002). Expect's high-level aim is that, "It's in The Book" accurately answers all questions. The book is really quite marvelous as both introduction and reference--but its style might strike some readers as archaic and inaccessible, at least until they shift to accept the approach that was the best in computing about a decade ago.
Ro 2004-05-30: This is is really very interesting Cameron. I just got a copy of the Expect book by my dear old dad, and I'm about to start it. What is this 'older approach'?
There are things that Expect can do that few other things can. I'm using it to jump off Cisco boxes and grab config, stuff like that. I have to agree to a point about the outdated writing style. It's almost easier to learn myself through trial and error, than to understand and help guides.