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bgztail

Continuous tail Perl script (à la tail -f) for bgzipped files.

bgzip compression format is compatible with gzip (uses standard extensions in RFC 1952 to zip in blocks, not in a continuos stream), so bgzipped files can be uncompressed with gunzip.

Nonetheless, bgztail can only tail bgzipped files. If you want to tail generic gzip files (including bgzip files!), you can use gztool.

bgztail does not need the index file (as with bgzip -i) to be created.

Note that bgztail outputs warnings to STDERR and file contents to STDIN.

The script is compatible with Windows' Perl. A bgztail.bat demo file is provided in order to use bgztail command in MS-DOS: please, substitute complete bgztail file path inside it, and move bgztail.bat to a path on your %PATH%.

Use

bgztail [-#CfhilLv] FILE

-#: a number: tail only that number of lines, and exit.

-C: do not use colors on error/warning messages.

-f: output appended data as the file grows (like tail -f). If FILE doesn't exist yet, bgztail waits for its creation.

-h: show this help.

-i: do not print incomplete bgzip blocks: instead wait until the bgzip block (<64KiB) is complete for printing.

-l: show internal/verbose decompression processing logs.

-L: do not show neither warnings nor errors (be careful!).

-v: print version and exit.

--: (two hyphens) to allow file names beginning with '-'.

Examples

Usual case: use bgztail as a "tail -f" on a bgzip-compressed file:

$ bgztail -f /var/log/my_log.gz

or tail just some lines of it and exit (by default 10 lines):

$ bgztail /var/log/my_log.gz

If a gzip (not bgzip) file is selected, a warning is shown and the script exists. Nonetheless, bgzip compression format is compatible with gzip, so bgzipped files can be uncompressed with gunzip. But bgztail can only tail bgzipped files, because gzip implies a complete file reading to reach the tail.

$ ./bgztail.pl my_file.gz

bgztail
"my_file.gz" :

'my_file.gz' is not a valid bgzip file

To show only internals of bgzip format handling (not-contents output is always printed to STDERR):

$ bgztail -l /var/log/my_log.gz > /dev/null

bgztail -l
"/var/log/my_log.gz" :

file size = 2103546
Searching header @2070778
Header found @2081847
STATE 0 0 ; Br = 0, Fr = 21699
Reading @2081847, (18)
STATE 2 0 ; Br = 21681, Fr = 21681
Reading @2081865, (21681)
            Br = 0, Fr = 0, #blks = 1

Starting decompression @2081847

STATE 0 0 ; Br = 0, Fr = 21699
Reading @2081847, (18)
STATE 2 0 ; Br = 21681, Fr = 21681
Reading @2081865, (21681)
            Br = 0, Fr = 0, #blks = 1
waiting for input...

Notes on implementation

  • bgzip actually does not set the timestamp in gzip headers, so parsing them is quite simple for this reason (timestamp is always 0x0).

  • even incomplete (growing) bgzip blocks are supported. Even though incomplete blocks are unlikely to live growing in the wild, this can be useful to determine possible corruptions of static bgzip files (use -l parameter).

  • bgzipped-file-to-tail may not exist when running: the script will patiently wait for its creation when -f is indicated.

  • bgztail can only tail bgzipped files. If you want to tail generic gzip files (including bgzip files!), you can use gztool.

Author

circulosmeos

License

GPL v3