mirror of
https://github.com/tstack/lnav
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471 lines
18 KiB
ReStructuredText
471 lines
18 KiB
ReStructuredText
.. _ui:
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User Interface
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==============
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The **lnav** TUI displays the content of the current "view" in the middle,
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with status bars above and below, and the interactive prompt as the last line.
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.. figure:: lnav-ui.png
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:align: center
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:figwidth: 90%
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Screenshot of **lnav** viewing syslog and web access_log messages.
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The default view shows the log messages from the log files that have been
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loaded. There are other views for displaying content like plaintext files
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and SQL results. The :ref:`ui_views` section describes the characteristics of
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each view in more detail. You can switch to the different views using the
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hotkeys described in the :ref:`hotkeys_display` section or by pressing
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:kbd:`ENTER` to activate the breadcrumb bar, moving to the first crumb, and
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then selecting the desired view. You can switch back to the previous view by
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pressing :kbd:`q`. You can switch forward to the new view by pressing
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:kbd:`a`. If the views are time-based (e.g. log and histogram), pressing
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:kbd:`Shift` + :kbd:`q` and :kbd:`Shift` + :kbd:`a` will synchronize the top
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times in the views.
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**lnav** provides many operations to work with the log/text data in the
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main view. For example, you can add comments and tags to log messages.
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The highlighted cursor line is used as the reference point to edit the
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comment or tags. Alternatively, you can press :kbd:`Ctrl` + :kbd:`x`
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to switch to "top" mode where the "focused" line is the top line in the
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view and most operations now work with that line. When in "cursor" mode,
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the :kbd:`↑` and :kbd:`↓` keys now move the focused line instead of scrolling
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the view. Jumping to bookmarks, like errors, will also move the focused
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line instead of moving the next error to the top of the view.
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The right side of the display has a proportionally sized 'scrollbar' that
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shows:
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* the current position in the file;
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* the locations of errors/warnings in the log files by using red or yellow
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coloring;
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* the locations of search hits by using a tick-mark pointing to the left;
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* the locations of bookmarks by using a tick-mark pointing to the right.
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Top Status Bar
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--------------
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The top status bar shows the current time and messages stored in the
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:ref:`table_lnav_user_notifications` table.
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Below the top status bar is the breadcrumb bar that displays the semantic
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location of the focused line in the main view. For example, within a
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pretty-printed JSON document, it will show the path to property at the top
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of the view. The actual content of the bar depends on the current view and
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will be updated as you navigate around the main view. The bar can also be
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used to navigate around the document by focusing on it.
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Breadcrumb Bar
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--------------
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.. figure:: lnav-breadcrumbs-help.png
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:align: center
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:figwidth: 90%
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Screenshot of the breadcrumb bar focused and navigating the help text
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To focus on the breadcrumb bar, press :kbd:`ENTER`. The :kbd:`←`/:kbd:`→`
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cursor keys can be used to select a crumb and the :kbd:`↑`/:kbd:`↓` keys can
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be used select a value of that crumb. To accept a value and drop focus on the
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bar, press :kbd:`ENTER`. To accept a value and move to the next crumb, press
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:kbd:`→`. Using :kbd:`→` makes it quicker to drill down into a document
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without having to constantly switch focus. To drop focus on the bar without
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accepting anything, press :kbd:`Escape`.
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There are three types of crumbs:
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* a dropdown where one of a limited set of values can be selected;
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* a combobox where a value can be entered directly or selected;
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* a numeric input for entering array indexes.
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When a dropdown or combobox is selected, you can type part of the desired value
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to filter the list of values. For example, the first crumb is always the
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current view, typing in "hi" will filter the list down to the "HIST" value.
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Configuration Panels
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--------------------
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.. figure:: lnav-config-header.png
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:align: center
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:figwidth: 90%
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Screenshot of the header for the configuration panels when they are hidden.
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After the main view content, there is a header bar for two configuration
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panels: Files and Filters. These panels provide visual access to parts of
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lnav's configuration. To access the panels, press the :kbd:`TAB` key.
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To hide the panels again, press :kbd:`q`.
