
How does the "tail" command's "-f" parameter work?
From the tail(1) man page: With --follow (-f), tail defaults to following the file descriptor, which means that even if a tail’ed file is renamed, tail will continue to track its end. This default behavior is not desirable …
What is the difference between "tail -f" and "tail -F"?
Tail will then listen for changes to that file. If you remove the file, and create a new one with the same name the filename will be the same but it's a different inode (and probably stored on a different place …
How to tail a log file by time? - Unix & Linux Stack Exchange
Aug 7, 2015 · How to tail a log file by time? Ask Question Asked 10 years, 6 months ago Modified 3 years, 11 months ago
Show tail of files in a directory? - Unix & Linux Stack Exchange
A simple pipe to tail -n 200 should suffice. Example Sample data. $ touch $(seq 300) Now the last 200: $ ls -l | tail -n 200 You might not like the way the results are presented in that list of 200. For that you …
How to tail multiple files using tail -0f in Linux/AIX
The point is that tail -f file1 file2 doesn't work on AIX where tail accepts only one filename. You can do (tail -f file1 & tail -f file2) | process to redirect the stdout of both tail s to the pipe to process.
tail - cat line X to line Y on a huge file - Unix & Linux Stack Exchange
Say I have a huge text file (>2GB) and I just want to cat the lines X to Y (e.g. 57890000 to 57890010). From what I understand I can do this by piping head into tail or viceversa, i.e. head -A /...
How do I tail a log file and keep tailing it when the latest one ...
tail monitors a single file, or at most a set of files that is determined when it starts up. In the command tail -F file_name*.log, first the shell expands the wildcard pattern, then tail is called on whatever file …
How to quit `tail -f` mode without using `Ctrl+c`?
Aug 22, 2017 · When I do tail -f filename, how to quit the mode without use Ctrl+c to kill the process? What I want is a normal way to quit, like q in top. I am just curious about the question, because I feel ...
shell - grep and tail -f? - Unix & Linux Stack Exchange
Is it possible to do a tail -f (or similar) on a file, and grep it at the same time? I wouldn't mind other commands just looking for that kind of behavior.
`tail -f` until text is seen - Unix & Linux Stack Exchange
tail -f my-file.log | grep -qx "Finished: SUCCESS" -q, meaning quiet, quits as soon as it finds a match -x makes grep match the whole line For the second part, try tail -f my-file.log | grep -m 1 "^Finished: " | …