/* tail -- output the last part of file(s) Copyright (C) 1989, 90, 91, 1995-2001 Free Software Foundation, Inc. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option) any later version. This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA. */ /* Can display any amount of data, unlike the Unix version, which uses a fixed size buffer and therefore can only deliver a limited number of lines. Original version by Paul Rubin . Extensions by David MacKenzie . tail -f for multiple files by Ian Lance Taylor . */ #include #include #include #include #include #include #include "system.h" #include "closeout.h" #include "argmatch.h" #include "error.h" #include "safe-read.h" #include "xstrtol.h" /* The official name of this program (e.g., no `g' prefix). */ #define PROGRAM_NAME "tail" #define AUTHORS \ "Paul Rubin, David MacKenzie, Ian Lance Taylor, and Jim Meyering" #ifndef ENOSYS /* Some systems don't have ENOSYS -- this should be a big enough value that no valid errno value will match it. */ # define ENOSYS 99999 #endif /* Number of items to tail. */ #define DEFAULT_N_LINES 10 /* Size of atomic reads. */ #ifndef BUFSIZ # define BUFSIZ (512 * 8) #endif /* A special value for dump_remainder's N_BYTES parameter. */ #define COPY_TO_EOF OFF_T_MAX /* FIXME: make Follow_name the default? */ #define DEFAULT_FOLLOW_MODE Follow_descriptor enum Follow_mode { /* Follow the name of each file: if the file is renamed, try to reopen that name and track the end of the new file if/when it's recreated. This is useful for tracking logs that are occasionally rotated. */ Follow_name = 1, /* Follow each descriptor obtained upon opening a file. That means we'll continue to follow the end of a file even after it has been renamed or unlinked. */ Follow_descriptor = 2 }; /* The types of files for which tail works. */ #define IS_TAILABLE_FILE_TYPE(Mode) \ (S_ISREG (Mode) || S_ISFIFO (Mode) || S_ISCHR (Mode)) static char const *const follow_mode_string[] = { "descriptor", "name", 0 }; static enum Follow_mode const follow_mode_map[] = { Follow_descriptor, Follow_name, }; struct File_spec { /* The actual file name, or "-" for stdin. */ char *name; /* File descriptor on which the file is open; -1 if it's not open. */ int fd; /* The size of the file the last time we checked. */ off_t size; /* The device and inode of the file the last time we checked. */ dev_t dev; ino_t ino; /* The specified name initially referred to a directory or some other type for which tail isn't meaningful. Unlike for a permission problem (tailable, below) once this is set, the name is not checked ever again. */ int ignore; /* See description of DEFAULT_MAX_N_... below. */ unsigned int n_unchanged_stats; /* See description of DEFAULT_MAX_N_... below. */ unsigned int n_consecutive_size_changes; /* A file is tailable if it exists, is readable, and is of type IS_TAILABLE_FILE_TYPE. */ int tailable; /* The value of errno seen last time we checked this file. */ int errnum; }; /* Keep trying to open a file even if it is inaccessible when tail starts or if it becomes inaccessible later -- useful only with -f. */ static int reopen_inaccessible_files; /* If nonzero, interpret the numeric argument as the number of lines. Otherwise, interpret it as the number of bytes. */ static int count_lines; /* Whether we follow the name of each file or the file descriptor that is initially associated with each name. */ static enum Follow_mode follow_mode = Follow_descriptor; /* If nonzero, read from the ends of all specified files until killed. */ static int forever; /* If nonzero, count from start of file instead of end. */ static int from_start; /* If nonzero, print filename headers. */ static int print_headers; /* When to print the filename banners. */ enum header_mode { multiple_files, always, never }; /* When tailing a file by name, if there have been this many consecutive iterations for which the size has remained the same, then open/fstat the file to determine if that file name is still associated with the same device/inode-number pair as before. This option is meaningful only when following by name. --max-unchanged-stats=N */ #define DEFAULT_MAX_N_UNCHANGED_STATS_BETWEEN_OPENS 5 static unsigned long max_n_unchanged_stats_between_opens = DEFAULT_MAX_N_UNCHANGED_STATS_BETWEEN_OPENS; /* This variable is used to ensure that a file that is unlinked or moved aside, yet always growing will be recognized as having been renamed. After detecting this many consecutive size changes for a file, open/fstat the file to determine if that file name is still associated with the same device/inode-number pair as before. This option is meaningful only when following by