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Connpy is a SSH/Telnet connection manager and automation module

Project description

Conn

Connpy is a ssh and telnet connection manager and automation module

Installation

pip install connpy

Automation module usage

Standalone module

import connpy
router = connpy.node("uniqueName","ip/host", user="username", password="password")
router.run(["term len 0","show run"])
print(router.output)
hasip = router.test("show ip int brief","1.1.1.1")
if hasip:
    print("Router has ip 1.1.1.1")
else:
    print("router does not have ip 1.1.1.1")

Using manager configuration

import connpy
conf = connpy.configfile()
device = conf.getitem("router@office")
router = connpy.node("unique name", **device, config=conf)
result = router.run("show ip int brief")
print(result)

Running parallel tasks on multiple devices

import connpy
conf = connpy.configfile()
#You can get the nodes from the config from a folder and fitlering in it
nodes = conf.getitem("@office", ["router1", "router2", "router3"])
#You can also get each node individually:
nodes = {}
nodes["router1"] = conf.getitem("router1@office")
nodes["router2"] = conf.getitem("router2@office")
nodes["router10"] = conf.getitem("router10@datacenter")
#Also, you can create the nodes manually:
nodes = {}
nodes["router1"] = {"host": "1.1.1.1", "user": "user", "password": "password1"}
nodes["router2"] = {"host": "1.1.1.2", "user": "user", "password": "password2"}
nodes["router3"] = {"host": "1.1.1.2", "user": "user", "password": "password3"}
#Finally you run some tasks on the nodes
mynodes = connpy.nodes(nodes, config = conf)
result = mynodes.test(["show ip int br"], "1.1.1.2")
for i in result:
    print("---" + i + "---")
    print(result[i])
    print()
# Or for one specific node
mynodes.router1.run(["term len 0". "show run"], folder = "/home/user/logs")

Using variables

import connpy
config = connpy.configfile()
nodes = config.getitem("@office", ["router1", "router2", "router3"])
commands = []
commands.append("config t")
commands.append("interface lo {id}")
commands.append("ip add {ip} {mask}")
commands.append("end")
variables = {}
variables["router1@office"] = {"ip": "10.57.57.1"}
variables["router2@office"] = {"ip": "10.57.57.2"}
variables["router3@office"] = {"ip": "10.57.57.3"}
variables["__global__"] = {"id": "57"}
variables["__global__"]["mask"] =  "255.255.255.255"
expected = "!"
routers = connpy.nodes(nodes, config = config)
routers.run(commands, variables)
routers.test("ping {ip}", expected, variables)
for key in routers.result:
    print(key, ' ---> ', ("pass" if routers.result[key] else "fail"))

Using AI

import connpy
conf = connpy.configfile()
organization = 'openai-org'
api_key = "openai-key"
myia = ai(conf, organization, api_key)
input = "go to router 1 and get me the full configuration"
result = myia.ask(input, dryrun = False)
print(result)

Connection manager

Features

- You can generate profiles and reference them from nodes using @profilename so you dont
  need to edit multiple nodes when changing password or other information.
- Nodes can be stored on @folder or @subfolder@folder to organize your devices. Then can 
  be referenced using node@subfolder@folder or node@folder
- If you have too many nodes. Get completion script using: conn config --completion.
  Or use fzf installing pyfzf and running conn config --fzf true
- Much more!

Usage:

usage: conn [-h] [--add | --del | --mod | --show | --debug] [node|folder] [--sftp]
       conn {profile,move,copy,list,bulk,export,import,run,config,api,ai} ...

positional arguments:
  node|folder    node[@subfolder][@folder]
                 Connect to specific node or show all matching nodes
                 [@subfolder][@folder]
                 Show all available connections globaly or in specified path

Options:

  -h, --help         show this help message and exit
  -v, --version      Show version
  -a, --add          Add new node[@subfolder][@folder] or [@subfolder]@folder
  -r, --del, --rm    Delete node[@subfolder][@folder] or [@subfolder]@folder
  -e, --mod, --edit  Modify node[@subfolder][@folder]
  -s, --show         Show node[@subfolder][@folder]
  -d, --debug        Display all conections steps
  -t, --sftp         Connects using sftp instead of ssh

Commands:

  profile        Manage profiles
  move (mv)      Move node
  copy (cp)      Copy node
  list (ls)      List profiles, nodes or folders
  bulk           Add nodes in bulk
  export         Export connection folder to Yaml file
  import         Import connection folder to config from Yaml file
  run            Run scripts or commands on nodes
  config         Manage app config
  api            Start and stop connpy api
  ai             Make request to an AI

Manage profiles:

usage: conn profile [-h] (--add | --del | --mod | --show) profile

positional arguments:
  profile        Name of profile to manage

options:
  -h, --help         show this help message and exit
  -a, --add          Add new profile
  -r, --del, --rm    Delete profile
  -e, --mod, --edit  Modify profile
  -s, --show         Show profile

Examples:

   conn profile --add office-user
   conn --add @office
   conn --add @datacenter@office
   conn --add server@datacenter@office
   conn --add pc@office
   conn --show server@datacenter@office
   conn pc@office
   conn server

http API

With the Connpy API you can run commands on devices using http requests

1. List Nodes

Endpoint: /list_nodes

Method: POST

Description: This route returns a list of nodes. It can also filter the list based on a given keyword.

Request Body:

{
  "filter": "<keyword>"
}
  • filter (optional): A keyword to filter the list of nodes. It returns only the nodes that contain the keyword. If not provided, the route will return the entire list of nodes.

Response:

  • A JSON array containing the filtered list of nodes.

2. Get Nodes

Endpoint: /get_nodes

Method: POST

Description: This route returns a dictionary of nodes with all their attributes. It can also filter the nodes based on a given keyword.

Request Body:

{
  "filter": "<keyword>"
}
  • filter (optional): A keyword to filter the nodes. It returns only the nodes that contain the keyword. If not provided, the route will return the entire list of nodes.

Response:

  • A JSON array containing the filtered nodes.

3. Run Commands

Endpoint: /run_commands

Method: POST

Description: This route runs commands on selected nodes based on the provided action, nodes, and commands. It also supports executing tests by providing expected results.

Request Body:

{
  "action": "<action>",
  "nodes": "<nodes>",
  "commands": "<commands>",
  "expected": "<expected>",
  "options": "<options>"
}
  • action (required): The action to be performed. Possible values: run or test.
  • nodes (required): A list of nodes or a single node on which the commands will be executed. The nodes can be specified as individual node names or a node group with the @ prefix. Node groups can also be specified as arrays with a list of nodes inside the group.
  • commands (required): A list of commands to be executed on the specified nodes.
  • expected (optional, only used when the action is test): A single expected result for the test.
  • options (optional): Array to pass options to the run command, options are: prompt, parallel, timeout

Response:

  • A JSON object with the results of the executed commands on the nodes.

4. Ask AI

Endpoint: /ask_ai

Method: POST

Description: This route sends to chatgpt IA a request that will parse it into an understandable output for the application and then run the request.

Request Body:

{
  "input": "<user input request>",
  "dryrun": true or false
}
  • input (required): The user input requesting the AI to perform an action on some devices or get the devices list.
  • dryrun (optional): If set to true, it will return the parameters to run the request but it won't run it. default is false.

Response:

  • A JSON array containing the action to run and the parameters and the result of the action.

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