See the blogpost from Karl Lockhart on tailing a log file over SSH:
"Tailing logs is a very good way to keep an eye on the operation of
processes running on your server. Sometimes you want a little more
flexibility than the simple SSH
window affords, or you simply want to view logs via locally available
software. I accomplish this with a very simple solution as I need to run
windows on my development machine.
I use plink.exe available from the putty download website, as well as BareTail, don’t google that, available from Bare Metal Software.
Plink will allow you to open a noninteractive connection to the server
and store the output in a local file. The following command works under
Windows, “C:\Path to\PuTTY\plink.exe” user@hostname tail -1000f /path/to/logfile.txt > C:/path/to/logfile.log“. This will create the logfile specified after the redirection operator
and populate it with the output of your tail from the remote machine.
Simply open the file with BareTail to take advantage of a local tail and
all the features of BareTail. This is actually very simple, but works
very well. You can run any command after the user@hostname part of the
command. This does assume that you have public/private keys set up."
Hi
ReplyDeleteYou can checkout dbitail:
https://github.com/pschweitz/DBITail/wiki
And for download:
https://github.com/pschweitz/DBITail/releases