name. --max-consecutive-size-changes=N */ #define DEFAULT_MAX_N_CONSECUTIVE_SIZE_CHANGES 200 static unsigned long max_n_consecutive_size_changes_between_opens = DEFAULT_MAX_N_CONSECUTIVE_SIZE_CHANGES; /* The name this program was run with. */ char *program_name; /* The number of seconds to sleep between iterations. During one iteration, every file name or descriptor is checked to see if it has changed. */ /* FIXME: allow fractional seconds */ static unsigned int sleep_interval = 1; /* The process ID of the process (presumably on the current host) that is writing to all followed files. */ static pid_t pid; /* Nonzero if we have ever read standard input. */ static int have_read_stdin; /* For long options that have no equivalent short option, use a non-character as a pseudo short option, starting with CHAR_MAX + 1. */ enum { RETRY_OPTION = CHAR_MAX + 1, MAX_UNCHANGED_STATS_OPTION, /* FIXME: remove this in 2001, unless someone can show a good reason to keep it. */ MAX_CONSECUTIVE_SIZE_CHANGES_OPTION, PID_OPTION, LONG_FOLLOW_OPTION }; static struct option const long_options[] = { /* --allow-missing is deprecated; use --retry instead FIXME: remove it some day */ {"allow-missing", no_argument, NULL, RETRY_OPTION}, {"bytes", required_argument, NULL, 'c'}, {"follow", optional_argument, NULL, LONG_FOLLOW_OPTION}, {"lines", required_argument, NULL, 'n'}, {"max-unchanged-stats", required_argument, NULL, MAX_UNCHANGED_STATS_OPTION}, {"max-consecutive-size-changes", required_argument, NULL, MAX_CONSECUTIVE_SIZE_CHANGES_OPTION}, {"pid", required_argument, NULL, PID_OPTION}, {"quiet", no_argument, NULL, 'q'}, {"retry", no_argument, NULL, RETRY_OPTION}, {"silent", no_argument, NULL, 'q'}, {"sleep-interval", required_argument, NULL, 's'}, {"verbose", no_argument, NULL, 'v'}, {GETOPT_HELP_OPTION_DECL}, {GETOPT_VERSION_OPTION_DECL}, {NULL, 0, NULL, 0} }; void usage (int status) { if (status != 0) fprintf (stderr, _("Try `%s --help' for more information.\n"), program_name); else { printf (_("\ Usage: %s [OPTION]... [FILE]...\n\ "), program_name); printf (_("\ Print the last %d lines of each FILE to standard output.\n\ With more than one FILE, precede each with a header giving the file name.\n\ With no FILE, or when FILE is -, read standard input.\n\ \n\ --retry keep trying to open a file even if it is\n\ inaccessible when tail starts or if it becomes\n\ inaccessible later -- useful only with -f\n\ -c, --bytes=N output the last N bytes\n\ -f, --follow[={name|descriptor}] output appended data as the file grows;\n\ -f, --follow, and --follow=descriptor are\n\ equivalent\n\ -n, --lines=N output the last N lines, instead of the last %d\n\ --max-unchanged-stats=N\n\ with --follow=name, reopen a FILE which has not\n\ changed size after N (default %d) iterations\n\ to see if it has been unlinked or renamed\n\ (this is the usual case of rotated log files)\n\ --pid=PID with -f, terminate after process ID, PID dies\n\ -q, --quiet, --silent never output headers giving file names\n\ -s, --sleep-interval=S with -f, each iteration lasts approximately S\n\ (default 1) seconds\n\ -v, --verbose always output headers giving file names\n\ --help display this help and exit\n\ --version output version information and exit\n\ \n\ "), DEFAULT_N_LINES, DEFAULT_N_LINES, DEFAULT_MAX_N_UNCHANGED_STATS_BETWEEN_OPENS ); printf (_("\ If the first character of N (the number of bytes or lines) is a `+',\n\ print beginning with the Nth item from the start of each file, otherwise,\n\ print the last N items in the file. N may have a multiplier suffix:\n\ b for 512, k for 1024, m for 1048576 (1 Meg). A first OPTION of -VALUE\n\ or +VALUE is treated like -n VALUE or -n +VALUE unless VALUE has one of\n\ the [bkm] suffix multipliers, in which case it is treated like -c VALUE\n\ or -c +VALUE. Warning: a first option of +VALUE is obsolescent, and support\n\ for it will be withdrawn.\n\ \n\ With --follow (-f), tail defaults to following the file descriptor, which\n\ means that even if a tail'ed file is renamed, tail will continue to track\n\ its end. This default behavior is not desirable when you really want to\n\ track the actual name of the file, not the file descriptor (e.g., log\n\ rotation). Use --follow=name in that case. That causes tail to track the\n\ named file by reopening it periodically to see if it has been removed and\n\ recreated by some other program.