1.Dd September 10, 2012 2.Dt CHAT 8 3.Os 4.Sh NAME 5.Nm chat 6.Nd Automated conversational script with a modem 7.Sh SYNOPSIS 8.Nm 9.Op Fl eSsVv 10.Op Fl f Ar chat-file 11.Op Fl r Ar report-file 12.Op Fl T Ar phone-number 13.Op Fl t Ar timeout 14.Op Fl U Ar phone-number2 15.Op Ar script 16.Sh DESCRIPTION 17The 18.Nm 19program defines a conversational exchange between the 20computer and the modem. 21Its primary purpose is to establish the 22connection between the Point-to-Point Protocol Daemon 23.Pq pppd 24and the remote's pppd process. 25.Sh OPTIONS 26.Bl -tag -width indent 27.It Fl e 28Start with the echo option turned on. 29Echoing may also be turned on 30or off at specific points in the chat script by using the ECHO 31keyword. 32When echoing is enabled, all output from the modem is echoed 33to 34.Em stderr . 35.It Fl f Ar chat-file 36Read the chat script from the chat file. 37The use of this option 38is mutually exclusive with the chat script parameters. 39The user must 40have read access to the file. 41Multiple lines are permitted in the file. 42Space or horizontal tab characters should be used to separate 43the strings. 44.It Fl r Ar report-file 45Set the file for output of the report strings. 46If you use the keyword 47.Dv REPORT , 48the resulting strings are written to this file. 49If this 50option is not used and you still use 51.Dv REPORT 52keywords, the 53.Pa stderr 54file is used for the report strings. 55.It Fl S 56Do not use 57.Xr syslog 3 . 58By default, error messages are sent to 59.Xr syslog 3 . 60The use of 61.Fl S 62will prevent both log messages from 63.Fl v 64and error messages from being sent to 65.Xr syslog 3 . 66.It Fl s 67Use 68.Em stderr . 69All log messages from 70.Fl v 71and all error messages will be 72sent to 73.Em stderr . 74.It Fl T Ar phone-number 75Pass in an arbitrary string, usually a phone number, that will be 76substituted for the \\T substitution metacharacter in a send string. 77.It Fl t Ar timeout 78Set the timeout for the expected string to be received. 79If the string 80is not received within the time limit then the reply string is not 81sent. 82An alternate reply may be sent or the script will fail if there 83is no alternate reply string. 84A failed script will cause the 85.Nm 86program to terminate with a non-zero error code. 87.It Fl U Ar phone-number2 88Pass in a second string, usually a phone number, that will be 89substituted for the \\U substitution metacharacter in a send string. 90This is useful when dialing an ISDN terminal adapter that requires two 91numbers. 92.It Fl V 93Request that the 94.Nm 95script be executed in a 96.Em stderr 97verbose mode. 98The 99.Nm 100program will then log all text received from the 101modem and the output strings sent to the modem to the stderr device. 102This 103device is usually the local console at the station running the chat or 104pppd program. 105.It Fl v 106Request that the 107.Nm 108script be executed in a verbose mode. 109The 110.Nm 111program will then log the execution state of the chat 112script as well as all text received from the modem and the output 113strings sent to the modem. 114The default is to log through 115.Xr syslog 3 ; 116the logging method may be altered with the 117.Fl S 118and 119.Fl s 120flags. 121Logging is done to the 122.Em local2 123facility at level 124.Em info 125for verbose tracing and level 126.Em err 127for some errors. 128.El 129.Sh CHAT SCRIPT 130The 131.Nm 132script defines the communications. 133A script consists of one or more "expect-send" pairs of strings, 134separated by spaces, with an optional "subexpect-subsend" string pair, 135separated by a dash as in the following example: 136.Pp 137.D1 ogin:-BREAK-ogin: ppp ssword: hello2u2 138.Pp 139This line indicates that the 140.Nm 141program should expect the string "ogin:". 142If it fails to receive a login prompt within the time interval 143allotted, it is to send a break sequence to the remote and then expect the 144string "ogin:". 145If the first "ogin:" is received then the break sequence is 146not generated. 147.Pp 148Once it received the login prompt the 149.Nm 150program will send the 151string ppp and then expect the prompt "ssword:". 152When it receives the 153prompt for the password, it will send the password hello2u2. 154.Pp 155A carriage return is normally sent following the reply string. 156It is not 157expected in the "expect" string unless it is specifically requested by using 158the \\r character sequence. 159.Pp 160The expect sequence should contain only what is needed to identify the 161string. 162Since it is normally stored on a disk file, it should not contain 163variable information. 164It is generally not acceptable to look for time 165strings, network identification strings, or other variable pieces of data as 166an expect string. 