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1 .. _command-line-interface:
2
3 Command Line Interface
4 ======================
5
6 FRR features a flexible modal command line interface. Often when adding new
7 features or modifying existing code it is necessary to create or modify CLI
8 commands. FRR has a powerful internal CLI system that does most of the heavy
9 lifting for you.
10
11 Modes
12 -----
13 FRR's CLI is organized by modes. Each mode is associated with some set of
14 functionality, e.g. EVPN, or some underlying object such as an interface. Each
15 mode contains a set of commands that control the associated functionality or
16 object. Users move between the modes by entering a command, which is usually
17 different for each source and destination mode.
18
19 A summary of the modes is given in the following figure.
20
21 .. graphviz:: ../figures/nodes.dot
22
23 .. seealso:: :ref:`cli-data-structures`
24
25 Walkup
26 ^^^^^^
27 FRR exhibits, for historical reasons, a peculiar behavior called 'walkup'.
28 Suppose a user is in ``OSPF_NODE``, which contains only OSPF-specific commands,
29 and enters the following command: ::
30
31 ip route 192.168.100.0/24 10.0.2.2
32
33 This command is not defined in ``OSPF_NODE``, so the matcher will fail to match
34 the command in that node. The matcher will then check "parent" nodes of
35 ``OSPF_NODE``. In this case the direct parent of ``OSPF_NODE`` is
36 ``CONFIG_NODE``, so the current node switches to ``CONFIG_NODE`` and the command
37 is tried in that node. Since static route commands are defined in
38 ``CONFIG_NODE`` the command succeeds. The procedure of attempting to execute
39 unmatched commands by sequentially "walking up" to parent nodes only happens in
40 children (direct and indirect) below ``CONFIG_NODE`` and stops at
41 ``CONFIG_NODE``.
42
43 Unfortunately, the internal representation of the various modes is not actually
44 a graph. Instead, there is an array. The parent-child relationships are not
45 explicitly defined in any datastructure but instead are hard-coded into the
46 specific commands that switch nodes. For walkup, there is a function that takes
47 a node and returns the parent of the node. This interface causes all manner of
48 insidious problems, even for experienced developers, and needs to be fixed at
49 some point in the future.
50
51 Defining Commands
52 -----------------
53 All definitions for the CLI system are exposed in ``lib/command.h``. In this
54 header there are a set of macros used to define commands. These macros are
55 collectively referred to as "DEFUNs", because of their syntax:
56
57 ::
58
59 DEFUN(command_name,
60 command_name_cmd,
61 "example command FOO...",
62 "Examples\n"
63 "CLI command\n"
64 "Argument\n")
65 {
66 // ...command handler...
67 }
68
69 DEFUNs generally take four arguments which are expanded into the appropriate
70 constructs for hooking into the CLI. In order these are:
71
72 - **Function name** - the name of the handler function for the command
73 - **Command name** - the identifier of the ``struct cmd_element`` for the
74 command. By convention this should be the function name with ``_cmd``
75 appended.
76 - **Command definition** - an expression in FRR's CLI grammar that defines the
77 form of the command and its arguments, if any
78 - **Doc string** - a newline-delimited string that documents each element in
79 the command definition
80
81 In the above example, ``command_name`` is the function name,
82 ``command_name_cmd`` is the command name, ``"example..."`` is the definition and
83 the last argument is the doc string. The block following the macro is the body
84 of the handler function, details on which are presented later in this section.
85
86 In order to make the command show up to the user it must be installed into the
87 CLI graph. To do this, call:
88
89 ``install_element(NODE, &command_name_cmd);``
90
91 This will install the command into the specified CLI node. Usually these calls
92 are grouped together in a CLI initialization function for a set of commands, and
93 the DEFUNs themselves are grouped into the same source file to avoid cluttering
94 the codebase. The names of these files follow the form ``*_vty.[ch]`` by
95 convention. Please do not scatter individual CLI commands in the middle of
96 source files; instead expose the necessary functions in a header and place the
97 command definition in a ``*_vty.[ch]`` file.
98
99 Definition Grammar
100 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
101 FRR uses its own grammar for defining CLI commands. The grammar draws from
102 syntax commonly seen in \*nix manpages and should be fairly intuitive. The
103 parser is implemented in Bison and the lexer in Flex. These may be found in
104 ``lib/command_parse.y`` and ``lib/command_lex.l``, respectively.
105
106 **ProTip**: if you define a new command and find that the parser is
107 throwing syntax or other errors, the parser is the last place you want
108 to look. Bison is very stable and if it detects a syntax error, 99% of
109 the time it will be a syntax error in your definition.
