Fork of gvalkov/tailon.
Tailon is a webapp for looking at and searching through files and streams.
In a nutshell, it is a fancy web wrapper around the following commands:
tail -f
tail -f | grep
tail -f | awk
tail -f | sed
What sets tailon apart from other similar projects is:
- Fully self-contained executable. Just download (or build) and run.
- Responsive and minimal user-interface.
docker run --rm ghcr.io/niniyas/tailon:beta --help
version: "3.9"
services:
tailon:
container_name: Tailon
image: ghcr.io/niniyas/tailon:beta
ports:
- 8080:8080
volumes:
- /var/log/syslog:/syslog
- /var/log/log1:/log1
- .tailon/config:/config # If you need to load from config file, put your config.toml in this folder.
command: -b :8080 "group=Syslog,alias=syslog,/syslog" "group=group1,/log1/*.log"
command: -c /config/config.toml # If you need to load from config file
Download a build for your platform from the releases page.
See changelog.
Tailon is a command-line program that starts a local HTTP server, which in turn streams the output of commands such as tail
and grep
.
It can be configured from its command-line interface or through the convenience of a toml config file.
Some options, like adding new commands, are only available through the configuration file.
To get started, run tailon with the list of files that you wish to monitor.
tailon /var/log/apache/access.log /var/log/apache/error.log /var/log/messages
Tailon can serve single files, globs or whole directory trees.
Tailon’s server-side functionality is summarized entirely in its help message:
Usage: tailon -c <config file>
Usage: tailon [options] <filespec> [<filespec> ...]
Tailon is a webapp for looking at and searching through files and streams.
-a, --allow-download Allow file downloads. (default true)
-b, --bind string Listen on the specified address and port (default ":8080")
-c, --config string Config.toml file location.
-h, --help Show this help message and exit
-e, --help-config Show configuration file help and exit
--history-lines int No. of history lines to tail.
--lines-to-tail int No. of lines to tail. (default 100)
-r, --relative-root string Webapp relative root. (default "/")
Tailon can be configured through a config file or with command-line flags.
The command-line interface expects one or more filespec arguments, which
specify the files to be served. The expected format is:
[alias=name,group=name]<spec>
where <spec> can be a file name, glob or directory. The optional 'alias='
and 'group=' specifiers change the display name of the files in the UI and
the group in which they appear.
A file specifier points to a single, possibly non-existent file. The file
name in the UI can be overwritten with 'alias='. For example:
tailon alias=error.log,/var/log/apache/error.log
A glob evaluates to the list of files that match a shell file name pattern.
The pattern is evaluated each time the file list is refreshed. An 'alias='
specifier overwrites the parent directory of each matched file in the UI.
tailon "/var/log/apache/*.log" "alias=nginx,/var/log/nginx/*.log"
If a directory is given, all files under it are served recursively.
tailon /var/log/apache/ /var/log/nginx/
Example usage:
tailon file1.txt file2.txt file3.txt
tailon alias=messages,/var/log/messages "/var/log/*.log"
tailon -b localhost:8080,localhost:8081 -c config.toml
For information on usage through the configuration file, please refer to the
'--help-config' option.
Tailon can be configured through a TOML config file.
The config file allows more configurability than the command-line interface.
# The <title> of the index page.
title = "Tailon"
# The root of the web application.
relative-root = "/"
# The addresses to listen on. Can be an address:port combination or an unix socket.
listen-addr = [":8080"]
