I want to tail multiple files (and follow them) in CentOS, I've tried this:
tail -f file1 file2 file3
but the output is very unfriendly
I've also had a look at multitail but can't find a CentOS version.
What other choices do I have?
Multitail is available for CentOS in rpmforge repos. To add rpmforge repository check the documentation on 3rd Party Repositories.
I found the solution described here work well on centos:
The link is http://www.thegeekstuff.com/2009/09/multitail-to-view-tail-f-output-of-multiple-log-files-in-one-terminal/
Thanks to Ramesh Natarajan
$ vi multi-tail.sh
#!/bin/sh
# When this exits, exit all back ground process also.
trap 'kill $(jobs -p)' EXIT
# iterate through the each given file names,
for file in "$@"
do
# show tails of each in background.
tail -f $file &
done
# wait .. until CTRL+C
wait
You could simulate multitail by opening multiple instances of tail -f in Emacs subwindows.
I usually just open another xterm and run a separate 'tail -f' there.
Otherwise if I'm using the 'screen' tool, I'll set up separate 'tail -f' commands there. I don't like that as much because it takes a few keystrokes to enable scrolling in screen before using the Page Up and Page Down keys. I prefer to just use xterm's scroll bar.
You can use the watch command, i use it to tail two files at the same time:
watch -n0 tail -n30 file1 file2
A better answer to an old question...
I create a shell function in my .bashrc (obviously assumes you're using bash as your shell) and use tmux. You can probably complicate this a whole lot and do it without the tempfile, but the quoting is just ugly if you're trying to ensure that files with spaces or other weird characters in the name still work.
multitail ()
{
cmdfile=`mktemp`
echo "new-session -d \"tail -f '$1'\"" >$cmdfile
shift
for file in "$@"
do
echo "split-window -d \"tail -f '$file'\"" >>$cmdfile
done
echo "select-layout even-vertical" >>$cmdfile
tmux source-file $cmdfile \; attach && rm -f $cmdfile
}