Provided by: expect_5.45.4-3_amd64 bug

NAME

       expect - programmed dialogue with interactive programs, Version 5

SYNOPSIS

       expect [ -dDinN ] [ -c cmds ] [ [ -[f|b] ] cmdfile ] [ args ]

INTRODUCTION

       Expect  is  a  program  that  "talks" to other interactive programs according to a script.  Following the
       script, Expect knows what can be expected from a program and what the correct  response  should  be.   An
       interpreted  language  provides  branching  and high-level control structures to direct the dialogue.  In
       addition, the user can take control and interact directly when desired, afterward  returning  control  to
       the script.

       Expectk  is  a  mixture of Expect and Tk.  It behaves just like Expect and Tk's wish.  Expect can also be
       used directly in C or C++ (that is, without Tcl).  See libexpect(3).

       The name "Expect" comes from the idea of send/expect sequences popularized  by  uucp,  kermit  and  other
       modem control programs.  However unlike uucp, Expect is generalized so that it can be run as a user-level
       command  with  any  program  and  task in mind.  Expect can actually talk to several programs at the same
       time.

       For example, here are some things Expect can do:

              •   Cause your computer to dial you back, so that you can login without paying for the call.

              •   Start a game (e.g., rogue) and if the optimal configuration doesn't appear, restart it  (again
                  and again) until it does, then hand over control to you.

              •   Run  fsck,  and  in response to its questions, answer "yes", "no" or give control back to you,
                  based on predetermined criteria.

              •   Connect to another network or BBS (e.g., MCI Mail, CompuServe) and automatically retrieve your
                  mail so that it appears as if it was originally sent to your local system.

              •   Carry environment variables, current directory, or any  kind  of  information  across  rlogin,
                  telnet, tip, su, chgrp, etc.

       There  are  a  variety  of reasons why the shell cannot perform these tasks.  (Try, you'll see.)  All are
       possible with Expect.

       In general, Expect is useful for running any program which requires interaction between the  program  and
       the  user.   All that is necessary is that the interaction can be characterized programmatically.  Expect
       can also give the  user  back  control  (without  halting  the  program  being  controlled)  if  desired.
       Similarly, the user can return control to the script at any time.

USAGE

       Expect reads cmdfile for a list of commands to execute.  Expect may also be invoked implicitly on systems
       which support the #! notation by marking the script executable, and making the first line in your script:

           #!/usr/bin/expect -f

       Of course, the path must accurately describe where Expect lives.  /usr/bin is just an example.

       The  -c flag prefaces a command to be executed before any in the script.  The command should be quoted to
       prevent being broken up by the shell.  This option may be used multiple times.  Multiple commands may  be
       executed  with  a  single -c by separating them with semicolons.  Commands are executed in the order they
       appear.  (When using Expectk, this option is specified as -command.)

       The -d flag enables some diagnostic output, which primarily reports internal activity of commands such as
       expect and interact.  This flag has the same effect as "exp_internal 1" at the  beginning  of  an  Expect
       script, plus the version of Expect is printed.  (The strace command is useful for tracing statements, and
       the  trace  command  is  useful  for  tracing variable assignments.)  (When using Expectk, this option is
       specified as -diag.)

       The -D flag enables an interactive debugger.  An integer value should follow.   The  debugger  will  take
       control  before the next Tcl procedure if the value is non-zero or if a ^C is pressed (or a breakpoint is
       hit, or other appropriate debugger command appears in the script).  See  the  README  file  or  SEE  ALSO
       (below) for more information on the debugger.  (When using Expectk, this option is specified as -Debug.)

       The  -f flag prefaces a file from which to read commands from.  The flag itself is optional as it is only
       useful when using the #! notation (see above), so that other arguments may be  supplied  on  the  command
       line.  (When using Expectk, this option is specified as -file.)

       By  default,  the  command  file  is  read  into memory and executed in its entirety.  It is occasionally
       desirable to read files one line at a time.  For example, stdin is read this  way.   In  order  to  force
       arbitrary  files  to be handled this way, use the -b flag.  (When using Expectk, this option is specified
       as -buffer.)  Note that stdio-buffering may still take place however this shouldn't cause  problems  when
       reading from a fifo or stdin.

       If  the  string "-" is supplied as a filename, standard input is read instead.  (Use "./-" to read from a
       file actually named "-".)

       The -i flag causes Expect to interactively prompt for commands instead  of  reading  them  from  a  file.
       Prompting  is terminated via the exit command or upon EOF.  See interpreter (below) for more information.
       -i is assumed if neither a command file nor -c is used.  (When using Expectk, this option is specified as
       -interactive.)

       -- may be used to delimit the end of the options.  This is useful if you  want  to  pass  an  option-like
       argument  to  your  script without it being interpreted by Expect.  This can usefully be placed in the #!
       line to prevent any flag-like interpretation by Expect.   For  example,  the  following  will  leave  the
       original arguments (including the script name) in the variable argv.

           #!/usr/bin/expect --

       Note  that the usual getopt(3) and execve(2) conventions must be observed when adding arguments to the #!
       line.

       The file $exp_library/expect.rc is sourced automatically if present, unless the -N flag is  used.   (When
       using  Expectk,  this  option  is  specified as -NORC.)  Immediately after this, the file ~/.expect.rc is
       sourced automatically, unless the -n flag is used.  If the environment variable DOTDIR is defined, it  is
       treated  as a directory and .expect.rc is read from there.  (When using Expectk, this option is specified
       as -norc.)  This sourcing occurs only after executing any -c flags.

       -v causes Expect to print its version number and exit.  (The corresponding flag in  Expectk,  which  uses
       long flag names, is -version.)

       Optional  args are constructed into a list and stored in the variable named argv.  argc is initialized to
       the length of argv.

       argv0 is defined to be the name of the script (or binary  if  no  script  is  used).   For  example,  the
       following prints out the name of the script and the first three arguments:

           send_user "$argv0 [lrange $argv 0 2]\n"

COMMANDS

       Expect  uses  Tcl  (Tool Command Language).  Tcl provides control flow (e.g., if, for, break), expression
       evaluation and several other features such as recursion, procedure definition, etc.  Commands  used  here
       but  not  defined  (e.g.,  set,  if,  exec)  are  Tcl  commands (see tcl(3)).  Expect supports additional
       commands, described below.  Unless otherwise specified, commands return the empty string.

       Commands are listed alphabetically so that they can be quickly located.  However, new users may  find  it
       easier to start by reading the descriptions of spawn, send, expect, and interact, in that order.

       Note  that the best introduction to the language (both Expect and Tcl) is provided in the book "Exploring
       Expect" (see SEE ALSO below).  Examples are included in this man page but they  are  very  limited  since
       this man page is meant primarily as reference material.

       Note that in the text of this man page, "Expect" with an uppercase "E" refers to the Expect program while
       "expect" with a lower-case "e" refers to the expect command within the Expect program.)

       close [-slave] [-onexec 0|1] [-i spawn_id]
             closes  the  connection to the current process.  Most interactive programs will detect EOF on their
             stdin and exit; thus close usually suffices to kill the process as well.  The -i flag declares  the
             process to close corresponding to the named spawn_id.

             Both expect and interact will detect when the current process exits and implicitly do a close.  But
             if you kill the process by, say, "exec kill $pid", you will need to explicitly call close.

             The  -onexec flag determines whether the spawn id will be closed in any new spawned processes or if
             the process is overlayed.  To leave a spawn id open, use the value 0.   A  non-zero  integer  value
             will force the spawn closed (the default) in any new processes.

             The  -slave  flag  closes  the  slave  associated with the spawn id.  (See "spawn -pty".)  When the
             connection is closed, the slave is automatically closed as well if still open.

             No matter whether the connection is closed implicitly or explicitly, you should call wait to  clear
             up  the  corresponding  kernel  process slot.  close does not call wait since there is no guarantee
             that closing a process connection will cause it to exit.  See wait below for more info.

       debug [[-now] 0|1]
             controls a Tcl debugger allowing you to step through statements, set breakpoints, etc.

             With no arguments, a 1 is returned if the debugger is not running, otherwise a 0 is returned.

             With a 1 argument, the debugger is started.  With a 0 argument, the debugger is stopped.   If  a  1
             argument  is preceded by the -now flag, the debugger is started immediately (i.e., in the middle of
             the debug command itself).  Otherwise, the debugger is started with the next Tcl statement.

             The debug command does not change any traps.  Compare this to starting Expect with the -D flag (see
             above).

