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What is the best way to find a specific string in the logs of a docker container? Let's say I want to see all requests, that are made in the "nginx" docker image that came from a ip starting with "127."

grep wont work as expected on docker logs command:

docker logs nginx | grep "127." 

It prints all logs, but does not filter the result!

6
  • The Question is: What is the best way to find a specific string in the logs of an docker container Commented Jan 11, 2016 at 15:54
  • Does docker logs send output to standard output? Because if it does then grep should work just fine. If not then it is a bit busted and you'll need to redirect standard error to standard output before filtering with grep. Commented Jan 11, 2016 at 16:17
  • 3
    check stderr et atdout, extract from github.com/docker/docker/issues/7440 $ docker run -d --name foo busybox ls abcd $ docker logs foo > stdout.log 2>stderr.log $ cat stdout.log $ cat stderr.log ls: abcd: No such file or directory Commented Jan 11, 2016 at 16:46
  • 1
    @Robse Sorry, your question was hard to get before you added that example. Looks like docker logs is hard-to-grep since it contains terminal control chars. I would grep trough the nginx log files. Commented Jan 11, 2016 at 19:09
  • wonder if you could do this with --follow so the grep keeps looping as containers are being initialized Commented Sep 1, 2019 at 20:12

12 Answers 12

451

this can happen if the container is logging to stderr, piping works only for stdout, so try:

docker logs nginx 2>&1 | grep "127." 
  • "2>&1" will tell the shell to redirect stderr to stdout
  • "|" to give the "unified" output to grep using pipe
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1 Comment

I wonder if the docker logs command itself prints to stderr instead of stdout.
44

As vim fan I prefer to use less and search with / (or ? for backwards search)

docker logs nginx 2>&1 | less 

More about vim search here

2 Comments

Or docker logs nginx |& less for a few less characters :)
As a vim fan I use docker logs nginx 2>&1 | vim - in order to make vim read from stdin.
16

Additionally, I found it usefull to highlight some terms that I'm searching for in the logs. Especially on productive installations where a lot of log output is generated. In my case I want to highlight COUNT(*) statements. But with a simple grep I can't see the entire SQL statement since it's a multi line statement. This is possible with -E switch and some regex:

For example, the following snippet search for all queries that contain COUNT(*) as well as count(*):

docker logs <containerName> -f | grep --line-buffered -i -E --color "select count\(\*\)|$" 

Some explanation:

  • docker logs -f tell docker to follow the logs, so the filter applys also to new entrys like when viewing it using tail -f
  • greps --line-buffered switch flushes the output on every line, which is required to grep in real time when docker logs -f is used
  • -E is an extended regex pattern, required to apply our pattern that allow us returning also the non matching results
  • --color highlights the matched parts (seems the default behaviour on my Ubuntu 16.04 LTS, but maybe not on other distributions, so I included it here to be safe)
  • * is escaped to disable its special glob functionality, where (, and ) are masked to avoid their regex meaning as group, which is enabled by -E switch

If the container logs to stderr, you can pipe them as Edoardo already wrote for a simple grep:

docker logs <containerName> -f 2>&1 | grep --line-buffered -i -E --color "select count\(\*\)|$" 

The -f switch could be omitted if no live grep is wanted. In both cases, you see the entire log buth with highlighted search term like this:

enter image description here

Comments

16

you can use these:

  1. On all shells:
    docker logs nginx 2>&1 | grep "127." 
  2. Only on newer versions of bash works:
    docker logs nginx | &> grep "127" 

What is this syntax?

  • Standard input (0)
  • Standard output (1)
  • Standard error (2)

The > operator actually defaults to using 1 as the file descriptor number, which is why we don't need to specify 1> to redirect standard output: (date 1> now.txt = date > now.txt)

all together

We can redirect multiple streams at once! In this example, we are concatenating two files, redirecting standard output to a file called insects.txt, and redirecting standard error to a file called error.txt.

cat bees.txt ants.txt > insects.txt 2> error.txt 
getting fancy

If we wanted to redirect both standard output and standard error to the same file, we could do ls docs > output.txt 2> output.txt

Or we could instead use 2>&1 which is a fancy syntax for saying "redirect standard error to the same location as standard output.

ls docs > output.txt 2>&1 
getting fancier

Newer versions of bash also support a fancier syntax for redirecting both standard output and standard error to the same file: the &> notation

ls docs &> output.txt 

Comments

14
docker logs <container_name> 2>&1 | grep <string> 

Comments

11

You could also use an anonymous pipe:

docker logs nginx 2> >(grep '127.') 

1 Comment

For some reason, this is the only answer that works for me. The others don't work, I can't lay my finger on it. It seems as if docker logs writes directly to the screen, bypassing STDOUT or STDERR.
7

To follow up on the comments and clarify this for anyone else hitting this issue. Here is the simplest way I can see to search an nginx container log.

docker logs nginx > stdout.log 2>stderr.log cat stdout.log | grep "127." 

IMO its kinda messy because you need to create and delete these potentially very large files. Hopefully we'll get some tooling to make it a bit more convenient.

1 Comment

Unlikely - it doesn't look like docker logs will support separate stdout and stderr github.com/moby/moby/issues/25683
7

I generally use it with -f option as well, when I am debugging the issue

docker logs -f nginx 2>&1 | grep "127." 

It will show us, what we are expecting in real-time.

To include timestamps, add -t

docker logs -ft nginx 2>&1 | grep "127." 

Comments

4

Run following command to extract container name for image nginx -

docker ps --filter ancestor=nginx 

Copy container ID from last command & then extract log path for your container through below command

grep "127." `docker inspect --format={{.LogPath}} <ContainerName>` 

Comments

1

First, use this command ( b1e3c456f07f is the container id ):

docker inspect --format='{{.LogPath}}' b1e3c456f07f 

The result will be something like this:

/var/lib/docker/containers/b1e3c456f07f2cb3ae79381ada33a034041a10f65174f52bc1792110b36fb767/b1e3c456f07f2cb3ae79381ada33a034041a10f65174f52bc1792110b36fb767-json.log 

Second, use this command ( you can use vim if you like ):

nano /var/lib/docker/containers/b1e3c456f07f2cb3ae79381ada33a034041a10f65174f52bc1792110b36fb767/b1e3c456f07f2cb3ae79381ada33a034041a10f65174f52bc1792110b36fb767-json.log 

2 Comments

shouldn’t it be grep /var/lib/docker/… '127.' instead of nano?
OC. You could even use MS Word or send it to your printer;) At least you should give advise how to search for the string, as this is the task to be solved
0

The top-rated solution didn't work for me - grep printed this output and I couldn't properly find what I was searching for (I'm trying this with a custom docker container, not with nginx):

docker logs collector 2>&1 | grep "ERROR" grep: (standard input): binary file matches 

The solution for me was to use grep -a 'pattern'.

from grep's man page:

-a, --text Process a binary file as if it were text; this is equivalent to the --binary-files=text option.

So this works properly for me:

docker logs collector | grep -a 'ERROR' 

Comments

0

docker logs nginx | grep -a '127.'

Comments

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