mirror of
https://github.com/tstack/lnav
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623 lines
26 KiB
ReStructuredText
623 lines
26 KiB
ReStructuredText
.. _log_formats:
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Log Formats
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===========
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Log files loaded into **lnav** are parsed based on formats defined in
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configuration files. Many
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formats are already built in to the **lnav** binary and you can define your own
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using a JSON file. When loading files, each format is checked to see if it can
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parse the first few lines in the file. Once a match is found, that format will
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be considered that files format and used to parse the remaining lines in the
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file. If no match is found, the file is considered to be plain text and can
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be viewed in the "text" view that is accessed with the **t** key.
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The following log formats are built into **lnav**:
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.. csv-table::
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:header: "Name", "Table Name", "Description"
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:widths: 8 5 20
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:file: format-table.csv
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In addition to the above formats, the following self-describing formats are
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supported:
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* The
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`Bro Network Security Monitor <https://www.bro.org/sphinx/script-reference/log-files.html>`_
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TSV log format is supported in lnav versions v0.8.3+. The Bro log format is
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self-describing, so **lnav** will read the header to determine the shape of
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the file.
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* The
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`W3C Extended Log File Format <https://www.w3.org/TR/WD-logfile.html>`_
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is supported in lnav versions v0.10.0+. The W3C log format is
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self-describing, so **lnav** will read the header to determine the shape of
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the file.
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There is also basic support for the `logfmt <https://brandur.org/logfmt>`_
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convention for formatting log messages. Files that use this format must
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have the entire line be key/value pairs and the timestamp contained in a
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field named :code:`time` or :code:`ts`. If the file you're using does not
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quite follow this formatting, but wraps logfmt data with another recognized
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format, you can use the :ref:`logfmt2json` SQL function to convert the data
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into JSON for further analysis.
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Defining a New Format
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---------------------
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New log formats can be defined by placing JSON configuration files in
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subdirectories of the :file:`/etc/lnav/formats` and :file:`~/.lnav/formats/`
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directories. The directories and files can be named anything you like, but the
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files must have the '.json' suffix. A sample file containing the builtin
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configuration will be written to this directory when **lnav** starts up.
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You can consult that file when writing your own formats or if you need to
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modify existing ones. Format directories can also contain '.sql' and '.lnav'
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script files that can be used automate log file analysis.
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Creating a Format Using Regex101.com (v0.11.0+)
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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For plain-text log files, the easiest way to create a log format definition is
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to create the regular expression that recognizes log messages using
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https://regex101.com . Simply copy a log line into the test string input box
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on the site and then start editing the regular expression. When building the
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regular expression, you'll want to use named captures for the structured parts
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of the log message. Any raw message text should be matched by a captured named
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"body". Once you have a regex that matches the whole log message, you can use
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**lnav**'s "management CLI" to create a skeleton format file. The skeleton
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will be populated with the regular expression from the site and the test
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string, along with any unit tests, will be added to the "samples" list. The
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"regex101 import" management command is used to create the skeleton and has
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the following form:
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.. prompt:: bash
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lnav -m regex101 import <regex101-url> <format-name> [<regex-name>]
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If the import was successful, the path to the new format file should be
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printed out. The skeleton will most likely need some changes to make it
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fully functional. For example, the :code:`kind` properties for captured values
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default to :code:`string`, but you'll want to change them to the appropriate
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type.
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Format File Reference
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^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
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An **lnav** format file must contain a single JSON object, preferably with a
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:code:`$schema` property that refers to the
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`format-v1.schema <https://lnav.org/schemas/format-v1.schema.json>`_,
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like so:
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.. code-block:: json
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{
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"$schema": "https://lnav.org/schemas/format-v1.schema.json"
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}
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Each format to be defined in the file should be a separate field in the top-level
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object. The field name should be the symbolic name of the format and consist
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only of alphanumeric characters and underscores. This value will also be used
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as the SQL table name for the log. The value for each field should be another
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object with the following fields:
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:title: The short and human-readable name for the format.
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:description: A longer description of the format.