             See the README file or SEE ALSO (below) for more information on the debugger.

       disconnect
             disconnects a forked process from the terminal.  It  continues  running  in  the  background.   The
             process is given its own process group (if possible).  Standard I/O is redirected to /dev/null.

             The following fragment uses disconnect to continue running the script in the background.

                 if {[fork]!=0} exit
                 disconnect
                 . . .

             The  following  script reads a password, and then runs a program every hour that demands a password
             each time it is run.  The script supplies the password so that you only have to type it once.  (See
             the stty command which demonstrates how to turn off password echoing.)

                 send_user "password?\ "
                 expect_user -re "(.*)\n"
                 for {} 1 {} {
                     if {[fork]!=0} {sleep 3600;continue}
                     disconnect
                     spawn priv_prog
                     expect Password:
                     send "$expect_out(1,string)\r"
                     . . .
                     exit
                 }

             An advantage to using disconnect over the shell asynchronous process feature (&) is that Expect can
             save the terminal parameters prior to disconnection, and then later apply them to new  ptys.   With
             &,  Expect  does  not have a chance to read the terminal's parameters since the terminal is already
             disconnected by the time Expect receives control.

       exit [-opts] [status]
             causes Expect to exit or otherwise prepare to do so.

             The -onexit flag causes the next argument to be used as an exit handler.  Without an argument,  the
             current exit handler is returned.

             The  -noexit  flag causes Expect to prepare to exit but stop short of actually returning control to
             the operating system.  The user-defined exit handler is  run  as  well  as  Expect's  own  internal
             handlers.  No further Expect commands should be executed.  This is useful if you are running Expect
             with  other  Tcl  extensions.   The  current interpreter (and main window if in the Tk environment)
             remain so that other Tcl extensions can clean up.  If Expect's exit is called again  (however  this
             might occur), the handlers are not rerun.

             Upon  exiting, all connections to spawned processes are closed.  Closure will be detected as an EOF
             by spawned processes.  exit takes no other actions beyond what the normal _exit(2) procedure  does.
             Thus,  spawned  processes  that do not check for EOF may continue to run.  (A variety of conditions
             are important to determining, for example, what signals a spawned process will be sent,  but  these
             are  system-dependent, typically documented under exit(3).)  Spawned processes that continue to run
             will be inherited by init.

             status (or 0 if not specified) is returned as the  exit  status  of  Expect.   exit  is  implicitly
             executed if the end of the script is reached.

       exp_continue [-continue_timer]
             The  command  exp_continue  allows  expect itself to continue executing rather than returning as it
             normally would. By default exp_continue resets the timeout timer. The -continue_timer flag prevents
             timer from being restarted. (See expect for more information.)

       exp_internal [-f file] value
             causes further commands to send diagnostic information internal to Expect to  stderr  if  value  is
             non-zero.   This  output  is  disabled  if  value  is 0.  The diagnostic information includes every
             character received, and every attempt made to match the current output against the patterns.

             If the optional file is supplied,  all  normal  and  debugging  output  is  written  to  that  file
             (regardless of the value of value).  Any previous diagnostic output file is closed.

             The  -info  flag  causes exp_internal to return a description of the most recent non-info arguments
             given.

       exp_open [args] [-i spawn_id]
             returns a Tcl file identifier that corresponds to the original spawn id.  The file  identifier  can
             then  be  used as if it were opened by Tcl's open command.  (The spawn id should no longer be used.
             A wait should not be executed.

             The -leaveopen flag leaves the spawn id open for access through Expect commands.  A  wait  must  be
             executed on the spawn id.

       exp_pid [-i spawn_id]
             returns the process id corresponding to the currently spawned process.  If the -i flag is used, the
             pid returned corresponds to that of the given spawn id.

       exp_send
             is an alias for send.

       exp_send_error
             is an alias for send_error.

       exp_send_log
             is an alias for send_log.

       exp_send_tty
             is an alias for send_tty.

       exp_send_user
             is an alias for send_user.

       exp_version [[-exit] version]
             is useful for assuring that the script is compatible with the current version of Expect.

             With  no arguments, the current version of Expect is returned.  This version may then be encoded in
             your script.  If you actually know that you are not using features  of  recent  versions,  you  can
             specify an earlier version.

             Versions  consist  of three numbers separated by dots.  First is the major number.  Scripts written
             for versions of Expect with a different major number will almost certainly not  work.   exp_version
             returns an error if the major numbers do not match.

             Second  is  the  minor  number.  Scripts written for a version with a greater minor number than the
             current version may depend upon some new feature and might not run.  exp_version returns  an  error
             if the major numbers match, but the script minor number is greater than that of the running Expect.

             Third  is  a  number that plays no part in the version comparison.  However, it is incremented when
             the Expect software distribution is changed in any way, such  as  by  additional  documentation  or
             optimization.  It is reset to 0 upon each new minor version.

             With the -exit flag, Expect prints an error and exits if the version is out of date.

       expect [[-opts] pat1 body1] ... [-opts] patn [bodyn]
             waits  until  one  of the patterns matches the output of a spawned process, a specified time period
             has passed, or an end-of-file is seen.  If the final body is empty, it may be omitted.

             Patterns from the most recent expect_before command are implicitly used before any other  patterns.
             Patterns from the most recent expect_after command are implicitly used after any other patterns.

             If  the  arguments to the entire expect statement require more than one line, all the arguments may
             be "braced" into one so as to avoid terminating each line with a backslash.  In this one case,  the
             usual Tcl substitutions will occur despite the braces.

             If a pattern is the keyword eof, the corresponding body is executed upon end-of-file.  If a pattern
             is  the keyword timeout, the corresponding body is executed upon timeout.  If no timeout keyword is
             used, an implicit null action is executed upon timeout.  The default timeout period is  10  seconds
             but  may  be  set,  for example to 30, by the command "set timeout 30".  An infinite timeout may be
             designated by the value -1.  If a pattern  is  the  keyword  default,  the  corresponding  body  is
             executed upon either timeout or end-of-file.

             If  a  pattern  matches, then the corresponding body is executed.  expect returns the result of the
             body (or the empty string if no pattern matched).  In the event that multiple patterns  match,  the
             one appearing first is used to select a body.

             Each  time  new output arrives, it is compared to each pattern in the order they are listed.  Thus,
             you may test for absence of a match by making the last pattern something guaranteed to appear, such
             as a prompt.  In situations where there is no prompt, you must use timeout (just like you would  if
             you were interacting manually).

             Patterns  are  specified  in  three  ways.  By default, patterns are specified as with Tcl's string
             match command.  (Such patterns are also similar to C-shell regular expressions usually referred  to
             as  "glob"  patterns).  The -gl flag may may be used to protect patterns that might otherwise match
             expect flags from doing so.  Any pattern beginning with a "-" should be protected this  way.   (All
             strings starting with "-" are reserved for future options.)

             For  example, the following fragment looks for a successful login.  (Note that abort is presumed to
             be a procedure defined elsewhere in the script.)

                 expect {
                     busy               {puts busy\n ; exp_continue}
                     failed             abort
                     "invalid password" abort
                     timeout            abort
                     connected
                 }

             Quotes are necessary on the fourth pattern  since  it  contains  a  space,  which  would  otherwise
             separate  the  pattern  from  the  action.  Patterns with the same action (such as the 3rd and 4th)
             require listing the actions again.  This can be avoid by using regexp-style patterns  (see  below).
             More information on forming glob-style patterns can be found in the Tcl manual.

             Regexp-style  patterns  follow  the syntax defined by Tcl's regexp (short for "regular expression")
             command.  regexp patterns are introduced with the flag -re.  The previous example can be  rewritten
             using a regexp as:

                 expect {
                     busy       {puts busy\n ; exp_continue}
                     -re "failed|invalid password" abort
                     timeout    abort
                     connected
                 }

             Both  types of patterns are "unanchored".  This means that patterns do not have to match the entire
             string, but can begin and end the match  anywhere  in  the  string  (as  long  as  everything  else
             matches).   Use  ^ to match the beginning of a string, and $ to match the end.  Note that if you do
             not wait for the end of a string, your responses can easily end up in the middle of the  string  as
             they  are  echoed  from the spawned process.  While still producing correct results, the output can
             look unnatural.  Thus, use of $ is encouraged if you can exactly describe the characters at the end
             of a string.

             Note that in many editors, the ^ and $ match the beginning and end of lines respectively.  However,
             because  expect  is not line oriented, these characters match the beginning and end of the data (as
             opposed to lines) currently in the expect matching buffer.  (Also, see the note  below  on  "system
             indigestion.")

             The -ex flag causes the pattern to be matched as an "exact" string.  No interpretation of *, ^, etc
             is  made  (although  the  usual Tcl conventions must still be observed).  Exact patterns are always
             unanchored.

