Linux Today: Linux News On Internet Time.
Search Linux Today
Linux News Sections:  Blog -  Developer -  High Performance -  Infrastructure -  IT Management -  Security -  Storage -
Linux Today Navigation
LT Home
Preferences
Contribute
Link to Us
Search
Linux Jobs

Linux Today
Enterprise Linux Today
Apache Today
JustLinux.com
Linux Planet
PHPBuilder
All Linux Devices
Technology Jobs

JustTechJobs.com

LinuxToday Newsletters
Server Daily
IT Management Daily
Subscribe News
Subscribe PR
Subscribe Security

internet.com
Internet News
Small Business

Advertise
Newsletters
Tech Jobs
E-mail Offers

 






Current Newswire:

Tech Comics: "Daydream of a Tech Salesman"

Simplify Administration with Directory Services

The Best Filesystem for an external hard disk of 1TB with cross platform support

SECURITY: Bouncing malware from Android Market

Alfresco Embraces SaaS and the Cloud with Its New CMS Platform

Android, Tizen and the End of Java

Hardening Postfix For ISPConfig 3

Is Facebook's IPO an exit strategy?

PCLinuxOS KDE 2012.02 Has Been Officially Released

GhostBSD 2.5 review



Applications Management Engineer Sr (NYC)
Next Step Systems
US-NY-New York

Justtechjobs.com Post A Job | Post A Resume
:Tip: Simple Regular Expressions For Reviewing Log Files
Tip: Simple Regular Expressions For Reviewing Log Files
Nov 20, 2008, 01 :33 UTC (0 Talkback[s]) (4926 reads)

(Other stories by Carla Schroder)

"So there you are with all of your Linux servers humming along happily. You have tested, tweaked, and configured until they are performing at their peak of perfection. Users are hardly whining at all. Life is good. You may relax and indulge in some nice, relaxing rounds of TuxKart. After all, you earned it.

"Except for one little remaining chore: monitoring your log files. [insert horrible alarming music of your choice here.] You're conscientious, so you know you can't just ignore the logs until there's a problem, especially for public services like Web and mail. Somewhere up in the pointy-haired suites, they may even be plotting to require you to track and analyze all sorts of server statistics.

"Not to worry, for there are many ways to implement data reduction, which is what log parsing is all about. You want to slice and dice your logs to present only the data you're interested in viewing. Unless you wish to devote your entire life to manually analyzing log files. Even if you only pay attention to logfiles when you're debugging a problem, having some tools to weed out the noise is helpful."

Complete Story

Related Stories:
How to Find duplicate copies of files Using fdupes in Ubuntu(Oct 17, 2008)
Hone Your Scripting With a Regexp Toolbox(May 23, 2007)
Speaking UNIX: !$#@*%(Oct 03, 2008)
Using Grep To Streamline Your Shell And Command Line Scripting(Aug 08, 2008)
Variable MultiLine Spacing With Sed On Linux Or Unix(Jul 08, 2008)
Bash Regular Expressions(May 28, 2008)
Regular Expressions and Search Patterns(Sep 25, 2007)



No talkbacks posted.
  Home | Search Talkbacks | Customize View    Top of Page  



Enter your comments below:

* Your Name:

* Your Email Address:

* Subject:

CC: [will also send this talkback to an E-Mail address]

* Comments:

Tags allowed:<I>,<B> and <U>. See our talkback-policy for more about talkback content.

Fields marked with * are required!

..............................




All times are recorded in UTC.
Linux is a trademark of Linus Torvalds.
Powered by Linux, Apache and PHP