110
111 The formal grammar in BNF is given below. This is the grammar implemented in the
112 Bison parser. At runtime, the Bison parser reads all of the CLI strings and
113 builds a combined directed graph that is used to match and interpret user input.
114
115 Human-friendly explanations of how to use this grammar are given a bit later in
116 this section alongside information on the :ref:`cli-data-structures` constructed
117 by the parser.
118
119 .. productionlist::
120 command: `cmd_token_seq`
121 : `cmd_token_seq` `placeholder_token` "..."
122 cmd_token_seq: *empty*
123 : `cmd_token_seq` `cmd_token`
124 cmd_token: `simple_token`
125 : `selector`
126 simple_token: `literal_token`
127 : `placeholder_token`
128 literal_token: WORD `varname_token`
129 varname_token: "$" WORD
130 placeholder_token: `placeholder_token_real` `varname_token`
131 placeholder_token_real: IPV4
132 : IPV4_PREFIX
133 : IPV6
134 : IPV6_PREFIX
135 : VARIABLE
136 : RANGE
137 : MAC
138 : MAC_PREFIX
139 selector: "<" `selector_seq_seq` ">" `varname_token`
140 : "{" `selector_seq_seq` "}" `varname_token`
141 : "[" `selector_seq_seq` "]" `varname_token`
142 : "![" `selector_seq_seq` "]" `varname_token`
143 selector_seq_seq: `selector_seq_seq` "|" `selector_token_seq`
144 : `selector_token_seq`
145 selector_token_seq: `selector_token_seq` `selector_token`
146 : `selector_token`
147 selector_token: `selector`
148 : `simple_token`
149
150 Tokens
151 ^^^^^^
152 The various capitalized tokens in the BNF above are in fact themselves
153 placeholders, but not defined as such in the formal grammar; the grammar
154 provides the structure, and the tokens are actually more like a type system for
155 the strings you write in your CLI definitions. A CLI definition string is broken
156 apart and each piece is assigned a type by the lexer based on a set of regular
157 expressions. The parser uses the type information to verify the string and
158 determine the structure of the CLI graph; additional metadata (such as the raw
159 text of each token) is encoded into the graph as it is constructed by the
160 parser, but this is merely a dumb copy job.
161
162 Here is a brief summary of the various token types along with examples.
163
164 +-----------------+-------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------+
165 | Token type | Syntax | Description |
166 +=================+===================+=============================================================+
167 | ``WORD`` | ``show ip bgp`` | Matches itself. In the given example every token is a WORD. |
168 +-----------------+-------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------+
169 | ``IPV4`` | ``A.B.C.D`` | Matches an IPv4 address. |
170 +-----------------+-------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------+
171 | ``IPV6`` | ``X:X::X:X`` | Matches an IPv6 address. |
172 +-----------------+-------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------+
173 | ``IPV4_PREFIX`` | ``A.B.C.D/M`` | Matches an IPv4 prefix in CIDR notation. |
174 +-----------------+-------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------+
175 | ``IPV6_PREFIX`` | ``X:X::X:X/M`` | Matches an IPv6 prefix in CIDR notation. |
176 +-----------------+-------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------+
177 | ``MAC`` | ``X:X:X:X:X:X`` | Matches a 48-bit mac address. |
178 +-----------------+-------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------+
179 | ``MAC_PREFIX`` | ``X:X:X:X:X:X/M`` | Matches a 48-bit mac address with a mask. |
180 +-----------------+-------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------+
181 | ``VARIABLE`` | ``FOOBAR`` | Matches anything. |
182 +-----------------+-------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------+
183 | ``RANGE`` | ``(X-Y)`` | Matches numbers in the range X..Y inclusive. |
184 +-----------------+-------------------+-------------------------------------------------------------+
185
186 When presented with user input, the parser will search over all defined
187 commands in the current context to find a match. It is aware of the various
188 types of user input and has a ranking system to help disambiguate commands. For
189 instance, suppose the following commands are defined in the user's current
190 context:
191
192 ::
193
194 example command FOO
195 example command (22-49)
196 example command A.B.C.D/X
197
198 The following table demonstrates the matcher's choice for a selection of
199 possible user input.
200
201 +---------------------------------+---------------------------+--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
202 | Input | Matched command | Reason |
203 +=================================+===========================+==============================================================================================================+
204 | ``example command eLi7eH4xx0r`` | example command FOO | ``eLi7eH4xx0r`` is not an integer or IPv4 prefix, |
205 | | | but FOO is a variable and matches all input. |
206 +---------------------------------+---------------------------+--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
207 | ``example command 42`` | example command (22-49) | ``42`` is not an IPv4 prefix. It does match both |
208 | | | ``(22-49)`` and ``FOO``, but RANGE tokens are more specific and have a higher priority than VARIABLE tokens. |
209 +---------------------------------+---------------------------+--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
210 | ``example command 10.3.3.0/24`` | example command A.B.C.D/X | The user entered an IPv4 prefix, which is best matched by the last command. |
211 +---------------------------------+---------------------------+--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
212
213 Rules
214 ^^^^^
215 There are also constructs which allow optional tokens, mutual exclusion,
216 one-or-more selection and repetition.