             The -nocase flag causes uppercase characters of the output to compare as  if  they  were  lowercase
             characters.  The pattern is not affected.

             While  reading output, more than 2000 bytes can force earlier bytes to be "forgotten".  This may be
             changed with the function match_max.  (Note that excessively large values can slow down the pattern
             matcher.)  If patlist is full_buffer, the corresponding body is executed if  match_max  bytes  have
             been  received and no other patterns have matched.  Whether or not the full_buffer keyword is used,
             the forgotten characters are written to expect_out(buffer).

             If patlist is the keyword  null,  and  nulls  are  allowed  (via  the  remove_nulls  command),  the
             corresponding body is executed if a single ASCII 0 is matched.  It is not possible to match 0 bytes
             via glob or regexp patterns.

             Upon  matching  a  pattern (or eof or full_buffer), any matching and previously unmatched output is
             saved in the variable expect_out(buffer).  Up to 9  regexp  substring  matches  are  saved  in  the
             variables expect_out(1,string) through expect_out(9,string).  If the -indices flag is used before a
             pattern,  the  starting  and  ending  indices (in a form suitable for lrange) of the 10 strings are
             stored in the variables expect_out(X,start) and expect_out(X,end) where X is a  digit,  corresponds
             to  the substring position in the buffer.  0 refers to strings which matched the entire pattern and
             is generated for glob patterns as well as regexp patterns.  For example, if a process has  produced
             output of "abcdefgh\n", the result of:

                 expect "cd"

             is as if the following statements had executed:

                 set expect_out(0,string) cd
                 set expect_out(buffer) abcd

             and  "efgh\n" is left in the output buffer.  If a process produced the output "abbbcabkkkka\n", the
             result of:

                 expect -indices -re "b(b*).*(k+)"

             is as if the following statements had executed:

                 set expect_out(0,start) 1
                 set expect_out(0,end) 10
                 set expect_out(0,string) bbbcabkkkk
                 set expect_out(1,start) 2
                 set expect_out(1,end) 3
                 set expect_out(1,string) bb
                 set expect_out(2,start) 10
                 set expect_out(2,end) 10
                 set expect_out(2,string) k
                 set expect_out(buffer) abbbcabkkkk

             and "a\n" is left in the output buffer.  The pattern "*" (and  -re  ".*")  will  flush  the  output
             buffer without reading any more output from the process.

             Normally, the matched output is discarded from Expect's internal buffers.  This may be prevented by
             prefixing  a  pattern  with  the -notransfer flag.  This flag is especially useful in experimenting
             (and can be abbreviated to "-not" for convenience while experimenting).

             The  spawn  id  associated  with  the  matching  output  (or  eof  or  full_buffer)  is  stored  in
             expect_out(spawn_id).

             The -timeout flag causes the current expect command to use the following value as a timeout instead
             of using the value of the timeout variable.

             By  default,  patterns  are  matched  against  output from the current process, however the -i flag
             declares the output from the named spawn_id list be matched against any following patterns  (up  to
             the  next  -i).   The  spawn_id list should either be a whitespace separated list of spawn_ids or a
             variable referring to such a list of spawn_ids.

             For example, the following example waits for "connected"  from  the  current  process,  or  "busy",
             "failed" or "invalid password" from the spawn_id named by $proc2.

                 expect {
                     -i $proc2 busy {puts busy\n ; exp_continue}
                     -re "failed|invalid password" abort
                     timeout abort
                     connected
                 }

             The  value  of the global variable any_spawn_id may be used to match patterns to any spawn_ids that
             are named with all other -i flags in the current expect command.  The spawn_id from a -i flag  with
             no  associated  pattern  (i.e.,  followed immediately by another -i) is made available to any other
             patterns in the same expect command associated with any_spawn_id.

             The -i flag may also name a global variable in which case the variable is read for a list of  spawn
             ids.   The  variable is reread whenever it changes.  This provides a way of changing the I/O source
             while the command is in execution.  Spawn ids provided this way are called "indirect" spawn ids.

             Actions such as break and continue cause control structures (i.e., for,  proc)  to  behave  in  the
             usual  way.   The  command  exp_continue  allows  expect  itself  to continue executing rather than
             returning as it normally would.

             This is useful for avoiding explicit loops or repeated expect statements.  The following example is
             part of a fragment to automate rlogin.  The exp_continue avoids having to  write  a  second  expect
             statement (to look for the prompt again) if the rlogin prompts for a password.

                 expect {
                     Password: {
                         stty -echo
                         send_user "password (for $user) on $host: "
                         expect_user -re "(.*)\n"
                         send_user "\n"
                         send "$expect_out(1,string)\r"
                         stty echo
                         exp_continue
                     } incorrect {
                         send_user "invalid password or account\n"
                         exit
                     } timeout {
                         send_user "connection to $host timed out\n"
                         exit
                     } eof {
                         send_user \
                             "connection to host failed: $expect_out(buffer)"
                         exit
                     } -re $prompt
                 }

             For  example, the following fragment might help a user guide an interaction that is already totally
             automated.  In this case, the terminal is put into raw mode.  If the user presses "+",  a  variable
             is  incremented.  If "p" is pressed, several returns are sent to the process, perhaps to poke it in
             some way, and "i" lets the user interact with the process, effectively stealing away  control  from
             the  script.  In each case, the exp_continue allows the current expect to continue pattern matching
             after executing the current action.

                 stty raw -echo
                 expect_after {
                     -i $user_spawn_id
                     "p" {send "\r\r\r"; exp_continue}
                     "+" {incr foo; exp_continue}
                     "i" {interact; exp_continue}
                     "quit" exit
                 }

             By default, exp_continue resets the timeout timer.  The timer is not restarted, if exp_continue  is
             called with the -continue_timer flag.

       expect_after [expect_args]
             works  identically  to  the expect_before except that if patterns from both expect and expect_after
             can match, the expect pattern is used.  See the expect_before command for more information.

       expect_background [expect_args]
             takes the same arguments as expect, however it returns immediately.  Patterns are  tested  whenever
             new  input  arrives.   The pattern timeout and default are meaningless to expect_background and are
             silently discarded.  Otherwise, the expect_background command uses expect_before  and  expect_after
             patterns just like expect does.

             When  expect_background actions are being evaluated, background processing for the same spawn id is
             blocked.   Background  processing  is  unblocked  when  the  action  completes.   While  background
             processing is blocked, it is possible to do a (foreground) expect on the same spawn id.

             It is not possible to execute an expect while an expect_background is unblocked.  expect_background
             for  a  particular spawn id is deleted by declaring a new expect_background with the same spawn id.
             Declaring expect_background with no pattern removes the given spawn id from the  ability  to  match
             patterns in the background.

       expect_before [expect_args]
             takes  the same arguments as expect, however it returns immediately.  Pattern-action pairs from the
             most recent expect_before with the same spawn id are  implicitly  added  to  any  following  expect
             commands.   If  a  pattern matches, it is treated as if it had been specified in the expect command
             itself, and the associated body is executed in the context of the expect command.  If patterns from
             both expect_before and expect can match, the expect_before pattern is used.

             If no pattern is specified, the spawn id is not checked for any patterns.

             Unless overridden by a -i flag, expect_before patterns match against the spawn id  defined  at  the
             time that the expect_before command was executed (not when its pattern is matched).

             The  -info  flag causes expect_before to return the current specifications of what patterns it will
             match.  By default, it reports on the current spawn id.  An optional spawn id specification may  be
             given for information on that spawn id.  For example

                 expect_before -info -i $proc

             At  most  one  spawn id specification may be given.  The flag -indirect suppresses direct spawn ids
             that come only from indirect specifications.

             Instead of a spawn id specification, the flag "-all" will cause "-info" to report on all spawn ids.

             The output of the -info flag can be reused as the argument to expect_before.

       expect_tty [expect_args]
             is like expect but it reads characters from /dev/tty (i.e. keystrokes from the user).  By  default,
             reading is performed in cooked mode.  Thus, lines must end with a return in order for expect to see
             them.  This may be changed via stty (see the stty command below).

       expect_user [expect_args]
             is  like  expect  but  it reads characters from stdin (i.e. keystrokes from the user).  By default,
             reading is performed in cooked mode.  Thus, lines must end with a return in order for expect to see
             them.  This may be changed via stty (see the stty command below).

       fork  creates a new process.  The new process is an  exact  copy  of  the  current  Expect  process.   On
             success,  fork returns 0 to the new (child) process and returns the process ID of the child process
             to the parent process.  On failure (invariably due to lack of resources, e.g., swap space, memory),
             fork returns -1 to the parent process, and no child process is created.

