forked from acaudwell/Logstalgia
-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 0
replay or stream website access logs as a retro arcade game
License
geekybeaver/Logstalgia
Folders and files
Name | Name | Last commit message | Last commit date | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Repository files navigation
Logstalgia a website access log visualisation tool Copyright (C) 2008 Andrew Caudwell http://code.google.com/p/logstalgia/ Contents ======== 1. Description 2. Requirements 3. Using Logstalgia 4. Copyright 1. Description ============== Logstalgia is a visualization tool that replays or streams web server access logs as a retro arcade game simulation. 2. Requirements =============== Logstalgia's display is rendered using OpenGL and requires a 3D accelerated video card to run. Logstalgia supports several standardized access.log formats used by web servers such as Apache and Nginx (see 'Supported Log Formats' below). As Logstalgia is designed to playback logs in real time you will need a log from a fairly busy webserver to achieve interesting results (eg 100s of requests each minute). 3. Using Logstalgia =================== logstalgia [options] logfile options: -f Fullscreen. -WxH Set the window size. If -f is also supplied, will attempt to set the video mode to this also. Add ! to make the window non-resizable. -b, --background FFFFFF Background colour in hex. -x, --full-hostnames Show full request ip/hostname. -s, --simulation-speed Simulation speed. Defaults to 1 (1 second-per-second). -p, --pitch-speed Speed balls travel across the screen (defaults to 0.15). -u, --update-rate Page Summary update speed. Defaults to 5 (5 seconds). -g name,(HOST|URI|CODE)=regex,percent[,colour] Creates a new named summarizer group for requests for which a specified attribute (HOST, URI or response CODE) matches a regular expression. Percent specifies a vertical percentage of screen to use. A colour may optionally be supplied in hexadecimal format (eg FF0000 for red) which will be applied to all labels and request balls matched to the group. Examples: -g "HTML,URI=html?$,30" -g "Lan,HOST=^192,30" -g "Success,CODE=^[23],30" If no groups are specified, the default groups are Images (image files), CSS (.css files) and Scripts (.js files). If there is enough space remaining a catch-all group 'Misc' will appear as the last group. --paddle-mode MODE Paddle mode (pid, vhost, single). vhost - separate paddle for each virtual host in the log file. pid - separate paddle for each process id in the log file. single - single paddle (the default). --paddle-position POSITION Paddle position as a fraction of the view width (0.25 - 0.75). --sync Read from STDIN, ignoring entries before the current time. --from, --to 'YYYY-MM-DD hh:mm:ss +tz' Show entries from a specific time period. If a time zone offset isn't specified the local time zone is used. Example accepted formats: "2012-06-30" "2012-06-30 12:00" "2012-06-30 12:00:00 +12" --start-position POSITION Begin at some position in the log file (between 0.0 and 1.0). --stop-position POSITION Stop at some position. --no-bounce No bouncing. --hide-response-code Hide response code. --hide-paddle Hide paddle. --hide-paddle-tokens Hide paddle tokens shown in multi-paddle modes. --hide-url-prefix Hide URL protocol and hostname prefix of requests. --disable-auto-skip Disable automatic skipping of empty time periods. --disable-progress Disable the progress bar. --disable-glow Disable the glow effect. --font-size SIZE Font size (10 - 40). --glow-duration Duration of the glow (between 0.0 and 1.0). --glow-multiplier Adjust the amount of glow. --glow-intensity Intensity of the glow. -o, --output-ppm-stream FILE Write frames as PPM to a file (?-? for STDOUT). -r, --output-framerate FPS Framerate of output (used with --output-ppm-stream). --load-config CONFIG_FILE Load a config file. --save-config CONFIG_FILE Save a config file with the current options. logfile The path to the access log file to read or '-' if you wish to supply log entries via STDIN. Examples: Watch an example access.log file using the default settings: logstalgia data/example.log Watch the live access.log, starting from the most recent batch of entries in the log (requires tail). Note than '-' at the end is required for logstalgia to know it needs to read from STDIN: tail -f /var/log/apache2/access.log | logstalgia - To follow the log in real time, use the --sync option. This will start reading from the next entry received on STDIN: tail -f /var/log/apache2/access.log | logstalgia --sync Watch a remote access.log via ssh: ssh user@example.com tail -f /var/log/apache2/access.log | logstalgia --sync Supported Log Formats: Logstalgia supports the following standardized log formats used by web servers like Apache and Nginx: NCSA Common Log Format (CLF) "%h %l %u %t \"%r\" %>s %b" NCSA Common Log Format with Virtual Host "%v %h %l %u %t \"%r\" %>s %b" NCSA extended/combined log format "%h %l %u %t \"%r\" %>s %b \"%{Referer}i\" \"%{User-agent}i\"" NCSA extended/combined log format with Virtual Host "%v %h %l %u %t \"%r\" %>s %b \"%{Referer}i\" \"%{User-agent}i\"" The process id (%P), or some other identifier, may be included as an additional field at the end of the entry. This can be used with '--paddle-mode pid' where a separate paddle will be created for each unique value in this field. Custom Log Format: Logstalgia now supports a pipe ('|') delimited custom log file format: timestamp - unix timestamp of the request date. hostname - hostname of the request path - path requested response_code - the response code from the webserver (eg 200) response_size - the size of the response in bytes The following are optional: success - 1 or 0 to indicate if successful response_colour - response colour in hexidecial (#FFFFFF) format referrer url - the referrer url user agent - the user agent virtual host - the virtual host (to use with --paddle-mode vhost) pid - process id or some other identifier (--paddle-mode pid) If success or response_colour are not provided, they will be derived from the response_code using the normal HTTP conventions (code < 400 = success). Recording Videos: See the guide on the homepage for examples of recording videos with Logstalgia: http://code.google.com/p/logstalgia/wiki/Videos Interface: The time shown in the top left of the screen is set initially from the first log entry read and is incremented according to the simulation speed (-s). The counter in the bottom right hand corner shows the number of requests displayed since the start of the current session. Pressing space at any time will pause/unpause the simulation. While paused you may use the mouse to inspect the detail of individual requests. Interactive keyboard commands: (C) Displays Logstalgia logo (N) Jump forward in time to next log entry (+-) Adjust simulation speed (<>) Adjust pitch speed (F12) Screenshot (Alt+Enter) Fullscreen toggle (ESC) Quit 4. Copyright ============ Logstalgia - web server access log visualization Copyright (C) 2008 Andrew Caudwell <acaudwell@gmail.com> This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
About
replay or stream website access logs as a retro arcade game
Resources
License
Stars
Watchers
Forks
Packages 0
No packages published