\n\ \n\ ")); puts (_("\nReport bugs to .")); } exit (status == 0 ? EXIT_SUCCESS : EXIT_FAILURE); } static int valid_file_spec (struct File_spec const *f) { /* Exactly one of the following subexpressions must be true. */ return ((f->fd == -1) ^ (f->errnum == 0)); } static char * pretty_name (struct File_spec const *f) { return (STREQ (f->name, "-") ? "standard input" : f->name); } static void xwrite (int fd, char *const buffer, size_t n_bytes) { assert (fd == STDOUT_FILENO); assert (n_bytes >= 0); if (n_bytes > 0 && fwrite (buffer, 1, n_bytes, stdout) == 0) error (EXIT_FAILURE, errno, _("write error")); } static void close_fd (int fd, const char *filename) { if (fd != -1 && fd != STDIN_FILENO && close (fd)) { error (0, errno, _("closing %s (fd=%d)"), filename, fd); } } static void write_header (const char *pretty_filename) { static int first_file = 1; printf ("%s==> %s <==\n", (first_file ? "" : "\n"), pretty_filename); first_file = 0; } /* Read and output N_BYTES of file PRETTY_FILENAME starting at the current position in FD. If N_BYTES is COPY_TO_EOF, then copy until end of file. Return the number of bytes read from the file. */ static long dump_remainder (const char *pretty_filename, int fd, off_t n_bytes) { char buffer[BUFSIZ]; int bytes_read; long n_written; off_t n_remaining = n_bytes; n_written = 0; while (1) { long n = MIN (n_remaining, (off_t) BUFSIZ); bytes_read = safe_read (fd, buffer, n); if (bytes_read <= 0) break; xwrite (STDOUT_FILENO, buffer, bytes_read); n_remaining -= bytes_read; n_written += bytes_read; } if (bytes_read == -1) error (EXIT_FAILURE, errno, "%s", pretty_filename); return n_written; } /* Print the last N_LINES lines from the end of file FD. Go backward through the file, reading `BUFSIZ' bytes at a time (except probably the first), until we hit the start of the file or have read NUMBER newlines. FILE_LENGTH is the length of the file (one more than the offset of the last byte of the file). Return 0 if successful, 1 if an error occurred. */ static int file_lines (const char *pretty_filename, int fd, long int n_lines, off_t file_length) { char buffer[BUFSIZ]; int bytes_read; int i; /* Index into `buffer' for scanning. */ off_t pos = file_length; if (n_lines == 0) return 0; /* Set `bytes_read' to the size of the last, probably partial, buffer; 0 < `bytes_read' <= `BUFSIZ'. */ bytes_read = pos % BUFSIZ; if (bytes_read == 0) bytes_read = BUFSIZ; /* Make `pos' a multiple of `BUFSIZ' (0 if the file is short), so that all reads will be on block boundaries, which might increase efficiency. */ pos -= bytes_read; /* FIXME: check lseek return value */ lseek (fd, pos, SEEK_SET); bytes_read = safe_read (fd, buffer, bytes_read); if (bytes_read == -1) { error (0, errno, "%s", pretty_filename); return 1; } /* Count the incomplete line on files that don't end with a newline. */ if (bytes_read && buffer[bytes_read - 1] != '\n') --n_lines; do { /* Scan backward, counting the newlines in this bufferfull. */ for (i = bytes_read - 1; i >= 0; i--) { /* Have we counted the requested number of newlines yet? */ if (buffer[i] == '\n' && n_lines-- == 0) { /* If this newline wasn't the last character in the buffer, print the text after it. */ if (i != bytes_read - 1) xwrite (STDOUT_FILENO, &buffer[i + 1], bytes_read - (i + 1)); dump_remainder (pretty_filename, fd, file_length - (pos + bytes_read)); return 0; } } /* Not enough newlines in that bufferfull. */ if (pos == 0) { /* Not enough lines in the file; print the entire file. */ /* FIXME: check lseek return value */ lseek (fd, (off_t) 0, SEEK_SET); dump_remainder (pretty_filename, fd, file_length); return 0; } pos -= BUFSIZ; /* FIXME: check lseek return value */ lseek (fd, pos, SEEK_SET); } while ((bytes_read = safe_read (fd, buffer, BUFSIZ)) > 0); if (bytes_read == -1) { error (0, errno, "%s", pretty_filename); return 1; } return 0; } /* Print the last N_LINES lines from the end of the standard input, open for reading as pipe FD. Buffer the text as a linked list of LBUFFERs, adding them as needed. Return 0 if successful, 1 if an error occured. */ static int pipe_lines (const char *pretty_filename, int fd, long int n_lines) { struct linebuffer { int nbytes, nlines; char buffer[BUFSIZ]; struct linebuffer *next; }; typedef struct linebuffer LBUFFER; LBUFFER *first, *last, *tmp; int i; /* Index into buffers. */ int total_lines = 0; /* Total number of newlines in all buffers. */ int errors = 0; int nbytes; /* Size of most recent read */ first = last = (LBUFFER *) xmalloc (sizeof (LBUFFER)); first->nbytes = first->nlines = 0; first->next = NULL; tmp = (LBUFFER *) xmalloc (sizeof (LBUFFER)); /* Input is always read into a fresh buffer. */ while ((nbytes = tmp->nbytes = safe_read (fd, tmp->buffer, BUFSIZ)) > 0) { tmp->nlines = 0; tmp->next = NULL; /* Count the number of newlines just read. */ for (i = 0; i < tmp->nbytes; i++) if (tmp->buffer[i] == '\n') ++tmp->nlines; total_lines += tmp->nlines; /* If there