Net::SNPP(3pm) | User Contributed Perl Documentation | Net::SNPP(3pm) |
Net::SNPP - Simple Network Pager Protocol Client
use Net::SNPP; # Constructors $snpp = Net::SNPP->new('snpphost'); $snpp = Net::SNPP->new('snpphost', Timeout => 60);
This module is in a maintenance mode, as I no longer have significant access to SNPP servers to test with. However, to the best of the present maintainer's knowledge, the module works just fine and has been used in many a production environment.
This module implements a client interface to the SNPP protocol, enabling a perl5 application to talk to SNPP servers. This documentation assumes that you are familiar with the SNPP protocol described in RFC1861.
A new Net::SNPP object must be created with the new method. Once this has been done, all SNPP commands are accessed through this object.
This example will send a pager message in one hour saying "Your lunch is ready"
#!/usr/local/bin/perl -w use Net::SNPP; $snpp = Net::SNPP->new('snpphost'); $snpp->send( Pager => $some_pager_number, Message => "Your lunch is ready", Alert => 1, Hold => time + 3600, # lunch ready in 1 hour :-) ) || die $snpp->message; $snpp->quit;
If "HOST" is not given, then the "SNPP_Host" specified in "Net::Config" will be used.
"OPTIONS" are passed in a hash like fashion, using key and value pairs. Possible options are:
Timeout - Maximum time, in seconds, to wait for a response from the SNPP server (default: 120)
Debug - Enable debugging information
Example:
$snpp = Net::SNPP->new('snpphost', Debug => 1, );
Unless otherwise stated all methods return either a true or false value, with true meaning that the operation was a success. When a method states that it returns a value, failure will be returned as undef or an empty list.
NOTE: This is only the SEND command - you have to build the page using various methods from this module before calling this method.
use Net::SNPP; my $snpp = Net::SNPP->new( "snpp.provider.com" ); $snpp->two_way(); $snpp->pager_id( 5555555555 ); $snpp->data( "The sky is falling!\nThe sky is falling!" ); $snpp->message_response( 1, "Don't Panic" ); $snpp->message_response( 2, "Panic!" ); my @result = $snpp->send_two_way(); $snpp->quit(); printf "Use these two numbers: \"%s %s\" to check message status.\n", $result[0], $result[1]; __END__ use Net::SNPP; my $snpp = Net::SNPP->new( "snpp.provider.com" ); my @status = $snpp->message_status( $ARGV[0], $ARGV[1] ); $snpp->quit; printf "User responded with: %s\n", $status[3];
"Net::SNPP" exports all that "Net::CMD" exports, plus three more subroutines that can bu used to compare against the result of "status". These are :- "CMD_2WAYERROR", "CMD_2WAYOK", and "CMD_2WAYQUEUED".
Net::Cmd RFC1861
Derek J. Balling <dredd@megacity.org> ( original version by Graham Barr ) Al Tobey <tobeya@tobert.org> (since Oct 2003)
Copyright (c) 1995-2001 Graham Barr. (c) 2001-2003 Derek J. Balling. All rights reserved. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself.
$Id: SNPP.pm,v 1.9 2004/01/27 22:18:32 tobeya Exp $
2022-10-13 | perl v5.34.0 |