217
218 - ``<angle|brackets>`` -- Contain sequences of tokens separated by pipes and
219 provide mutual exclusion. User input matches at most one option.
220 - ``[square brackets]`` -- Contains sequences of tokens that can be omitted.
221 ``[<a|b>]`` can be shortened to ``[a|b]``.
222 - ``![exclamation square brackets]`` -- same as ``[square brackets]``, but
223 only allow skipping the contents if the command input starts with ``no``.
224 (For cases where the positive command needs a parameter, but the parameter
225 is optional for the negative case.)
226 - ``{curly|braces}`` -- similar to angle brackets, but instead of mutual
227 exclusion, curly braces indicate that one or more of the pipe-separated
228 sequences may be provided in any order.
229 - ``VARIADICS...`` -- Any token which accepts input (anything except WORD)
230 which occurs as the last token of a line may be followed by an ellipsis,
231 which indicates that input matching the token may be repeated an unlimited
232 number of times.
233 - ``$name`` -- Specify a variable name for the preceding token. See
234 "Variable Names" below.
235
236 Some general notes:
237
238 - Options are allowed at the beginning of the command. The developer is
239 entreated to use these extremely sparingly. They are most useful for
240 implementing the 'no' form of configuration commands. Please think carefully
241 before using them for anything else. There is usually a better solution, even
242 if it is just separating out the command definition into separate ones.
243 - The developer should judiciously apply separation of concerns when defining
244 commands. CLI definitions for two unrelated or vaguely related commands or
245 configuration items should be defined in separate commands. Clarity is
246 preferred over LOC (within reason).
247 - The maximum number of space-separated tokens that can be entered is
248 presently limited to 256. Please keep this limit in mind when
249 implementing new CLI.
250
251 Variable Names
252 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
253 The parser tries to fill the "varname" field on each token. This can happen
254 either manually or automatically. Manual specifications work by appending
255 ``$name`` after the input specifier:
256
257 ::
258
259 foo bar$cmd WORD$name A.B.C.D$ip
260
261 Note that you can also assign variable names to fixed input tokens, this can be
262 useful if multiple commands share code. You can also use "$name" after a
263 multiple-choice option:
264
265 ::
266
267 foo bar <A.B.C.D|X:X::X:X>$addr [optionA|optionB]$mode
268
269 The variable name is in this case assigned to the last token in each of the
270 branches.
271
272 Automatic assignment of variable names works by applying the following rules:
273
274 - manual names always have priority
275 - a ``[no]`` at the beginning receives ``no`` as varname on the ``no`` token
276 - ``VARIABLE`` tokens whose text is not ``WORD`` or ``NAME`` receive a cleaned
277 lowercase version of the token text as varname, e.g. ``ROUTE-MAP`` becomes
278 ``route_map``.
279 - other variable tokens (i.e. everything except "fixed") receive the text of
280 the preceding fixed token as varname, if one can be found. E.g.
281 ``ip route A.B.C.D/M INTERFACE`` assigns "route" to the ``A.B.C.D/M`` token.
282
283 These rules should make it possible to avoid manual varname assignment in 90% of
284 the cases.
285
286 Doc Strings
287 ^^^^^^^^^^^
288 Each token in a command definition should be documented with a brief doc string
289 that informs a user of the meaning and/or purpose of the subsequent command
290 tree. These strings are provided as the last parameter to DEFUN macros,
291 concatenated together and separated by an escaped newline (``\n``). These are
292 best explained by example.
293
294 ::
295
296 DEFUN (config_terminal,
297 config_terminal_cmd,
298 "configure terminal",
299 "Configuration from vty interface\n"
300 "Configuration terminal\n")
301
302 The last parameter is split into two lines for readability. Two newline
303 delimited doc strings are present, one for each token in the command. The second
304 string documents the functionality of the ``terminal`` command in the
305 ``configure`` subtree.
306
307 Note that the first string, for ``configure`` does not contain documentation for
308 'terminal'. This is because the CLI is best envisioned as a tree, with tokens
309 defining branches. An imaginary ``start`` token is the root of every command in
310 a CLI node. Each subsequent written token descends into a subtree, so the
311 documentation for that token ideally summarizes all the functionality contained
312 in the subtree.
313
314 A consequence of this structure is that the developer must be careful to use the
315 same doc strings when defining multiple commands that are part of the same tree.
