lldpctl -f keyvalue gives me output in this format:
lldp.eth0.via=LLDP
lldp.eth0.rid=1
lldp.eth0.age=286 days, 06:58:09
lldp.eth0.chassis.mac=<removed>
lldp.eth0.chassis.name=<removed>
lldp.eth0.chassis.descr=Not received
lldp.eth0.port.ifname=Gi1/19
lldp.eth0.port.descr=GigabitEthernet1/19
lldp.eth0.port.auto-negotiation.supported=yes
lldp.eth0.port.auto-negotiation.enabled=yes
lldp.eth0.port.auto-negotiation.10Base-T.hd=yes
lldp.eth0.port.auto-negotiation.10Base-T.fd=yes
lldp.eth0.port.auto-negotiation.100Base-X.hd=no
lldp.eth0.port.auto-negotiation.100Base-X.fd=yes
lldp.eth0.port.auto-negotiation.1000Base-T.hd=yes
lldp.eth0.port.auto-negotiation.1000Base-T.fd=yes
lldp.eth0.port.auto-negotiation.current=1000BaseTFD - Four-pair Category 5 UTP, full duplex mode
lldp.eth0.vlan.vlan-id=<removed>
lldp.eth0.vlan.pvid=yes
lldp.eth1.via=LLDP
lldp.eth1.rid=2
lldp.eth1.age=286 days, 06:58:08
lldp.eth1.chassis.mac=<removed>
lldp.eth1.chassis.name=<removed>
lldp.eth1.chassis.descr=Not received
lldp.eth1.port.ifname=Gi1/19
lldp.eth1.port.descr=GigabitEthernet1/19
lldp.eth1.
I want to use Python to parse the output into a dictionary like this:
lldp['eth1']['port']['descr'] = 'GigabitEthernet1/19'
With this consideration too:
lldp['eth0']['rid'] = '1'
Is there a reliable way to do this with python where I have an unpredictable depth to parse through?