             Forked processes exit via the exit command, just like the original process.  Forked  processes  are
             allowed  to  write  to  the  log  files.  If you do not disable debugging or logging in most of the
             processes, the result can be confusing.

             Some pty implementations may be confused by multiple readers and writers, even momentarily.   Thus,
             it is safest to fork before spawning processes.

       interact [string1 body1] ... [stringn [bodyn]]
             gives  control  of  the  current  process  to  the user, so that keystrokes are sent to the current
             process, and the stdout and stderr of the current process are returned.

             String-body pairs may be specified as arguments, in which  case  the  body  is  executed  when  the
             corresponding  string  is  entered.   (By  default, the string is not sent to the current process.)
             The interpreter command is assumed, if the final body is missing.

             If the arguments to the entire interact statement require more than one line, all the arguments may
             be "braced" into one so as to avoid terminating each line with a backslash.  In this one case,  the
             usual Tcl substitutions will occur despite the braces.

             For  example,  the  following  command  runs interact with the following string-body pairs defined:
             When ^Z is pressed, Expect is suspended.  (The -reset flag restores the terminal modes.)   When  ^A
             is pressed, the user sees "you typed a control-A" and the process is sent a ^A.  When $ is pressed,
             the  user  sees  the  date.   When ^C is pressed, Expect exits.  If "foo" is entered, the user sees
             "bar".  When ~~ is pressed, the Expect interpreter runs interactively.

                 set CTRLZ \032
                 interact {
                     -reset $CTRLZ {exec kill -STOP [pid]}
                     \001   {send_user "you typed a control-A\n";
                             send "\001"
                            }
                     $      {send_user "The date is [clock format [clock seconds]]."}
                     \003   exit
                     foo    {send_user "bar"}
                     ~~
                 }

             In string-body pairs, strings are matched in the order they are listed as arguments.  Strings  that
             partially  match  are  not sent to the current process in anticipation of the remainder coming.  If
             characters are then entered such that there can no longer possibly be a match, only the part of the
             string will be sent to the process that cannot possibly begin another match.   Thus,  strings  that
             are  substrings  of partial matches can match later, if the original strings that was attempting to
             be match ultimately fails.

             By default, string matching is exact with no wild cards.  (In contrast,  the  expect  command  uses
             glob-style patterns by default.)  The -ex flag may be used to protect patterns that might otherwise
             match interact flags from doing so.  Any pattern beginning with a "-" should be protected this way.
             (All strings starting with "-" are reserved for future options.)

             The -re flag forces the string to be interpreted as a regexp-style pattern.  In this case, matching
             substrings are stored in the variable interact_out similarly to the way expect stores its output in
             the variable expect_out.  The -indices flag is similarly supported.

             The pattern eof introduces an action that is executed upon end-of-file.  A separate eof pattern may
             also  follow  the  -output  flag  in  which  case it is matched if an eof is detected while writing
             output.  The default eof action is "return", so that interact simply returns upon any EOF.

             The pattern timeout introduces a timeout  (in  seconds)  and  action  that  is  executed  after  no
             characters  have  been  read  for  a  given time.  The timeout pattern applies to the most recently
             specified process.  There is no default timeout.  The  special  variable  "timeout"  (used  by  the
             expect command) has no affect on this timeout.

             For  example, the following statement could be used to autologout users who have not typed anything
             for an hour but who still get frequent system messages:

                 interact -input $user_spawn_id timeout 3600 return -output \
                     $spawn_id

             If the pattern is the keyword null, and nulls are  allowed  (via  the  remove_nulls  command),  the
             corresponding body is executed if a single ASCII 0 is matched.  It is not possible to match 0 bytes
             via glob or regexp patterns.

             Prefacing  a  pattern with the flag -iwrite causes the variable interact_out(spawn_id) to be set to
             the spawn_id which matched the pattern (or eof).

             Actions such as break and continue cause control structures (i.e., for,  proc)  to  behave  in  the
             usual  way.   However  return  causes  interact  to return to its caller, while inter_return causes
             interact to cause a return in its caller.  For example, if "proc foo" called  interact  which  then
             executed  the  action  inter_return,  proc  foo  would  return.  (This means that if interact calls
             interpreter interactively typing return will cause the interact  to  continue,  while  inter_return
             will cause the interact to return to its caller.)

             During  interact, raw mode is used so that all characters may be passed to the current process.  If
             the current process does not catch job control signals, it will stop if  sent  a  stop  signal  (by
             default ^Z).  To restart it, send a continue signal (such as by "kill -CONT <pid>").  If you really
             want to send a SIGSTOP to such a process (by ^Z), consider spawning csh first and then running your
             program.  On the other hand, if you want to send a SIGSTOP to Expect itself, first call interpreter
             (perhaps by using an escape character), and then press ^Z.

             String-body  pairs  can  be  used  as  a shorthand for avoiding having to enter the interpreter and
             execute commands interactively.  The previous terminal mode is used while the body of a string-body
             pair is being executed.

             For speed, actions execute in raw mode by default.  The -reset flag resets the terminal to the mode
             it had before interact was executed (invariably, cooked mode).  Note that characters  entered  when
             the  mode  is  being  switched  may  be lost (an unfortunate feature of the terminal driver on some
             systems).  The only reason to use -reset is if your action depends on running in cooked mode.

             The -echo flag sends characters that match the following pattern back to the process that generated
             them as each character is read.  This may be useful when  the  user  needs  to  see  feedback  from
             partially typed patterns.

             If  a pattern is being echoed but eventually fails to match, the characters are sent to the spawned
             process.  If the spawned process then echoes them, the user will see the characters  twice.   -echo
             is  probably only appropriate in situations where the user is unlikely to not complete the pattern.
             For example, the following excerpt is from rftp,  the  recursive-ftp  script,  where  the  user  is
             prompted to enter ~g, ~p, or ~l, to get, put, or list the current directory recursively.  These are
             so  far away from the normal ftp commands, that the user is unlikely to type ~ followed by anything
             else, except mistakenly, in which case, they'll probably just ignore the result anyway.

                 interact {
                     -echo ~g {getcurdirectory 1}
                     -echo ~l {getcurdirectory 0}
                     -echo ~p {putcurdirectory}
                 }

             The -nobuffer flag sends characters that match the following pattern on to the  output  process  as
             characters are read.

             This  is  useful  when you wish to let a program echo back the pattern.  For example, the following
             might be used to monitor where a person is dialing (a Hayes-style modem).  Each time "atd" is  seen
             the script logs the rest of the line.

                 proc lognumber {} {
                     interact -nobuffer -re "(.*)\r" return
                     puts $log "[clock format [clock seconds]]: dialed $interact_out(1,string)"
                 }

                 interact -nobuffer "atd" lognumber

             During  interact,  previous  use  of  log_user  is ignored.  In particular, interact will force its
             output to be logged (sent to the standard output) since it is presumed the  user  doesn't  wish  to
             interact blindly.

             The -o flag causes any following key-body pairs to be applied to the output of the current process.
             This  can  be  useful,  for example, when dealing with hosts that send unwanted characters during a
             telnet session.

             By default, interact expects the user to be writing stdin and reading stdout of the Expect  process
             itself.   The  -u  flag  (for  "user") makes interact look for the user as the process named by its
             argument (which must be a spawned id).

             This allows two unrelated processes to be joined together without using an explicit loop.   To  aid
             in  debugging,  Expect diagnostics always go to stderr (or stdout for certain logging and debugging
             information).  For the same reason, the interpreter command will read interactively from stdin.

             For example, the following fragment creates a login process.  Then it dials the user  (not  shown),
             and  finally  connects  the  two together.  Of course, any process may be substituted for login.  A
             shell, for example, would allow the user to work without supplying an account and password.

                 spawn login
                 set login $spawn_id
                 spawn tip modem
                 # dial back out to user
                 # connect user to login
                 interact -u $login

             To send output to multiple processes, list each spawn id list prefaced by a  -output  flag.   Input
             for  a  group  of  output spawn ids may be determined by a spawn id list prefaced by a -input flag.
             (Both -input and -output may take lists in the same form as the -i  flag  in  the  expect  command,
             except  that  any_spawn_id  is  not  meaningful  in interact.)  All following flags and strings (or
             patterns) apply to this input until another -input flag appears.  If  no  -input  appears,  -output
             implies  "-input  $user_spawn_id -output".  (Similarly, with patterns that do not have -input.)  If
             one -input is specified, it  overrides  $user_spawn_id.   If  a  second  -input  is  specified,  it
             overrides $spawn_id.  Additional -input flags may be specified.

