I want to display the last 10 lines of my log file, starting with the last line- like a normal log reader. I thought this would be a variation of the tail command, but I can't find this anywhere.
6 Answers
GNU (Linux) uses the following:
tail -n 10 <logfile> | tac
tail -n 10 <logfile>
prints out the last 10 lines of the log file and tac
(cat spelled backwards) reverses the order.
BSD (OS X) of tail
uses the -r
option:
tail -r -n 10 <logfile>
For both cases, you can try the following:
if hash tac 2>/dev/null; then tail -n 10 <logfile> | tac; else tail -n 10 -r <logfile>; fi
NOTE: The GNU manual states that the BSD -r
option "can only reverse files that are at most as large as its buffer, which is typically 32 KiB" and that tac
is more reliable. If buffer size is a problem and you cannot use tac
, you may want to consider using @ata's answer which writes the functionality in bash.
-
1I'm sure this is right, but looks like the 'tac' command doesn't exist on OSX shell...– YarinNov 5, 2011 at 1:38
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@Yarin See stackoverflow.com/questions/742466/… for some alternatives to
tac
, not all of which are portable. Nov 5, 2011 at 3:57 -
Sorry, I have to ding you for "useless use of cat" smallo.ruhr.de/award.html since tail has the option -r to reverse the order. So
tail -r -n 10 <logfile>
is the better choice. As a bonus tail -r works on non-GNU systems like OSX, Solaris, AIX, etc. Dec 3, 2014 at 20:45 -
@RichardBronosky Nice link, I've edited my answer to also include the
-r
option. Dec 3, 2014 at 21:52 -
@RickSmith respectable humility, friend. I received the award in 1999 and have been diligent ever since. Also, I was GNU-only from 1995-1999 before getting plunged into Posix systems and had to relearn a lot because the admins refused to install all the sugar I was used to. Dec 4, 2014 at 3:01
I ended up using tail -r
, which worked on my OSX (tac
doesn't)
tail -r -n10
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This is the best answer because it is not GNU specific and avoids a "useless use of cat". smallo.ruhr.de/award.html Dec 3, 2014 at 20:47
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1Does not work
root@elk:/# tail -r -n1 /var/log/logstash-test-output.log tail: invalid option -- 'r'
Feb 26, 2016 at 15:56 -
2@KarlMorrison This won't work for non-BSD tail commands. See my answer for more help... Aug 16, 2016 at 18:47
You can do that with pure bash:
#!/bin/bash
readarray file
lines=$(( ${#file[@]} - 1 ))
for (( line=$lines, i=${1:-$lines}; (( line >= 0 && i > 0 )); line--, i-- )); do
echo -ne "${file[$line]}"
done
./tailtac 10 < somefile
./tailtac -10 < somefile
./tailtac 100000 < somefile
./tailtac < somefile
This is the perfect methods to print output in reverse order
tail -n 10 <logfile> | tac
Pure bash solution is
_tac_echo() {
IFS=$'\n'
echo "${BASH_ARGV[*]}"
}
_tac () {
local -a lines
readarray -t lines
shopt -s extdebug
_tac_echo "${lines[@]}"
shopt -u extdebug
}
cat <<'EOF' | _tac
1 one line[of] smth
2 two line{of} smth
3 three line(of) smth
4 four line&of smth
EOF
which prints
4 four line&of smth
3 three line(of) smth
2 two line{of} smth
1 one line[of] smth