This is the source repository for lnav, visit https://lnav.org for a high level overview.
The Logfile Navigator is a log file viewer for the terminal. Given a set of files/directories, lnav will:
Then, in the lnav TUI, you can:
e
/E
);/
);:highlight
command);P
);i
);;
)The following screenshot shows a mix of syslog and web access log files. Failed requests are shown in red. Identifiers, like IP address and PIDs are semantically highlighted.
tail
/grep
/less
?The standard Unix utilities are great for processing raw text lines, however, they do not understand log messages. Tail can watch multiple files at a time, but it won't display messages in order by time and you can't scroll backwards. Grep will only find matching lines, but won't return a full multi-line log message. Less can only display a single file at a time. Also, none of these basic tools handle compressed files.
You can SSH into a demo node to play with lnav before installing.
The "playground" account starts lnav with a couple of log files as an example:
$ ssh playground@demo.lnav.org
The "tutorial 1" account is an interactive tutorial that can teach you the basics of operation:
Download a statically-linked binary for Linux/MacOS from the release page
$ brew install lnav
Simply point lnav at the files or directories you want to monitor, it will figure out the rest:
$ lnav /path/to/file1 /path/to/dir ...
The lnav TUI will pop up right away and begin indexing the
files. Progress is displayed in the "Files" panel at the
bottom. Once the indexing has finished, the LOG view will display
the log messages that were recognized[^1]. You can then use the
usual hotkeys to move around the view (arrow keys or
j
/k
/h
/l
to move down/up/left/right).
See the Usage section of the online documentation for more information.
[^1]: Files that do not contain log messages can be seen in the
TEXT view (reachable by pressing t
).
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.
Please file issues on this repository or use the discussions section. The following alternatives are also available:
The following software packages are required to build lnav:
Lnav follows the usual GNU style for configuring and installing software:
Run ./autogen.sh
if compiling from a cloned repository.
$ ./configure
$ make
$ sudo make install
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.