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Monitoring apache logs with tail –f tends gets very frustrating for the eyes after a while. Are there any tool/options to colorize the log outputs? Maybe signal FATAL with red, etc...

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9 Answers 9

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I'm using multitail to monitor logs, it includes coloring as well as multiple logfile monitoring either merged or in windows. Give it a try.

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Any reason why you can't use something like this:

tail -f FILE | grep --color=always KEYWORD

source: commandlinefu.com

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  • Did you test it? IT doesn't output anything for me.
    – SabreWolfy
    Nov 12, 2013 at 11:22
  • This filters the output as well, so any line without KEYWORD will be ignored.
    – Michal Mau
    Apr 3, 2015 at 17:41
  • The OP seems to be implying he's looking for a keyword or words. Unless the file is multiline in nature (which apache logs generally are not), then this answer is sufficient.
    – Garrett
    May 27, 2015 at 5:50
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I use a small script with grep combinations to get some colors:

#!/bin/bash
shopt -s expand_aliases

alias grey-grep="GREP_COLOR='1;30' grep -E --color=always --line-buffered"
alias red-grep="GREP_COLOR='1;31' grep -E --color=always --line-buffered"
alias green-grep="GREP_COLOR='1;32' grep -E --color=always --line-buffered"
alias yellow-grep="GREP_COLOR='1;33' grep -E --color=always --line-buffered"
alias cyan-grep="GREP_COLOR='1;36' grep -E --color=always --line-buffered"

tail -1000f /var/log/apache2/error.log | grey-grep ".*PerformanceLogger.*|$" | cyan-grep "INFO|$" | yellow-grep "WARN|$" | red-grep "[ERROR].*|[FATAL].*|$" | green-grep "***|$"

The point is that every chained grep add a different color. So the result is something like: Apache log with some colors

4

Found this: http://fixunix.com/unix/83044-tail-color.html

tail -f file | perl -pe 's/keyword/\e[1;31;43m$&\e[0m/g'

This only works on ANSI terminals, but all others have become virtually extinct. \e[...m ist the ANSI escape sequence SGR "select graphic rendition". The "..." can be replaced by some semicolon-separated integers, with the meaning:

0 : all attributes off 1 : bold 31 : foreground red 43 : background yellow

"keyword", of course, can be any perl regular expression:

(foo|bar) highlight the strings foo and bar \b((foo|bar)\b highlight the words foo and bar .\b((foo|bar)\b. highlight the whole line that contains the words foo or bar

Or, the easy way, just install colortail Its probably in your favorite repo (dag for CentOS)

http://developwithstyle.com/articles/2010/04/20/tail-your-logs-with-a-touch-of-color.html

http://joakimandersson.se/projects/colortail/

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0

Shameless plug: I wrote a tool called TxtStyle that does something similar as the options mentioned earlier. You can run it as follows:

tail -f /var/log/syslog | txts --regex '\d+'

You can also define named styles in the config file (~/.txts.conf) and use it like so:

ifconfig | txts --name ifconfig

(ifconfig style is defined out of the box)

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There's one feature that I haven't seen in those colorizers -- highlight response times (higher time -> more alarming color). 256-color support in modern terminal emulators could be useful here.

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Another useful grep trick to show all output but colour the selected KEYWORD is :

tail -f FILE | grep --color=always -E "$|REGEXP"
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From all responses above this is what I got and it works very nicely

#!zsh
GR="grep --color=always --line-buffered -E"

alias grey="GREP_COLOR='1;30' $GR"
alias red="GREP_COLOR='1;31' $GR"
alias green="GREP_COLOR='1;32' $GR"
alias yellow="GREP_COLOR='1;33' $GR"
alias cyan="GREP_COLOR='1;36' $GR"

# show static files gray, 200 status green, 300 grey, etc
# [503] 06/24/20 19:40:34 (239) proxy:https://feedpress.me/drudgereportfeed?format=xml | cache miss: attempting entity save | 2460b
# [200] 06/24/20 19:40:34 (394) proxy:https://www.reddit.com/r/news/.rss | cache miss: attempting entity save | 25883b#
tail -300f /var/log/apache2/access.log | grey "$|[a-z0-9/]+(css|js|ico|png).*" | green "$|\[2[0-9]*\]" | yellow "$|\[3[0-9]*\]" | cyan "$|\[4[0-9]*\]" | red "$|\[5[0-9]*\].*"

Terminal Screen Shot

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I spent many years as a sysadmin for an MX-level email antivirus & antispam service & while trying to help myself out of a semi-dyslexic maillog tailing session, one hyper-spamming event, I knocked this little script up, that allowed me to selectively highlight various interesting log entries.

https://github.com/furriephillips/hl

Please be gentle - this was the creation of a madman, being spammed into kingdom come.

This should work fine, on any log you are tailing, as you can tailor the bits that get highlighted & in what colour & gradually work your way up to a fully personalised experience, perhaps with per-log command aliases, like this random & not very useful example: -

alias hlmaillog="tail -F /var/log/maillog | hl NOQUEUE lightblue | hl 'blocked using zen' pink | hl warning yellow | hl 'Name or service not known' pink | hl 'TLS connection established' yellow | hl TIMING lightblue | hl dkim red"

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