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.. figure:: lnav-files-panel.png
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:align: center
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:figwidth: 90%
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Screenshot of the files panel showing the loaded files.
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The Files panel is open initially to display progress in loading files.
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The following information can be displayed for each file:
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* the "unique" portion of the path relative to the other files;
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* the amount of data that has been indexed;
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* the date range of log messages contained in the file;
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* the errors that were encountered while trying to index the file;
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* the notes recorded for files where some automatic action was taken,
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like hiding the file if it was seen as a duplicate of another file.
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.. figure:: lnav-filters-panel.png
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:align: center
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:figwidth: 90%
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Screenshot of the filters panel showing an OUT and a disabled IN filter.
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If the view supports filtering, there will be a status line showing the
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following:
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* the number of enabled filters and the total number of filters;
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* the number of lines that are **not** displayed because of filtering.
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To edit the filters, you can press TAB to change the focus from the main
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view to the filter editor. The editor allows you to create, enable/disable,
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and delete filters easily.
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Bottom Status Bar
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-----------------
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The second to last line is the bottom status bar, which shows the following:
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* the line number of the focused line, starting from zero;
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* the location within the view, as a percentage;
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* the current search hit, the total number of hits, and the search term;
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* the loading indicator.
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When the interactive prompt is active, this bar can show the prompt
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description, help text, or error message.
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Prompt
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------
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Finally, the last line on the display is where you can enter search
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patterns and execute internal commands, such as converting a
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unix-timestamp into a human-readable date. The following key-presses
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will activate a corresponding prompt:
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* :kbd:`/` - The search prompt. You can enter a PCRE2-flavored regular
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expression to search for in the current view.
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* :kbd:`:` - The command prompt. Commands are used to perform common
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operations.
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* :kbd:`;` - The SQL prompt. SQL queries can be used for log analysis
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and manipulating **lnav**'s state.
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* :kbd:`|` - The script prompt. Enter a path to the lnav script to
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execute, along with the arguments to pass in.
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The command-line is by the readline library, so the usual set of keyboard
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shortcuts can be used for editing and moving within the command-line.
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.. _ui_views:
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Views
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-----
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The accessible content within lnav is separated into the following views.
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LOG
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^^^
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The log view displays the log messages from any loaded log files in time
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order. This view will be shown by default if any log files were detected.
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If plain text files were also loaded, they will be available in the TEXT
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view, which you can switch to by pressing :kbd:`t`.
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On color displays, the log messages will be highlighted as follows:
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* Errors will be colored in red;
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* warnings will be yellow;
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* search hits are reverse video;
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* various color highlights will be applied to: IP addresses, SQL keywords,
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XML tags, file and line numbers in Java backtraces, and quoted strings;
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* "identifiers" in the messages will be randomly assigned colors based on their
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content (works best on "xterm-256color" terminals).
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.. note::
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If the coloring is too much for your tastes, you can change to the
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"grayscale" theme by entering the following command:
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.. code-block:: lnav
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:config /ui/theme grayscale
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Timestamps in log messages will be rewritten to the local timezone (or the
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timezone specified by :envvar:`TZ`) automatically if they include a
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timezone component. If a file's timestamps do not include a timezone, they
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will be treated as if they are from the local zone. You can change the zone
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to use for these types of files using the
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:ref:`:set-file-timezone<set_file_timezone>` command.
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.. note::
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If a log message has a timestamp that is out-of-order with its neighboring
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messages, the timestamp will be highlighted in yellow. When one of these
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messages is focused, an overlay will display the
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difference between the "actual time" and the "received time". The "actual
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time" is the original textual timestamp. The "received time" is the time
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of an earlier message that is larger than this log message's time.
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The source file name for each message can be displayed by scrolling left.
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Scrolling left once will show the shortened version of the file name relative
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to the other files that are loaded. In the shortened version, the unique
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portion of the file name will be in square brackets. Scrolling left a second
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time will show the full path.
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The breadcrumb bar will show the following crumbs:
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* the timestamp for the focused line;
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* the log format for the focused line;
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* the name of the file the focused line was pulled from;
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* the "operation ID" of the focused log message, if it is supported by the log
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format.