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:url: A URL to the definition of the format.
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:file-pattern: A regular expression used to match log file paths. Typically,
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every file format will be tried during the detection process. This field
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can be used to limit which files a format is applied to in case there is
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a potential for conflicts.
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.. _format_regex:
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:regex: This object contains sub-objects that describe the message formats
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to match in a plain-text log file. Each :code:`regex` MUST only match one
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type of log message. It must not match log messages that are matched by
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other regexes in this format. This uniqueness requirement is necessary
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because **lnav** will "lock-on" to a regex and use it to match against
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the next line in a file. So, if the regexes do not uniquely match each
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type of log message, messages can be matched by the wrong regex. The
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"lock-on" behavior is needed to avoid the performance hit of having to
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try too many different regexes.
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.. note:: Log files that contain JSON messages should not specify this field.
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:pattern: The regular expression that should be used to match log messages.
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The `PCRE2 <http://www.pcre.org>`_ library is used by **lnav** to do all
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regular expression matching.
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:module-format: If true, this regex will only be used to parse message
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bodies for formats that can act as containers, such as syslog. Default:
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false.
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:json: True if each log line is JSON-encoded.
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:converter: An object that describes how an input file can be detected and
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then converted to a form that can be interpreted by **lnav**. For
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example, a PCAP file is in a binary format that cannot be handled natively
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by **lnav**. However, a PCAP file can be converted by :file:`tshark`
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into JSON-lines that can be handled by **lnav**. So, this configuration
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describes how the input file format can be detected and converted. See
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`Automatic File Conversion`_ for more information.
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:header: An object that describes how to match the header of the input
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file.
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:expr: An object that contains SQLite expressions that can be used to
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check if the input file's header is of this type. The property
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name is the name of the expression and the value is the expression.
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The expression is evaluated with the following variables:
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:\:header: The hex-encoded version of the header content.
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:\:filepath: The path to the input file.
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:size: The minimum size of header that is needed to do the match.
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:command: The command to execute to convert the input file.
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:line-format: An array that specifies the text format for JSON-encoded
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log messages. Log files that are JSON-encoded will have each message
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converted from the raw JSON encoding into this format. Each element
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is either an object that defines which fields should be inserted into
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the final message string and or a string constant that should be
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inserted. For example, the following configuration will transform each
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log message object into a string that contains the timestamp, followed
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by a space, and then the message body:
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.. code-block:: json
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[ { "field": "ts" }, " ", { "field": "msg" } ]
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.. note:: Line-feeds at the end of a value are automatically stripped.
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:field: The name or `JSON-Pointer <https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6901>`_
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of the message field that should be inserted at this point in the
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message. The special :code:`__timestamp__` field name can be used to
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insert a human-readable timestamp. The :code:`__level__` field can be
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used to insert the level name as defined by lnav.
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.. tip::
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Use a JSON-Pointer to reference nested fields. For example, to include
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a "procname" property that is nested in a "details" object, you would
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write the field reference as :code:`/details/procname`.
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:min-width: The minimum width for the field. If the value for the field
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in a given log message is shorter, padding will be added as needed to
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meet the minimum-width requirement. (v0.8.2+)
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:max-width: The maximum width for the field. If the value for the field
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in a given log message is longer, the overflow algorithm will be applied
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to try and shorten the field. (v0.8.2+)
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:auto-width: Flag that indicates that the width of the field should
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automatically be set to the widest value seen. (v0.11.2)
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:align: Specifies the alignment for the field, either "left" or "right".
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If "left", padding to meet the minimum-width will be added on the right.
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If "right", padding will be added on the left. (v0.8.2+)
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:overflow: The algorithm used to shorten a field that is longer than
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"max-width". The following algorithms are supported:
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:abbrev: Removes all but the first letter in dotted text. For example,
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"com.example.foo" would be shortened to "c.e.foo".
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:truncate: Truncates any text past the maximum width.
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:dot-dot: Cuts out the middle of the text and replaces it with two
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dots (i.e. '..').