316 Commands which share prefixes must share the same doc strings for those
317 prefixes. On startup the parser will generate warnings if it notices
318 inconsistent doc strings. Behavior is undefined; the same token may show up
319 twice in completions, with different doc strings, or it may show up once with a
320 random doc string. Parser warnings should be heeded and fixed to avoid confusing
321 users.
322
323 The number of doc strings provided must be equal to the amount of tokens present
324 in the command definition, read left to right, ignoring any special constructs.
325
326 In the examples below, each arrowed token needs a doc string.
327
328 ::
329
330 "show ip bgp"
331 ^ ^ ^
332
333 "command <foo|bar> [example]"
334 ^ ^ ^ ^
335
336 DEFPY
337 ^^^^^
338 ``DEFPY(...)`` is an enhanced version of ``DEFUN()`` which is preprocessed by
339 :file:`python/clidef.py`. The python script parses the command definition
340 string, extracts variable names and types, and generates a C wrapper function
341 that parses the variables and passes them on. This means that in the CLI
342 function body, you will receive additional parameters with appropriate types.
343
344 This is best explained by an example. Invoking ``DEFPY`` like this:
345
346 .. code-block:: c
347
348 DEFPY(func, func_cmd, "[no] foo bar A.B.C.D (0-99)$num", "...help...")
349
350 defines the handler function like this:
351
352 .. code-block:: c
353
354 func(self, vty, argc, argv, /* standard CLI arguments */
355 const char *no, /* unparsed "no" */
356 struct in_addr bar, /* parsed IP address */
357 const char *bar_str, /* unparsed IP address */
358 long num, /* parsed num */
359 const char *num_str) /* unparsed num */
360
361 Note that as documented in the previous section, ``bar`` is automatically
362 applied as variable name for ``A.B.C.D``. The Python script then detects this as
363 an IP address argument and generates code to parse it into a ``struct in_addr``,
364 passing it in ``bar``. The raw value is passed in ``bar_str``. The range/number
365 argument works in the same way with the explicitly given variable name.
366
367 Type rules
368 """"""""""
369
370 +----------------------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------+
371 | Token(s) | Type | Value if omitted by user |
372 +============================+================================+==========================+
373 | ``A.B.C.D`` | ``struct in_addr`` | ``0.0.0.0`` |
374 +----------------------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------+
375 | ``X:X::X:X`` | ``struct in6_addr`` | ``::`` |
376 +----------------------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------+
377 | ``A.B.C.D + X:X::X:X`` | ``const union sockunion *`` | ``NULL`` |
378 +----------------------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------+
379 | ``A.B.C.D/M`` | ``const struct prefix_ipv4 *`` | ``all-zeroes struct`` |
380 +----------------------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------+
381 | ``X:X::X:X/M`` | ``const struct prefix_ipv6 *`` | ``all-zeroes struct`` |
382 +----------------------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------+
383 | ``A.B.C.D/M + X:X::X:X/M`` | ``const struct prefix *`` | ``all-zeroes struct`` |
384 +----------------------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------+
385 | ``(0-9)`` | ``long`` | ``0`` |
386 +----------------------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------+
387 | ``VARIABLE`` | ``const char *`` | ``NULL`` |
388 +----------------------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------+
389 | ``word`` | ``const char *`` | ``NULL`` |
390 +----------------------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------+
391 | *all other* | ``const char *`` | ``NULL`` |
392 +----------------------------+--------------------------------+--------------------------+
393
394 Note the following details:
395
396 - Not all parameters are pointers, some are passed as values.
397 - When the type is not ``const char *``, there will be an extra ``_str``
398 argument with type ``const char *``.
399 - You can give a variable name not only to ``VARIABLE`` tokens but also to
400 ``word`` tokens (e.g. constant words). This is useful if some parts of a
401 command are optional. The type will be ``const char *``.
402 - ``[no]`` will be passed as ``const char *no``.
403 - Most pointers will be ``NULL`` when the argument is optional and the
404 user did not supply it. As noted in the table above, some prefix
405 struct type arguments are passed as pointers to all-zeroes structs,
406 not as ``NULL`` pointers.
407 - If a parameter is not a pointer, but is optional and the user didn't use it,
408 the default value will be passed. Check the ``_str`` argument if you need to
409 determine whether the parameter was omitted.
410 - If the definition contains multiple parameters with the same variable name,
411 they will be collapsed into a single function parameter. The python code will
412 detect if the types are compatible (i.e. IPv4 + IPv6 variants) and choose a
413 corresponding C type.
414 - The standard DEFUN parameters (``self, vty, argc, argv``) are still present
415 and can be used. A DEFUN can simply be **edited into a DEFPY without further
416 changes and it will still work**; this allows easy forward migration.