             The  two  implied  input  processes  default  to  having  their  outputs specified as $spawn_id and
             $user_spawn_id (in reverse).  If a -input flag appears with no -output flag, characters  from  that
             process are discarded.

             The -i flag introduces a replacement for the current spawn_id when no other -input or -output flags
             are used.  A -i flag implies a -o flag.

             It  is possible to change the processes that are being interacted with by using indirect spawn ids.
             (Indirect spawn ids are described in the section on the expect command.)  Indirect spawn ids may be
             specified with the -i, -u, -input, or -output flags.

       interpreter  [args]
             causes the user to be interactively prompted for Expect and  Tcl  commands.   The  result  of  each
             command is printed.

             Actions  such  as  break  and  continue cause control structures (i.e., for, proc) to behave in the
             usual way.  However return causes interpreter to return to its caller,  while  inter_return  causes
             interpreter  to  cause a return in its caller.  For example, if "proc foo" called interpreter which
             then executed the action inter_return, proc foo would return.  Any other command causes interpreter
             to continue prompting for new commands.

             By default, the prompt contains two integers.   The  first  integer  describes  the  depth  of  the
             evaluation  stack  (i.e.,  how many times Tcl_Eval has been called).  The second integer is the Tcl
             history identifier.  The prompt can be set by defining a procedure called  "prompt1"  whose  return
             value  becomes  the  next  prompt.   If a statement has open quotes, parens, braces, or brackets, a
             secondary prompt (by default "+> ") is issued upon newline.  The secondary prompt  may  be  set  by
             defining a procedure called "prompt2".

             During interpreter, cooked mode is used, even if the its caller was using raw mode.

             If  stdin  is  closed,  interpreter  will  return  unless  the -eof flag is used, in which case the
             subsequent argument is invoked.

       log_file [args] [[-a] file]
             If a filename is provided, log_file will record a transcript of  the  session  (beginning  at  that
             point)  in  the file.  log_file will stop recording if no argument is given.  Any previous log file
             is closed.

             Instead of a filename, a Tcl file identifier may be provided  by  using  the  -open  or  -leaveopen
             flags.  This is similar to the spawn command.  (See spawn for more info.)

             The -a flag forces output to be logged that was suppressed by the log_user command.

             By  default,  the  log_file  command  appends  to  old  files  rather than truncating them, for the
             convenience of being able to turn logging off and on multiple times in one  session.   To  truncate
             files, use the -noappend flag.

             The -info flag causes log_file to return a description of the most recent non-info arguments given.

       log_user -info|0|1
             By  default,  the send/expect dialogue is logged to stdout (and a logfile if open).  The logging to
             stdout is disabled by the command "log_user 0" and reenabled  by  "log_user  1".   Logging  to  the
             logfile is unchanged.

             The -info flag causes log_user to return a description of the most recent non-info arguments given.

       match_max [-d] [-i spawn_id] [size]
             defines  the  size  of the buffer (in bytes) used internally by expect.  With no size argument, the
             current size is returned.

             With the -d flag, the default size is set.  (The initial default is 2000.)  With the -i  flag,  the
             size is set for the named spawn id, otherwise it is set for the current process.

       overlay [-# spawn_id] [-# spawn_id] [...] program [args]
             executes  program  args  in  place  of the current Expect program, which terminates.  A bare hyphen
             argument forces a hyphen in front of the command name as if it was a login  shell.   All  spawn_ids
             are closed except for those named as arguments.  These are mapped onto the named file identifiers.

             Spawn_ids  are  mapped  to  file  identifiers  for  the  new  program to inherit.  For example, the
             following line runs chess and allows it to be controlled by the current  process  -  say,  a  chess
             master.

                 overlay -0 $spawn_id -1 $spawn_id -2 $spawn_id chess

             This  is  more  efficient  than  "interact -u", however, it sacrifices the ability to do programmed
             interaction since the Expect process is no longer in control.

             Note that no controlling terminal is provided.  Thus, if you disconnect or  remap  standard  input,
             programs that do job control (shells, login, etc) will not function properly.

       parity [-d] [-i spawn_id] [value]
             defines  whether  parity  should  be retained or stripped from the output of spawned processes.  If
             value is zero, parity is stripped, otherwise it is not  stripped.   With  no  value  argument,  the
             current value is returned.

             With  the -d flag, the default parity value is set.  (The initial default is 1, i.e., parity is not
             stripped.)  With the -i flag, the parity value is set for the named spawn id, otherwise it  is  set
             for the current process.

       remove_nulls [-d] [-i spawn_id] [value]
             defines  whether  nulls are retained or removed from the output of spawned processes before pattern
             matching or storing in the variable expect_out or interact_out.  If value is 1, nulls are  removed.
             If value is 0, nulls are not removed.  With no value argument, the current value is returned.

             With  the  -d flag, the default value is set.  (The initial default is 1, i.e., nulls are removed.)
             With the -i flag, the value is set for the named spawn id, otherwise it  is  set  for  the  current
             process.

             Whether or not nulls are removed, Expect will record null bytes to the log and stdout.

       send [-flags] string
             Sends string to the current process.  For example, the command

                 send "hello world\r"

             sends the characters, h e l l o <blank> w o r l d <return> to the current process.  (Tcl includes a
             printf-like command (called format) which can build arbitrarily complex strings.)

             Characters  are  sent  immediately  although  programs  with  line-buffered input will not read the
             characters until a return character is sent.  A return character is denoted "\r".

             The -- flag forces the next argument to be interpreted as a string rather than a flag.  Any  string
             can  be  preceded  by  "--" whether or not it actually looks like a flag.  This provides a reliable
             mechanism to specify variable strings without being tripped up by those that accidentally look like
             flags.  (All strings starting with "-" are reserved for future options.)

             The -i flag declares that  the  string  be  sent  to  the  named  spawn_id.   If  the  spawn_id  is
             user_spawn_id,  and  the  terminal is in raw mode, newlines in the string are translated to return-
             newline sequences so that they appear as if the  terminal  was  in  cooked  mode.   The  -raw  flag
             disables this translation.

             The  -null  flag  sends  null  characters (0 bytes).  By default, one null is sent.  An integer may
             follow the -null to indicate how many nulls to send.

             The -break flag generates a break condition.  This only makes sense if the spawn id refers to a tty
             device opened via "spawn -open".  If you have spawned a process such as tip, you should  use  tip's
             convention for generating a break.

             The  -s  flag  forces  output to be sent "slowly", thus avoid the common situation where a computer
             outtypes an input buffer that was designed for a human who would never  outtype  the  same  buffer.
             This  output is controlled by the value of the variable "send_slow" which takes a two element list.
             The first element is an integer that describes the number of bytes to send atomically.  The  second
             element  is  a  real  number that describes the number of seconds by which the atomic sends must be
             separated.  For example, "set send_slow {10 .001}" would force "send -s" to  send  strings  with  1
             millisecond in between each 10 characters sent.

             The  -h  flag  forces output to be sent (somewhat) like a human actually typing.  Human-like delays
             appear between the  characters.   (The  algorithm  is  based  upon  a  Weibull  distribution,  with
             modifications  to suit this particular application.)  This output is controlled by the value of the
             variable "send_human" which takes a  five  element  list.   The  first  two  elements  are  average
             interarrival  time  of characters in seconds.  The first is used by default.  The second is used at
             word endings, to simulate the subtle pauses that occasionally occur at such transitions.  The third
             parameter is a measure of variability where .1 is quite variable, 1 is reasonably variable, and  10
             is quite invariable.  The extremes are 0 to infinity.  The last two parameters are, respectively, a
             minimum  and maximum interarrival time.  The minimum and maximum are used last and "clip" the final
             time.  The ultimate average can be quite different from  the  given  average  if  the  minimum  and
             maximum clip enough values.

             As an example, the following command emulates a fast and consistent typist:

                 set send_human {.1 .3 1 .05 2}
                 send -h "I'm hungry.  Let's do lunch."

             while the following might be more suitable after a hangover:

                 set send_human {.4 .4 .2 .5 100}
                 send -h "Goodd party lash night!"

             Note that errors are not simulated, although you can set up error correction situations yourself by
             embedding mistakes and corrections in a send argument.

             The  flags  for sending null characters, for sending breaks, for forcing slow output and for human-
             style output are mutually exclusive. Only the one specified last  will  be  used.  Furthermore,  no
             string argument can be specified with the flags for sending null characters or breaks.