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(v0.8.2+)
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:timestamp-format: The timestamp format to use when displaying the time
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for this log message. (v0.8.2+)
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:default-value: The default value to use if the field could not be found
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in the current log message. The built-in default is "-".
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:text-transform: Transform the text in the field. Supported options are:
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none, uppercase, lowercase, capitalize
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:prefix: Text to prepend to the value. If the value is empty, this prefix
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will not be added.
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:suffix: Text to append to the value. If the value is empty, this suffix
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will not be added.
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:timestamp-field: The name of the field that contains the log message
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timestamp. Defaults to "timestamp".
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:timestamp-format: An array of timestamp formats using a subset of the
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strftime conversion specification. The following conversions are
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supported: %a, %b, %L, %M, %H, %I, %d, %e, %k, %l, %m, %p, %y, %Y, %S, %s,
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%Z, %z. In addition, you can also use the following:
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:%L: Milliseconds as a decimal number (range 000 to 999).
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:%f: Microseconds as a decimal number (range 000000 to 999999).
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:%N: Nanoseconds as a decimal number (range 000000000 to 999999999).
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:%q: Seconds from the epoch as a hexidecimal number.
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:%i: Milliseconds from the epoch.
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:%6: Microseconds from the epoch.
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:timestamp-divisor: For JSON logs with numeric timestamps, this value is used
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to divide the timestamp by to get the number of seconds and fractional
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seconds.
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:subsecond-field: (v0.11.1+) The path to the property in a JSON-lines log
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message that contains the sub-second time value
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:subsecond-units: (v0.11.1+) The units of the subsecond-field property value.
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The following values are supported:
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:milli: for milliseconds
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:micro: for microseconds
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:nano: for nanoseconds
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:ordered-by-time: (v0.8.3+) Indicates that the order of messages in the file
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is time-based. Files that are not naturally ordered by time will be sorted
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in order to display them in the correct order. Note that this sorting can
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incur a performance penalty when tailing logs.
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:level-field: The name of the regex capture group that contains the log
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message level. Defaults to "level".
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:body-field: The name of the field that contains the main body of the
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message. Defaults to "body".
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:opid-field: The name of the field that contains the "operation ID" of the
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message. An "operation ID" establishes a thread of messages that might
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correspond to a particular operation/request/transaction. The user can
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press the 'o' or 'Shift+O' hotkeys to move forward/backward through the
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list of messages that have the same operation ID. Note: For JSON-encoded
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logs, the opid field can be a path (e.g. "foo/bar/opid") if the field is
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nested in an object and it MUST be included in the "line-format" for the
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'o' hotkeys to work.
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:module-field: The name of the field that contains the module identifier
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that distinguishes messages from one log source from another. This field
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should be used if this message format can act as a container for other
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types of log messages. For example, an Apache access log can be sent to
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syslog instead of written to a file. In this case, **lnav** will parse
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the syslog message and then separately parse the body of the message to
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determine the "sub" format. This module identifier is used to help
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**lnav** quickly identify the format to use when parsing message bodies.
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:hide-extra: A boolean for JSON logs that indicates whether fields not
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present in the line-format should be displayed on their own lines.
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:level: A mapping of error levels to regular expressions. During scanning
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the contents of the capture group specified by *level-field* will be
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checked against each of these regexes. Once a match is found, the log
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message level will set to the corresponding level. The available levels,
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in order of severity, are: **fatal**, **critical**, **error**,
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**warning**, **stats**, **info**, **debug**, **debug2-5**, **trace**.
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For JSON logs with exact numeric levels, the number for the corresponding
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level can be supplied. If the JSON log format uses numeric ranges instead
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of exact numbers, you can supply a pattern and the number found in the log
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will be converted to a string for pattern-matching.
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.. note:: The regular expression is not anchored to the start of the
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string by default, so an expression like :code:`1` will match
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:code:`-1`. If you want to exactly match :code:`1`, you would
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use :code:`^1$` as the expression.
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:multiline: If false, **lnav** will consider any log lines that do not
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match one of the message patterns to be in error when checking files with
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the '-C' option. This flag will not affect normal viewing operation.
