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Published at 2023-09-25T14:57:42+03:00
Hey there. As I am pretty busy this month personally (I am now on Paternity Leave) and as I still want to post once monthly, the blog post of this month will only be some DTail usage examples. They're from the DTail documentation, but not all readers of my blog may be aware of those!
DTail is a distributed DevOps tool for tailing, grepping, catting logs and other text files on many remote machines at once which I programmed in Go.
,_---~~~~~----._ _,,_,*^____ _____``*g*\"*, ____ _____ _ _ / __/ /' ^. / \ ^@q f | _ \_ _|_ _(_) | @f | ((@| |@)) l 0 _/ | | | || |/ _` | | | \`/ \~____ / __ \_____/ \ | |_| || | (_| | | | | _l__l_ I |____/ |_|\__,_|_|_| } [______] I ] | | | | ] ~ ~ | | Let's tail those logs! | | |
DTail consists out of a server and several client binaries. In this post, I am showcasing their use!
The following example demonstrates how to follow logs of several servers at once. The server list is provided as a flat text file. The example filters all records containing the string `INFO`. Any other Go compatible regular expression can also be used instead of `INFO`.
% dtail --servers serverlist.txt --grep INFO --files "/var/log/dserver/*.log"
Hint: you can also provide a comma separated server list, e.g.: `servers server1.example.org,server2.example.org:PORT,...`
Hint: You can also use the shorthand version (omitting the `--files`)
% dtail --servers serverlist.txt --grep INFO "/var/log/dserver/*.log"
To run ad-hoc map-reduce aggregations on newly written log lines you must add a query. The following example follows all remote log lines and prints out every few seconds the result to standard output.
Hint: To run a map-reduce query across log lines written in the past, please use the `dmap` command instead.
% dtail --servers serverlist.txt \ --files '/var/log/dserver/*.log' \ --query 'from STATS select sum($goroutines),sum($cgocalls), last($time),max(lifetimeConnections)'
Beware: For map-reduce queries to work, you have to ensure that DTail supports your log format. Check out the documentaiton of the DTail query language and the DTail log formats on the DTail homepage for more information.
Hint: You can also use the shorthand version:
% dtail --servers serverlist.txt \ --files '/var/log/dserver/*.log' \ 'from STATS select sum($goroutines),sum($cgocalls), last($time),max(lifetimeConnections)'
Here is another example:
% dtail --servers serverlist.txt \ --files '/var/log/dserver/*.log' \ --query 'from STATS select $hostname,max($goroutines),max($cgocalls),$loadavg, lifetimeConnections group by $hostname order by max($cgocalls)'
You can also continuously append the results to a CSV file by adding `outfile append filename.csv` to the query:
% dtail --servers serverlist.txt \ --files '/var/log/dserver/*.log' \ --query 'from STATS select ... outfile append result.csv'
The following example demonstrates how to cat files (display the full content of the files) on several servers at once.
As you can see in this example, a DTail client also creates a local log file of all received data in `~/log`. You can also use the `noColor` and `-plain` flags (this all also work with other DTail commands than `dcat`).
% dcat --servers serverlist.txt --files /etc/hostname
Hint: You can also use the shorthand version:
% dcat --servers serverlist.txt /etc/hostname
The following example demonstrates how to grep files (display only the lines which match a given regular expression) of multiple servers at once. In this example, we look after some entries in `/etc/passwd`. This time, we don't provide the server list via an file but rather via a comma separated list directly on the command line. We also explore the `-before`, `-after` and `-max` flags (see animation).
% dgrep --servers server1.example.org:2223 \ --files /etc/passwd \ --regex nologin
Generally, `dgrep` is also a very useful way to search historic application logs for certain content.
Hint: `-regex` is an alias for `-grep`.
To run a map-reduce aggregation over logs written in the past, the `dmap` command can be used. The following example aggregates all map-reduce fields `dmap` will print interim results every few seconds. You can also write the result to an CSV file by adding `outfile result.csv` to the query.
% dmap --servers serverlist.txt \ --files '/var/log/dserver/*.log' \ --query 'from STATS select $hostname,max($goroutines),max($cgocalls),$loadavg, lifetimeConnections group by $hostname order by max($cgocalls)'
Remember: For that to work, you have to make sure that DTail supports your log format. You can either use the ones already defined in `internal/mapr/logformat` or add an extension to support a custom log format. The example here works out of the box though, as DTail understands its own log format already.
Until now, all examples so far required to have remote server(s) to connect to. That makes sense, as after all DTail is a *distributed* tool. However, there are circumstances where you don't really need to connect to a server remotely. For example, you already have a login shell open to the server an all what you want is to run some queries directly on local log files.
The serverless mode does not require any `dserver` up and running and therefore there is no networking/SSH involved.
All commands shown so far also work in a serverless mode. All what needs to be done is to omit a server list. The DTail client then starts in serverless mode.
The following `dmap` example is the same as the previously shown one, but the difference is that it operates on a local log file directly:
% dmap --files /var/log/dserver/dserver.log --query 'from STATS select $hostname,max($goroutines),max($cgocalls),$loadavg, lifetimeConnections group by $hostname order by max($cgocalls)'
As a shorthand version the following command can be used:
% dmap 'from STATS select $hostname,max($goroutines),max($cgocalls),$loadavg, lifetimeConnections group by $hostname order by max($cgocalls)' \ /var/log/dsever/dserver.log
You can also use a file input pipe as follows:
% cat /var/log/dserver/dserver.log | \ dmap 'from STATS select $hostname,max($goroutines),max($cgocalls),$loadavg, lifetimeConnections group by $hostname order by max($cgocalls)'
In essence, this works exactly like aggregating logs. All files operated on must be valid CSV files and the first line of the CSV must be the header. E.g.:
% cat example.csv name,lastname,age,profession Michael,Jordan,40,Basketball player Michael,Jackson,100,Singer Albert,Einstein,200,Physician % dmap --query 'select lastname,name where age > 40 logformat csv outfile result.csv' example.csv % cat result.csv lastname,name Jackson,Michael Einstein,Albert
DMap can also be used to query and aggregate CSV files from remote servers.
The serverless mode works transparently with all other DTail commands. Here are some examples:
% dtail /var/log/dserver/dserver.log
% dtail --logLevel trace /var/log/dserver/dserver.log
% dcat /etc/passwd
% dcat --plain /etc/passwd > /etc/test # Should show no differences. diff /etc/test /etc/passwd
% dgrep --regex ERROR --files /var/log/dserver/dsever.log
% dgrep --before 10 --after 10 --max 10 --grep ERROR /var/log/dserver/dsever.log
Use `--help` for more available options. Or go to the DTail page for more information! Hope you find DTail useful!
E-Mail your comments to `paul@nospam.buetow.org` :-)
Other related posts are:
2021-04-22 DTail - The distributed log tail program
2022-03-06 The release of DTail 4.0.0
2022-10-30 Installing DTail on OpenBSD
2023-09-25 DTail usage examples (You are currently reading this)
I hope you find the tools presented in this post useful!
Paul