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At work we have a 2 X 4 24 inch monitor video wall served by a single Mac Pro with a bunch of video cards. It's an architectural feature of the office and not a particularly good way to use those nice 24 inch dells.

We mostly put a few of our websites on some screens and run gltail on some for watching traffic. Sometimes we tail -f error logs.

My question is this: what other pretty log analyzers except gltail are there? All those bouncing balls in gltail seem to slow down the rendering significantly, and it seems impossible to turn it off. What other things we can stick on there?

You'd be surprised as to how useful this thing is - yesterday we noticed that one of the three virtual servers was a lot slower than usual. It was still up and serving and because of that did not trip our monitoring, but was slow enough to warrant a restart.

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Is this really an important enough question that someone is willing to sacrifice some of their own reputation to get it answered? I'm pretty sure this was not the intent of the bounty system. Still, it's your rep, and if you want to waste it, who am I to tell you you're wrong? – Graeme Perrow Jan 27 at 23:41
I'm just going to post a smart-aleck answer, so I won't waste a "response", but have you considered bouncing Michigan? hulu.com/watch/40678/… – Paul Fisher Jan 28 at 7:38
I think you should have it pick a random workstation every 60 seconds and display a screenshot of that workstations desktop...productivity enhancer. – EBGreen Feb 1 at 13:08

10 Answers

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My question is this: what other pretty log analyzers except gltail are there?

LogStalgia is the best visual log analyzer I have seen. YouTube video here. Watch it!

Also known as “ApachePong“, it displays apache access log as a retro arcade game-like simulation in real time. Warning! This is extremely entertaining and you might end up spending a lot of your time watching server logs, which you otherwise wouldn’t.

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Also, this blogger suggests:

I have a separate monitor on my desk that I use to SSH from terminator with split screen. I usually use trafshow and htop to monitor and occasionally tail -f log messages. Which are mostly enough for basic server monitoring.

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Which is a little less eye-candy but provides a good amount of information on one screen.

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That Logstalgia is so cool! But I get only 1 ball every minute or so :( – Isaac Waller Jan 28 at 4:53
I've no idea if LogStalgia is useful, but it is pretty :) – Marcus Downing Jan 30 at 0:33
Thanks for the link! LogStalgia is fun to look at. – nooomi Jan 30 at 9:03
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SecViz

A portal for sharing and discussion security visualisation maintained by the author of AfterGlow an open source tool for security data visualization.

Davix

Also on the SecViz site is Davix a live CD (ISO download) for data analysis and visualization that has a whole bunch of data visualisation tools on it.


There's also a long list of web log tools here:
Web Analytics, Stats, & Site Analysis Sites - Ultimate List of Statistics Tools

Amongst the list are:

Piwik

Woopra


I found the above sites with the following Google image searches:

http://images.google.com/images?q=log+analyzers+pretty

http://images.google.com/images?q=website+log+analyzer+visualize (the maxkiesler.com result in these led to the secviz site.)


Update: You might also want to take some ideas from blekko's ambient cluster health visualization

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Just as an fyi, Woopra (1.2) renders wonderful world maps in full screen mode, but it cannot simultaneously control more than one monitor. It lets me select a target display, but once the map is displayed on monitor 2, the main window is unavailable on monitor 1. – cdonner Mar 25 at 2:03
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Splunk is not bad, although not especially pretty. It might be a little more clearly informative than the other stuff.

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self-serving suggestion: monitor all of your systems, not just your web logs

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This is going to use 57-110W† per monitor all the time you have this on. That is 456-880W in electricity for all eight monitors! If you only have these on for 8 hours each working day and there are 250 working days in a year, this will be using 912,000-1,760,000 Watt Hours a year. This increases to 3,994,560-7,708,800 Watt Hours‡ if you never turn them off. At home I pay £0.1241p per kWh of electricity; at that rate keeping the eight monitors going full pelt for the whole year is going to cost £956* (1,365 USD). Isn't that a lot of money, not to mention environmental damage, to be wasting when you don't even know what you want to use it for?

My suggestion is, in the style of a James Bond villain’s lair, to fit a big map in front of the monitors that can slide out the way when you do need them.

Source Dell support. I have not included the PC required to drive the monitors or the air conditioning required to keep it all cool.
‡ 7,708,800 Watt Hours can move you 642 miles in a Gi-Wiz
* That’s enough to buy your colleagues 435 pints of beer in a London pub.

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you must be the least fun person ever – Greg Dean Jan 28 at 23:45
and the cost of missing the chance to catch a problem early or thwart an attack when it just starts is...millions? – Steven A. Lowe Jan 29 at 2:03
and moving 642 miles in a Gi-Wiz would take 12.84 hours at top speed (50mph), except that you'd have to stop every 40 minutes and recharge it for 8 hours, so the trip would take you a week! LOL! – Steven A. Lowe Jan 29 at 5:45
This is not peta.org. Its mend to be a funny question. – nooomi Jan 29 at 13:38
Well, I would love to replace smaller 20 inch monitors for all of our devs with these 24 inchers, but they are a part of office architecture and such, and thus off limits to my grabby hands. – deadprogrammer Jan 29 at 19:01
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If you have some services to monitor Cacti can make a lot of nice graphs for you.

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What other things we can stick on there?

If you have a CruiseControl server somewhere which needs to be monitored, maybe BigVisibleCruise might be of interest.

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Quake 3

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+1 This really is the only viable option. – Outlaw Programmer Jan 27 at 20:23
Hahahahahahah xD – tunnuz Jan 27 at 23:46
Now that's what you do with a video wall! – Sorskoot Jan 28 at 8:56
That reminds me of this youtube.com/watch?v=lzfJUHVrWhs – Martin Brown Jan 28 at 17:58
The only problem with running 3d simulation with a high fov screen is increased simulator sickness for the viewer. But I wouldn't mind having this awesome setup. :D – Spoike Jan 30 at 14:23
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There's this really cool video of a product from NetQos that turns your network traffic into a game-like 3D animation: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dtC6ZM0_m8U That would be fun to show up there.

I'd use one of the monitors to display software build information from our continuous integration setup.

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This is a Unix system... I know this! – Daniel Schaffer Jan 27 at 17:05
@[Daniel Schaffer]: may you be eaten by raptors for that ;-) – Steven A. Lowe Jan 29 at 2:03
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At the newspaper where I used to work, we had a couple of large LCD screens where we did the same thing. We had Firefox page through various news sites using the Tab Slideshow add-on, and on another screen we ran a cool little Flash app that showed simple charts and stats from SiteCatalyst. You could do something similar by generating reports in web pages, and having Tab Slideshow cycle through those as well. Alternatively, you could use a single page to display system status in an easy-to-read way. Here are some other ideas from last.fm.

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