             It  is  a  good idea to precede the first send to a process by an expect.  expect will wait for the
             process to start, while send cannot.  In particular, if the first send completes before the process
             starts running, you run the risk of having your data  ignored.   In  situations  where  interactive
             programs offer no initial prompt, you can precede send by a delay as in:

                 # To avoid giving hackers hints on how to break in,
                 # this system does not prompt for an external password.
                 # Wait for 5 seconds for exec to complete
                 spawn telnet very.secure.gov
                 sleep 5
                 send password\r

             exp_send  is an alias for send.  If you are using Expectk or some other variant of Expect in the Tk
             environment, send is defined by Tk for an entirely different purpose.   exp_send  is  provided  for
             compatibility  between  environments.   Similar  aliases are provided for other Expect's other send
             commands.

       send_error [-flags] string
             is like send, except that the output is sent to stderr rather than the current process.

       send_log [--] string
             is like send, except that the string is only sent to the log file (see  log_file.)   The  arguments
             are ignored if no log file is open.

       send_tty [-flags] string
             is like send, except that the output is sent to /dev/tty rather than the current process.

       send_user [-flags] string
             is like send, except that the output is sent to stdout rather than the current process.

       sleep seconds
             causes  the  script  to  sleep  for  the given number of seconds.  Seconds may be a decimal number.
             Interrupts (and Tk events if you are using Expectk) are processed while Expect sleeps.

       spawn [args] program [args]
             creates a new process running program args.  Its stdin, stdout and stderr are connected to  Expect,
             so  that  they may be read and written by other Expect commands.  The connection is broken by close
             or if the process itself closes any of the file identifiers.

             When a process is started by spawn, the variable spawn_id is set to a descriptor referring to  that
             process.   The  process  described  by spawn_id is considered the current process.  spawn_id may be
             read or written, in effect providing job control.

             user_spawn_id is a global variable containing a descriptor which refers to the user.  For  example,
             when spawn_id is set to this value, expect behaves like expect_user.

             error_spawn_id  is  a  global  variable containing a descriptor which refers to the standard error.
             For example, when spawn_id is set to this value, send behaves like send_error.

             tty_spawn_id is a global variable containing a descriptor which refers to  /dev/tty.   If  /dev/tty
             does  not  exist  (such as in a cron, at, or batch script), then tty_spawn_id is not defined.  This
             may be tested as:

                 if {[info vars tty_spawn_id]} {
                     # /dev/tty exists
                 } else {
                     # /dev/tty doesn't exist
                     # probably in cron, batch, or at script
                 }

             spawn returns the UNIX process id.  If  no  process  is  spawned,  0  is  returned.   The  variable
             spawn_out(slave,name) is set to the name of the pty slave device.

             By  default,  spawn echoes the command name and arguments.  The -noecho flag stops spawn from doing
             this.

             The -console flag causes console output to be redirected to  the  spawned  process.   This  is  not
             supported on all systems.

             Internally,  spawn  uses  a  pty,  initialized  the  same  way  as the user's tty.  This is further
             initialized so that all settings are "sane" (according to stty(1)).  If the variable  stty_init  is
             defined,  it  is interpreted in the style of stty arguments as further configuration.  For example,
             "set stty_init raw" will cause  further  spawned  processes's  terminals  to  start  in  raw  mode.
             -nottycopy  skips  the  initialization  based  on  the  user's  tty.   -nottyinit  skips the "sane"
             initialization.

             Normally, spawn takes little time to execute.  If you notice spawn taking a significant  amount  of
             time, it is probably encountering ptys that are wedged.  A number of tests are run on ptys to avoid
             entanglements  with errant processes.  (These take 10 seconds per wedged pty.)  Running Expect with
             the -d option will show if Expect is encountering many ptys in odd states.  If you cannot kill  the
             processes to which these ptys are attached, your only recourse may be to reboot.

             If  program cannot be spawned successfully because exec(2) fails (e.g. when program doesn't exist),
             an error message will be returned by the next interact or expect command as if program had run  and
             produced the error message as output.  This behavior is a natural consequence of the implementation
             of  spawn.  Internally, spawn forks, after which the spawned process has no way to communicate with
             the original Expect process except by communication via the spawn_id.

             The -open flag causes the next argument to be interpreted as a Tcl file identifier (i.e.,  returned
             by  open.)   The  spawn  id can then be used as if it were a spawned process.  (The file identifier
             should no longer be used.)  This lets you treat  raw  devices,  files,  and  pipelines  as  spawned
             processes without using a pty.  0 is returned to indicate there is no associated process.  When the
             connection to the spawned process is closed, so is the Tcl file identifier.  The -leaveopen flag is
             similar  to  -open except that -leaveopen causes the file identifier to be left open even after the
             spawn id is closed.

             The -pty flag causes a pty to be opened but no process spawned.  0 is returned to indicate there is
             no associated process.  Spawn_id is set as usual.

             The variable spawn_out(slave,fd) is set to a file identifier corresponding to the  pty  slave.   It
             can be closed using "close -slave".

             The  -ignore  flag names a signal to be ignored in the spawned process.  Otherwise, signals get the
             default behavior.  Signals are named as in the trap command, except that  each  signal  requires  a
             separate flag.

       strace level
             causes  following  statements  to  be  printed  before being executed.  (Tcl's trace command traces
             variables.)  level indicates how far down in the call stack to trace.  For example,  the  following
             command runs Expect while tracing the first 4 levels of calls, but none below that.

                 expect -c "strace 4" script.exp

             The -info flag causes strace to return a description of the most recent non-info arguments given.

       stty args
             changes terminal modes similarly to the external stty command.

             By  default, the controlling terminal is accessed.  Other terminals can be accessed by appending "<
             /dev/tty..." to the command.  (Note that  the  arguments  should  not  be  grouped  into  a  single
             argument.)

             Requests  for  status  return  it  as the result of the command.  If no status is requested and the
             controlling terminal is accessed, the previous status of the raw and echo attributes  are  returned
             in a form which can later be used by the command.

             For  example,  the  arguments raw or -cooked put the terminal into raw mode.  The arguments -raw or
             cooked put the terminal into cooked mode.  The arguments echo and -echo put the terminal into  echo
             and noecho mode respectively.

             The  following  example  illustrates  how  to  temporarily  disable echoing.  This could be used in
             otherwise-automatic scripts to avoid embedding passwords in them.  (See  more  discussion  on  this
             under EXPECT HINTS below.)

                 stty -echo
                 send_user "Password: "
                 expect_user -re "(.*)\n"
                 set password $expect_out(1,string)
                 stty echo

       system args
             gives  args  to  sh(1) as input, just as if it had been typed as a command from a terminal.  Expect
             waits until the shell terminates.  The return status from sh is handled  the  same  way  that  exec
             handles its return status.

             In  contrast to exec which redirects stdin and stdout to the script, system performs no redirection
             (other than that indicated by the string itself).  Thus, it is possible to use programs which  must
             talk directly to /dev/tty.  For the same reason, the results of system are not recorded in the log.

       timestamp [args]
             returns a timestamp.  With no arguments, the number of seconds since the epoch is returned.

             The -format flag introduces a string which is returned but with substitutions made according to the
             POSIX  rules  for strftime.  For example %a is replaced by an abbreviated weekday name (i.e., Sat).
             Others are:
                 %a      abbreviated weekday name
                 %A      full weekday name
                 %b      abbreviated month name
                 %B      full month name
                 %c      date-time as in: Wed Oct  6 11:45:56 1993
                 %d      day of the month (01-31)
                 %H      hour (00-23)
                 %I      hour (01-12)
                 %j      day (001-366)
                 %m      month (01-12)
                 %M      minute (00-59)
                 %p      am or pm
                 %S      second (00-61)
                 %u      day (1-7, Monday is first day of week)
                 %U      week (00-53, first Sunday is first day of week one)
                 %V      week (01-53, ISO 8601 style)
                 %w      day (0-6)
                 %W      week (00-53, first Monday is first day of week one)
                 %x      date-time as in: Wed Oct  6 1993
                 %X      time as in: 23:59:59
                 %y      year (00-99)
                 %Y      year as in: 1993
                 %Z      timezone (or nothing if not determinable)
                 %%      a bare percent sign

             Other % specifications are undefined.  Other characters will be passed through untouched.  Only the
             C locale is supported.

             The -seconds flag introduces a number of seconds since the epoch to be used as a source from  which
             to format.  Otherwise, the current time is used.

