Provided by: xwatch_2.11-16.1build1_amd64 

XWatch
The Logfiles Watcher"
Karel Kubat (karel@icce.rug.nl)
State University of Groningen
Westerhaven 16, 9718 AW Groningen
The Netherlands"
1996
Chapter 1: Introduction
XWatch is a small program that I wrote to monitor logfiles and to see any changes directly (instead of
having to read all the logs after a breakin or a crash). XWatch is simply started with a few file
arguments, and any information that appears on the files is displayed. With a slider you can see past
information; i.e., lines that scroll in xwatch’s window. That’s all there is to it. The appearance of the
xwatch window can furthermore be modified via command line flags or via an application defaults file.
(Older versions of XWatch had a button to activate an `options’ window. I removed this code, almost
no-one uses it.)
XWatch is incidentally my first applications with the XForms GUI library for X, which I can highly
recommend for developers who want to start `X programming’ but who don’t want to go through the hassle of
having to learn about intrinsics. XForms is really excellent. Congrats, T.C. Zhao and Mark Overmars (the
latter is rumored to bootleg at a soccer club in his free time ;). Instructions on where and how to get
the XForms library are in the Makefile, contained in xwatch’s distribution.
Debian maintainer note: XWatch doesn’t have an active upstream maintainer. If you are interested in
taking over this package, please see the file /usr/share/doc/xwatch/README.debian
Chapter 2: Using xwatch
You typically start xwatch when activating an X session; e.g., from the file which xdm uses to fire up a
user’s session (this file is normally /usr/X11/lib/X11/xdm/Xsession). The command that starts xwatch is
something like
xwatch [options] files &
where `options’ are optional flags, files are the files to watch, and the ampersand character is used to
start xwatch in the background. The files to watch are typically in the directory /var/adm/: files which
are created by the syslog daemon (see the file syslogd.conf.SAMPLE in the distribution for an example).
XWatch accepts only filenames which are:
startit()
o ordinary files, no sockets, directory names,
o which are not binary files.
endit()
Other files as stated on the commandline are not monitored. When any `non-proper’ file is given on the
commandline, xwatch warns about the file not being acceptable and deletes it from its list of names.
2.1: Options to the xwatch program
The options are many, start xwatch without arguments to see what is supported. All options can also be
stated in the file /usr/lib/X11/app-defaults/XWatch as X resources (see the file XWatch.ap as an
example). In the following enumeration, a nr denotes a number:
startit()
o -border nr: Specifies whether xwatch should start with a border. The nr must be 0 or 1. When you
start xwatch without a border, your window manager may not be able to resize or even recognize it.
Incidentally, this may be what you want -- I use it to `hide’ the presence of xwatch from my
window manager fvwm.
o -geometry geom: Specifies the display geometry, a-la other X programs. You can express the
geometry in terms of WxH (width by height), optionally postfixed by +X+Y (x and y offset) or -X-Y
(offsets relative to the lower right corner) and other combinations.
Note that previous switches that emulated the geometry specification, such as -xpos and -height, are now
obsolete. Use the geometry setting.
o -fg color and -bg color: These options define the default foreground and background of the watch
window.
Note that previous switches, such as -bred and -bblue, are now obsolete.
o -printtime nr: Defines whether xwatch should prefix any info on the watched files with a
timestamp. The nr can be 0 or zero; the timestamp is printed when nr is 1.
o -printname nr: Defines whether xwatch should prefix any info on the watched files with the
filename. The nr is again a flag, 0 or 1.
o -newline nr: Defines whether xwatch should let a newline follow the time and/or filename stamp, so
that the actual information is displayed on its own line.
o -interval nr: Defines the scanning interval. Each nr seconds, xwatch will check if new
information has arrived on the watched files. The nr may be between 1 and 30 seconds.
o -fontsize nr: Defines the initial size of the display font. The nr may range from 1 to 4; 1 being
the smallest font and 4 being the largest.
o -fontstyle nr: Defines the style of the used font. The nr is a number between 0 and 15 (0 being
the default). Start xwatch without arguments or read the application defaults file to see what
fonts the numbers choose.
o -firstwarnings nr: Defines whether xwatch should print initial warnings into the watch window.
E.g., you might like to set firstwarnings to zero, and then start xwatch with the file argument
/var/adm/*. Warnings about, e.g., utmp being a binary file would then be suppressed.
o -printversion nr: Controls whether xwatch prints its version number and copyright notice upon
startup in the watch window.
o -gag text: This option, when present, prevents all lines with text in them from being shown in the
display window. You can specify more than one string to `gag’, in that case, separate the strings
with |.
o -colorstring col:string: This option causes lines that contain string to be displayed using the
specified color. The string is matched literally. E.g., if you use the option -colorstring
blue:connection then all lines containing connection are displayed in pure blue.
