On Sun 31 May 2026 at 10:49:16 (-0700), AC wrote:
> On 2026-05-31 05:15, Darac Marjal wrote:
> > On 24/05/2026 19:49, AC wrote:
> > > Do any of you use Multitail to monitor your logs? Have you
> > > ever seen it randomly close some or all of the files you're
> > > monitoring for no apparent reason?
> > > 
> > > Every one of my Debian installs does this randomly and I can't
> > > seem to figure out why. The program itself continues to run
> > > but all the windows/files within it close. This isn't
> > > happening on one Redhat machine that I use which uses the same
> > > Multitail configurations.
> > > 
> > > I may have to resort to using just screen/tmux and custom
> > > scripts. But I like Multitail because I can customize things
> > > like highlighting in color or filtering unneeded text so I
> > > hope I can actually fix it.
> > > 
> > I've seen this in the past year or so too, but haven't yet got
> > around to investigating. I have a script which runs (among other
> > parameters) "multitail ... -f /var/log/syslog -f /var/log/mail.log
> > -I /var/log/ dovecot.log -f /var/log/nginx/access.log". This runs
> > in tmux, so I can keep a tmux tab open and see all the logs
> > streaming past. This script used to be quite reliable, but
> > something happened a while ago and now, when I connect to tmux I
> > can occasionally find one or more of the multitail windows
> > missing. "-f" is _supposed_ to follow the filename, not the
> > descriptor so _should_ work fine with logrotate.
> > 
> > It happens only occasionally, though, so it's usually easiest to
> > just quit and restart multitail.
> > 
> 
> Mine are usually running in xterms and not using screen or tmux. It
> seems to happen at the same time every time so I'm thinking it's
> related to a log rotate or other timed event but I can't figure out
> what exactly kills it or why.

When I use tail, I use -F, not -f, and that works through log
rotations. Do you need --retry or --retry-all in multitail to
achieve the same effect?

Cheers,
David.

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