             The -gmt flag forces timestamp output to use the GMT timezone.  With no flag, the local timezone is
             used.

       trap [[command] signals]
             causes  the  given  command  to  be  executed upon future receipt of any of the given signals.  The
             command is executed in the global scope.  If command is absent, the signal action is returned.   If
             command  is  the  string  SIG_IGN,  the signals are ignored.  If command is the string SIG_DFL, the
             signals are result to the system default.  signals is either a single signal or a list of  signals.
             Signals  may  be  specified  numerically or symbolically as per signal(3).  The "SIG" prefix may be
             omitted.

             With no arguments (or the argument -number), trap returns the signal number  of  the  trap  command
             currently being executed.

             The  -code  flag  uses  the  return  code of the command in place of whatever code Tcl was about to
             return when the command originally started running.

             The -interp flag causes the command to be evaluated using the interpreter active at  the  time  the
             command started running rather than when the trap was declared.

             The  -name  flag  causes  the  trap command to return the signal name of the trap command currently
             being executed.

             The -max flag causes the trap command to return the largest signal number that can be set.

             For example, the command "trap {send_user "Ouch!"} SIGINT" will print "Ouch!"  each time  the  user
             presses ^C.

             By  default,  SIGINT  (which  can  usually be generated by pressing ^C) and SIGTERM cause Expect to
             exit.  This is due to the following trap, created by default when Expect starts.

                 trap exit {SIGINT SIGTERM}

             If you use the -D flag to start  the  debugger,  SIGINT  is  redefined  to  start  the  interactive
             debugger.  This is due to the following trap:

                 trap {exp_debug 1} SIGINT

             The  debugger  trap  can  be changed by setting the environment variable EXPECT_DEBUG_INIT to a new
             trap command.

             You can, of course, override both of these just  by  adding  trap  commands  to  your  script.   In
             particular, if you have your own "trap exit SIGINT", this will override the debugger trap.  This is
             useful if you want to prevent users from getting to the debugger at all.

             If  you  want  to define your own trap on SIGINT but still trap to the debugger when it is running,
             use:

                 if {![exp_debug]} {trap mystuff SIGINT}

             Alternatively, you can trap to the debugger using some other signal.

             trap will not let you override the action for SIGALRM as this is used internally  to  Expect.   The
             disconnect  command sets SIGALRM to SIG_IGN (ignore).  You can reenable this as long as you disable
             it during subsequent spawn commands.

             See signal(3) for more info.

       wait [args]
             delays until a spawned process (or the current process if none is named) terminates.

             wait normally returns a list of four integers.  The first integer is the pid of  the  process  that
             was  waited upon.  The second integer is the corresponding spawn id.  The third integer is -1 if an
             operating system error occurred, or 0 otherwise.  If the third integer was 0, the fourth integer is
             the status returned by the spawned process.  If the third integer was -1, the fourth integer is the
             value of errno set by the operating system.  The global variable errorCode is also set.

             Additional elements may appear at the end of the return value from wait.  An optional fifth element
             identifies a class of information.   Currently,  the  only  possible  value  for  this  element  is
             CHILDKILLED  in  which  case  the  next  two values are the C-style signal name and a short textual
             description.

             The -i flag declares the process to wait corresponding to the named spawn_id (NOT the process  id).
             Inside a SIGCHLD handler, it is possible to wait for any spawned process by using the spawn id -1.

             The  -nowait  flag  causes the wait to return immediately with the indication of a successful wait.
             When the process exits (later), it will automatically disappear without the need  for  an  explicit
             wait.

             The  wait  command  may also be used wait for a forked process using the arguments "-i -1".  Unlike
             its use with spawned processes, this command can be executed at any time.  There is no control over
             which process is reaped.  However, the return value can be checked for the process id.

LIBRARIES

       Expect automatically knows about two built-in libraries for Expect scripts.  These  are  defined  by  the
       directories  named  in the variables exp_library and exp_exec_library.  Both are meant to contain utility
       files that can be used by other scripts.

       exp_library contains architecture-independent files.   exp_exec_library  contains  architecture-dependent
       files.   Depending  on  your  system,  both  directories may be totally empty.  The existence of the file
       $exp_exec_library/cat-buffers describes whether your /bin/cat buffers by default.

PRETTY-PRINTING

       A vgrind definition is available for pretty-printing Expect  scripts.   Assuming  the  vgrind  definition
       supplied with the Expect distribution is correctly installed, you can use it as:

           vgrind -lexpect file

EXAMPLES

       It  many  not be apparent how to put everything together that the man page describes.  I encourage you to
       read and try out the examples in the example directory of the Expect distribution.  Some of them are real
       programs.  Others are simply illustrative of certain techniques, and of course, a couple are  just  quick
       hacks.  The INSTALL file has a quick overview of these programs.

       The  Expect papers (see SEE ALSO) are also useful.  While some papers use syntax corresponding to earlier
       versions of Expect, the accompanying rationales are still valid and go into a lot more detail  than  this
       man page.

CAVEATS

       Extensions  may  collide with Expect's command names.  For example, send is defined by Tk for an entirely
       different purpose.  For this reason, most of the  Expect  commands  are  also  available  as  "exp_XXXX".
       Commands  and  variables  beginning with "exp", "inter", "spawn", and "timeout" do not have aliases.  Use
       the extended command names if you need this compatibility between environments.

       Expect takes a rather liberal view of scoping.  In particular, variables read by commands specific to the
       Expect program will be sought first from the local scope, and if not found, in  the  global  scope.   For
       example,  this obviates the need to place "global timeout" in every procedure you write that uses expect.
       On the other hand, variables written are always in the local scope (unless a "global"  command  has  been
       issued).   The  most  common  problem  this causes is when spawn is executed in a procedure.  Outside the
       procedure, spawn_id no longer exists, so the spawned process is no longer accessible  simply  because  of
       scoping.  Add a "global spawn_id" to such a procedure.

       If  you  cannot enable the multispawning capability (i.e., your system supports neither select (BSD *.*),
       poll (SVR>2), nor something equivalent), Expect will only be able to control a single process at a  time.
       In  this  case, do not attempt to set spawn_id, nor should you execute processes via exec while a spawned
       process is running.  Furthermore, you will not be able to expect from multiple processes  (including  the
       user as one) at the same time.

       Terminal  parameters  can  have a big effect on scripts.  For example, if a script is written to look for
       echoing, it will misbehave if echoing is turned off.   For  this  reason,  Expect  forces  sane  terminal
       parameters  by  default.   Unfortunately,  this  can  make  things  unpleasant for other programs.  As an
       example, the emacs shell wants to change the "usual" mappings: newlines get mapped to newlines instead of
       carriage-return newlines, and echoing is disabled.  This allows one to use emacs to edit the input  line.
       Unfortunately, Expect cannot possibly guess this.

       You can request that Expect not override its default setting of terminal parameters, but you must then be
       very  careful  when  writing  scripts  for such environments.  In the case of emacs, avoid depending upon
       things like echoing and end-of-line mappings.

       The commands that accepted arguments braced into a single list (the expect variants and interact)  use  a
       heuristic  to  decide  if  the list is actually one argument or many.  The heuristic can fail only in the
       case when the list actually does represent a single argument which has multiple embedded \n's  with  non-
       whitespace  characters between them.  This seems sufficiently improbable, however the argument "-nobrace"
       can be used to force a single argument to be handled as a single argument.   This  could  conceivably  be
       used  with  machine-generated  Expect  code.   Similarly, -brace forces a single argument to be handle as
       multiple patterns/actions.

BUGS

       It was really tempting to name the program "sex" (for either "Smart EXec"  or  "Send-EXpect"),  but  good
       sense (or perhaps just Puritanism) prevailed.

       On  some  systems,  when a shell is spawned, it complains about not being able to access the tty but runs
       anyway.  This means your system has a mechanism for gaining the controlling tty that Expect doesn't  know
       about.  Please find out what it is, and send this information back to me.

       Ultrix  4.1  (at  least  the  latest  versions  around  here)  considers  timeouts of above 1000000 to be
       equivalent to 0.

       Digital UNIX 4.0A (and probably other versions) refuses to allocate ptys if you define a SIGCHLD handler.
       See grantpt page for more info.

       IRIX 6.0 does not handle pty permissions  correctly  so  that  if  Expect  attempts  to  allocate  a  pty
       previously used by someone else, it fails.  Upgrade to IRIX 6.1.

