(C) Kenneth Falck <kennu@iki.fi> 2015-2016
This is a simple tool for viewing Amazon AWS CloudWatch Logs on the command line.
CloudWatch Logs are stored in a simple hierarchy:
Log Group
+-- Log Stream
+-- Record
Record
When you specify the log group, cwtail will attempt to read the latest log streams in that group, and then outputs their latest records. If the -f option is specified, cwtail then waits forever for more log records (or log streams) to appear and outputs them.
Assuming that you have already installed and configured AWS CLI previously, you can start using cwtail immediately with no configuration:
npm install -g cwtail
cwtail -l
The -l option will list all existing log groups. Assuming you have a Lambda function that writes logs to the /aws/lambda/MyFunction log group, you can start tailing the logs with the following command:
cwtail -f /aws/lambda/MyFunction
The command will show the last 30 log records and then wait for more to appear. If you invoke your Lambda function again, you should see more output within ~10 seconds.
By default, cwtail outputs only the plain log messages in chronological order. You can use some additional options to show extra information.
Use the -s option to output the CloudWatch log stream names in between log records, whenever a new log stream is shown:
cwtail -sf /aws/lambda/MyFunction
Use the -t option to output timestamps in front of each log record:
cwtail -tf /aws/lambda/MyFunction
Use the -n option to specify how many log records should be initially shown:
cwtail -n 1 -f /aws/lambda/MyFunction
The easiest way to configure cwtail is to install AWS CLI (https://aws.amazon.com/cli/) and configure it. The configuration is stored in ~/.aws and will be automatically used.
If you use multiple AWS profiles to access multiple AWS accounts, you can specify the profile with the AWS_PROFILE environment variable or with the -p option:
cwtail -p myprofile -f /aws/lambda/MyFunction