Hello:
I'm a very newbee at UNIX/AIX.
What i want to do is to tail a file from the bottom until a certain string is found and write all the lines after the found string to another file.
I've tried out a lot of combination with tail and grep but doesn't find the good one.
Could someone help... (4 Replies)
I'm trying to use tail/grep to monitor a log file. The command I cooked up is:
tail -n 50 -f output.log | grep 'type:system' | cut -f 5-
A sample line from the log file is:
1208894862 type:system session:0 severity:4 load started
the columns are tab delimited.
this works ok, except... (3 Replies)
Hi,
I am writing a shell script that checks catalina logs on a production system and mails me if it detects errors.
It greps the logs for known errors which i have defined as variables.
The problem is the logs are huge, approx 30,000 before they rotate.
So I am forced to use grep instead... (3 Replies)
The program that is running on my machine generates log files. I want to be able to know the number of lines that contain "FT" in the most recent log file. I wrote the following, but it always returns zero. And I know the count is not zero. Any ideas?
ls -rt *.log | tail -n 1 | grep -c FT (6 Replies)
Hey!!
I'm having a hard time getting this to work!
I need to input a name and compare that name to a file in the file the name has a code on the same line as it, what i need is to compare the input name with the file and then output the code to a other file.
Ex:
... (16 Replies)
I need to tail -f a file so I can monitor it as it is being written to. However, there is a lot of garbage in the file that I don't care about. So normally I would just pipe and grep for the string that is important to me. However, in this case, there are two things I need to grep for. I can't... (3 Replies)
I have a basic tail/grep question. I have logs that are generated & kept in a directory called alert_audit. I am using "tail" to see the logs that are coming in, but I only need logs that contain the IP address 10.249.185. or 10.247.231.
Here is the command I have, but it pulls all IP... (3 Replies)
not sure how to do it. wan't to delete it using cut and grep ince i would use it in the shell.
but how must the command be?
grep "64.233.181.103 wwwGoogle.com" /etc/hosts | cut -d
the delimeter is just a space. can you help meplease. :D (1 Reply)
hi guys,
I perform a sort of monitoring. I have a server running and with
tail -f | grep "Searchstring"I monitor the log-file for recent specific entries. This is ok and works fine.
Now, in addition I want to have my search results not posted into the shell but into a file. I tried:
tail... (3 Replies)
Good Morning,
i ran into some trouble this morning while 'improving' my monitoring stuff. i would like to get a warning when the number of mails sent (outbound) by postfix is above a certain number. so far, so easy. to test that i simply put
cat /var/log/mail.info | grep 'to=<' | grep -v -e... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Mike
1 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
inotail
INOTAIL(1) Inotify enhanced tail INOTAIL(1)NAME
inotail - A fast and lightweight version of tail using inotify
SYNOPSIS
inotail [OPTION]... [FILE]...
DESCRIPTION
inotail is a replacement for the 'tail' program found in the base installation of every Linux/UNIX system. It makes use of the inotify in-
frastructure in recent versions of the Linux kernel to speed up tailing files in the follow mode (the '-f' option). Standard tail polls the
file every second by default while inotail listens to special events sent by the kernel through the inotify API to determine whether a file
needs to be reread. Note: inotail will not work on systems running a kernel without inotify. To enable inotify, please set CONFIG_INOTIFY=y
in your Linux kernel configuration and recompile it.
Currently inotail is not fully compatible to neither POSIX or GNU tail but might be in the future.
OPTIONS -c N, --bytes=N
output the last N bytes. If the first character of N is a '+', begin printing with the Nth character from the start of each file.
-f, --follow
keep the file(s) open and print appended data as the file grows
-n N, --lines=N
output the last N lines (default: 10) If the first character of N is a '+', begin printing with the Nth line from the start of each
file.
-v, --verbose
print headers with file names
-h, --help
show help and exit
-V, --version
show inotail version and exit
AUTHOR
Written by Tobias Klauser <tklauser@distanz.ch>
SEE ALSO tail(1), inotify(7)
2006-08-13 INOTAIL(1)