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UCI Parse Library

pypi license wheel python Test Suite docs coverage Poetry

Python 3 library and command line tools to parse, diff, and normalize OpenWRT UCI configuration files.

These tools were written to ease OpenWRT upgrades, making it easier to see the differences between two config files. As of this writing (mid-2020), OpenWRT upgrades often don't normalize upgraded config files in the same way from version to version. For instance, the new version from opkg upgrade (saved off with a -opkg filename) might use single quotes on all lines, while the original version on disk might not use quotes at all. This makes it very difficult understand the often-minimal differences between an upgraded file and the original file.

Installing the Package

Installing this package on your OpenWRT router is not as simple as it could be. A lot of routers do not have enough space available to install a full version of Python including pip or setuptools. If yours does have lots of space, it's as simple as this:

$ opkg update
$ opkg install python3-pip
$ pip3 install uciparse

If not, it gets a little ugly. First, install wget with support for HTTPS:

$ opkg update
$ opkg install wget ca-bundle ca-certificates

Then, go to PyPI and copy the URL for the source package .tar.gz file. Retrieve the source package with wget and then manually extract it:

$ wget https://files.pythonhosted.org/.../uciparse-0.1.2.tar.gz
$ tar zxvf uciparse-0.1.2.tar.gz
$ cd uciparse-0.1.2

Finally, run the custom install script provided with the source package:

$ sh ./scripts/install

This installs the OpenWRT python3-light package, then copies the Python packages into the right site-packages directory and the uciparse and ucidiff scripts to /usr/bin.

Using the Tools

Once you have installed the package as described above, the uciparse and ucidiff tools will be available in your path.

ucidiff

The ucidiff tool is probably the tool you'll use most often when updating your router. It reads two UCI configuration files from disk, normalizes both in memory (without making changes on disk), and then compares them. The result is a unified diff, like diff -Naur. This gives you a way to understand the real differences between two files without ever having to change anything on disk.

$ ucidiff --help
usage: ucidiff [-h] a b

Diff two UCI configuration files.

positional arguments:
  a           Path to the first UCI file to compare
  b           Path to the second UCI file to compare

optional arguments:
  -h, --help  show this help message and exit

The comparison is equivalent to a 'diff -Naur' between the normalized versions
of the files. If either file can't be parsed, then an error will be returned
and no diff will be shown.

uciparse

If you would prefer to clean up and normalize your configuration files on disk, then you can use the uciparse tool. It reads a UCI config file from disk or from stdin, parses it, and prints normalized output to stdout.

$ uciparse --help
usage: uciparse [-h] uci

Parse and normalize a UCI configuration file.

positional arguments:
  uci         Path to the UCI file to normalize, or '-' for stdin

optional arguments:
  -h, --help  show this help message and exit

Results will be printed to stdout. If the file can't be parsed then an error
will be returned and no output will be generated.

Before using uciparse, you should make a backup of any config file that you are going to normalized.