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This is the source repository for lnav, visit http://lnav.org for a high level overview.

LNAV -- The Logfile Navigator

The Log File Navigator, lnav for short, is an advanced log file viewer for the small-scale. It is a terminal application that can understand your log files and make it easy for you to find problems with little to no setup.

Contributing

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Features

  • Log messages from different files are collated together into a single view
  • Automatic detection of log format
  • Automatic decompression of GZip and BZip2 files
  • Filter log messages based on regular expressions
  • Use SQL to analyze your logs
  • And more...

Prerequisites

The following software packages are required to build lnav:

  • gcc/clang - A C++14-compatible compiler.
  • libpcre - The Perl Compatible Regular Expression (PCRE) library.
  • sqlite - The SQLite database engine. Version 3.9.0 or higher is required.
  • ncurses - The ncurses text UI library.
  • readline - The readline line editing library.
  • zlib - The zlib compression library.
  • bz2 - The bzip2 compression library.
  • libcurl - The cURL library for downloading files from URLs. Version 7.23.0 or higher is required.

Installation

Lnav follows the usual GNU style for configuring and installing software:

$ ./configure
$ make
$ sudo make install

Run ./autogen.sh before running any of the above commands when compiling from a cloned repository.

Cygwin users

It should compile fine in Cygwin.

Alternatively, you can get the generated binary from AppVeyor artifacts.

Remember that you still need the lnav dependencies under Cygwin, here is a quick way to do it:

setup-x86_64.exe -q -P libpcre1 -P libpcrecpp0 -P libsqlite3_0 -P libstdc++6

Currently, the x64 version seems to be working better than the x86 one.

Usage

The only file installed is the executable, lnav. You can execute it with no arguments to view the default set of files:

$ lnav

You can view all the syslog messages by running:

$ lnav /var/log/messages*

Usage with systemd-journald

On systems running systemd-journald, you can use lnav as the pager:

$ journalctl | lnav

or in follow mode:

$ journalctl -f | lnav

Since journalctl's default output format omits the year, if you are viewing logs which span multiple years you will need to change the output format to include the year, otherwise lnav gets confused:

$ journalctl -o short-iso | lnav

It is also possible to use journalctl's json output format and lnav will make use of additional fields such as PRIORITY and _SYSTEMD_UNIT:

$ journalctl -o json | lnav

In case some MESSAGE fields contain special characters such as ANSI color codes which are considered as unprintable by journalctl, specifying journalctl's -a option might be preferable in order to output those messages still in a non binary representation:

$ journalctl -a -o json | lnav

If using systemd v236 or newer, the output fields can be limited to the ones actually recognized by lnav for increased efficiency:

$ journalctl -o json --output-fields=MESSAGE,PRIORITY,_PID,SYSLOG_IDENTIFIER,_SYSTEMD_UNIT | lnav

If your system has been running for a long time, for increased efficiency you may want to limit the number of log lines fed into lnav, e.g. via journalctl's -n or --since=... options.

In case of a persistent journal, you may want to limit the number of log lines fed into lnav via journalctl's -b option.

Screenshot

The following screenshot shows a syslog file. Log lines are displayed with highlights. Errors are red and warnings are yellow.

Screenshot

See Also

Angle-grinder is a tool to slice and dice log files on the command-line. If you're familiar with the SumoLogic query language, you might find this tool more comfortable to work with.