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Default: true.
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:value: This object contains the definitions for the values captured by the
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regexes.
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:kind: The type of data that was captured **string**, **integer**,
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**float**, **json**, **quoted**.
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:collate: The name of the SQLite collation function for this value.
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The standard SQLite collation functions can be used as well as the
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ones defined by lnav, as described in :ref:`collators`.
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:identifier: A boolean that indicates whether or not this field represents
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an identifier and should be syntax colored.
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:foreign-key: A boolean that indicates that this field is a key and should
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not be graphed. This should only need to be set for integer fields.
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:hidden: A boolean for log fields that indicates whether they should
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be displayed. The behavior is slightly different for JSON logs and text
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logs. For a JSON log, this property determines whether an extra line
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will be added with the key/value pair. For text logs, this property
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controls whether the value should be displayed by default or replaced
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with an ellipsis.
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:rewriter: A command to rewrite this field when pretty-printing log
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messages containing this value. The command must start with ':', ';',
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or '|' to signify whether it is a regular command, SQL query, or a script
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to be executed. The other fields in the line are accessible in SQL by
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using the ':' prefix. The text value of this field will then be replaced
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with the result of the command when pretty-printing. For example, the
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HTTP access log format will rewrite the status code field to include the
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textual version (e.g. 200 (OK)) using the following SQL query:
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.. code-block:: sql
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;SELECT :sc_status || ' (' || (
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SELECT message FROM http_status_codes
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WHERE status = :sc_status) || ') '
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:tags: This object contains the tags that should automatically be added to
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log messages.
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:pattern: The regular expression evaluated over a line in the log file as
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it is read in. If there is a match, the log message the line is a part
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of will have this tag added to it.
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:paths: This array contains objects that define restrictions on the file
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paths that the tags will be applied to. The objects in this array can
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contain:
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:glob: A glob pattern to check against the log files read by lnav.
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.. _format_sample:
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:sample: A list of objects that contain sample log messages. All formats
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must include at least one sample and it must be matched by one of the
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included regexes. Each object must contain the following field:
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:line: The sample message.
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:level: The expected error level. An error will be raised if this level
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does not match the level parsed by lnav for this sample message.
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:highlights: This object contains the definitions for patterns to be
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highlighted in a log message. Each entry should have a name and a
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definition with the following fields:
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:pattern: The regular expression to match in the log message body.
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:color: The foreground color to use when highlighting the part of the
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message that matched the pattern. If no color is specified, one will be
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picked automatically. Colors can be specified using hexadecimal notation
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by starting with a hash (e.g. #aabbcc) or using a color name as found
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at http://jonasjacek.github.io/colors/.
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:background-color: The background color to use when highlighting the part
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of the message that matched the pattern. If no background color is
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specified, black will be used. The background color is only considered
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if a foreground color is specified.
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:underline: If true, underline the part of the message that matched the
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pattern.
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:blink: If true, blink the part of the message that matched the pattern.
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Example format:
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.. code-block:: json
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{
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"$schema": "https://lnav.org/schemas/format-v1.schema.json",
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"example_log" : {
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"title" : "Example Log Format",
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"description" : "Log format used in the documentation example.",
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"url" : "http://example.com/log-format.html",
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"regex" : {
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"basic" : {
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"pattern" : "^(?<timestamp>\\d{4}-\\d{2}-\\d{2}T\\d{2}:\\d{2}:\\d{2}\\.\\d{3}Z)>>(?<level>\\w+)>>(?<component>\\w+)>>(?<body>.*)$"
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}
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},
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"level-field" : "level",
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"level" : {
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"error" : "ERROR",
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"warning" : "WARNING"
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},
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"value" : {
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"component" : {
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"kind" : "string",
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"identifier" : true
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}
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},
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"sample" : [
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{
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"line" : "2011-04-01T15:14:34.203Z>>ERROR>>core>>Shit's on fire yo!"
