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  1. How does the "tail" command's "-f" parameter work?

    From the tail(1) man page: With --follow (-f), tail defaults to following the file descriptor, which means that even if a tail’ed file is renamed, tail will continue to track its end. This default behavior is not desirable …

  2. What is the difference between "tail -f" and "tail -F"?

    Tail will then listen for changes to that file. If you remove the file, and create a new one with the same name the filename will be the same but it's a different inode (and probably stored on a different place …

  3. How do I tail a log file and keep tailing it when the latest one ...

    tail monitors a single file, or at most a set of files that is determined when it starts up. In the command tail -F file_name*.log, first the shell expands the wildcard pattern, then tail is called on whatever file …

  4. What does "tail -f " do? - Unix & Linux Stack Exchange

    It means tail -f command will wait for new strings in the file and show these strings dynamically. This command useful for observing log files . For example try, tail -f /var/log/messages.

  5. How do I read the last lines of a huge log file?

    Feb 20, 2024 · tail --bytes 100M logfile.log | tail However, if you're using GNU Coreutil¹'s tail implementation, that already does this (i.e., it seeks to the end of the file minus 2.5 kB, and looks …

  6. Head/Tail command to grab multiple sets of lines

    Oct 17, 2023 · I have to grab the first two lines, the lines 43 and 44, and the last 2 lines from a file in one conduct of commands. Is there away to print those while only using head, tail and pipe commands AND

  7. Show tail of files in a directory? - Unix & Linux Stack Exchange

    A simple pipe to tail -n 200 should suffice. Example Sample data. $ touch $(seq 300) Now the last 200: $ ls -l | tail -n 200 You might not like the way the results are presented in that list of 200. For that you …

  8. Why can't I do two greps after a tail? - Unix & Linux Stack Exchange

    Dec 22, 2022 · tail -f file prints the last 10 lines that were initially in the file and waits and prints all the additional lines that come thereafter. To print all the initial lines and all following, use tail -n +1 -f file.

  9. How to quit `tail -f` mode without using `Ctrl+c`?

    Aug 22, 2017 · When I do tail -f filename, how to quit the mode without use Ctrl+c to kill the process? What I want is a normal way to quit, like q in top. I am just curious about the question, because I feel ...

  10. `tail -f` until text is seen - Unix & Linux Stack Exchange

    tail -f my-file.log | grep -qx "Finished: SUCCESS" -q, meaning quiet, quits as soon as it finds a match -x makes grep match the whole line For the second part, try tail -f my-file.log | grep -m 1 "^Finished: " | …