You can specify several colorstrings by separating all options with a | character, as in -colorstring
blue:connection|red:error. Note that, for reasons of shell expansion, you should quote such options on
the commandline.
o -title name: This option sets the window title of the watch window. Note that the title will only
be visible when border is not 0. This option may be useful if you have several XWatch windows,
monitoring different things.
o -ignore fileA|fileB|fileC|...: This option is handy if you start XWatch with a wildcard file
argument, but when you want XWatch not to process some files. The -ignore flag removes the stated
files from the watchlist. Note that, for reasons of shell commandline expansion, you must quote
the file specification (or the shell will interpret the | characters as pipes). (Thanks, Frank
Brokken, frank@icce.rug.nl for the code).
endit()
Debian Maintainer’s note: Applications defaults are stored in /etc/X11/app-defaults/XWatch . System
adminitrators who want to customize xwatch globally may also create a file /etc/X11/Xresources/xwatch for
these configurations by prefixing the entries with Xwatch (see /usr/share/doc/xwatch/README.Debian for
an example). Individual users can make the same types of changes in their ~/.Xdefaults or ~/.Xresources
files.
Before you extensively use the options, create an application defaults file
/usr/lib/X11/app-defaults/XWatch. You can do so by copying the file XWatch.ap, extracted from the
archive, to /usr/lib/X11/app-defaults/XWatch. The comments in the distributed application defaults file
explain what you can configure and show examples.
Some systems do not have the directory /usr/lib/X11/app-defaults. In that case, you should create the
following links:
startit()
o /usr/X11 should point to your X11 distribution; e.g. to /usr/X11R6. That way, you always have
e.g. /usr/X11/bin, even after upgrading your X11 distribution. All that is needed is one new
link.
o /usr/lib/X11 should point to /usr/X11/lib/X11.
endit()
Then edit the file XWatch in the application defaults directory, and follow the instructions therein to
define your favorite settings. If you need to start xwatch incidentally with another setting, use a
flag.
2.2: File arguments
The filename arguments can optionally be followed by a color specification that applies only to that
particular file. E.g., say you want to see all the files in /var/adm normally in blue text; but you want
to see /var/adm/critical (critical messages from applications) in yellow and /var/adm/auth
(authentification messages) in red. In that case, the course to follow would be:
startit()
o The default foreground color would be blue. You could set this with the flags -fg blue, or in the
application defaults file.
o The color for /var/adm/critical should be yellow. Hence, the first file argument would be
/var/adm/critical:yellow.
o The color for file /var/adm/auth should be red, hence the second file argument would be
/var/adm/auth:red.
o The following arguments would be the files, using the standard foreground (blue): /var/adm/*,
without any extra color specifications.
endit()
Such a commandline would cause xwatch to complain about the multiple presence of /var/adm/critical (once
from the separate argument, and once from the wildcard argument) and similarly about /var/adm/auth. If
this bothers you, turn off the initial warnings (e.g., using -firstwarnings 0 or in the application
defaults file).
Note that besides the color specifications for filenames, you can also specify coloring for lines that
match a given string in all files. See the above description of the switch -colorstring for more
information.
Chapter 3: Obtaining xwatch
XWatch can be obtained at the ftp site ftp.icce.rug.nl, in the directory /pub/unix, as the file
xwatch-X.YY.tar.gz. X.YY is the version number, e.g., 1.00. This site is the primary site, so check here
for new versions.
To unpack the archive, change-dir to your `sources’ directory (e.g., /usr/local/src) and type
tar xvzf /where/ever/you/put/it/xwatch-X.YY.tar.gz
Next, change-dir to the unpacked subdirectory xwatch and check there. You will find a subdirectory src
with the full sources.
Chapter 4: Compiling xwatch
Follow these steps.
startit()
o You will need the XForms library and include files to compile xwatch. Check the Makefile in the
src subdirectory for two ftp sites that carry XForms for Linux. Obtain the library and install it.
XWatch will happily run with XForms version 0.81 or 0.88.
o In the src subdirectory, edit the Makefile and adjust some defines at the top. E.g., a make
install copies the binary by default to /usr/local/X11/bin; adjust that if you don’t like this
behavior.
o Next, do a make install, followed by a make clean.
o Copy the file XWatch.ap from the source directory to /usr/lib/X11/app-defaults/XWatch. Edit the
file and state your favorite settings.
o Next, start the program xwatch with some file arguments in your logfiles directory. If you’re
satisfied with the appearance and workings of xwatch, add the invocation to your script that
starts an X session.
endit()
Chapter 5: Copyright
XWatch - a tool to monitor logfiles and display new logs in an X window. Copyright (C) 1995 Karel Kubat.
All rights reserved.
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 2 of the License, or
(at your option) any later version.
You may link this software with XForms (Copyright (C) by T.C. Zhao and Mark Overmars) and distribute the
resulting binary, under the restrictions in clause 3 of the GPL, even though the resulting binary is not,
as a whole, covered by the GPL. (You still need a separate license to do so from the owner (s) of the
copyright for XForms, however). If a derivative no longer requires XForms, you may use the
unsupplemented GPL as its license by deleting this paragraph and therefore removing this exemption for
XForms.
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, write to the Free Software
Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307 USA
XWatch ()