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Python Network Programming Techniques

You're reading from   Python Network Programming Techniques 50 real-world recipes to automate infrastructure networks and overcome networking challenges with Python

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Product type Paperback
Published in Oct 2021
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781838646639
Length 340 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Marcel Neidinger Marcel Neidinger
Author Profile Icon Marcel Neidinger
Marcel Neidinger
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Table of Contents (14) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Chapter 1: A Primer on Python 3 2. Chapter 2: Connecting to Network Devices via SSH Using Paramiko FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 3: Building Configuration Templates Using Jinja2 4. Chapter 4: Configuring Network Devices Using Netmiko 5. Chapter 5: Model-Driven Programmability with NETCONF and ncclient 6. Chapter 6: Automating Complex Multi-Vendor Networks with NAPALM 7. Chapter 7: Automating Your Network Tests and Deployments with pyATS and Genie 8. Chapter 8: Configuring Devices Using RESTCONF and requests 9. Chapter 9: Consuming Controllers and High-Level Networking APIs with requests 10. Chapter 10: Incorporating your Python Scripts into an Existing Workflow by Writing Custom Ansible Modules 11. Chapter 11: Automating AWS Cloud Networking Infrastructure Using the AWS Python SDK 12. Chapter 12: Automating your Network Security Using Python and the Firepower APIs 13. Other Books You May Enjoy

Executing a command via SSH

With our connection now open, we can go ahead and execute a command on our remote device. Similar to the way we deal with issuing commands on a remote device by hand, we have three different streams that come back to us: the standard out (or stdout), which is the normal output, the standard error (or stderr), which is the default stream for the system to return errors on, and the standard in (or stdin), which is the stream used to send text back into the executed command. This can be useful if, in your workflow, you would normally interact with the command line.

In this recipe, you will see how to programmatically open an SSH connection and then send a command of your choice to the device.

Getting ready

Open your code editor and start by creating a file called command.py. Next, navigate your terminal to the same directory that you just created the command.py file in.

How to do it...

Let's start by importing the Paramiko library and create a client object as seen in the last recipe. We'll then execute a single command of your choice on this device:

  1. Import the Paramiko library:
    from paramiko.client import SSHClient
  2. Specify the host, username, and password. You can name these variables however you like. In the Python community, it has become a standard to uppercase these global variables:
    SSH_USER = "<Insert your ssh user here>"
    SSH_PASSWORD = "<Insert your ssh password here>"
    SSH_HOST = "<Insert the IP/host of your device/server here>"
    SSH_PORT = 22 # Change this if your SSH port is different
  3. Create an SSHClient object, which we just imported from Paramiko:
    client = SSHClient()
  4. While we have created our client object, we have not yet connected to the device. We will use the connect method of the client object to do so. Before actually connecting, we will need to make sure that our client knows the host keys:
    client.load_system_host_keys()
    client.connect(SSH_HOST, port=SSH_PORT,
                             username=SSH_USER,
                             password=SSH_PASSWORD)
  5. Finally, we can use the client to execute a command. Executing a command will return three different file-like objects to us representing stdin, stdout, and stderr:
    CMD = "show ip interface brief" # You can issue any command you want
    stdin, stdout, stderr = client.exec_command(CMD)
    client.close()
  6. To run this script, go to your terminal and execute it with this:
    python3 command.py

How it works...

In this example, we first created a new client as seen in the previous example. We then used the exec_command() method to execute a command of our choice.

The function returns three different file-like objects for the three different streams: stdin, stdout, and stderr. In the next recipe, Reading the output of an executed command, we will use this to read back the output that was provided when executing a command.

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Python Network Programming Techniques
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Python Network Programming Techniques
Published in: Oct 2021
Publisher: Packt
ISBN-13: 9781838646639
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