Miscellaneous Commands¶
action
¶
This task allows you to extend DPBuddy with various DataPower administration functions which are not implemented by other DPBuddy tasks.
A complete list of available actions can be found in the xml-mgmt.xsd file, under the type “AnyActionElement”. Documentation for actions can be found in the DataPower command reference documentation under “Global mode” and “Initial login and common commands”. Note that many actions can be executed using other DPBuddy tasks. For example, DPBuddy provides dedicated tasks for flushing caches, so there is no need to know how to do it using “action”.
To execute actions/commands without parameters, simply provide the action’s name using the name
attribute of the action
task.
For example, the SOMA counterpart for “save error-report” command is “ErrorReport” action. This action can be executed as follows:
<dp:action name="ErrorReport" />
Most actions, however, take some parameters. For these actions you need to provide a nested XML fragment with all the necessary XML elements for the action. The XML fragment can be nested directly inside the action
task.
Attributes/Options¶
Name |
Description |
Required |
---|---|---|
name |
Name of SOMA action as per the DataPower XML schema. |
No |
rollbackOnError |
If set to Defaults to |
No |
Examples¶
The “ping” action (see ping command documentation) requires “RemoteHost” as a parameter.
“ping” invocation could be encoded using the following XML fragment:
<dp:action>
<Ping>
<RemoteHost>${ping.host}</RemoteHost>
</Ping>
</dp:action>
You can find more examples under samples
in your distribution or online.
exec
¶
The exec
task executes a DataPower configuration script. The configuration script contains DataPower CLI commands. This task performs the same function as the exec DataPower command.
Before executing the script on the device, the exec
task uploads the script file to the device.
As with all other DPBuddy tasks, exec
does not use SSH, it relies on XML management interface (SOMA) instead.
Note that scripts will be automatically executed in the global configuration mode. Therefore, don’t use “configure terminal” in your scripts. Also, scripts are not allowed to exit the global configuration mode, therefore the “top” command is not allowed.
You can use variables/properties anywhere inside the configuration script. DPBuddy will attempt to resolve the properties before uploading the file. If any of the properties remains unresolved, the task will fail.
Instead of a script, you can provide a single command (or semicolon-delimited list of commands) to exec
. In this case, DPBuddy will create the script “commands.cfg” containing the provided commands on the device and execute it.
Note that exec
cannot capture the output of the commands specified in the configuration script, e.g., if you have an “echo” command in the script, the output of “echo” will not be returned to DPBuddy. So, if the script execution fails, you will need to login to the device and re-execute the script (which would already be pre-uploaded by DPBuddy) using the “exec” DataPower command.
Attributes/Options¶
Name |
Description |
Required |
---|---|---|
file |
Path to the configuration script file, including file extension. |
Yes, unless |
command
CLI alias:
-cmd |
A single command or a semicolon-delimited list of commands to execute on the device. |
Yes, unless |
toDir |
Specifies the target directory for uploaded configuration scripts on the device. It could include a filesystem which is defined using Defaults to |
No |
scriptName |
The name of the script file on the device. If |
No |
resolveVars |
If set to Defaults to |
No |
rollbackOnError |
If set to Defaults to |
No |
Examples¶
dpbuddy exec -file dpconfigs/ping-dpcli.cfg
dpbuddy exec -cmd "ping 127.0.0.1"
<dp:exec file="${dpconfig.home}/ping-dpcli.cfg"/>
exportConf
¶
exportConf
allows developing shell scripts that use values from the DPBuddy conf file.
This command generates a file (by default, in shell/bash format) containing DPBuddy configuration for a given device/environment. Shell scripts can then source this file and use the variables.
Each configuration path is translated into a variable with the same name, with dots replaced by underscores.
E.g.,
dp.status.ignore.objects: "ISAMRuntime:isam-runtime"
Is translated into:
export dp_status_ignore_objects="ISAMRuntime:isam-runtime"
Options¶
Name |
Description |
Required |
---|---|---|
outFile
CLI alias:
-file |
Output file containing shell variables generated based on the current DPBuddy configuration (must be defined using HOCON format). |
Yes |
template |
Template for each variable (line). Must contain two ‘%s’ (Java format). The first ‘%s’ is the name of the variable, the second ‘%s’ is the value from the config file.
Defaults to |
No |
Examples¶
dpbuddy exportConf -outFile conf_export.sh -env dev
firmware
¶
The firmware
command copies a firmware image to DataPower, installs it and reboots the device from the new image. The image can be copied from any external or internal website over HTTP/HTTPS. Internally, DPBuddy uses DataPower copy CLI command to copy the image.
You can copy the firmware image directly from the IBM Fix Central website. Login to Fix Central, locate the firmware file that you need, accept the license and save the download link. Use this link as the value for the fromUrl
parameter.
By default, DPBuddy will wait for the reboot to complete. It will then print the version of the firmware reported by DataPower after the reboot.
