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Aruba Central API CLI

Latest Version Documentation Status Downloads PyPI - Installs MIT license

A CLI app for interacting with Aruba Central Cloud Management Platform. With cross-platform shell support. Auto Completion, easy device/site/group/template identification (fuzzy match), support for batch import, and a lot more.

As commands are built out the CLI hierarchy may evolve. Refer to the documentation or help text for CLI structure/syntax.

centralcli Animated Demo

Known Issues

When running with Python 3.12 it's possible to see a number of SyntaxWarning messages regarding "invaslid escape sequence". This is due to a change in behavior in 3.12. This will be resolved in an upcoming release. The warnings do not impact functionality.

Features

  • Cross Platform Support
  • Auto/TAB Completion
  • Specify device, site, etc. by fuzzy match of multiple fields (i.e. name, mac, serial#, ip address)
  • Multiple output formats
  • Output to file
  • Numerous import formats (csv, yaml, json, etc.)
  • Multiple account support (easily switch between different central accounts --account myotheraccount)
  • Batch Operation based on data from input file. i.e. Add sites in batch based on data from a csv.
  • Automatic Token refresh. With prompt to paste in a new token if it becomes invalid.

    If using Tokens, dedicate the token to the CLI alone, using it in swagger or on another system, will eventually lead to a refresh that invalidates the tokens on the other systems using it.

  • You can also use username/Password Auth. which will facilitate automatic retrieval of new Tokens even if they do become invalid.

Installation

The recommended method is to use uv, which is a single Rust binary that you can use to install Python apps. It's significantly faster than alternative tools, and will get you up and running with Posting in seconds. uv will install centralcli in an isolated environment and expose the cencli command in PATH.

You don't even need to worry about installing Python yourself - uv will manage everything for you.

uv

Install uv on Linx/Mac:

# quick install on MacOS/Linux
curl -LsSf https://astral.sh/uv/install.sh | sh

Install uv on Windows:

# quick install on Windows via PowerShell
powershell -ExecutionPolicy ByPass -c "irm https://astral.sh/uv/install.ps1 | iex"

Changing the execution policy allows running a script from the internet.

uv can also be installed via Homebrew, Cargo, Winget, pipx, and more. See the installation guide for more information.

Install centralcli via uv

# install centralcli (will also quickly install Python 3.11 if needed)
uv tool install --python 3.11 centralcli

Then to Upgrade centralcli

uv tool upgrade centralcli

pipx

centralcli can also be installed via pipx, similar to uv pipx will install centralcli in an isolated environment, and expose the cencli command in PATH.

The first section below is for Debian based systems refer to pipx documentation for instructions on other OSs.

# install pipx (Debian)
sudo apt update
sudo apt install pipx
pipx ensurepath

# install central CLI
pipx install centralcli --include-deps

# optional install speedups for centralcli (this pulls in additional optional dependencies, that can improve performance.)  Minimal impact in most scenarios.
pipx install centralcli[speedups] --force  # force if centralcli was already installed and you are just adding speedups

Then to Upgrade centralcli

pip upgrade centralcli

pip (manually install in virtual environment)

The example below is for Debian based systems, where apt is referenced but should be easy to translate to other OSs given you have some familiarity with the package management commands (i.e. dnf). On Windows python should install with pip. The pip commands are still valid.

# (Debian) If you don't have pip
sudo apt update
sudo apt install python3-pip
sudo apt install python3-virtualenv

# create a directory to store the venv in
cd ~                                              # ensure you are in your home dir
mkdir .venvs                                      # creates hidden .venvs dir to store venv in
cd .venvs                                         # change to that directory
export DEB_PYTHON_INSTALL_LAYOUT='deb'            # Just ensures the directory structure for simpler instructions (Ubuntu 22.04 changed the dir layout of venvs without it)
python3 -m virtualenv centralcli --prompt cencli  # prompt is optional
source centralcli/bin/activate                    # activates the venv

# Install centralcli
pip install centralcli

# optional install speedups for centralcli (this pulls in additional optional dependencies, that can improve performance.)  Minimal impact in most scenarios.
pip install centralcli[speedups]

which centralcli # Should return ~/.venvs/centralcli/bin/centralcli

# for BASH shell Update .bashrc to update PATH on login (keep the single quotes)
echo 'export PATH="$PATH:$HOME/.venvs/centralcli/bin"' >> ~/.bashrc

# for zsh or others, do the equivalent... i.e. update .zshrc in a similar manner

Then to upgrade:

~/.venvs/centralcli/bin/pip install -U centralcli

pip (in system python environment)

Requires python3.9 or above and pip.