is enough room in the last buffer read, just append the new one to it. This is because when reading from a pipe, `nbytes' can often be very small. */ if (tmp->nbytes + last->nbytes < BUFSIZ) { memcpy (&last->buffer[last->nbytes], tmp->buffer, tmp->nbytes); last->nbytes += tmp->nbytes; last->nlines += tmp->nlines; } else { /* If there's not enough room, link the new buffer onto the end of the list, then either free up the oldest buffer for the next read if that would leave enough lines, or else malloc a new one. Some compaction mechanism is possible but probably not worthwhile. */ last = last->next = tmp; if (total_lines - first->nlines > n_lines) { tmp = first; total_lines -= first->nlines; first = first->next; } else tmp = (LBUFFER *) xmalloc (sizeof (LBUFFER)); } } free ((char *) tmp); if (nbytes < 0) { error (0, errno, "%s", pretty_filename); errors = 1; goto free_lbuffers; } /* If the file is empty, then bail out. */ if (last->nbytes == 0) goto free_lbuffers; /* This prevents a core dump when the pipe contains no newlines. */ if (n_lines == 0) goto free_lbuffers; /* Count the incomplete line on files that don't end with a newline. */ if (last->buffer[last->nbytes - 1] != '\n') { ++last->nlines; ++total_lines; } /* Run through the list, printing lines. First, skip over unneeded buffers. */ for (tmp = first; total_lines - tmp->nlines > n_lines; tmp = tmp->next) total_lines -= tmp->nlines; /* Find the correct beginning, then print the rest of the file. */ if (total_lines > n_lines) { const char *cp; /* Skip `total_lines' - `n_lines' newlines. We made sure that `total_lines' - `n_lines' <= `tmp->nlines'. */ cp = tmp->buffer; for (i = total_lines - n_lines; i; --i) while (*cp++ != '\n') /* Do nothing. */ ; i = cp - tmp->buffer; } else i = 0; xwrite (STDOUT_FILENO, &tmp->buffer[i], tmp->nbytes - i); for (tmp = tmp->next; tmp; tmp = tmp->next) xwrite (STDOUT_FILENO, tmp->buffer, tmp->nbytes); free_lbuffers: while (first) { tmp = first->next; free ((char *) first); first = tmp; } return errors; } /* Print the last N_BYTES characters from the end of pipe FD. This is a stripped down version of pipe_lines. Return 0 if successful, 1 if an error occurred. */ static int pipe_bytes (const char *pretty_filename, int fd, off_t n_bytes) { struct charbuffer { int nbytes; char buffer[BUFSIZ]; struct charbuffer *next; }; typedef struct charbuffer CBUFFER; CBUFFER *first, *last, *tmp; int i; /* Index into buffers. */ int total_bytes = 0; /* Total characters in all buffers. */ int errors = 0; first = last = (CBUFFER *) xmalloc (sizeof (CBUFFER)); first->nbytes = 0; first->next = NULL; tmp = (CBUFFER *) xmalloc (sizeof (CBUFFER)); /* Input is always read into a fresh buffer. */ while ((tmp->nbytes = safe_read (fd, tmp->buffer, BUFSIZ)) > 0) { tmp->next = NULL; total_bytes += tmp->nbytes; /* If there is enough room in the last buffer read, just append the new one to it. This is because when reading from a pipe, `nbytes' can often be very small. */ if (tmp->nbytes + last->nbytes < BUFSIZ) { memcpy (&last->buffer[last->nbytes], tmp->buffer, tmp->nbytes); last->nbytes += tmp->nbytes; } else { /* If there's not enough room, link the new buffer onto the end of the list, then either free up the oldest buffer for the next read if that would leave enough characters, or else malloc a new one. Some compaction mechanism is possible but probably not worthwhile. */ last = last->next = tmp; if (total_bytes - first->nbytes > n_bytes) { tmp = first; total_bytes -= first->nbytes; first = first->next; } else { tmp = (CBUFFER *) xmalloc (sizeof (CBUFFER)); } } } if (tmp->nbytes == -1) { error (0, errno, "%s", pretty_filename); errors = 1; free ((char *) tmp); goto free_cbuffers; } free ((char *) tmp); /* Run through the list, printing characters. First, skip over unneeded buffers. */ for (tmp = first; total_bytes - tmp->nbytes > n_bytes; tmp = tmp->next) total_bytes -= tmp->nbytes; /* Find the correct beginning, then print the rest of the file. We made sure that `total_bytes' - `n_bytes' <= `tmp->nbytes'. */ if (total_bytes > n_bytes) i = total_bytes - n_bytes; else i = 0; xwrite (STDOUT_FILENO, &tmp->buffer[i], tmp->nbytes - i); for (tmp = tmp->next; tmp; tmp = tmp->next) xwrite (STDOUT_FILENO, tmp->buffer, tmp->nbytes); free_cbuffers: while (first) { tmp = first->next; free ((char *) first); first = tmp; } return errors; } /* Skip N_BYTES characters from the start of pipe FD, and print any extra characters that were read beyond that. Return 1 on error, 0 if ok. */ static int start_bytes (const char *pretty_filename, int fd, off_t n_bytes) { char buffer[BUFSIZ]; int bytes_read = 0; while (n_bytes > 0 && (bytes_read = safe_read (fd, buffer, BUFSIZ)) > 0) n_bytes -= bytes_read; if (bytes_read == -1) { error (0, errno, "%s", pretty_filename); return 1; } else if (n_bytes < 0) xwrite (STDOUT_FILENO, &buffer[bytes_read + n_bytes], -n_bytes); return 0; } /* Skip N_LINES lines at the start of file or pipe FD, and print any extra characters that were read beyond that. Return 1 on error, 0 if ok. */ static int start_lines (const char *pretty_filename, int fd, long int n_lines) { char buffer[BUFSIZ]; int bytes_read = 0; int bytes_to_skip = 0; while (n_lines && (bytes_read = safe_read (fd, buffer, BUFSIZ)) > 0) { bytes_to_skip = 0; while (bytes_to_skip < bytes_read) if (buffer[bytes_to_skip++] == '\n' && --n_lines == 0) break; } if (bytes_read == -1) { error (0, errno, "%s", pretty_filename); return 1; } else if (bytes_to_skip < bytes_read) { xwrite (STDOUT_FILENO, &buffer[bytes_to_skip], bytes_read - bytes_to_skip); } return 0; } /* FIXME: describe */ static void recheck (struct File_spec *f) { /* open/fstat the file and announce if dev/ino have changed */ struct stat new_stats; int fd; int fail = 0; int is_stdin = (STREQ (f->name, "-")); int was_tailable = f->tailable; int prev_errnum = f->errnum; int new_file; assert (valid_file_spec (f)); fd = (is_stdin ? STDIN_FILENO : open (f->name, O_RDONLY)); /* If the open fails because the file doesn't exist, then mark the file as not tailable. */ f->tailable = !(reopen_inaccessible_files && fd == -1); if (fd == -1 || fstat (fd, &new_stats) < 0) { fail = 1; f->errnum = errno; if (!f->tailable) { if (was_tailable) { /* FIXME-maybe: detect the case in which the file first becomes unreadable (perms), and later becomes readable again and can be seen to be the same file (dev/ino). Otherwise, tail prints the entire contents of the file when it becomes readable. */ error (0, f->errnum, _("`%s' has become inaccessible"), pretty_name (f)); } else { /* say nothing... it's still not tailable */ } } else if (prev_errnum != errno) { error (0, errno, "%s", pretty_name (f)); } } else if (!IS_TAILABLE_FILE_TYPE (new_stats.st_mode)) { fail = 1; f->errnum = -1; error (0, 0, _("`%s' has been replaced with an untailable file;\ giving up on this name"), pretty_name (f)); f->ignore = 1; } else { f->errnum = 0; } new_file = 0; if (fail) { close_fd (fd, pretty_name (f)); close_fd (f->fd, pretty_name (f)); f->fd = -1; } else if (prev_errnum && prev_errnum != ENOENT) { new_file = 1; assert (f->fd == -1); error (0, 0, _("`%s' has become accessible"), pretty_name (f)); } else if (f->ino != new_stats.st_ino || f->dev != new_stats.st_dev) { new_file = 1; if (f->fd == -1) { error (0, 0, _("`%s' has appeared; following end of new file"), pretty_name (f)); } else { /* Close the old one. */ close_fd (f->fd, pretty_name (f)); /* File has been replaced (e.g., via log rotation) -- tail the new one. */ error (0, 0, _("`%s' has been replaced; following end of new file"), pretty_name (f)); } } else { if (f->fd == -1) { /* This happens when one iteration finds the file missing, then the preceding pair is reused as the file is recreated. */ new_file = 1; } else { close_fd (fd, pretty_name (f)); } } if (new_file) { /* Record new file info in f. */ f->fd = fd; f->size = 0; /* Start at the beginning of the file... */ f->dev = new_stats.st_dev; f->ino = new_stats.st_ino; f->n_unchanged_stats = 0; f->n_consecutive_size_changes = 0; f->ignore = 0; /* FIXME: check lseek return value */ lseek (f->fd, f->size, SEEK_SET); } } /* FIXME: describe */ static unsigned int n_live_files (const struct File_spec *f, int n_files) { int i; unsigned int n_live = 0; for (i = 0; i < n_files; i++) { if (f[i].fd >= 0) ++n_live; } return n_live; } /* Tail NFILES files forever, or until killed. The pertinent information for each file is stored in an entry of F. Loop over each of them, doing an fstat to see if they have changed size, and an occasional open/fstat to see if any dev/ino pair has changed. If none of them have changed size in one iteration, sleep for a while and try again. Continue until the user interrupts us. */ static void tail_forever (struct File_spec *f, int nfiles) { int last; int writer_is_dead = 0; last = nfiles - 1; while (1) { int i; int any_changed; any_changed = 0; for (i = 0; i < nfiles; i++) { struct stat stats; if (f[i].ignore) continue; if (f[i].fd < 0) { recheck (&f[i]); continue; } if (fstat (f[i].fd, &stats) < 0) { f[i].fd = -1; f[i].errnum = errno; error (0, errno, "%s", pretty_name (&f[i])); continue; } if (stats.st_size == f[i].size) { f[i].n_consecutive_size_changes = 0; if (++f[i].n_unchanged_stats > max_n_unchanged_stats_between_opens && follow_mode == Follow_name) { recheck (&f[i]); f[i].n_unchanged_stats = 0; } continue; } /* Size changed. */ ++f[i].n_consecutive_size_changes; /* Ensure that a file that's unlinked or moved aside, yet always growing will be recognized as having been renamed. */ if (follow_mode == Follow_name && (f[i].n_consecutive_size_changes > max_n_consecutive_size_changes_between_opens)) { f[i].n_consecutive_size_changes = 0; recheck (&f[i]); continue; } /* This file has changed size. Print out what we can, and then keep looping. */ any_changed = 1; /* reset counter */ f[i].n_unchanged_stats = 0; if (stats.st_size < f[i].size) { error (0, 0, _("%s: file truncated"), pretty_name (&f[i])); last = i; /* FIXME: check lseek return value */ lseek (f[i].fd, stats.st_size, SEEK_SET); f[i].size = stats.st_size; continue; } if (i != last) { if (print_headers) write_header (pretty_name (&f[i])); last = i; } f[i].size += dump_remainder (pretty_name (&f[i]), f[i].fd, COPY_TO_EOF); } if (n_live_files (f, nfiles) == 0 && ! reopen_inaccessible_files) { error (0, 0, _("no files remaining")); break; } /* If none of the files changed size, sleep. */ if (!any_changed) { if (writer_is_dead) break; sleep (sleep_interval); /* Once the writer is dead, read the files once more to avoid a race condition. */ writer_is_dead = (pid != 0 && kill (pid, 0) != 0 /* Handle the case in which you cannot send a signal to the writer, so kill fails and sets errno to EPERM. */ && errno != EPERM); } } } /* Output the last N_BYTES bytes of file FILENAME open for reading in FD. Return 0 if successful, 1 if an error occurred. */ static int tail_bytes (const char *pretty_filename, int fd, off_t n_bytes) { struct stat stats; /* We need binary input, since `tail' relies on `lseek' and byte counts, while binary output will preserve the style (Unix/DOS) of text file. */ SET_BINARY2 (fd, STDOUT_FILENO); if (fstat (fd, &stats)) { error (0, errno, "%s", pretty_filename); return 1; } if (from_start) { if (S_ISREG (stats.st_mode)) { /* FIXME: check lseek return value */ lseek (fd, n_bytes, SEEK_CUR); } else if (start_bytes (pretty_filename, fd, n_bytes)) { return 1; } dump_remainder (pretty_filename, fd, COPY_TO_EOF); } else { if (S_ISREG (stats.st_mode)) { off_t current_pos, end_pos; size_t bytes_remaining; if ((current_pos = lseek (fd, (off_t) 0, SEEK_CUR)) != -1 && (end_pos = lseek (fd, (off_t) 0, SEEK_END)) != -1) { off_t diff; /* Be careful here. The current position may actually be beyond the end of the file. */ bytes_remaining = (diff = end_pos - current_pos) < 0 ? 0 : diff; } else { error (0, errno, "%s", pretty_filename); return 1; } if (bytes_remaining <= n_bytes) { /* From the current position to end of file, there are no more bytes than have been requested. So reposition the file pointer to the incoming current position and print everything after that. */ /* FIXME: check lseek return value */ lseek (fd, current_pos, SEEK_SET); } else { /* There are more bytes remaining than were requested. Back up. */ /* FIXME: check lseek return value */ lseek (fd, -n_bytes, SEEK_END); } dump_remainder (pretty_filename, fd, n_bytes); } else return pipe_bytes (pretty_filename, fd, n_bytes); } return 0; } /* Output the last N_LINES lines of file FILENAME open for reading in FD. Return 0 if successful, 1 if an error occurred. */ static int tail_lines (const char *pretty_filename, int fd, long int n_lines) { struct stat stats; off_t length; /* We need binary input, since `tail' relies on `lseek' and byte counts, while binary output will preserve the style (Unix/DOS) of text file. */ SET_BINARY2 (fd, STDOUT_FILENO); if (fstat (fd, &stats)) { error (0, errno, "%s", pretty_filename); return 1; } if (from_start) { if (start_lines (pretty_filename, fd, n_lines)) return 1; dump_remainder (pretty_filename, fd, COPY_TO_EOF); } else { /* Use file_lines only if FD refers to a regular file with its file pointer positioned at beginning of file. */ /* FIXME: adding the lseek conjunct is a kludge. Once there's a reasonable test suite, fix the true culprit: file_lines. file_lines shouldn't presume that the input file pointer is initially positioned to beginning of file. */ if (S_ISREG (stats.st_mode) && lseek (fd, (off_t) 0, SEEK_CUR) == (off_t) 0) { length = lseek (fd, (off_t) 0, SEEK_END); if (length != 0 && file_lines (pretty_filename, fd, n_lines, length)) return 1; } else return pipe_lines (pretty_filename, fd, n_lines); } return 0; } /* Display the last N_UNITS units of file FILENAME, open for reading in FD. Return 0 if successful, 1 if an error occurred. */ static int tail (const char *pretty_filename, int fd, off_t n_units) { if (count_lines) return tail_lines (pretty_filename, fd, (long) n_units); else return tail_bytes (pretty_filename, fd, n_units); } /* Display the last N_UNITS units of the file described by F. Return 0 if successful, 1 if an error occurred. */ static int tail_file (struct File_spec *f, off_t n_units) { int fd, errors; struct stat stats; int is_stdin = (STREQ (f->name, "-")); if (is_stdin) { have_read_stdin = 1; fd = STDIN_FILENO; } else { fd = open (f->name, O_RDONLY); } f->tailable = !