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These crumbs are interactive and can be used to navigate to different parts
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of the log view. For example, selecting a different value in the log format
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crumb will jump to the first message with that format.
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The file crumb will show a "↻" icon if the file is from the output of a FIFO,
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:code:`:sh` command, or data that was piped into the standard input. When
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the pipe is closed, the icon will disappear.
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TEXT
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^^^^
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The text view displays files for which lnav could not detect any log messages.
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Press :kbd:`t` to switch to the text view. While in the text view, you can
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press :kbd:`f` or :kbd:`Shift` + :kbd:`F` to switch to the next / previous
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text file.
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The breadcrumb bar will show the name of the file and any structure that was
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discovered in the content. The file crumb will show a "↻" icon if the file
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is from the output of a FIFO, :code:`:sh` command, or data that was piped
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into the standard input. When the pipe is closed, the icon will disappear.
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If the content is piped into lnav through standard input, a FIFO, or a
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:code:`:sh` command, the time that lines are received are recorded. You
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can press :kbd:`Shift` + :kbd:`T` to view the elapsed time like in the
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LOG view. The breadcrumb bar will also show the received time of the
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focused line after the file name crumb. If the output being shown is from
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a :code:`:sh` command, you can press :kbd:`Ctrl` + :kbd:`C` to send a
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SIGINT to the child process without killing **lnav** itself.
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.. figure:: lnav-make-check-log.png
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:align: center
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:figwidth: 90%
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Screenshot of the TEXT view showing the output of :code:`sh make check`.
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Each line is timestamped internally when it was received so it's
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possible to view how long each test is taking to run. The "↻" icon
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next to the file name in the breadcrumb bar means that the make is
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still running.
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Markdown
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""""""""
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Files with an :code:`.md` (or :code:`.markdown`) extension will be treated as
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Markdown files and rendered separately.
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.. figure:: lnav-markdown-example.png
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:align: center
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Viewing the **lnav** :file:`README.md` file.
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DB
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^^
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The DB view shows the results of queries done through the SQLite interface.
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You can execute a query by pressing :kbd:`;` and then entering a SQL statement.
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Press :kbd:`v` to switch to the database result view.
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HELP
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^^^^
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The help view displays the builtin help text. While in the help view, the
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breadcrumb bar can be used to navigate to different sections of the document.
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Press :kbd:`?` to switch to the help view.
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HIST
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^^^^
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The histogram view displays a stacked bar chart of messages over time
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classified by their log level and whether they've been bookmarked.
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Press :kbd:`i` to switch back and forth to the histogram view. You
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can also press :kbd:`Shift` + :kbd:`i` to toggle the histogram view
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while synchronizing the top time. While in the histogram view,
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pressing :kbd:`z` / :kbd:`Shift` + :kbd:`z` will zoom in/out.
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GANTT
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^^^^^
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.. note:: This feature is available in v0.12.0+.
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.. figure:: lnav-gantt-1.png
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:align: center
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Screenshot of the Gantt chart view when viewing logs from the
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VMWare Update Manager. Most rows show API requests as they
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are received and processed.
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The Gantt Chart view visualizes operations over time. The operations
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are identified by the "opid" field defined in the log format. In the
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view, there is a header that shows the overall time span, the
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narrowed time span around the focused line, and the column headers.
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Each row in the view shows the following:
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* The duration of the operation
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* Sparklines showing the number of errors and warnings relative to the
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total number of messages associated with the OPID.
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* The OPID itself.
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* A description of the operation as captured from the log messages.
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The rows are sorted by the start time of each operation.
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If an operation row is in the focused time span, a reverse-video
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bar will show when the operation started and finished (unless it
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extends outside the time span). As you move the focused line, the
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focused time span will be adjusted to keep the preceding and following
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five operations within the span.
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The preview panel at the bottom of the display will show the
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messages associated with the focused operation.
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The following hotkeys can be useful in this view:
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* :kbd:`p` -- If the log format defined sub-operations with the
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:code:`opid/subid` property, this will toggle an overlay panel
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that displays the sub-operation descriptions.
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.. figure:: lnav-gantt-2.png
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:align: center
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Screenshot showing the same log as above after pressing
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:kbd:`p`. The overlay panel shows a breakdown of
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sub-operations performed while processing the main operation.