It's recommended to use the uv install method above, however if you don't use a lot of python apps (meaning a dependency conflict with other apps is not a concern). Then simply installing via pip is possible (albeit not recommended).

This method is primarily feasible on Windows, as current versions of many Linux distributions do not allow installing apps in the system python environment.

pip install centralcli

# optional install speedups for centralcli (this pulls in additional optional dependencies, that can improve performance.)  Minimal impact in most scenarios.
pip install centralcli[speedups]

Then to upgrade:

pip install -U centralcli

if you don't have python

  • You can get it for any platform @ https://www.python.org
  • On Windows 10 it's also available in the Windows store, and via winget.

Configuration

✨ pre-populating the config as described below is optional. Central CLI will prompt for the information it needs on first run if no config exists.

It's still a good idea to look over the example config to see the optional config items.

Refer to config.yaml.example to guide in the creation of config.yaml and place in the config directory.

Central CLI will look in <Users home dir>/.config/centralcli, and <Users home dir>\.centralcli. i.e. on Windows c:\Users\wade\.centralcli or on Linux /home/wade/.config/centralcli

Once config.yaml is populated per config.yaml.example, run some test commands to validate the config.

For Example cencli show all

wade@wellswa6:~ $ cencli show all
                                                                                       All Devices
 ─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
  name                  type   model                            ip                mac                 serial       group          site             labels        version       status
 ─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
  6100F-48-LAB          cx     6100 48G CL4 4SFP+ Swch          10.0.40.11        --redacted--   --redacted--    WadeLab8x                                     10.08.1010       Down
                               (JL675A)
  SDBranch1:7008        gw     A7008                            192.168.240.101   --redacted--   --redacted--    Branch1        Antigua          Branch View   10.3.0.0_82528   Up
  br1-2930F-sw          sw     Aruba2930F-8G-PoE+-2SFP+         10.101.5.4        --redacted--   --redacted--    Branch1        Antigua          Branch View   16.11.0002       Up
                               Switch(JL258A)
  br1-315.0c88-ap       ap     315                              10.101.6.200      --redacted--   --redacted--    Branch1        Antigua          Branch View   10.3.0.0_82528   Up
  MB1-505h              ap     505H                             10.10.1.101       --redacted--   --redacted--    MicroBranch1   Champions Hill                 10.3.0.0_82528   Up
  6200F-Bot             cx     6200F 48G CL4 4SFP+740W Swch     10.0.40.16        --redacted--   --redacted--    WadeLab8x      Pommore                        10.08.1010       Down
                               (JL728A)
  6200F-Top             cx     6200F 48G CL4 4SFP+740W Swch     10.0.40.6         --redacted--   --redacted--    WadeLab8x      Pommore                        10.08.1010       Down
                               (JL728A)
  APGW1                 gw     A9004-LTE                        10.0.35.10        --redacted--   --redacted--    WLNET          WadeLab                        10.3.0.0_82528   Up
  APGW2                 gw     A9004                            10.0.35.20        --redacted--   --redacted--    WLNET          WadeLab                        10.3.0.0_82528   Up
  VPNC1                 gw     A7005                            172.30.0.242      --redacted--   --redacted--    VPNC           WadeLab          Branch View   10.3.0.0_82528   Up
  VPNC2                 gw     A7005                            172.30.0.243      --redacted--   --redacted--    VPNC           WadeLab          Branch View   10.3.0.0_82528   Up
  av-555.11b8-ap        ap     555                              10.0.31.155       --redacted--   --redacted--    WLNET          WadeLab                        10.3.0.0_82463   Down
  barn-303p.2c30-ap     ap     303P                             10.1.30.151       --redacted--   --redacted--    WLNET          WadeLab                        10.3.0.0_82528   Up
  barn-4100i            cx     4100i 12G CL4/6 POE 2SFP+ DIN    10.1.30.152       --redacted--   --redacted--    WadeLab        WadeLab                        10.08.1010       Up
                               Sw (JL817A)
  barn-518.2816-ap      ap     518                              10.1.30.101       --redacted--   --redacted--    WLNET          WadeLab                        10.3.0.0_82528   Up
  bsmt-515.51s9-ap      ap     515                              10.0.30.233       --redacted--   --redacted--    WLNET          WadeLab                        10.3.0.0_82463   Down
  craft-2930F           sw     Aruba2930F-8G-PoE+-2SFP+         10.0.30.5         --redacted--   --redacted--    WadeLab        WadeLab                        16.11.0002       Up
                               Switch(JL258A)
  garage-345.5136-ap    ap     345                              10.0.31.148       --redacted--   --redacted--    WLNET          WadeLab                        10.3.0.0_82463   Down
  ktcn-505H.206c-ap     ap     505H                             10.0.30.212       --redacted--   --redacted--    WLNET          WadeLab                        10.3.0.0_82463   Down
  lwrptio-575.0824-ap   ap     575                              10.0.30.219       --redacted--   --redacted--    WLNET          WadeLab                        10.3.0.0_82463   Down
  zrm-535.70be-ap       ap     535                              10.0.31.101       --redacted--   --redacted--    WLNET          WadeLab                        10.3.0.0_82463   Down
 ─────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
  Show all displays fields common to all device types. To see all columns for a given device type use show <DEVICE TYPE>
  API Rate Limit: 925 of 1000 remaining.