(reopen_inaccessible_files && fd == -1); if (fd == -1) { if (forever) { f->fd = -1; f->errnum = errno; f->ignore = 0; f->ino = 0; f->dev = 0; } error (0, errno, "%s", pretty_name (f)); errors = 1; } else { if (print_headers) write_header (pretty_name (f)); errors = tail (pretty_name (f), fd, n_units); if (forever) { f->errnum = 0; /* FIXME: duplicate code */ if (fstat (fd, &stats) < 0) { errors = 1; f->errnum = errno; error (0, errno, "%s", pretty_name (f)); } else if (!IS_TAILABLE_FILE_TYPE (stats.st_mode)) { error (0, 0, _("%s: cannot follow end of this type of file;\ giving up on this name"), pretty_name (f)); errors = 1; f->errnum = -1; f->ignore = 1; } if (errors) { close_fd (fd, pretty_name (f)); f->fd = -1; } else { f->fd = fd; f->size = stats.st_size; f->dev = stats.st_dev; f->ino = stats.st_ino; f->n_unchanged_stats = 0; f->n_consecutive_size_changes = 0; f->ignore = 0; } } else { if (!is_stdin && close (fd)) { error (0, errno, "%s", pretty_name (f)); errors = 1; } } } return errors; } /* If the command line arguments are of the obsolescent form and the option string is well-formed, set *FAIL to zero, set *N_UNITS, the globals COUNT_LINES, FOREVER, and FROM_START, and return non-zero. Otherwise, if the command line arguments appear to be of the obsolescent form but the option string is malformed, set *FAIL to non-zero, don't modify any other parameter or global variable, and return non-zero. Otherwise, return zero and don't modify any parameter or global variable. */ static int parse_obsolescent_option (int argc, const char *const *argv, off_t *n_units, int *fail) { const char *p = argv[1]; const char *n_string = NULL; const char *n_string_end; int t_from_start; int t_count_lines; int t_forever; /* With the obsolescent form, there is one option string and (technically) at most one file argument. But we allow two or more by default. */ if (argc < 2) return 0; /* If P starts with `+', `-N' (where N is a digit), or `-l', then it is obsolescent. Return zero otherwise. */ if ( ! (p[0] == '+' || (p[0] == '-' && (p[1] == 'l' || ISDIGIT (p[1])))) ) return 0; if (*p == '+') t_from_start = 1; else if (*p == '-') t_from_start = 0; else return 0; ++p; if (ISDIGIT (*p)) { n_string = p; do { ++p; } while (ISDIGIT (*p)); } n_string_end = p; t_count_lines = 1; if (*p == 'c' || *p == 'b') { t_count_lines = 0; ++p; } else if (*p == 'l') { ++p; } t_forever = 0; if (*p == 'f') { t_forever = 1; ++p; } if (*p != '\0') { /* If (argv[1] begins with a `+' or if it begins with `-' followed by a digit), but has an invalid suffix character, give a diagnostic and indicate to caller that this *is* of the obsolescent form, but that it's an invalid option. */ if (t_from_start || n_string) { error (0, 0, _("%c: invalid suffix character in obsolescent option" ), *p); *fail = 1; return 1; } /* Otherwise, it might be a valid non-obsolescent option like -n. */ return 0; } *fail = 0; if (n_string == NULL) *n_units = DEFAULT_N_LINES; else { strtol_error s_err; unsigned long int tmp_ulong; char *end; s_err = xstrtoul (n_string, &end, 10, &tmp_ulong, *n_string_end == 'b' ? "b" : NULL); if (s_err == LONGINT_OK && tmp_ulong <= OFF_T_MAX) *n_units = (off_t) tmp_ulong; else { /* Extract a NUL-terminated string for the error message. */ size_t len = n_string_end - n_string; char *n_string_tmp = xmalloc (len + 1); strncpy (n_string_tmp, n_string, len); n_string_tmp[len] = '\0'; error (0, 0, _("%s: %s is so large that it is not representable"), n_string_tmp, (t_count_lines ? _("number of lines") : _("number of bytes"))); free (n_string_tmp); *fail = 1; } } if (!