lnav/ARCHITECTURE.md
2021-02-14 22:44:14 -08:00

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Architecture

This document covers the internal architecture of the Logfile Navigator (lnav), a terminal-based tool for viewing and analyzing log files.

Goals

The following goals drive the design and implementation of lnav:

  • Don't make the user do something that can be done automatically.

    Example: Automatically detect log formats for files instead of making them specify the format for each file.

  • Be performant on low-spec hardware.

    Example: Prefer single-threaded optimizations over trying to parallelize

  • Operations should be "live" and not block the user from continuing to work.

    Example: Searches are run in the background.

  • Provide context-sensitive help.

    Example: When the cursor is over a SQL keyword/function, the help text for that is shown above.

  • Show a preview of operations so the user knows what is going to happen.

    Example: When entering a :filter-out command, the matched parts of the lines are highlighted in red.

Overview

The whole of lnav consists of a log file parser, text UI, integrations with SQLite, command-line interface, and commands for operating on logs. Since the majority of lnav's operations center around logs, the core data-structure is the combined log message index. The message index is populated when new messages are read from log files. The text UI displays a subset of messages from the index. The SQLite virtual-tables allow for programmatic access to the messages and lnav's internal state.

lnav architecture

File Monitoring

Each file being monitored by lnav has an associated logfile object, be they plaintext files or files with a recognized format. These objects are periodically polled by the main event loop to check if the file was deleted, truncated, or new lines added. While reading new lines, if no log format has matched yet, each line will be passed through the log format regular expressions to try and find a match. Each line that is read is added to an index

Why is mmap() not used?

Note that file contents are consumed using pread(2)/read(2) and not mmap(2) since mmap(2) does not react well to files changing out from underneath it. For example, a truncated file would likely result in a SIGBUS.

Log Messages

As files are being indexed, if a matching format is found, the file is "promoted" from a plaintext file to a log file. When the file is promoted, it is added to the logfile_sub_source, which collates all log messages together into a single index.

Timestamp Parsing

Since all log messages need to have a timestamp, timestamp parsing needs to be very efficient. The standard strptime() function is quite expensive, so lnav includes an optimized custom parser and code-generator in the ptimec component. The code-generator is used at compile-time to generate parsers for several common formats.

Log Formats

log_format instances are used to parse lines from files into logline objects. The majority of log formats are external_log_format objects that are create from JSON format definitions. The built-in definitions are located in the formats directory. Log formats that cannot be handled through a simple regular expression are implemented in the log_format_impls.cc file.

User Interface

The lnav text-user-interface is built on top of ncurses. However, the higher-level functionality of panels, widgets, and such is not used. Instead, the following custom components are built on top of the ncurses primitives:

  • view_curses - Provides the basics for text roles, which allows for themes to color and style text. The mvwattrline() function does all the heavy lifting of drawing "attributed" lines, which are strings that have attributes associated with a given range of characters.
  • listview_curses - Displays a list of items that are provided by a source.
  • textview_curses - Builds on the list view by adding support for searching, filtering, bookmarks, etc... The main panel that displays the logs/plaintext/help is a textview.
  • statusview_curses - Draws the status bars at the top and bottom of the TUI.
  • vt52_curses - Adapts vt52 escape codes to the ncurses API.
  • readline_curses - Provides access to the readline library. The readline code is executed in a child process since readline does not get along with ncurses. The child process and readline is set to use a vt52 terminal and the vt52_curses view is uses to translate those escape codes to ncurses.

The following diagram shows the underlying components that make up the TUI:

lnav TUI