xtail
watches the growth of files. It's like running a "tail -f"on a bunch of files at once. You can specify both filenames and directories on the command line. If you specify a directory, it watches all the files in that directory. It will notice when new files are created (and start watching them) or when old files are deleted (and stop watching them). Original software: http://www.unicom.com/sw/xtail/
Source Files
Filename | Size | Changed | Actions |
---|---|---|---|
_service | 0000000292292 Bytes | 1656595405over 1 year ago | |
_service:tar_git:0001-Use-ISO8601-Fix-Gcc-header-U |
00000026282.57 KB | 1628785548over 2 years ago | |
_service:tar_git:0001-xtail.1-remove-SIGQUIT.patch | 0000000934934 Bytes | 1628785548over 2 years ago | |
_service:tar_git:xtail-2.1.tar.gz | 000002676926.1 KB | 1656595278over 1 year ago | |
_service:tar_git:xtail.spec | 00000027312.67 KB | 1656595278over 1 year ago | |
_service:tar_git:xtail.yaml | 00000021242.07 KB | 1656595278over 1 year ago | |
_service:tar_git:xtail_2.1-5-debian-local-changes. |
00000047524.64 KB | 1628785548over 2 years ago |