167.Pp 168To help correct for characters which may be corrupted during the initial 169sequence, look for the string "ogin:" rather than "login:". 170It is possible 171that the leading "l" character may be received in error and you may never 172find the string even though it was sent by the system. 173For this reason, 174scripts look for "ogin:" rather than "login:" and "ssword:" rather than 175"password:". 176.Pp 177A very simple script might look like this: 178.Pp 179.D1 ogin: ppp ssword: hello2u2 180.Pp 181In other words, expect ....ogin:, send ppp, expect ...ssword:, send hello2u2. 182.Pp 183In actual practice, simple scripts are rare. 184At the vary least, you 185should include sub-expect sequences should the original string not be 186received. 187For example, consider the following script: 188.Pp 189.D1 ogin:--ogin: ppp ssword: hello2u2 190.Pp 191This would be a better script than the simple one used earlier. 192This would look 193for the same login: prompt, however, if one was not received, a single 194return sequence is sent and then it will look for login: again. 195Should line 196noise obscure the first login prompt then sending the empty line will 197usually generate a login prompt again. 198.Sh COMMENTS 199Comments can be embedded in the chat script. 200A comment is a line which 201starts with the # (hash) character in column 1. 202Such comment 203lines are just ignored by the chat program. 204If a '#' character is to 205be expected as the first character of the expect sequence, you should 206quote the expect string. 207If you want to wait for a prompt that starts with a # (hash) 208character, you would have to write something like this: 209.Bd -literal -offset indent 210# Now wait for the prompt and send logout string 211\&'# ' logout 212.Ed 213.Sh ABORT STRINGS 214Many modems will report the status of the call as a string. 215These strings may be 216.Dv CONNECTED 217or 218.Dv NO CARRIER 219or 220.Dv BUSY . 221It is often desirable to terminate the script should the modem fail to 222connect to the remote. 223The difficulty is that a script would not know 224exactly which modem string it may receive. 225On one attempt, it may receive 226.Dv BUSY 227while the next time it may receive 228.Dv NO CARRIER . 229.Pp 230These "abort" strings may be specified in the script using the ABORT 231sequence. 232It is written in the script as in the following example: 233.Pp 234.D1 ABORT BUSY ABORT 'NO CARRIER' '' ATZ OK ATDT5551212 CONNECT 235.Pp 236This sequence will expect nothing; and then send the string ATZ. 237The expected response to this is the string 238.Dv OK . 239When it receives 240.Dv OK , 241the string ATDT5551212 to dial the telephone. 242The expected string is 243.Dv CONNECT . 244If the string 245.Dv CONNECT 246is received the remainder of the 247script is executed. 248However, should the modem find a busy telephone, it will 249send the string 250.Dv BUSY . 251This will cause the string to match the abort 252character sequence. 253The script will then fail because it found a match to 254the abort string. 255If it received the string 256.Dv NO CARRIER , 257it will abort 258for the same reason. 259Either string may be received. 260Either string will 261terminate the 262.Nm 263script. 264.Sh CLR_ABORT STRINGS 265This sequence allows for clearing previously set 266.Dv ABORT 267strings. 268.Dv ABORT 269strings are kept in an array of a pre-determined size (at 270compilation time); CLR_ABORT will reclaim the space for cleared 271entries so that new strings can use that space. 272.Sh SAY STRINGS 273The 274.Dv SAY 275directive allows the script to send strings to the user 276at the terminal via standard error. 277If 278.Nm 279is being run by 280pppd, and pppd is running as a daemon (detached from its controlling 281terminal), standard error will normally be redirected to the file 282.Pa /etc/ppp/connect-errors . 283.Pp 284.Dv SAY 285strings must be enclosed in single or double quotes. 286If carriage return and line feed are needed in the string to be output, 287you must explicitly add them to your string. 288.Pp 289The 290.Dv SAY 291strings could be used to give progress messages in sections of 292the script where you want to have 'ECHO OFF' but still let the user 293know what is happening. 294An example is: 295.Bd -literal -offset indent 296ABORT BUSY 297ECHO OFF 298SAY "Dialling your ISP...\\n" 299\&'' ATDT5551212 300TIMEOUT 120 301SAY "Waiting up to 2 minutes for connection ... " 302CONNECT '' 303SAY "Connected, now logging in ...\\n" 304ogin: account 305ssword: pass 306$ SAY "Logged in OK ...\\n" \fIetc ...\fR 307.Ed 308.Pp 309This sequence will only present the 310.Dv SAY 311strings to the user and all 312the details of the script will remain hidden. 