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}
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]
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}
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}
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Patching an Existing Format
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---------------------------
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When loading log formats from files, **lnav** will overlay any new data over
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previously loaded data. This feature allows you to override existing value or
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append new ones to the format configurations. For example, you can separately
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add a new regex to the example log format given above by creating another file
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with the following contents:
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.. code-block:: json
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{
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"$schema": "https://lnav.org/schemas/format-v1.schema.json",
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"example_log" : {
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"regex" : {
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"custom1" : {
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"pattern" : "^(?<timestamp>\\d{4}-\\d{2}-\\d{2}T\\d{2}:\\d{2}:\\d{2}\\.\\d{3}Z)<<(?<level>\\w+)--(?<component>\\w+)>>(?<body>.*)$"
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}
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},
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"sample" : [
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{
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"line" : "2011-04-01T15:14:34.203Z<<ERROR--core>>Shit's on fire yo!"
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}
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]
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}
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}
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This example overrides the default `syslog_log <https://github.com/tstack/lnav/blob/master/src/formats/syslog_log.json>`_
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error detection regex to **not** match the :code:`errors=` string.
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.. code-block:: json
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{
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"syslog_log": {
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"level": {
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"error": "(?:(?:(?<![a-zA-Z]))(?:(?i)error(?:s)?(?!=))(?:(?![a-zA-Z]))|failed|failure)"
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}
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|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
|
|
.. _scripts:
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|
|
|
Scripts
|
|
-------
|
|
|
|
Format directories may also contain :file:`.sql` and :file:`.lnav` files to help automate
|
|
log file analysis. The SQL files are executed on startup to create any helper
|
|
tables or views and the '.lnav' script files can be executed using the pipe
|
|
hotkey :kbd:`|`. For example, **lnav** includes a "partition-by-boot" script that
|
|
partitions the log view based on boot messages from the Linux kernel. A script
|
|
can have a mix of SQL and **lnav** commands, as well as include other scripts.
|
|
The type of statement to execute is determined by the leading character on a
|
|
line: a semi-colon begins a SQL statement; a colon starts an **lnav** command;
|
|
and a pipe :code:`|` denotes another script to be executed. Lines beginning with a
|
|
hash are treated as comments. The following variables are defined in a script:
|
|
|
|
.. envvar:: #
|
|
|
|
The number of arguments passed to the script.
|
|
|
|
.. envvar:: __all__
|
|
|
|
A string containing all the arguments joined by a single space.
|
|
|
|
.. envvar:: 0
|
|
|
|
The path to the script being executed.
|
|
|
|
.. envvar:: 1-N
|
|
|
|
The arguments passed to the script.
|
|
|
|
.. envvar:: LNAV_HOME_DIR
|
|
|
|
The path to the directory where the user's **lnav** configuration is stored.
|
|
|
|
.. envvar:: LNAV_WORK_DIR
|
|
|
|
The path to the directory where **lnav** caches files, like archives that
|
|
have been unpacked or piper captures.
|
|
|
|
Remember that you need to use the :ref:`:eval<eval>` command when referencing
|
|
variables in most **lnav** commands. Scripts can provide help text to be
|
|
displayed during interactive usage by adding the following tags in a comment
|
|
header:
|
|
|
|
:@synopsis: The synopsis should contain the name of the script and any
|
|
parameters to be passed. For example::
|
|
|
|
# @synopsis: hello-world <name1> [<name2> ... <nameN>]
|
|
|
|
:@description: A one-line description of what the script does. For example::
|
|
|
|
# @description: Say hello to the given names.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
.. tip::
|
|
|
|
The :ref:`:eval<eval>` command can be used to do variable substitution for
|
|
commands that do not natively support it. For example, to substitute the
|
|
variable, :code:`pattern`, in a :ref:`:filter-out<filter_out>` command:
|
|
|
|
.. code-block:: lnav
|
|
|
|
:eval :filter-out ${pattern}
|
|
|
|
VSCode Extension
|
|
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
|
|
|
|
The `lnav VSCode Extension <https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=lnav.lnav>`_
|
|
can be installed to add syntax highlighting to lnav scripts.