Attributes/Options¶
Name |
Description |
Required |
---|---|---|
fromUrl |
http or https URL of the firmware image. This URL will be used by the DataPower “copy” command that runs directly on the device. If not provided, DPBuddy assumes that the firmware image file was already copied to DataPower at the location specified by |
No |
dpFile |
Absolute path to the image file on DataPower. If not provided, the name will be inferred from |
No |
timeout |
Time, in seconds, to wait for DataPower to become available after applying the firmware image. -1 disables waiting. Defaults to 300 seconds. |
No |
xmlManager |
Name of the XML manager to use for copying from https URLs. If not provided, DPBuddy will automatically create the XML Manager and other required objects (user agent, crypto profile) required to support TLS/SSL. All object names start with ‘dpbuddy-copy’. The “default” XML manager in DataPower does not support TLS out of the box, so this configuration is required, unless the “default” manager or a custom manager was already updated to support TLS. |
No |
Examples¶
Copy the 7.5.2.1 image directly from IBM Fix Central, apply it and wait for the completion of the reboot:
dpbuddy firmware -fromUrl "https://delivery04.dhe.ibm.com/sar/CMA/WSA/06l8h/0/xi7521.scrypt4"
Apply the image previously uploaded to “image://”, don’t wait for the reboot:
dpbuddy firmware -dpFile "xi7521.scrypt4" -timeout -1
Copy the 7.5.2.1 image directly from IBM Fix Central, apply it and wait for the completion of the reboot. Use existing XML Manager with SSL profile.
dpbuddy firmware -fromUrl "https://delivery04.dhe.ibm.com/sar/CMA/WSA/06l8h/0/xi7521.scrypt4" -xmlManager "xmlManagerWithSsl"
license
¶
This task/command prints the DPBuddy’s license information, including the expiration date and appliance entitlements.
Examples¶
dpbuddy license
passwordAlias
¶
This task creates password alias. The password is securely stored on the device and DataPower configuration objects can reference the alias instead of specifying the password directly,
If the password is encrypted, DPBuddy will attempt to decrypt it automatically.
If the alias with this name already exists, DPBuddy will override it with the new password (the existing alias object is deleted first).
You can run listCrypto command to list all password aliases and their expiration.
Attributes/Options¶
Name |
Description |
Required |
---|---|---|
name |
Name of the alias |
Yes |
passwd |
Password. It is recommended to encrypt the password using DPBuddy encryption support. |
Yes |
expiresIn |
Expiration of this password in days. This value is stored in the audit file on DataPower and can be seen using “listCrypto” task |
No |
Examples¶
<dp:passwordAlias name="test-alias" passwd="ENC{NIR5xVHWngkGpsBA/Y9YT4KTDtgAPiBN}" expiresIn="180"/>
dpbuddy passwordAlias -name test-alias -passwd "ENC{NIR5xVHWngkGpsBA/Y9YT4KTDtgAPiBN}" -expiresIn 180
ping
¶
This task executes “ping” on the device against the provided host name.
Attributes/Options¶
Name |
Description |
Required |
---|---|---|
remoteHost
CLI alias:
-rh |
Host or IP to ping from DataPower |
Yes |
Examples¶
dpbuddy -rh 127.0.0.1
restartDP
¶
This task/command restarts the appliances and optionally waits for the completion of the restart process.
Attributes/Options¶
Name |
Description |
Required |
---|---|---|
timeout |
Time, in seconds, to wait for DataPower to become available after restart. -1 disables waiting. Defaults to 240 seconds. |
No |
mode |
Restart mode: reload, reboot or halt. Defaults to |
No |
quiesce |
Quiesce all the domains before performing the restart. Defaults to |
No |
somaRequest
¶
The somaRequest
task executes an arbitrary SOMA request defined in an external file.
Do not specify SOAP envelope XML elements in the file; DPBuddy will add them automatically.
You can use Ant variables in any text node or in any attribute of the XML file.
This task will attempt to validate XML request against DataPower schema unless the validate
attribute is set to false
.
Attributes/Options¶
Name |
Description |
Required |
---|---|---|
file |
SOMA request file. |
Yes |
printResponse |
If set to Defaults to |
No |
rollbackOnError |
If set to Defaults to |
No |
Examples¶
dpbuddy somaRequest -printResponse -file dpconfigs/ping-remote-host.xml
<dp:somaRequest file="ping-remote-host.xml" />
Here is the content of “ping-remote-host.xml”:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<dp:request xmlns:dp="http://www.datapower.com/schemas/management" >
<dp:do-action>
<Ping>
<RemoteHost>${ping.host}</RemoteHost>
</Ping>
</dp:do-action>
</dp:request>
testConnection
/connect
¶
This task accesses the device and retrieves and prints its firmware version. This task could be used to test connectivity with DataPower. The task does not have any task-specific attributes/options.
Examples¶
dpbuddy connect
wsrrSynchronize
¶
This task synchronizesWSRR content with the WSRR server. See wsrr-synchronize command documentation for more details.
Attributes/Options¶
Name |
Description |
Required |
---|---|---|
subscription |
Specifies the name of a WSRR subscription or a WSRR Saved Search subscription object. Content previously retrieved using this subscription is immediately synchronized with the WSRR server specified by the subscription. |
Yes |
Examples¶
<dp:wsrrSynchronize subscription="testSubscription" />