Logolas is a light-weight multi-file log scraper with an accompanying real-time web interface.
- Logolas utilizes inotify to watch files for updates. This means it will not work on Windows or over NFS.
- Lines are scraped using regular expressions. At a minimum, each line must include a date/time.
- The scraped lines are persisted to a SQL backend. This addresses loss of historical data due to log rotation. However, currently purging is not automatic.
- Web interface performs standard polling at a configurable rate.
- Multi-file logging
- Multi-regular expression scraping per-file
- Real-time streaming of logged events
- Filtering on any matched field
- Access to historical data (admittedly a bit awkward)
- Cannot parse timezones currently.
An administrator of my Minecraft server needed a web interface that provided real-time access to information stored in multiple log files on my server.
This started as a toy project, but I've decided to publish it as I can imagine there is someone out there who would benefit from this work.
The following instructions assumes a debian based distribution.
Using virtual environments:
git clone https://github.com/bheiskell/logolas.git
cd logolas
sudo aptitude install python-virtualenv
virtualenv --no-site-packages venv
. venv/bin/activate
easy_install .
cp sample/config.yml .
To start the log scraper:
cd logolas
. venv/bin/activate
logolas config.yml
Alternatively, deploy to the root python installation:
git clone https://github.com/bheiskell/logolas.git
cd logolas
sudo easy_install .
cp sample/config.yml .
logolas config.yml
To launch the web interface, run:
cd logolas
. venv/bin/activate
export LOGOLAS_CONFIG=config.py
logolas_web
If you plan on using SQLite, make sure you provide a fully qualified path to the database. The Flask framework changes the current working directory which will cause relative paths to break.
TODO: wsgi configuration
If you choose to use MySQL with virtual environments, you'll need to install libmysqlclient-dev and python-dev with aptitude. Then you can easy_install mysql-python.
Alternatively, you should be able to simply install to python-mysqldb if you're not using virtual environments.