417 - A file may contain both ``DEFUN`` and ``DEFPY`` statements.
418
419 Getting a parameter dump
420 """"""""""""""""""""""""
421 The clidef.py script can be called to get a list of DEFUNs/DEFPYs with the
422 parameter name/type list:
423
424 ::
425
426 lib/clippy python/clidef.py --all-defun --show lib/plist.c > /dev/null
427
428 The generated code is printed to stdout, the info dump to stderr. The
429 ``--all-defun`` argument will make it process DEFUN blocks as well as DEFPYs,
430 which is useful prior to converting some DEFUNs. **The dump does not list the
431 ``_str`` arguments** to keep the output shorter.
432
433 Note that the ``clidef.py`` script cannot be run with python directly, it needs
434 to be run with *clippy* since the latter makes the CLI parser available.
435
436 Include & Makefile requirements
437 """""""""""""""""""""""""""""""
438 A source file that uses DEFPY needs to include the ``*_clippy.c`` file **before
439 all DEFPY statements**:
440
441 .. code-block:: c
442
443 /* GPL header */
444 #include ...
445 ...
446 #ifndef VTYSH_EXTRACT_PL
447 #include "daemon/filename_clippy.c"
448 #endif
449
450 DEFPY(...)
451 DEFPY(...)
452
453 install_element(...)
454
455 This dependency needs to be marked in ``Makefile.am`` or ``subdir.am``: (there
456 is no ordering requirement)
457
458 .. code-block:: make
459
460 # ...
461
462 # if linked into a LTLIBRARY (.la/.so):
463 filename.lo: filename_clippy.c
464
465 # if linked into an executable or static library (.a):
466 filename.o: filename_clippy.c
467
468 Handlers
469 ^^^^^^^^
470 The block that follows a CLI definition is executed when a user enters input
471 that matches the definition. Its function signature looks like this:
472
473 .. code-block:: c
474
475 int (*func) (const struct cmd_element *, struct vty *, int, struct cmd_token *[]);
476
477 The first argument is the command definition struct. The last argument is an
478 ordered array of tokens that correspond to the path taken through the graph, and
479 the argument just prior to that is the length of the array.
480
481 The arrangement of the token array has changed from Quagga's CLI implementation.
482 In the old system, missing arguments were padded with ``NULL`` so that the same
483 parts of a command would show up at the same indices regardless of what was
484 entered. The new system does not perform such padding and therefore it is
485 generally *incorrect* to assume consistent indices in this array. As a simple
486 example:
487
488 Command definition:
489
490 ::
491
492 command [foo] <bar|baz>
493
494 User enters:
495
496 ::
497
498 command foo bar
499
500 Array:
501
502 ::
503
504 [0] -> command
505 [1] -> foo
506 [2] -> bar
507
508 User enters:
509
510 ::
511
512 command baz
513
514 Array:
515
516 ::
517
518 [0] -> command
519 [1] -> baz
520
521
522 .. _cli-data-structures:
523
524 Data Structures
525 ---------------
526 On startup, the CLI parser sequentially parses each command string definition
527 and constructs a directed graph with each token forming a node. This graph is
528 the basis of the entire CLI system. It is used to match user input in order to
529 generate command completions and match commands to functions.
530
531 There is one graph per CLI node (not the same as a graph node in the CLI graph).
532 The CLI node struct keeps a reference to its graph (see :file:`lib/command.h`).
533
534 While most of the graph maintains the form of a tree, special constructs
535 outlined in the Rules section introduce some quirks. ``<>``, ``[]`` and ``{}``
536 form self-contained 'subgraphs'. Each subgraph is a tree except that all of the
537 'leaves' actually share a child node. This helps with minimizing graph size and
538 debugging.
539
540 As a working example, here is the graph of the following command: ::
541
542 show [ip] bgp neighbors [<A.B.C.D|X:X::X:X|WORD>] [json]
543
544 .. figure:: ../figures/cligraph.png
545 :align: center
546
547 Graph of example CLI command
548
549
550 ``FORK`` and ``JOIN`` nodes are plumbing nodes that don't correspond to user
551 input. They're necessary in order to deduplicate these constructs where
552 applicable.
553
554 Options follow the same form, except that there is an edge from the ``FORK``
555 node to the ``JOIN`` node. Since all of the subgraphs in the example command are
556 optional, all of them have this edge.
557
558 Keywords follow the same form, except that there is an edge from ``JOIN`` to
559 ``FORK``. Because of this the CLI graph cannot be called acyclic. There is
560 special logic in the input matching code that keeps a stack of paths already
561 taken through the node in order to disallow following the same path more than
562 once.
563
564 Variadics are a bit special; they have an edge back to themselves, which allows
565 repeating the same input indefinitely.
