Basically I'm wondering why this doesn't output anything:
tail --follow=name file.txt | grep something | grep something_else
You can assume that it should produce output I have run another line to confirm
cat file.txt | grep something | grep something_else
It seems like you can't pipe the output of tail more than once!? Anyone know what the deal is and is there a solution?
EDIT: To answer the questions so far, the file definitely has contents that should be displayed by the grep. As evidence if the grep is done like so:
tail --follow=name file.txt | grep something
Output shows up correctly, but if this is used instead:
tail --follow=name file.txt | grep something | grep something
No output is shown.
If at all helpful I am running ubuntu 10.04
Figured out what was going on here. It turns out that the command is working it's just that the output takes a long time to reach the console (approx 120 seconds in my case). This is because the buffer on the standard out is not written each line but rather each block. So instead of getting every line from the file as it was being written I would get a giant block every 2 minutes or so.
It should be noted that this works correctly:
It is the following of the file with
--follow=name
that is problematic.For my purposes I found a way around it, what I was intending to do was capture the output of the first grep to a file, so the command would be:
A way around this is to use the
script
command like so:Script captures the output of the command and writes it to file, thus avoiding the second pipe.
This has effectively worked around the issue for me, and I have explained why the command wasn't working as I expected, problem solved.
FYI, These other stackoverflow questions are related:
Trick an application into thinking its stdin is interactive, not a pipe
Force another program's standard output to be unbuffered using Python
works for me on Mac without
--follow=name
You might also run into a problem with grep buffering when inside a pipe. ie, you don't see the output from
since grep will buffer its own output.
Use the --line-buffered switch for grep to work around this:
This is useful if you want to get the results of the follow into the output.txt file as rapidly as possible.
You do know that
tail
starts by default with the last ten lines of the file? My guess is everything thecat
version found is well into the past. Trytail -n+1 --follow=name file.txt
to start from the beginning of the file.grep pattern filename | grep pattern | grep pattern | grep pattern ......