       Telnet  (verified only under SunOS 4.1.2) hangs if TERM is not set.  This is a problem under cron, at and
       in cgi scripts, which do not define TERM.  Thus, you must set it explicitly - to  what  type  is  usually
       irrelevant.  It just has to be set to something!  The following probably suffices for most cases.

           set env(TERM) vt100

       Tip  (verified  only  under BSDI BSD/OS 3.1 i386) hangs if SHELL and HOME are not set.  This is a problem
       under cron, at and in cgi scripts, which do not define these environment variables.  Thus, you  must  set
       them explicitly - to what type is usually irrelevant.  It just has to be set to something!  The following
       probably suffices for most cases.

           set env(SHELL) /bin/sh
           set env(HOME) /usr/bin

       Some implementations of ptys are designed so that the kernel throws away any unread output after 10 to 15
       seconds  (actual  number  is  implementation-dependent) after the process has closed the file descriptor.
       Thus Expect programs such as

           spawn date
           sleep 20
           expect

       will fail.  To avoid this, invoke non-interactive programs with  exec  rather  than  spawn.   While  such
       situations are conceivable, in practice I have never encountered a situation in which the final output of
       a truly interactive program would be lost due to this behavior.

       On the other hand, Cray UNICOS ptys throw away any unread output immediately after the process has closed
       the file descriptor.  I have reported this to Cray and they are working on a fix.

       Sometimes  a  delay is required between a prompt and a response, such as when a tty interface is changing
       UART settings or matching baud rates by looking for start/stop bits.  Usually, all this is require is  to
       sleep  for  a  second or two.  A more robust technique is to retry until the hardware is ready to receive
       input.  The following example uses both strategies:

           send "speed 9600\r";
           sleep 1
           expect {
               timeout {send "\r"; exp_continue}
               $prompt
           }

       trap -code will not work with any command that sits in Tcl's event loop, such as sleep.  The  problem  is
       that  in the event loop, Tcl discards the return codes from async event handlers.  A workaround is to set
       a flag in the trap code.  Then check the flag immediately after the command (i.e., sleep).

       The expect_background command ignores -timeout arguments and has no concept of timeouts in general.

EXPECT HINTS

       There are a couple of things about Expect that may be non-intuitive.  This section  attempts  to  address
       some of these things with a couple of suggestions.

       A  common  expect  problem  is how to recognize shell prompts.  Since these are customized differently by
       differently people and different shells, portably automating rlogin can be difficult without knowing  the
       prompt.   A reasonable convention is to have users store a regular expression describing their prompt (in
       particular, the end of it) in the environment variable EXPECT_PROMPT.  Code like  the  following  can  be
       used.  If EXPECT_PROMPT doesn't exist, the code still has a good chance of functioning correctly.

           set prompt "(%|#|\\$) $"          ;# default prompt
           catch {set prompt $env(EXPECT_PROMPT)}

           expect -re $prompt

       I encourage you to write expect patterns that include the end of whatever you expect to see.  This avoids
       the  possibility of answering a question before seeing the entire thing.  In addition, while you may well
       be able to answer questions before seeing them entirely, if you answer early,   your  answer  may  appear
       echoed  back  in  the middle of the question.  In other words, the resulting dialogue will be correct but
       look scrambled.

       Most prompts include a space character at the end.  For example, the prompt from ftp is  'f',  't',  'p',
       '>'  and  <blank>.   To match this prompt, you must account for each of these characters.  It is a common
       mistake not to include the blank.  Put the blank in explicitly.

       If you use a pattern of the form X*, the * will match all the output received from the end of  X  to  the
       last  thing received.  This sounds intuitive but can be somewhat confusing because the phrase "last thing
       received" can vary depending upon the speed of the computer and the processing of I/O both by the  kernel
       and the device driver.

       In  particular,  humans  tend  to see program output arriving in huge chunks (atomically) when in reality
       most programs produce output one line at a time.  Assuming this is the case, the * in the pattern of  the
       previous paragraph may only match the end of the current line even though there seems to be more, because
       at the time of the match that was all the output that had been received.

       expect  has no way of knowing that further output is coming unless your pattern specifically accounts for
       it.

       Even depending on line-oriented buffering is unwise.  Not only do programs rarely make promises about the
       type of buffering they do, but system indigestion can break output  lines  up  so  that  lines  break  at
       seemingly  random  places.   Thus,  if  you  can express the last few characters of a prompt when writing
       patterns, it is wise to do so.

       If you are waiting for a pattern in the last output of a program and the  program  emits  something  else
       instead,  you  will  not be able to detect that with the timeout keyword.  The reason is that expect will
       not timeout - instead it will get an eof indication.  Use that instead.  Even better, use both.  That way
       if that line is ever moved around, you won't have to edit the line itself.

       Newlines are usually converted to carriage return, linefeed sequences when output by the terminal driver.
       Thus, if you want a pattern that explicitly matches the two lines,  from,  say,  printf("foo\nbar"),  you
       should use the pattern "foo\r\nbar".

       A  similar  translation occurs when reading from the user, via expect_user.  In this case, when you press
       return, it will be translated to a newline.  If Expect then passes that  to  a  program  which  sets  its
       terminal to raw mode (like telnet), there is going to be a problem, as the program expects a true return.
       (Some  programs are actually forgiving in that they will automatically translate newlines to returns, but
       most don't.)  Unfortunately, there is no way to find out that a program put its terminal into raw mode.

       Rather than manually replacing newlines with returns, the solution is to  use  the  command  "stty  raw",
       which  will  stop the translation.  Note, however, that this means that you will no longer get the cooked
       line-editing features.

       interact implicitly sets your terminal to raw mode so this problem will not arise then.

       It is often useful to store passwords (or other private information) in  Expect  scripts.   This  is  not
       recommended  since  anything  that  is  stored  on a computer is susceptible to being accessed by anyone.
       Thus, interactively prompting for passwords  from  a  script  is  a  smarter  idea  than  embedding  them
       literally.  Nonetheless, sometimes such embedding is the only possibility.

       Unfortunately,  the  UNIX  file  system  has  no  direct way of creating scripts which are executable but
       unreadable.  Systems which support setgid shell scripts may indirectly simulate this as follows:

       Create the Expect script (that contains  the  secret  data)  as  usual.   Make  its  permissions  be  750
       (-rwxr-x---)  and  owned  by  a  trusted group, i.e., a group which is allowed to read it.  If necessary,
       create a new group for this purpose.  Next, create a /bin/sh script with  permissions  2751  (-rwxr-s--x)
       owned by the same group as before.

       The  result  is  a  script  which may be executed (and read) by anyone.  When invoked, it runs the Expect
       script.

SEE ALSO

       Tcl(3), libexpect(3)
       "Exploring Expect: A Tcl-Based Toolkit for Automating Interactive Programs" by Don Libes, pp.  602,  ISBN
       1-56592-090-2, O'Reilly and Associates, 1995.
       "expect:  Curing Those Uncontrollable Fits of Interactivity" by Don Libes, Proceedings of the Summer 1990
       USENIX Conference, Anaheim, California, June 11-15, 1990.
       "Using expect to Automate System Administration Tasks" by Don Libes, Proceedings of the 1990 USENIX Large
       Installation Systems Administration Conference, Colorado Springs, Colorado, October 17-19, 1990.
       "Tcl: An Embeddable Command  Language"  by  John  Ousterhout,  Proceedings  of  the  Winter  1990  USENIX
       Conference, Washington, D.C., January 22-26, 1990.
       "expect:  Scripts  for  Controlling Interactive Programs" by Don Libes, Computing Systems, Vol. 4, No. 2,
       University of California Press Journals, November 1991.
       "Regression Testing and Conformance Testing Interactive Programs",  by  Don  Libes,  Proceedings  of  the
       Summer 1992 USENIX Conference, pp. 135-144, San Antonio, TX, June 12-15, 1992.
       "Kibitz  -  Connecting  Multiple  Interactive  Programs  Together",  by  Don Libes, Software - Practice &
       Experience, John Wiley & Sons, West Sussex, England, Vol. 23, No. 5, May, 1993.
       "A Debugger for Tcl Applications", by Don Libes, Proceedings of the 1993 Tcl/Tk Workshop,  Berkeley,  CA,
       June 10-11, 1993.

AUTHOR

       Don Libes, National Institute of Standards and Technology

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

       Thanks  to John Ousterhout for Tcl, and Scott Paisley for inspiration.  Thanks to Rob Savoye for Expect's
       autoconfiguration code.

       The HISTORY file documents much of the evolution of expect.  It makes interesting reading and might  give
       you  further  insight  to  this software.  Thanks to the people mentioned in it who sent me bug fixes and
       gave other assistance.

       Design and implementation of Expect was paid for in part by the U.S. government and is therefore  in  the
       public  domain.   However  the  author  and  NIST  would like credit if this program and documentation or
       portions of them are used.

                                                29 December 1994                                       EXPECT(1)