313For example, if the 314above script works, the user will see: 315.Bd -literal -offset indent 316Dialling your ISP... 317Waiting up to 2 minutes for connection ... Connected, now logging in ... 318Logged in OK ... 319.Ed 320.Sh REPORT STRINGS 321A report string is similar to the 322.Dv ABORT 323string. 324The difference 325is that the strings, and all characters to the next control character 326such as a carriage return, are written to the report file. 327.Pp 328The report strings may be used to isolate the transmission rate of the 329modem's connect string and return the value to the chat user. 330The 331analysis of the report string logic occurs in conjunction with the 332other string processing such as looking for the expect string. 333The use 334of the same string for a report and abort sequence is probably not 335very useful, however, it is possible. 336.Pp 337The report strings to no change the completion code of the program. 338.Pp 339These "report" strings may be specified in the script using the 340.Dv REPORT 341sequence. 342It is written in the script as in the following example: 343.Pp 344.D1 REPORT CONNECT ABORT BUSY '' ATDT5551212 CONNECT '' ogin: account 345.Pp 346This sequence will expect nothing; and then send the string 347ATDT5551212 to dial the telephone. 348The expected string is 349.Dv CONNECT . 350If the string 351.Dv CONNECT 352is received the remainder 353of the script is executed. 354In addition the program will write to the 355expect-file the string "CONNECT" plus any characters which follow it 356such as the connection rate. 357.Sh CLR_REPORT STRINGS 358This sequence allows for clearing previously set 359.Dv REPORT 360strings. 361.Dv REPORT 362strings are kept in an array of a pre-determined size (at 363compilation time); CLR_REPORT will reclaim the space for cleared 364entries so that new strings can use that space. 365.Sh ECHO 366The echo options controls whether the output from the modem is echoed 367to 368.Em stderr . 369This option may be set with the 370.Fl e 371option, but 372it can also be controlled by the 373.Dv ECHO 374keyword. 375The "expect-send" 376pair 377.Dv ECHO ON 378enables echoing, and 379.Dv ECHO OFF 380disables it. 381With this keyword you can select which parts of the 382conversation should be visible. 383For instance, with the following 384script: 385.Bd -literal -offset indent 386ABORT 'BUSY' 387ABORT 'NO CARRIER' 388\&'' ATZ 389OK\\r\\n ATD1234567 390\\r\\n \\c 391ECHO ON 392CONNECT \\c 393ogin: account 394.Ed 395.Pp 396all output resulting from modem configuration and dialing is not visible, 397but starting with the 398.Dv CONNECT 399or 400.Dv BUSY 401message, everything 402will be echoed. 403.Sh HANGUP 404The 405.Dv HANGUP 406options control whether a modem hangup should be considered 407as an error or not. 408This option is useful in scripts for dialling 409systems which will hang up and call your system back. 410The 411.Dv HANGUP 412options can be 413.Dv ON 414or 415.Dv OFF . 416.Pp 417When 418.Dv HANGUP 419is set 420.Dv OFF 421and the modem hangs up (e.g., after the first 422stage of logging in to a callback system), 423.Nm 424will continue 425running the script (e.g., waiting for the incoming call and second 426stage login prompt). 427As soon as the incoming call is connected, you 428should use the 429.Dv HANGUP ON 430directive to reinstall normal hang up 431signal behavior. 432Here is a (simple) example script: 433.Bd -literal -offset indent 434ABORT 'BUSY' 435\&'' ATZ 436OK\\r\\n ATD1234567 437\\r\\n \\c 438CONNECT \\c 439\&'Callback login:' call_back_ID 440HANGUP OFF 441ABORT "Bad Login" 442\&'Callback Password:' Call_back_password 443TIMEOUT 120 444CONNECT \\c 445HANGUP ON 446ABORT "NO CARRIER" 447ogin:--BREAK--ogin: real_account 448\fIetc ...\fR 449.Ed 450.Sh TIMEOUT 451The initial timeout value is 45 seconds. 452This may be changed using the 453.Fl t 454parameter. 455.Pp 456To change the timeout value for the next expect string, the following 457example may be used: 458.Bd -literal -offset indent 459ATZ OK ATDT5551212 CONNECT TIMEOUT 10 ogin:--ogin: TIMEOUT 5 assword: hello2u2 460.Ed 461.Pp 462This will change the timeout to 10 seconds when it expects the login: 463prompt. 464The timeout is then changed to 5 seconds when it looks for the 465password prompt. 466.Pp 467The timeout, once changed, remains in effect until it is changed again. 468.Sh SENDING EOT 469The special reply string of 470.Dv EOT 471indicates that the chat program 472should send an 473.Dv EOT 474character to the remote. 475This is normally the 476End-of-file character sequence. 477A return character is not sent 478following the 479.Dv EOT . 