*fail) { if (argc > 3) { int posix_pedantic = (getenv ("POSIXLY_CORRECT") != NULL); /* When POSIXLY_CORRECT is set, enforce the `at most one file argument' requirement. */ if (posix_pedantic) { error (0, 0, _("\ too many arguments; When using tail's obsolescent option syntax (%s)\n\ there may be no more than one file argument. Use the equivalent -n or -c\n\ option instead."), argv[1]); *fail = 1; return 1; } #if DISABLED /* FIXME: enable or remove this warning. */ error (0, 0, _("\ Warning: it is not portable to use two or more file arguments with\n\ tail's obsolescent option syntax (%s). Use the equivalent -n or -c\n\ option instead."), argv[1]); #endif } /* Set globals. */ from_start = t_from_start; count_lines = t_count_lines; forever = t_forever; } return 1; } static void parse_options (int argc, char **argv, off_t *n_units, enum header_mode *header_mode) { int c; count_lines = 1; forever = from_start = print_headers = 0; while ((c = getopt_long (argc, argv, "c:n:fqs:v", long_options, NULL)) != -1) { switch (c) { case 0: break; case 'c': case 'n': count_lines = (c == 'n'); if (*optarg == '+') from_start = 1; else if (*optarg == '-') ++optarg; { strtol_error s_err; uintmax_t n; s_err = xstrtoumax (optarg, NULL, 10, &n, "bkm"); if (s_err == LONGINT_INVALID) { error (EXIT_FAILURE, 0, "%s: %s", optarg, (c == 'n' ? _("invalid number of lines") : _("invalid number of bytes"))); } if (s_err != LONGINT_OK) error (EXIT_FAILURE, 0, _("%s: is so large that it is not representable"), optarg); if (OFF_T_MAX < n) error (EXIT_FAILURE, 0, _("%s is larger than the maximum file size on this system"), optarg); *n_units = (off_t) n; } break; case 'f': case LONG_FOLLOW_OPTION: forever = 1; if (optarg == NULL) follow_mode = DEFAULT_FOLLOW_MODE; else follow_mode = XARGMATCH ("--follow", optarg, follow_mode_string, follow_mode_map); break; case RETRY_OPTION: reopen_inaccessible_files = 1; break; case MAX_UNCHANGED_STATS_OPTION: /* --max-unchanged-stats=N */ if (xstrtoul (optarg, NULL, 10, &max_n_unchanged_stats_between_opens, "") != LONGINT_OK) { error (EXIT_FAILURE, 0, _("%s: invalid maximum number of unchanged stats between opens"), optarg); } break; case MAX_CONSECUTIVE_SIZE_CHANGES_OPTION: /* --max-consecutive-size-changes=N */ if (xstrtoul (optarg, NULL, 10, &max_n_consecutive_size_changes_between_opens, "") != LONGINT_OK) { error (EXIT_FAILURE, 0, _("%s: invalid maximum number of consecutive size changes"), optarg); } break; case PID_OPTION: { strtol_error s_err; unsigned long int tmp_ulong; s_err = xstrtoul (optarg, NULL, 10, &tmp_ulong, ""); if (s_err != LONGINT_OK || tmp_ulong > PID_T_MAX) { error (EXIT_FAILURE, 0, _("%s: invalid PID"), optarg); } pid = tmp_ulong; } break; case 'q': *header_mode = never; break; case 's': { strtol_error s_err; unsigned long int tmp_ulong; s_err = xstrtoul (optarg, NULL, 10, &tmp_ulong, ""); if (s_err != LONGINT_OK || tmp_ulong > UINT_MAX) { error (EXIT_FAILURE, 0, _("%s: invalid number of seconds"), optarg); } sleep_interval = tmp_ulong; } break; case 'v': *header_mode = always; break; case_GETOPT_HELP_CHAR; case_GETOPT_VERSION_CHAR (PROGRAM_NAME, AUTHORS); default: usage (1); } } if (reopen_inaccessible_files && follow_mode != Follow_name) error (0, 0, _("warning: --retry is useful only when following by name")); if (pid && !forever) error (0, 0, _("warning: PID ignored; --pid=PID is useful only when following")); else if (pid && kill (pid, 0) != 0 && errno == ENOSYS) { error (0, 0, _("warning: --pid=PID is not supported on this system")); pid = 0; } } int main (int argc, char **argv) { enum header_mode header_mode = multiple_files; int exit_status = 0; /* If from_start, the number of items to skip before printing; otherwise, the number of items at the end of the file to print. Although the type is signed, the value is never negative. */ off_t n_units = DEFAULT_N_LINES; int n_files; char **file; struct File_spec *F; int i; program_name = argv[0]; setlocale (LC_ALL, ""); bindtextdomain (PACKAGE, LOCALEDIR); textdomain (PACKAGE); atexit (close_stdout); have_read_stdin = 0; { int found_obsolescent; int fail; found_obsolescent = parse_obsolescent_option (argc, (const char *const *) argv, &n_units, &fail); if (found_obsolescent) { if (fail) exit (EXIT_FAILURE); optind = 2; } else { parse_options (argc, argv, &n_units, &header_mode); } } /* To start printing with item N_UNITS from the start of the file, skip N_UNITS - 1 items. `tail +0' is actually meaningless, but for Unix compatibility it's treated the same as `tail +1'. */ if (from_start) { if (n_units) --n_units; } n_files = argc - optind; file = argv + optind; if (n_files == 0) { static char *dummy_stdin = "-"; n_files = 1; file = &dummy_stdin; } F = (struct File_spec *) xmalloc (n_files * sizeof (F[0])); for (i = 0; i < n_files; i++) F[i].name = file[i]; if (header_mode == always || (header_mode == multiple_files && n_files > 1)) print_headers = 1; for (i = 0; i < n_files; i++) exit_status |= tail_file (&F[i], n_units); if (forever) { /* This fflush appears to be required only on Solaris2.7. */ if (fflush (stdout) < 0) error (EXIT_FAILURE, errno, _("write error")); SETVBUF (stdout, NULL, _IONBF, 0); tail_forever (F, n_files); } if (have_read_stdin && close (0) < 0) error (EXIT_FAILURE, errno, "-"); exit (exit_status == 0 ? EXIT_SUCCESS : EXIT_FAILURE); }