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* :kbd:`Shift` + :kbd:`q` -- Return to the previous view and change
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its focused line to match the time that was focused in the gantt
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view.
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* :kbd:`Shift` + :kbd:`a` -- After leaving the gantt view, pressing
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these keys will return to the Gantt view while keeping the focused
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time in sync.
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PRETTY
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^^^^^^
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The pretty-print view takes the text displayed in the current view and shows
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the result of a pretty-printer run on that text. For example, if a log
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message contained an XML message on a single line, the pretty-printer would
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break the XML across multiple lines with appropriate indentation.
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.. figure:: lnav-pretty-view-before.png
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:align: center
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:figwidth: 90%
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Screenshot of a log message with a flat JSON object.
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.. figure:: lnav-pretty-view-after.png
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:align: center
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:figwidth: 90%
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Screenshot of the same log message in the PRETTY view. The JSON object
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is now indented for easier reading.
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Press :kbd:`Shift` + :kbd:`P` to switch to the pretty-print view.
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SCHEMA
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^^^^^^
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The schema view displays the current schema of the builtin SQLite database.
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Press :kbd:`;` to enter the SQL prompt and then enter :code:`.schema` to
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open the schema view.
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SPECTRO
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^^^^^^^
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The spectrogram view is a "three"-dimensional display of data points of a log
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field or a SQL query column. The dimensions are time on the Y axis, the range
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of data point values on the X axis, and the number of data points as a color.
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For example, if you were to visualize process CPU usage over time, the range
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of values on the X axis would be CPU percentages and there would be colored
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blocks at each point on the line where a process had that CPU percentage, like
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so
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.. figure:: lnav-spectro-cpu-pct.png
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:align: center
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Screenshot of the **lnav** spectrogram view showing CPU usage of processes.
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The colors correspond to the relative number of data points in a bucket.
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The legend overlaid at the top line in the view shows the counts of data
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points that are in a particular color, with green having the fewest number of
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data points, yellow the middle, and red the most. You can select a particular
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bucket using the cursor keys to see the exact number of data points and the
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range of values. The panel at the bottom of the view shows the data points
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themselves from the original source, the log file or the SQL query results.
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You can press :kbd:`TAB` to focus on the details panel so you can scroll
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around and get a closer look at the values.
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.. _ui_mouse:
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Mouse Support (v0.12.2+)
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------------------------
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With mouse support enabled, either through the `/ui/mouse/mode`
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configuration option or by pressing :kbd:`F2`, many of the UI
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elements will respond to mouse inputs:
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* clicking on the main view will move the cursor to the given
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row and dragging will scroll the view as needed;
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* shift + clicking/dragging in the main view will highlight
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lines and then toggle their bookmark status on release;
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* double-clicking will select the underlying token and
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drag-selecting within a line will select the given text;
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* when text is selected, a menu will pop up that can be used
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to filter based on the current text, search for it, or copy
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it to the clipboard;
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* clicking in the scroll area will move the view by a page and
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dragging the scrollbar will move the view to the given spot;
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* clicking on the breadcrumb bar will select a crumb and
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selecting a possibility from the popup will move to that
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location in the view;
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* clicking on portions of the bottom status bar will trigger
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a relevant action (e.g. clicking the line number will open
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the command prompt with `:goto <current-line>`);
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* clicking on the configuration panel tabs (i.e. Files/Filters)
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will open the selected panel and clicking parts of the
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display in there will perform the relevant action (e.g.
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clicking the diamond will enable/disable the file/filter);
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* clicking in a prompt will move the cursor to the location.
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.. note::
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A downside of enabling mouse support is that normal text
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selection and copy will no longer work. While lnav has
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some support for selection in the main view, there are
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still likely to be cases where that is insufficient.
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In those cases, you can press :kbd:`F2` to quickly
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switch back-and-forth. Or, some terminals have support
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for switching while a modifier is pressed:
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.. list-table::
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:header-rows: 1
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* - Key
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- Terminal
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* - :kbd:`Option`
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- iTerm, Hyper
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* - :kbd:`Fn`
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- Terminal.app
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