Use cencli ? to become familiar with the command options.

Auto Completion

The CLI supports auto-completion. To configure auto-completion run cencli --install-completion. This will auto-detect the type of shell you are running in, and install the necessary completion into your profile. You'll need to exit the shell and start a new session for it to take effect.

Note for OSX 11: Additional step, edit .zshrc and add "autoload -Uz compinit && compinit -i" then exit and start new session.

Usage Notes

Caching & Friendly identifiers

  • Caching: The CLI caches information on all devices, sites, groups and templates along with some other items. It's a minimal amount per device, and is done to allow human friendly identifiers. The API typically accepts serial #, site id, etc. This function allows you to specify a device by name, IP, mac (any format), and serial.

The lookup sequence for a device:

  1. Exact Match of any of the identifier fields (name, ip, mac, serial)
  2. case insensitive match
  3. case insensitive match disregarding all hyphens and underscores (in case you type 6200f_bot and the device name is 6200F-Bot)
  4. Case insensitive Fuzzy match with implied wild-card, otherwise match any devices that start with the identifier provided. cencli show switches 6200F will result in a match of 6200F-Bot.
  5. If a typo was made, and an item is a close match, you will be prompted to confirm that's what you meant.

If there is no match found, a cache update is triggered, and the match rules are re-tried.

  • Caching works in a similar manner for groups, templates, and sites. Sites can match on name and nearly any address field. So if you only had one site in San Antonio you could specify that site with show sites 'San Antonio' <-- Note the use of quotes because there is a space in the name.

  • Multiple Matches: If a provided identifier is ambiguous, meaning there are multiple matches. You will be prompted to select the intended device from a list of the matches.

Output Formats

There are a number of output formats available. Most commands default to what is likely the easiest to view given the number of fields. Otherwise longer outputs are typically displayed vertically by default. If the output can reasonably fit, it's displayed in tabular format horizontally.

You can specify the output format with command line flags --json, --yaml, --csv, --table rich is tabular format with folding (multi line within the same row) and truncating.

Most outputs will evolve to support an output with the most commonly desired fields by default and expanded vertical output via the -v option (not implemented yet.). Currently the output is tabular horizontally if the amount of data is likely to fit most displays, and vertical otherwise.

File Output

Just use --out \<filename\> (or <path\filename>), and specify the desired format.

CLI Tree

Use ? or --help from the cli, which you can do at any level. ccenli ?, cencli bounce --help etc.

You can also see the entire supported tree via the CLI Reference Guide. NOTE: The Reference Guide documents a few commands that are hidden in the CLI

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A CLI to interact with Aruba Central API

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