566
567 The leaves of the graph are nodes that have no out edges. These nodes are
568 special; their data section does not contain a token, as most nodes do, or
569 ``NULL``, as in ``FORK``/``JOIN`` nodes, but instead has a pointer to a
570 ``cmd_element``. All paths through the graph that terminate on a leaf are
571 guaranteed to be defined by that command. When a user enters a complete command,
572 the command matcher tokenizes the input and executes a DFS on the CLI graph. If
573 it is simultaneously able to exhaust all input (one input token per graph node),
574 and then find exactly one leaf connected to the last node it reaches, then the
575 input has matched the corresponding command and the command is executed. If it
576 finds more than one node, then the command is ambiguous (more on this in
577 deduplication). If it cannot exhaust all input, the command is unknown. If it
578 exhausts all input but does not find an edge node, the command is incomplete.
579
580 The parser uses an incremental strategy to build the CLI graph for a node. Each
581 command is parsed into its own graph, and then this graph is merged into the
582 overall graph. During this merge step, the parser makes a best-effort attempt to
583 remove duplicate nodes. If it finds a node in the overall graph that is equal to
584 a node in the corresponding position in the command graph, it will intelligently
585 merge the properties from the node in the command graph into the
586 already-existing node. Subgraphs are also checked for isomorphism and merged
587 where possible. The definition of whether two nodes are 'equal' is based on the
588 equality of some set of token properties; read the parser source for the most
589 up-to-date definition of equality.
590
591 When the parser is unable to deduplicate some complicated constructs, this can
592 result in two identical paths through separate parts of the graph. If this
593 occurs and the user enters input that matches these paths, they will receive an
594 'ambiguous command' error and will be unable to execute the command. Most of the
595 time the parser can detect and warn about duplicate commands, but it will not
596 always be able to do this. Hence care should be taken before defining a new
597 command to ensure it is not defined elsewhere.
598
599 struct cmd\_token
600 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
601
602 .. code-block:: c
603
604 /* Command token struct. */
605 struct cmd_token
606 {
607 enum cmd_token_type type; // token type
608 uint8_t attr; // token attributes
609 bool allowrepeat; // matcher can match token repetitively?
610
611 char *text; // token text
612 char *desc; // token description
613 long long min, max; // for ranges
614 char *arg; // user input that matches this token
615 char *varname; // variable name
616 };
617
618 This struct is used in the CLI graph to match input against. It is also used to
619 pass user input to command handler functions, as it is frequently useful for
620 handlers to have access to that information. When a command is matched, the
621 sequence of ``cmd_tokens`` that form the matching path are duplicated and placed
622 in order into ``*argv[]``. Before this happens the ``->arg`` field is set to
623 point at the snippet of user input that matched it.
624
625 For most nontrivial commands the handler function will need to determine which
626 of the possible matching inputs was entered. Previously this was done by looking
627 at the first few characters of input. This is now considered an anti-pattern and
628 should be avoided. Instead, the ``->type`` or ``->text`` fields for this logic.
629 The ``->type`` field can be used when the possible inputs differ in type. When
630 the possible types are the same, use the ``->text`` field. This field has the
631 full text of the corresponding token in the definition string and using it makes
632 for much more readable code. An example is helpful.
633
634 Command definition:
635
636 ::
637
638 command <(1-10)|foo|BAR>
639
640 In this example, the user may enter any one of:
641 - an integer between 1 and 10
642 - "foo"
643 - anything at all
644
645 If the user enters "command f", then:
646
647 ::
648
649 argv[1]->type == WORD_TKN
650 argv[1]->arg == "f"
651 argv[1]->text == "foo"
652
653 Range tokens have some special treatment; a token with ``->type == RANGE_TKN``
654 will have the ``->min`` and ``->max`` fields set to the bounding values of the
655 range.
656
657 struct cmd\_element
658 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
659
660 .. code-block:: c
661
662 struct cmd_node {
663 /* Node index. */
664 enum node_type node;
665
666 /* Prompt character at vty interface. */
667 const char *prompt;
668
669 /* Is this node's configuration goes to vtysh ? */
670 int vtysh;
671
672 /* Node's configuration write function */
673 int (*func)(struct vty *);
674
675 /* Node's command graph */
676 struct graph *cmdgraph;
677
678 /* Vector of this node's command list. */
679 vector cmd_vector;
680
681 /* Hashed index of command node list, for de-dupping primarily */
682 struct hash *cmd_hash;
683 };
684
685 This struct corresponds to a CLI mode. The last three fields are most relevant
686 here.
687
688 cmdgraph
689 This is a pointer to the command graph that was described in the first part
690 of this section. It is the datastructure used for matching user input to
691 commands.
