So I'm trying this really simple example given by the python docs:
import getpass
import sys
import telnetlib
HOST = "<HOST_IP>"
user = raw_input("Enter your remote account: ")
password = getpass.getpass()
tn = telnetlib.Telnet(HOST)
tn.read_until("login: ")
tn.write(user + "\n")
if password:
tn.read_until("Password: ")
tn.write(password + "\n")
tn.write("ls\n")
tn.write("exit\n")
print tn.read_all()
My issue is that it hangs at the end of the read_all()... It doesn't print anything out. I've never used this module before so I'm trying to get this really basic example to work before continuing. BTW, I'm using python 2.4 Thank you.
If you're using Windows, be sure to add carriage return (
\r
) before the new line character:use python 2.7 or use a higher version with"(" ,")" at last line
I know this is late to post but may help others. I also struggled to get this right but here is my piece of code. My telnet would follow certain flow like it would ask for
loginID
and thenPassword
and then you have to wait for a particular string to be displayed here,which for my case was"DB>"
then you can proceed with the command and all. My output would be saved in"out"
varibleFor more variations and help, Check the website nullege
I don't have a telnet server to test against, but I think the issue is that you are not reading server responses up to the prompt, after each command you write.
btw, telnetnetlib can be tricky and things varies depending on your FTP server and environment setup. you might be better off looking into something like pexpect to automate login and user interaction over telnet.
Okay, I found a solution. Before I entered ls and exit, I needed to first specify the terminal type. Adding
before the "ls" fixed the problem for me.
I struggled for a while trying to write to a SynAccess power strip. This is how I did it: