Using “tail” to follow a file without displaying the most recent linesHow can I do the equivalent of tail -f with ls?Observe multiple log files in one outputMaking less's follow option show line movementtail -f but suck in content of the file first (aka `cat -f`)Using tail to follow daily log file in BashTail -f the most recent log fileOnly output most recent 10 (or n) lines of a lengthy command outputtail display whole file and then only changesFor a given directory, how do I concatenate the tail end of recently modified files to a new file?Using head and tail to grab different sets of lines and saving into same file

Different meanings of こわい

What is required to make GPS signals available indoors?

Why were 5.25" floppy drives cheaper than 8"?

How do conventional missiles fly?

What are the G forces leaving Earth orbit?

OP Amp not amplifying audio signal

What Exploit Are These User Agents Trying to Use?

What does the same-ish mean?

What is the fastest integer factorization to break RSA?

Is it "common practice in Fourier transform spectroscopy to multiply the measured interferogram by an apodizing function"? If so, why?

Finding the reason behind the value of the integral.

Send out email when Apex Queueable fails and test it

Can compressed videos be decoded back to their uncompresed original format?

files created then deleted at every second in tmp directory

Why are UK visa biometrics appointments suspended at USCIS Application Support Centers?

How seriously should I take size and weight limits of hand luggage?

Is it possible to create a QR code using text?

Fair gambler's ruin problem intuition

What is the opposite of "eschatology"?

Bullying boss launched a smear campaign and made me unemployable

Using "tail" to follow a file without displaying the most recent lines

Unlock My Phone! February 2018

How dangerous is XSS

Why is it a bad idea to hire a hitman to eliminate most corrupt politicians?



Using “tail” to follow a file without displaying the most recent lines


How can I do the equivalent of tail -f with ls?Observe multiple log files in one outputMaking less's follow option show line movementtail -f but suck in content of the file first (aka `cat -f`)Using tail to follow daily log file in BashTail -f the most recent log fileOnly output most recent 10 (or n) lines of a lengthy command outputtail display whole file and then only changesFor a given directory, how do I concatenate the tail end of recently modified files to a new file?Using head and tail to grab different sets of lines and saving into same file













2















I would like use a program like tail to follow a file as it's being written to, but not display the most recent lines.



For instance, when following a new file, no text will be displayed while the file is less than 30 lines. After more than 30 lines are written to the file, lines will be written to the screen starting at line 1.



So as lines 31-40 are written to the file, lines 1-10 will be written to the screen.



If there is no easy way to do this with tail, maybe a there's a way to write to a new file a prior line from the first file each time the first file is extended by a line, and the tail that new file...










share|improve this question







New contributor




ridthyself is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
























    2















    I would like use a program like tail to follow a file as it's being written to, but not display the most recent lines.



    For instance, when following a new file, no text will be displayed while the file is less than 30 lines. After more than 30 lines are written to the file, lines will be written to the screen starting at line 1.



    So as lines 31-40 are written to the file, lines 1-10 will be written to the screen.



    If there is no easy way to do this with tail, maybe a there's a way to write to a new file a prior line from the first file each time the first file is extended by a line, and the tail that new file...










    share|improve this question







    New contributor




    ridthyself is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
    Check out our Code of Conduct.






















      2












      2








      2


      1






      I would like use a program like tail to follow a file as it's being written to, but not display the most recent lines.



      For instance, when following a new file, no text will be displayed while the file is less than 30 lines. After more than 30 lines are written to the file, lines will be written to the screen starting at line 1.



      So as lines 31-40 are written to the file, lines 1-10 will be written to the screen.



      If there is no easy way to do this with tail, maybe a there's a way to write to a new file a prior line from the first file each time the first file is extended by a line, and the tail that new file...










      share|improve this question







      New contributor




      ridthyself is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.












      I would like use a program like tail to follow a file as it's being written to, but not display the most recent lines.



      For instance, when following a new file, no text will be displayed while the file is less than 30 lines. After more than 30 lines are written to the file, lines will be written to the screen starting at line 1.



      So as lines 31-40 are written to the file, lines 1-10 will be written to the screen.



      If there is no easy way to do this with tail, maybe a there's a way to write to a new file a prior line from the first file each time the first file is extended by a line, and the tail that new file...







      linux command-line tail






      share|improve this question







      New contributor




      ridthyself is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.











      share|improve this question







      New contributor




      ridthyself is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.









      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question






      New contributor




      ridthyself is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.









      asked 3 hours ago









      ridthyselfridthyself

      111




      111




      New contributor




      ridthyself is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.





      New contributor





      ridthyself is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.






      ridthyself is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.




















          3 Answers
          3






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          2














          Maybe buffer with awk:



          tail -n +0 -f some/file | awk 'b[NR] = $0 NR > 30 print b[NR-30]; delete b[NR-30] END for (i = NR - 29; i <= NR; i++) print b[i]'


          The awk code, expanded:




          b[NR] = $0 # save the current line in a buffer array

          NR > 30 # once we have more than 30 lines
          print b[NR-30]; # print the line from 30 lines ago
          delete b[NR-30]; # and delete it

          END # once the pipe closes, print the rest
          for (i = NR - 29; i <= NR; i++)
          print b[i]






          share|improve this answer

























          • This works, but form the script I would expect it to work like tail, printing out a previous line as each new line is added to the file. Instead it prints out in spurts of ~70 lines after ~100 lines are added to the file. It does not print the most recent 30 lines, so it's pretty close...

            – ridthyself
            1 hour ago











          • @ridthyself if you have GNU awk, try adding a fflush(); after the print b[NR-30];. Maybe the output is being buffered.

            – muru
            1 hour ago











          • @ridthyself, your awk must be mawk, Try switching to gawk or pass the -W interactive option.

            – Stéphane Chazelas
            27 mins ago


















          1














          This isn't very efficient, because it will re-read the file every two seconds, but will do the job:



          watch 'tail -n40 /path/to/file | head -n10'





          share|improve this answer






























            0














            Same as @muru's but using the modulo operator instead of storing and deleting:



            tail -fn+1 some/file | awk -v n=30 '
            NR > n print s[NR % n]
            s[NR % n] = $0
            ENDfor (i = NR - n + 1; i <= NR; i++) print s[i % n]'





            share|improve this answer























              Your Answer








              StackExchange.ready(function()
              var channelOptions =
              tags: "".split(" "),
              id: "106"
              ;
              initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

              StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
              // Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
              if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
              StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
              createEditor();
              );

              else
              createEditor();

              );

              function createEditor()
              StackExchange.prepareEditor(
              heartbeatType: 'answer',
              autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
              convertImagesToLinks: false,
              noModals: true,
              showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
              reputationToPostImages: null,
              bindNavPrevention: true,
              postfix: "",
              imageUploader:
              brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
              contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
              allowUrls: true
              ,
              onDemand: true,
              discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
              ,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
              );



              );






              ridthyself is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.









              draft saved

              draft discarded


















              StackExchange.ready(
              function ()
              StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2funix.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f510178%2fusing-tail-to-follow-a-file-without-displaying-the-most-recent-lines%23new-answer', 'question_page');

              );

              Post as a guest















              Required, but never shown

























              3 Answers
              3






              active

              oldest

              votes








              3 Answers
              3






              active

              oldest

              votes









              active

              oldest

              votes






              active

              oldest

              votes









              2














              Maybe buffer with awk:



              tail -n +0 -f some/file | awk 'b[NR] = $0 NR > 30 print b[NR-30]; delete b[NR-30] END for (i = NR - 29; i <= NR; i++) print b[i]'


              The awk code, expanded:




              b[NR] = $0 # save the current line in a buffer array

              NR > 30 # once we have more than 30 lines
              print b[NR-30]; # print the line from 30 lines ago
              delete b[NR-30]; # and delete it

              END # once the pipe closes, print the rest
              for (i = NR - 29; i <= NR; i++)
              print b[i]






              share|improve this answer

























              • This works, but form the script I would expect it to work like tail, printing out a previous line as each new line is added to the file. Instead it prints out in spurts of ~70 lines after ~100 lines are added to the file. It does not print the most recent 30 lines, so it's pretty close...

                – ridthyself
                1 hour ago











              • @ridthyself if you have GNU awk, try adding a fflush(); after the print b[NR-30];. Maybe the output is being buffered.

                – muru
                1 hour ago











              • @ridthyself, your awk must be mawk, Try switching to gawk or pass the -W interactive option.

                – Stéphane Chazelas
                27 mins ago















              2














              Maybe buffer with awk:



              tail -n +0 -f some/file | awk 'b[NR] = $0 NR > 30 print b[NR-30]; delete b[NR-30] END for (i = NR - 29; i <= NR; i++) print b[i]'


              The awk code, expanded:




              b[NR] = $0 # save the current line in a buffer array

              NR > 30 # once we have more than 30 lines
              print b[NR-30]; # print the line from 30 lines ago
              delete b[NR-30]; # and delete it

              END # once the pipe closes, print the rest
              for (i = NR - 29; i <= NR; i++)
              print b[i]






              share|improve this answer

























              • This works, but form the script I would expect it to work like tail, printing out a previous line as each new line is added to the file. Instead it prints out in spurts of ~70 lines after ~100 lines are added to the file. It does not print the most recent 30 lines, so it's pretty close...

                – ridthyself
                1 hour ago











              • @ridthyself if you have GNU awk, try adding a fflush(); after the print b[NR-30];. Maybe the output is being buffered.

                – muru
                1 hour ago











              • @ridthyself, your awk must be mawk, Try switching to gawk or pass the -W interactive option.

                – Stéphane Chazelas
                27 mins ago













              2












              2








              2







              Maybe buffer with awk:



              tail -n +0 -f some/file | awk 'b[NR] = $0 NR > 30 print b[NR-30]; delete b[NR-30] END for (i = NR - 29; i <= NR; i++) print b[i]'


              The awk code, expanded:




              b[NR] = $0 # save the current line in a buffer array

              NR > 30 # once we have more than 30 lines
              print b[NR-30]; # print the line from 30 lines ago
              delete b[NR-30]; # and delete it

              END # once the pipe closes, print the rest
              for (i = NR - 29; i <= NR; i++)
              print b[i]






              share|improve this answer















              Maybe buffer with awk:



              tail -n +0 -f some/file | awk 'b[NR] = $0 NR > 30 print b[NR-30]; delete b[NR-30] END for (i = NR - 29; i <= NR; i++) print b[i]'


              The awk code, expanded:




              b[NR] = $0 # save the current line in a buffer array

              NR > 30 # once we have more than 30 lines
              print b[NR-30]; # print the line from 30 lines ago
              delete b[NR-30]; # and delete it

              END # once the pipe closes, print the rest
              for (i = NR - 29; i <= NR; i++)
              print b[i]







              share|improve this answer














              share|improve this answer



              share|improve this answer








              edited 1 hour ago

























              answered 2 hours ago









              murumuru

              36.8k589163




              36.8k589163












              • This works, but form the script I would expect it to work like tail, printing out a previous line as each new line is added to the file. Instead it prints out in spurts of ~70 lines after ~100 lines are added to the file. It does not print the most recent 30 lines, so it's pretty close...

                – ridthyself
                1 hour ago











              • @ridthyself if you have GNU awk, try adding a fflush(); after the print b[NR-30];. Maybe the output is being buffered.

                – muru
                1 hour ago











              • @ridthyself, your awk must be mawk, Try switching to gawk or pass the -W interactive option.

                – Stéphane Chazelas
                27 mins ago

















              • This works, but form the script I would expect it to work like tail, printing out a previous line as each new line is added to the file. Instead it prints out in spurts of ~70 lines after ~100 lines are added to the file. It does not print the most recent 30 lines, so it's pretty close...

                – ridthyself
                1 hour ago











              • @ridthyself if you have GNU awk, try adding a fflush(); after the print b[NR-30];. Maybe the output is being buffered.

                – muru
                1 hour ago











              • @ridthyself, your awk must be mawk, Try switching to gawk or pass the -W interactive option.

                – Stéphane Chazelas
                27 mins ago
















              This works, but form the script I would expect it to work like tail, printing out a previous line as each new line is added to the file. Instead it prints out in spurts of ~70 lines after ~100 lines are added to the file. It does not print the most recent 30 lines, so it's pretty close...

              – ridthyself
              1 hour ago





              This works, but form the script I would expect it to work like tail, printing out a previous line as each new line is added to the file. Instead it prints out in spurts of ~70 lines after ~100 lines are added to the file. It does not print the most recent 30 lines, so it's pretty close...

              – ridthyself
              1 hour ago













              @ridthyself if you have GNU awk, try adding a fflush(); after the print b[NR-30];. Maybe the output is being buffered.

              – muru
              1 hour ago





              @ridthyself if you have GNU awk, try adding a fflush(); after the print b[NR-30];. Maybe the output is being buffered.

