Files
CPLv4.0/mocks
ISA 71f120aa27 fetchCableData.mjs
Sends Authorization: Basic <base64(user:pass)> with configurable credentials.
Accepts --user and --pass, or env CPL_USER/CPL_PASS; defaults to Littwin/Littwin.
Uses an https.Agent({ rejectUnauthorized: false }) when --insecure is set.
Corrected output folder to cable-monitoring-data.
CLI parser supports both --key=value and --key value (PowerShell friendly).
Quick usage (PowerShell)

All 32 slots, both types (iso=3, rsl=4), all DIA modes, last 30 days:
npm run mocks:cable
Specific date range (e.g., 2025-07-13 to 2025-08-12), all slots and types:
node .\mocks\scripts\fetchCableData.mjs --from 2025-07-13 --to 2025-08-12 --insecure
Only slot 0, Isolationswiderstand, DIA1:
node .\mocks\scripts\fetchCableData.mjs --slots 0 --modes DIA1 --types iso --from 2025-07-13 --to 2025-08-12 --insecure
Provide credentials explicitly:
node .\mocks\scripts\fetchCableData.mjs --user Littwin --pass Littwin --insecure
Or via environment variables for the session:
$env:CPL_USER = "Littwin"; $env:CPL_PASS = "Littwin"
node .\mocks\scripts\fetchCableData.mjs --insecure
Output structure

mocks/device-cgi-simulator/cable-monitoring-data/slot{0..31}/
isolationswiderstand/DIA0.json, DIA1.json, DIA2.json
schleifenwiderstand/DIA0.json, DIA1.json, DIA2.json
I smoke-tested slot 0, DIA1, iso with login and it produced DIA1.json under slot0/isolationswiderstand. If you need me to also add a convenience npm script with user/pass placeholders, say the credentials source you prefer (env vs args), and I’ll wire it.
2025-08-12 10:50:08 +02:00
..
2025-08-12 10:50:08 +02:00
2025-08-12 10:50:08 +02:00