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I had two ideas. First I thought I read the file, delete it and logging will eventually recreate it (I was wrong). For a second try I thought I would make a copy of the file and the compare the copy and the original after a period of time. What do you think? Is the second method a good choice? If so what would be a good way to compare the files efficently? IMO it would be very inefficient because I had to read a big log file twice and compare it line by line...

I'm also intrested in other methods.

Something with polling would not be ideal this should be a job that I invoke with crontab.

Thanks for your help.

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2 Answers 2

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If the platform you're running on uses systemd you can utilize the journalctl command.

The journalctl command has a --since option that is very powerful

You can use it to get logs after a specific time:

journalctl --since "2018-10-08 13:00:00"

View logs between times

journalctl --since "2018-10-08 13:00:00" --until "2018-10-08 13:30:00"

Or N time ago

journalctl --since "10min ago"

To look at specific applications logs use the -u option

journalctl -u tomcat.service --since "1 hr ago"

References:

https://www.digitalocean.com/community/tutorials/how-to-use-journalctl-to-view-and-manipulate-systemd-logs

https://www.loggly.com/ultimate-guide/using-journalctl/

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What about:

   $ tail -f /var/log/long_file.log 

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