              – muru
              1 hour ago













              @ridthyself, your awk must be mawk, Try switching to gawk or pass the -W interactive option.

              – Stéphane Chazelas
              27 mins ago





              @ridthyself, your awk must be mawk, Try switching to gawk or pass the -W interactive option.

              – Stéphane Chazelas
              27 mins ago













              1














              This isn't very efficient, because it will re-read the file every two seconds, but will do the job:



              watch 'tail -n40 /path/to/file | head -n10'





              share|improve this answer



























                1














                This isn't very efficient, because it will re-read the file every two seconds, but will do the job:



                watch 'tail -n40 /path/to/file | head -n10'





                share|improve this answer

























                  1












                  1








                  1







                  This isn't very efficient, because it will re-read the file every two seconds, but will do the job:



                  watch 'tail -n40 /path/to/file | head -n10'





                  share|improve this answer













                  This isn't very efficient, because it will re-read the file every two seconds, but will do the job:



                  watch 'tail -n40 /path/to/file | head -n10'






                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered 2 hours ago









                  l0b0l0b0

                  28.7k19121249




                  28.7k19121249





















                      0














                      Same as @muru's but using the modulo operator instead of storing and deleting:



                      tail -fn+1 some/file | awk -v n=30 '
                      NR > n print s[NR % n]
                      s[NR % n] = $0
                      ENDfor (i = NR - n + 1; i <= NR; i++) print s[i % n]'





                      share|improve this answer



























                        0














                        Same as @muru's but using the modulo operator instead of storing and deleting:



                        tail -fn+1 some/file | awk -v n=30 '
                        NR > n print s[NR % n]
                        s[NR % n] = $0
                        ENDfor (i = NR - n + 1; i <= NR; i++) print s[i % n]'





                        share|improve this answer

























                          0












                          0








                          0







                          Same as @muru's but using the modulo operator instead of storing and deleting:



                          tail -fn+1 some/file | awk -v n=30 '
                          NR > n print s[NR % n]
                          s[NR % n] = $0
                          ENDfor (i = NR - n + 1; i <= NR; i++) print s[i % n]'





                          share|improve this answer













                          Same as @muru's but using the modulo operator instead of storing and deleting:



                          tail -fn+1 some/file | awk -v n=30 '
                          NR > n print s[NR % n]
                          s[NR % n] = $0
                          ENDfor (i = NR - n + 1; i <= NR; i++) print s[i % n]'






                          share|improve this answer












                          share|improve this answer



                          share|improve this answer










                          answered 29 mins ago









                          Stéphane ChazelasStéphane Chazelas

                          312k57592948




                          312k57592948




















                              ridthyself is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.









                              draft saved

                              draft discarded


















                              ridthyself is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.












                              ridthyself is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.











                              ridthyself is a new contributor. Be nice, and check out our Code of Conduct.














                              Thanks for contributing an answer to Unix & Linux Stack Exchange!


                              • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

                              But avoid


                              • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

                              • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.

                              To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




                              draft saved


                              draft discarded














                              StackExchange.ready(
                              function ()
                              StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2funix.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f510178%2fusing-tail-to-follow-a-file-without-displaying-the-most-recent-lines%23new-answer', 'question_page');

                              );

                              Post as a guest















                              Required, but never shown





















































                              Required, but never shown














                              Required, but never shown












                              Required, but never shown







                              Required, but never shown

































                              Required, but never shown














                              Required, but never shown












                              Required, but never shown







                              Required, but never shown







                              Popular posts from this blog

                              Log på Navigationsmenu

                              Wonderful Copenhagen (sang) Eksterne henvisninger | NavigationsmenurSide på frankloesser.comWonderful Copenhagen

                              Detroit Tigers Spis treści Historia | Skład zespołu | Sukcesy | Członkowie Baseball Hall of Fame | Zastrzeżone numery | Przypisy | Menu nawigacyjneEncyclopedia of Detroit - Detroit TigersTigers Stadium, Detroit, MITigers Timeline 1900sDetroit Tigers Team History & EncyclopediaTigers Timeline 1910s1935 World Series1945 World Series1945 World Series1984 World SeriesComerica Park, Detroit, MI2006 World Series2012 World SeriesDetroit Tigers 40-Man RosterDetroit Tigers Coaching StaffTigers Hall of FamersTigers Retired Numberse