|
|
|
|
Installing Formats
|
|
------------------
|
|
|
|
File formats are loaded from subdirectories in :file:`/etc/lnav/formats` and
|
|
:file:`~/.lnav/formats/`. You can manually create these subdirectories and
|
|
copy the format files into there. Or, you can pass the '-i' option to **lnav**
|
|
to automatically install formats from the command-line. For example:
|
|
|
|
.. code-block:: bash
|
|
|
|
$ lnav -i myformat.json
|
|
info: installed: /home/example/.lnav/formats/installed/myformat_log.json
|
|
|
|
Format files installed using this method will be placed in the :file:`installed`
|
|
subdirectory and named based on the first format name found in the file.
|
|
|
|
You can also install formats from git repositories by passing the repository's
|
|
clone URL. A standard set of repositories is maintained at
|
|
(https://github.com/tstack/lnav-config) and can be installed by passing 'extra'
|
|
on the command line, like so:
|
|
|
|
.. prompt:: bash
|
|
|
|
lnav -i extra
|
|
|
|
These repositories can be updated by running **lnav** with the '-u' flag.
|
|
|
|
Format files can also be made executable by adding a shebang (#!) line to the
|
|
top of the file, like so::
|
|
|
|
#! /usr/bin/env lnav -i
|
|
{
|
|
"myformat_log" : ...
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
Executing the format file should then install it automatically:
|
|
|
|
.. code-block:: bash
|
|
|
|
$ chmod ugo+rx myformat.json
|
|
$ ./myformat.json
|
|
info: installed: /home/example/.lnav/formats/installed/myformat_log.json
|
|
|
|
.. _format_order:
|
|
|
|
Format Order When Scanning a File
|
|
---------------------------------
|
|
|
|
When **lnav** loads a file, it tries each log format against the first 15,000
|
|
lines [#]_ of the file trying to find a match. When a match is found, that log
|
|
format will be locked in and used for the rest of the lines in that file.
|
|
Since there may be overlap between formats, **lnav** performs a test on
|
|
startup to determine which formats match each others sample lines. Using
|
|
this information it will create an ordering of the formats so that the more
|
|
specific formats are tried before the more generic ones. For example, a
|
|
format that matches certain syslog messages will match its own sample lines,
|
|
but not the ones in the syslog samples. On the other hand, the syslog format
|
|
will match its own samples and those in the more specific format. You can
|
|
see the order of the format by enabling debugging and checking the **lnav**
|
|
log file for the "Format order" message:
|
|
|
|
.. prompt:: bash
|
|
|
|
lnav -d /tmp/lnav.log
|
|
|
|
For JSON-lines log files, the log message must have the timestamp property
|
|
specified in the format in order to match. If multiple formats match a
|
|
message, the format that has the most matching :code:`line-format` elements
|
|
will win.
|
|
|
|
.. [#] The maximum number of lines to check can be configured. See the
|
|
:ref:`tuning` section for more details.
|
|
|
|
Automatic File Conversion
|
|
-------------------------
|
|
|
|
File formats that are not naturally understood by **lnav** can be
|
|
automatically detected and converted to a usable form using the
|
|
:code:`converter` property. For example, PCAP files can be
|
|
detected and converted to a JSON-lines form using :code:`tshark`.
|
|
The conversion process works as follows:
|
|
|
|
#. The first 1024 bytes of the file are read, if available.
|
|
#. This header is converted into a hex string.
|
|
#. For each log format that has defined a :code:`converter`,
|
|
every "header expression" is evaluated to see if there is a
|
|
match. The header expressions are SQLite expressions where
|
|
the following variables are defined:
|
|
|
|
:\:header: A string containing the header as a hex string.
|
|
|
|
:\:filepath: The path to the file.
|
|
|
|
#. If a match is found, the converter script defined in the
|
|
log format will be invoked and passed the format name and
|
|
path to the file as arguments. The script should write
|
|
the converted form of the input file on its standard output.
|
|
Any errors should be written to the standard error.
|
|
#. The log format will be associated with the original file will
|
|
be used to interpret the converted file.
|