NAME
File::Tail - Perl extension for reading from continously updated files
SYNOPSIS
use File::Tail;
$file=File::Tail->new("/some/log/file");
while (defined($line=$file->read)) {
print "$line";
}
use File::Tail;
$file=File::Tail->new(name=>$name, maxinterval=>300, adjustafter=>7);
while (defined($line=$file->read)) {
print "$line";
}
Note that the above script will never exit. If there is nothing being written to the file, it will simply block.
DESCRIPTION
The primary purpose of File::Tail is reading and analysing log files while they are being written, which is especialy usefull if you are monitoring the logging process with a tool like Tobias Oetiker's MRTG.
The module tries very hard NOT to "busy-wait" on a file that has little traffic. Any time it reads new data from the file, it counts the number of new lines, and divides that number by the time that passed since data were last written to the file before that. That is considered the average time before new data will be written. When there is no new data to read, File::Tail
sleeps for that number of seconds. Thereafter, the waiting time is recomputed dynamicaly. Note that File::Tail
never sleeps for more than the number of seconds set by maxinterval
.
Note that the sleep and time used are from Time::HiRes, so this module should do the right thing even if the time to sleep is less than one second.
The logwatch script (also included) demonstrates several ways of calling the methods.
CONSTRUCTOR
new ([ ARGS ])
Creates a File::Tail
. If it has only one paramter, it is assumed to be the filename. If the open fails, the module performs a croak. I am currently looking for a way to set $! and return undef.
You can pass several parameters to new:
- name
-
This is the name of the file to open. The file will be opened for reading. This must be a regular file, not a pipe or a terminal (i.e. it must be seekable).
- maxinterval
-
The maximum number of seconds (real number) that will be spent sleeping. Default is 60, meaning
File::Tail
will never spend more than sixty seconds without checking the file. - interval
-
The initial number of seconds (real number) that will be spent sleeping, before the file is first checked. Default is ten seconds, meaning
File::Tail
will sleep for 10 seconds and then determine, how many new lines have appeared in the file. - adjustafter
-
The number of
times
File::Tail
waits for the current interval, before adjusting the interval upwards. The default is 10. - resetafter
-
The number of seconds after last change when
File::Tail
decides the file may have been closed and reopened. The default is adjustafter*maxinterval. - nowait
-
Does not block on read, but returns an empty string if there is nothing to read. DO NOT USE THIS unless you know what you are doing. If you are using it in a loop, you probably DON'T know what you are doing. If you want to read tails from multiple files, use select.
- debug
-
Set to nonzero if you want to see more about the inner workings of File::Tail. Otherwise not useful.
- errmode
-
Modeled after the methods from Net:Telnet, here you decide how the errors should be handled. The parameter can be a code reference which is called with the error string as a parameter, an array with a code reference as the first parameter and other parameters to be passed to handler subroutine, or one of the words:
return - ignore any error (just put error message in errmsg). warn - output the error message but continue die - display error message and exit
Default is die.
METHODS
read
read
returns one line from the input file. If there are no lines ready, it blocks until there are.
TO BE DONE
The next version will support some form of "select" call, which will make it possible to read from several File::Tail files at once, as well as reading from sockets and File::Tail files without polling.
Also planned for 0.8: tail -n
functionality, using $/ instead of \n to separate "lines" (which should make it possible to read wtmp type files).
Tests should be devised and put into test.pl.
AUTHOR
Matija Grabnar, matija.grabnar@arnes.si
SEE ALSO
perl(1), tail (1), MRTG
(http://ee-staff.ethz.ch/~oetiker/webtools/mrtg/mrtg.html)