/usr/share/doc/libexpect-perl/examples/5.A.top is in libexpect-perl 1.21-1.
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1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 | #!/usr/bin/perl
# Here we are doing this again only this time we'll do it
#without Echoing the password.
$RSH='/usr/bin/ssh';
$host_to_login_to=shift(@ARGV);
use Expect;
print "Enter password: ";
# First we have to initialize STDIN in to an expect object.
$stdin=Expect->exp_init(\*STDIN);
# Now turn off echoing
$stdin->exp_stty('-echo');
# The easy way to do this is:
#$password=<STDIN>;
#chop $password;
# The somewhat harder way is to use $stdin->expect. This would look like:
#
($match_num,$error,$match,$before,$after)=$stdin->expect(undef,"\r");
$password = $before;
# Turn echo back on
$stdin->exp_stty('echo');
# print that newline that wasn't echoed
print "\n";
$rsh=Expect->spawn($RSH,$host_to_login_to);
# Look for a password prompt.
$rsh->expect(30,'-re','word:\s$')||(die"Never got password prompt\n");
print $rsh "$password\r";
# Look for a prompt. Prompt can be # $ > or ] followed by a whitespace.
$prompt = '[\]\$\>\#]\s$';
# Note the use of -re
$rsh->expect(30,'-re',$prompt)||(die "Never got prompt on host\n");
# Start top
print $rsh "exec top\r";
# OK, now return control to user.
$rsh->interact();
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