lnav/README
Suresh Sundriyal 13f5ad0dce Change the code to use Spookyhash.
* This change removes the external dependency on OpenSSL, which should
  allow the code to compile on Mac OS X without specifying the
  MAC_OS_X_VERSION_MIN_REQUIRED non-sense.
* Spookyhash should be faster than SHA-1's Merkle-Damgård construction.
* Spookyhash is only 128-bits as opposed to SHA-1's 160-bits so memory
  consumption should be less. I doubt it will lead to too many
  collisions.
* The docs are updated to reflect the fact that OpenSSL is not a
  dependency.
2014-02-03 22:36:33 -08:00

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LNAV
----
The log file navigator, lnav, is an enhanced log file viewer that
takes advantage of any semantic information that can be gleaned from
the files being viewed, such as timestamps and log levels. Using this
extra semantic information, lnav can do things like interleaving
messages from different files, generate histograms of messages over
time, and providing hotkeys for navigating through the file. It is
hoped that these features will allow the user to quickly and
efficiently zero in on problems.
PREREQUISITES
-------------
Lnav requires the following software packages:
libpcre - The Perl Compatible Regular Expression (PCRE) library.
sqlite - The SQLite database engine.
ncurses - The ncurses text UI library.
readline - The readline line editing library.
zlib - The zlib compression library.
bz2 - The bzip2 compression library.
INSTALLATION
------------
Lnav follows the usual GNU style for configuring and installing software:
$ ./configure
$ make
$ sudo make install
USING
-----
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*
SEE ALSO
--------
Lnav website:
http://lnav.org