Tools for parsing & diffing RouterOS configuration files. Can produce config file patches.
Project description
Create configuration patches for your Mikrotik routers
Installation
Install using your favourite Python package manager. For example:
pip install routeros-diff
Get a diff
The routeros_diff
(alias ros_diff
) command will take two RouterOS files and diff them:
routeros_diff old_config.rsc new_config.rsc
Or using Python:
from routeros_diff.parser import RouterOSConfig
new = RouterOSConfig.parse(new_config_string)
old = RouterOSConfig.parse(old_config_string)
print(new.diff(old))
Examples:
A simple example first:
# Old:
/routing ospf instance
add name=core router-id=100.127.0.1
# New:
/routing ospf instance
add name=core router-id=100.127.0.99
# Diff:
/routing ospf instance
set [ find name=core ] router-id=100.127.0.99
Here is a more complex example where we use custom IDs in order to maintain expression ordering (see 'Natural Keys & IDs' below for details):
# Old:
/ip firewall nat
add chain=a comment="Example text [ ID:block-smtp ]"
add chain=c comment="[ ID:block-smb ]"
# New:
/ip firewall nat
add chain=a comment="Example text [ ID:block-smtp ]"
add chain=b comment="[ ID:block-nfs ]"
add chain=c comment="[ ID:block-smb ]"
# Diff:
/ip firewall nat
add chain=b comment="[ ID:block-nfs ]" place-before=[ find where comment~ID:block-smb ]
Usage & limitations
This aim is for this diffing process to work well within a limited range of conditions.
The configuration format is an entire scripting language in itself, and so this library
cannot sensibly hope to parse any arbitrary input. As a rule of thumb, this library should
be able to diff anything produced by /export
.
Advanced use
RouterOSConfig.parse
also accepts a second optional parameter as follows:
from routeros_diff.parser import RouterOSConfig
new = RouterOSConfig.parse(new_config_string)
old = RouterOSConfig.parse(old_config_string)
# Produced using: /export verbose
old_verbose = RouterOSConfig.parse(old_verbose_config_string)
print(new.diff(old, old_verbose))
Providing old_verbose
allows the diffing algorithm to be a smarter in the
diff it produces. When old_verbose
is provided, the algorithm can automatically
avoid setting certain values which it knows to be unchanged. This only
applies in cases where both a) the new config sets an argument back to its
default value, and b) the old config already has the argument set the equal value.
While this feature isn't required to produce functioning diffs, it does make it easier to produce diffs without unnecessary expressions. To put it another way, use this method if you want to be sure that diffing two functionally-equal configurations produces an empty diff.
Sections and expressions
The following is NOT supported:
## NOT SUPPORTED, DONT DO THIS ##
/routing ospf instance add name=core router-id=100.127.0.1
Rather, this must be formatted as separate 'sections' and 'expressions' on different lines. For example:
/routing ospf instance
add name=core router-id=100.127.0.1
The section in this example is /routing ospf instance
, and the expression is add name=core router-id=100.127.0.1
.
Each section may contain multiple expressions (just like the output you see from /export
).
Natural Keys & IDs
The parser will try to uniquely identify each expression. This allows the parser to be intelligent regarding additions, modifications, deletions, and ordering.
The parser refers to these unique identities as naturals keys & natural IDs. For example:
add name=core router-id=100.127.0.1
Here the natural key is name
and the natural ID is core
. The parser assumes name
will be the natural key,
but is configured to use other keys in some situations.
Additionally, you can choose to manually add your own IDs to expressions. This is done using comments. For example:
add chain=a comment="[ ID:1 ]"
These comment-based IDs take priority over whatever the parser may have otherwise used. If using comment IDs, you should make sure you set them for all expressions in that section.
This is especially useful for firewall rules. The order of firewall rules is important, and they have no obvious natural keys/IDs. Using comments IDs for your firewall rules allows the parser to intelligently maintain order. For example:
# Old:
/ip firewall nat
add chain=a comment="Example text [ ID:block-smtp ]"
add chain=c comment="[ ID:block-smb ]"
# New:
/ip firewall nat
add chain=a comment="Example text [ ID:block-smtp ]"
add chain=b comment="[ ID:block-nfs ]"
add chain=c comment="[ ID:block-smb ]"
# Diff:
/ip firewall nat
add chain=b comment="[ ID:block-nfs ]" place-before=[ find where comment~ID:block-smb ]
Note that the parser uses place-before
to correctly place the new firewall rule.
Without using comment IDs, the parse would have to drop and recreate all firewall rules. This would be non-ideal for reasons of both security and reliability.
Reporting errors
Seeing something strange in your diff output? Please report the error with the following information:
- The input
- The actual output
- What you think the output should be instead
Please minimise the size of this data as much as possible. The smaller and more specific the example of the problem, the easier it will be for us to find a resolution.
Prettify
The routeros_prettify
(alias ros_prettify
) command will parse an existing configuration and re-print it in a
standard format with common sections collapsed:
routeros_prettify old_config.rsc new_config.rsc
Or using Python:
from routeros_diff.parser import RouterOSConfig
config = RouterOSConfig.parse(config_string)
print(config)
You can also produce a syntax-highlighted HTML version of the configuration as follows (see example css):
from routeros_diff.parser import RouterOSConfig
config = RouterOSConfig.parse(config_string)
print(config.__html__())
Settings
You can customise settings in one of two ways.
The simplest way is to pass settings to RouterOSConfig.parse():
RouterOSConfig.parse(s=my_config, settings=dict(
# Natural keys for each section name.
# 'name' will be used if none is found below
# (and only if the 'name' value is available)
natural_keys={
"/ip address": "address",
...
},
# Don't perform deletions in these sections
no_deletions={
"/interface ethernet",
...
},
# Don't perform creations in these sections
no_creations={
"/interface ethernet",
...
},
# Ordering is important in these sections. Ensure
# entities maintain their order. Natural keys/ids must be
# present in sections listed here
expression_order_important={
"/ip firewall*",
...
},
))
Note that section paths can be specified using '*' wildcards.
For example, /ip firewall*
.
Alternatively, you can extend this class and override its methods. This allows you to implement more complex logic should you require. In this case, you can pass your customised class to the parser as follows:
RouterOSConfig.parse(my_config, settings=MyCustomSettings())
Concepts
This is a section with a path of /ip address
and two expressions:
/ip address
add address=1.2.3.4
add address=5.6.7.8
This is an expression with a command of add, and a key-value argument of address=1.2.3.4
:
add address=1.2.3.4
Release process:
export VERSION=a.b.c
poetry version $VERSION
dephell convert
black setup.py
git add .
git commit -m "Releasing version $VERSION"
git tag "v$VERSION"
git branch "v$VERSION"
git push origin \
refs/tags/"v$VERSION" \
refs/heads/"v$VERSION" \
main
# Wait for CI to pass
poetry publish --build
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