692
693 cmd_vector
694 This is a list of all the ``struct cmd_element`` defined in the mode.
695
696 cmd_hash
697 This is a hash table of all the ``struct cmd_element`` defined in the mode.
698 When ``install_element`` is called, it checks that the element it is given is
699 not already present in the hash table as a safeguard against duplicate calls
700 resulting in a command being defined twice, which renders the command
701 ambiguous.
702
703 All ``struct cmd_node`` are themselves held in a static vector defined in
704 :file:`lib/command.c` that defines the global CLI space.
705
706 Command Abbreviation & Matching Priority
707 ----------------------------------------
708 It is possible for users to elide parts of tokens when the CLI matcher does not
709 need them to make an unambiguous match. This is best explained by example.
710
711 Command definitions:
712
713 ::
714
715 command dog cow
716 command dog crow
717
718 User input:
719
720 ::
721
722 c d c -> ambiguous command
723 c d co -> match "command dog cow"
724
725
726 The parser will look ahead and attempt to disambiguate the input based on tokens
727 later on in the input string.
728
729 Command definitions:
730
731 ::
732
733 show ip bgp A.B.C.D
734 show ipv6 bgp X:X::X:X
735
736 User enters:
737
738 ::
739
740 s i b 4.3.2.1 -> match "show ip bgp A.B.C.D"
741 s i b ::e0 -> match "show ipv6 bgp X:X::X:X"
742
743 Reading left to right, both of these commands would be ambiguous since 'i' does
744 not explicitly select either 'ip' or 'ipv6'. However, since the user later
745 provides a token that matches only one of the commands (an IPv4 or IPv6 address)
746 the parser is able to look ahead and select the appropriate command. This has
747 some implications for parsing the ``*argv[]`` that is passed to the command
748 handler.
749
750 Now consider a command definition such as:
751
752 ::
753
754 command <foo|VAR>
755
756 'foo' only matches the string 'foo', but 'VAR' matches any input, including
757 'foo'. Who wins? In situations like this the matcher will always choose the
758 'better' match, so 'foo' will win.
759
760 Consider also:
761
762 ::
763
764 show <ip|ipv6> foo
765
766 User input:
767
768 ::
769
770 show ip foo
771
772 ``ip`` partially matches ``ipv6`` but exactly matches ``ip``, so ``ip`` will
773 win.
774
775 Adding a CLI Node
776 -----------------
777
778 To add a new CLI node, you should:
779
780 - define a new numerical node constant
781 - define a node structure in the relevant daemon
782 - call ``install_node()`` in the relevant daemon
783 - define and install the new node in vtysh
784 - define corresponding node entry commands in daemon and vtysh
785 - add a new entry to the ``ctx_keywords`` dictionary in ``tools/frr-reload.py``
786
787 Defining the numerical node constant
788 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
789 Add your new node value to the enum before ``NODE_TYPE_MAX`` in
790 ``lib/command.h``:
791
792 .. code-block:: c
793
794 enum node_type {
795 AUTH_NODE, // Authentication mode of vty interface.
796 VIEW_NODE, // View node. Default mode of vty interface.
797 [...]
798 MY_NEW_NODE,
799 NODE_TYPE_MAX, // maximum
800 };
801
802 Defining a node structure
803 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
804 In your daemon-specific code where you define your new commands that
805 attach to the new node, add a node definition:
806
807 .. code-block:: c
808
809 static struct cmd_node my_new_node = {
810 .name = "my new node name",
811 .node = MY_NEW_NODE, // enum node_type lib/command.h
812 .parent_node = CONFIG_NODE,
813 .prompt = "%s(my-new-node-prompt)# ",
814 .config_write = my_new_node_config_write,
815 };
816
817 You will need to define ``my_new_node_config_write(struct vty \*vty)``
818 (or omit this field if you have no relevant configuration to save).
819
820 Calling ``install_node()``
821 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
822 In the daemon's initialization function, before installing your new commands
823 with ``install_element()``, add a call ``install_node(&my_new_node)``.
824
825 Defining and installing the new node in vtysh
826 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
827 The build tools automatically collect command definitions for vtysh.
828 However, new nodes must be coded in vtysh specifically.
829
830 In ``vtysh/vtysh.c``, define a stripped-down node structure and
831 call ``install_node()``:
832
833 .. code-block:: c
834
835 static struct cmd_node my_new_node = {
836 .name = "my new node name",
837 .node = MY_NEW_NODE, /* enum node_type lib/command.h */
838 .parent_node = CONFIG_NODE,
839 .prompt = "%s(my-new-node-prompt)# ",
840 };
841 [...]
842 void vtysh_init_vty(void)
843 {
844 [...]
845 install_node(&my_new_node)
846 [...]
