logtail
displays one or more log files in the terminal in the manner of tail -f
.
Features of logtail
:
- it displays more than one logfile, one above the other or side-by-side
- the display updates as each logfile grows
- use tab or arrow keys to navigate and scroll
- you can fork logtail-dash to create customised views of your logfile data
logtail
is written in Rust and uses tui-rs to create the terminal UI, and linemux to monitor the logfiles.
- Linux: works on Ubuntu.
- Windows: works on Windows 10.
- MacOS: let me know what happens!
1 Install Rust via https://doc.rust-lang.org/cargo/getting-started/installation.html
2 Linux (Ubuntu)
sudo apt-get install build-essential
3a. Linux/MacOS install logtail:
cargo install logtail
logtail --help
3b. Windows install logtail-crossterm:
To build on Windows you must use the 'nightly' compiler until the 'itarget' feature becomes part of 'stable', so install Rust nightly using rustup
:
rustup toolchain install nightly
To build logtail-crossterm
on Windows, clone logtail-dash, build with +nightly
and use the binary it creates under ./taget/release
:
git clone https://github.com/happybeing/logtail-dash
cd logtail-dash
cargo +nightly build -Z features=itarget --bin logtail-crossterm --release --no-default-features
./target/release/logtail-crossterm --help
Note: vdash
is a fork of logtail
that provides a dashboard for SAFE Network Vaults (see vdash).
In the terminal type the command and the paths of one or more logfiles you want to monitor. For example:
logtail /var/log/auth.log /var/log/kern.log
When the dashboard is active, pressing 'v' or 'h' switches between horizontal and vertical arrangments (when viewing more than one logfile).
For more information:
logtail --help
If you want to use the core functionality of logtail-dash to create a customised terminal display based on real time updates to files, you can do this by creating a fork and customising the files in src/custom:
src/custom/opt.rs
: command line options and usage
src/custom/app.rs
: application logic (e.g. parsing logfiles to `dashboard state)
src/custom/ui.rs
: dashboard display and keyboard/mouse interface
Example: vdash
is a fork of logtail
that provides a dashboard for SAFE Network Vaults (see vdash).
git clone https://github.com/happybeing/logtail-dash
cd logtail-dash
Builds logtail which uses the termion backend (see tui-rs). Note: MacOS is untested
cargo build --bin logtail --features="termion" --release
Builds logtail-crossterm which uses the crossterm backend (see tui-rs), with the intention to support Windows.
NOT working on Windows yet, this is being worked on at the moment. Help with testing appreciated.
cargo build --bin logtail-crossterm --features="crossterm" --release
Here's a couple of useful commands to build and run logtail
to monitor a couple of Linux logfiles.
Open two terminals and in one run logtail-dash with:
cargo run --bin logtail --features="termion" /var/log/auth.log /var/log/kern.log
In a second terminal you can affect the first logfile by trying and failing to 'su root':
su root </dev/null
You can use any logfiles for this basic level of testing. Here are some to try:
/var/log/syslog
/var/log/auth.log
/var/log/lastlog
/var/log/dmesg
/var/log/kern.log
/var/log/boot.log
Everything is GPL3.0 unless otherwise stated. Any contributions are accepted on the condition they conform to this license.
See also ./LICENSE