# Allow download of know files (only those matched by a filespec).
allow-download = true
# Commands that will appear in the UI.
allow-commands = ["tail", "grep", "grep -v", "sed", "awk"]
title = "Tailon"
relative-root = "/"
listen-addr = [":8080"]
allow-download = true
lines-of-history = 0
lines-to-tail = 100
allow-commands = ["tail", "grep", "grep -v", "sed", "awk"]
[files]
file1 = "alias=test,group=test_group,log.log"
file2 = "alias=test1,group=test_group1,log.log"
[commands]
[commands.tail]
action = ["tail", "-n", "$lines", "-F", "$path"]
[commands.grep]
stdin = "tail"
action = ["grep", "-e", "$script"]
default = ".*"
[commands.sed]
stdin = "tail"
action = ["sed", "-u", "-e", "$script"]
default = "s/.*/&/"
[commands.awk]
stdin = "tail"
action = ["awk", "--sandbox", "$script"]
default = "{print $0; fflush()}"
[commands."grep -v"]
stdin = "tail"
action = ["grep", "-v", "--text", "--line-buffered", "--color=never", "-e", "$script"]
default = "^$"
Tailon will automatically convert the following to labels:
- EMERGENCY
- ALERT
- CRITICAL
- ERROR
- WARNING
- WARN
- NOTICE
- INFO
- DEBUG
- GET
- POST
- PUT
- HEAD
- DELETE
- PATCH
- OPTIONS
- CONNECT
- TRACE
- FAILED
- FAILURE
Tailon runs commands on the server it is installed on. While commands that accept a script argument (such as awk, sed and grep) should be invulnerable to shell injection, they may still allow for arbitrary command execution and unrestricted access to the filesystem.
To clarify this point, consider the following input to the sed command:
s/a/b'; cat /etc/secrets
This will result in an error, as tailon does not invoke commands through a shell. On the other hand, the following command is a perfectly valid sed script that has the same effect as the above attempt for shell injection:
r /etc/secrets
The default set of enabled commands - tail, grep and awk - should be safe to
use. GNU awk is run in sandbox mode, which prevents scripts from accessing your
system, either through the system()
builtin or by using input redirection.
By default, tailon is accessible to anyone who knows the server address and port.
If you are on Windows, use WSL2. Install Ubuntu from Microsoft Store.
- GO: v1.18. I followed this guide.
- Node.js: v16.*. I followed this guide.
- Make:
sudo apt-get install make
- entr:
sudo apt-get install entr
git clone https://github.com/NiNiyas/tailon.git
cd tailon
export GOROOT=/usr/local/go
export GOPATH=$HOME/go
export PATH=$PATH:$GOROOT/bin
go get
Note: The paths above might be different for you. Set this accordingly.
The web interface is a written in plain ES5 with the help of some Vue.js. A
simple makefile is used to bundle and compress the frontend assets. To work on
the frontend, make sure you're building with the dev
build tag:
go build -tags dev
This will ensure that the tailon
binary is reading assets from the
frontend/dist
directory instead of from frontend/assets_vfsdata.go
. To
compile the web assets, use make all
or make all BUILD=dev
in case you want
to simply concatenate files instead of also compressing them.
The make watch
goal can be used to continuously update the bundles as you make
changes to the sources. This requires entr.
Note that the minified frontend bundles are committed in order to avoid people
wanting to work only on the backend from having to pull the full node_modules
.
To build frontend, I have included a simple build_frontend script.
Make it executable with sudo chmod +x build_frontend.sh
and run it ./build_frontend.sh
.
The backend is written in straightforward go that tries to do as much as possible using only the standard library.
CGO_ENABLED=0 go build -tags netgo -a -v
See TODO.
- When toolbar is hidden, last few lines are not visible in Fennec FDroid 101.1.1 build#1011120 8092b4e74+ and possibly other Firefox versions as well. Works fine on Bromite.
The project has unit-tests, which you can run with go test
and integration
tests which you can run with cd tests; pytest
.
Alternatively, you can run both with make test
.
The integration tests are written in Python and use pytest
and aiohttp
to
interact with a running tailon
instance.
To run the integration tests, you first need to install the needed dependencies:
Note: Python testing is broken. I have commented out the line in Makefile, I will take a look at it when I have time.
# Option 1: Using a virtualenv
python3 -m venv path/to/venv
source path/to/venv/bin/activate
python3 -m pip install -r tests/requirements.txt
# Option 2: User site-packages
python3 -m pip install --user -r tests/requirements.txt
Please do contribute! Issues and pull requests are welcome. I could use some help.