847 }
848
849 Defining corresponding node entry commands in daemon and vtysh
850 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
851 The command that descends into the new node is typically programmed
852 with ``VTY_PUSH_CONTEXT`` or equivalent in the daemon's CLI handler function.
853 (If the CLI has been updated to use the new northbound architecture,
854 ``VTY_PUSH_XPATH`` is used instead.)
855
856 In vtysh, you must implement a corresponding node change so that vtysh
857 tracks the daemon's movement through the node tree.
858
859 Although the build tools typically scan daemon code for CLI definitions
860 to replicate their parsing in vtysh, the node-descent function in the
861 daemon must be blocked from this replication so that a hand-coded
862 skeleton can be written in ``vtysh.c``.
863
864 Accordingly, use one of the ``*_NOSH`` macros such as ``DEFUN_NOSH``,
865 ``DEFPY_NOSH``, or ``DEFUN_YANG_NOSH`` for the daemon's node-descent
866 CLI definition, and use ``DEFUNSH`` in ``vtysh.c`` for the vtysh equivalent.
867
868 .. seealso:: :ref:`vtysh-special-defuns`
869
870 Examples:
871
872 ``zebra_whatever.c``
873
874 .. code-block:: c
875
876 DEFPY_NOSH(my_new_node,
877 my_new_node_cmd,
878 "my-new-node foo",
879 "New Thing\n"
880 "A foo\n")
881 {
882 [...]
883 VTY_PUSH_CONTEXT(MY_NEW_NODE, bar);
884 [...]
885 }
886
887
888 ``ripd_whatever.c``
889
890 .. code-block:: c
891
892 DEFPY_YANG_NOSH(my_new_node,
893 my_new_node_cmd,
894 "my-new-node foo",
895 "New Thing\n"
896 "A foo\n")
897 {
898 [...]
899 VTY_PUSH_XPATH(MY_NEW_NODE, xbar);
900 [...]
901 }
902
903
904 ``vtysh.c``
905
906 .. code-block:: c
907
908 DEFUNSH(VTYSH_ZEBRA, my_new_node,
909 my_new_node_cmd,
910 "my-new-node foo",
911 "New Thing\n"
912 "A foo\n")
913 {
914 vty->node = MY_NEW_NODE;
915 return CMD_SUCCESS;
916 }
917 [...]
918 install_element(CONFIG_NODE, &my_new_node_cmd);
919
920
921 Adding a new entry to the ``ctx_keywords`` dictionary
922 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
923 In file ``tools/frr-reload.py``, the ``ctx_keywords`` dictionary
924 describes the various node relationships.
925 Add a new node entry at the appropriate level in this dictionary.
926
927 .. code-block:: python
928
929 ctx_keywords = {
930 [...]
931 "key chain ": {
932 "key ": {}
933 },
934 [...]
935 "my-new-node": {},
936 [...]
937 }
938
939
940
941 Inspection & Debugging
942 ----------------------
943
944 Permutations
945 ^^^^^^^^^^^^
946 It is sometimes useful to check all the possible combinations of input that
947 would match an arbitrary definition string. There is a tool in
948 :file:`tools/permutations` that reads CLI definition strings on ``stdin`` and
949 prints out all matching input permutations. It also dumps a text representation
950 of the graph, which is more useful for debugging than anything else. It looks
951 like this:
952
953 .. code-block:: shell
954
955 $ ./permutations "show [ip] bgp [<view|vrf> WORD]"
956
957 show ip bgp view WORD
958 show ip bgp vrf WORD
959 show ip bgp
960 show bgp view WORD
961 show bgp vrf WORD
962 show bgp
963
964 This functionality is also built into VTY/VTYSH; :clicmd:`list permutations`
965 will list all possible matching input permutations in the current CLI node.
966
967 Graph Inspection
968 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
969 When in the Telnet or VTYSH console, :clicmd:`show cli graph` will dump the
970 entire command space of the current mode in the DOT graph language. This can be
971 fed into one of the various GraphViz layout engines, such as ``dot``,
972 ``neato``, etc.
973
974 For example, to generate an image of the entire command space for the top-level
975 mode (``ENABLE_NODE``):
976
977 .. code-block:: shell
978
979 sudo vtysh -c 'show cli graph' | dot -Tjpg -Grankdir=LR > graph.jpg
980
981 To do the same for the BGP mode:
982
983 .. code-block:: shell
984
985 sudo vtysh -c 'conf t' -c 'router bgp' -c 'show cli graph' | dot -Tjpg -Grankdir=LR > bgpgraph.jpg
986
987 This information is very helpful when debugging command resolution, tracking
988 down duplicate / ambiguous commands, and debugging patches to the CLI graph
989 builder.