480.Pp 481The 482.Dv EOT 483sequence may be embedded into the send string using the 484sequence ^D. 485.Sh GENERATING BREAK 486The special reply string of 487.Dv BREAK 488will cause a break condition 489to be sent. 490The break is a special signal on the transmitter. 491The 492normal processing on the receiver is to change the transmission rate. 493It may be used to cycle through the available transmission rates on 494the remote until you are able to receive a valid login prompt. 495.Pp 496The break sequence may be embedded into the send string using the 497\fI\\K\fR sequence. 498.Sh ESCAPE SEQUENCES 499The expect and reply strings may contain escape sequences. 500All of the 501sequences are legal in the reply string. 502Many are legal in the expect. 503Those which are not valid in the expect sequence are so indicated. 504.Bl -tag -width indent 505.It '' 506Expects or sends a null string. 507If you send a null string then it will still 508send the return character. 509This sequence may either be a pair of apostrophe 510or quote characters. 511.It \eb 512represents a backspace character. 513.It \ec 514Suppresses the newline at the end of the reply string. 515This is the only 516method to send a string without a trailing return character. 517It must 518be at the end of the send string. 519For example, 520the sequence hello\\c will simply send the characters h, e, l, l, o 521.Pq Em not valid in expect . 522.It \ed 523Delay for one second. 524The program uses sleep(1) which will delay to a 525maximum of one second 526.Pq Em not valid in expect . 527.It \eK 528Insert a 529.Dv BREAK 530.Pq Em not valid in expect . 531.It \en 532Send a newline or linefeed character. 533.It \eN 534Send a null character. 535The same sequence may be represented by \\0 536.Pq Em not valid in expect . 537.It \ep 538Pause for a fraction of a second. 539The delay is 1/10th of a second 540.Pq Em not valid in expect . 541.It \eq 542Suppress writing the string to 543.Xr syslogd 8 . 544The string ?????? is 545written to the log in its place 546.Pq Em not valid in expect . 547.It \er 548Send or expect a carriage return. 549.It \es 550Represents a space character in the string. 551This may be used when it 552is not desirable to quote the strings which contains spaces. 553The 554sequence 'HI TIM' and HI\\sTIM are the same. 555.It \et 556Send or expect a tab character. 557.It \e 558Send or expect a backslash character. 559.It \eddd 560Collapse the octal digits (ddd) into a single ASCII character and send that 561character 562.Pq Em some characters are not valid in expect . 563.It \^^C 564Substitute the sequence with the control character represented by C. 565For example, the character DC1 (17) is shown as \^^Q 566.Pq Em some characters are not valid in expect . 567.El 568.Sh TERMINATION CODES 569The 570.Nm 571program will terminate with the following completion 572codes. 573.Bl -tag -width indent 574.It 0 575The normal termination of the program. 576This indicates that the script 577was executed without error to the normal conclusion. 578.It 1 579One or more of the parameters are invalid or an expect string was too 580large for the internal buffers. 581This indicates that the program as not 582properly executed. 583.It 2 584An error occurred during the execution of the program. 585This may be due 586to a read or write operation failing for some reason or chat receiving 587a signal such as 588.Dv SIGINT . 589.It 3 590A timeout event occurred when there was an 591.Em expect 592string without 593having a "-subsend" string. 594This may mean that you did not program the 595script correctly for the condition or that some unexpected event has 596occurred and the expected string could not be found. 597.It 4 598The first string marked as an 599.Dv ABORT 600condition occurred. 601.It 5 602The second string marked as an 603.Dv ABORT 604condition occurred. 605.It 6 606The third string marked as an 607.Dv ABORT 608condition occurred. 609.It 7 610The fourth string marked as an 611.Dv ABORT 612condition occurred. 613.It ... 614The other termination codes are also strings marked as an 615.Dv ABORT 616condition. 617.El 618.Pp 619Using the termination code, it is possible to determine which event 620terminated the script. 621It is possible to decide if the string "BUSY" 622was received from the modem as opposed to "NO DIAL TONE". 623While the 624first event may be retried, the second will probably have little 625chance of succeeding during a retry. 626.Sh SEE ALSO 627Additional information about 628.Nm 629scripts may be found with UUCP 630documentation. 631The 632.Nm 633script was taken from the ideas proposed 634by the scripts used by the uucico program. 635.Pp 636.Xr syslog 3 , 637.Xr syslogd 8 638.Sh COPYRIGHT 639The 640.Nm 641program is in public domain. 642This is not the GNU public 643license. 644If it breaks then you get to keep both pieces. 645