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LogPlot

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example gif

Installation

$ pip3 install logplot

Usage

Configuration

In order to plot interesting graphs from custom logs, logplot needs to know what log entries are considered interesting. This can be done by defining entries and special_entries sections in the config file. The main purpose of entries is to plot trends, i.e. connected points. This is useful e.g. for plotting state machine states. special_entries is for plotting single, unconnected points, such as errors.

Each entry in entries and special_entries should have the following:

  • identifier: string to be searched from log entries
  • value: y-axis value in the plot

Ideally, one entry in entries should have initial_state: true. This is used for separating plotted series from each other.

You can define specific marker style for each entry in special_entries, refer to matplotlib docs for available options.

In addition to the entries and special-entries sections, user can override default settings (see src/logplot/default_conf.yaml) in general section. For example, it's the place where you can define the command to be used for opening the log in your favorite editor.

See doc/example/user_conf.yaml and corresponding log file (doc/example/log.txt) for full example.

Plotting logs

$ logplot path/to/log -c path/to/conf/file

For example, this:

$ logplot doc/examples/log.txt -c doc/examples/user_conf.yaml

yields this:

example plot

Clicking a data point in the plot opens the log file in the correct line number in the editor defined in the configuration file. If the log_open_cmd is not configured, the log will be opened with a default program defined by the OS. Note that log_open_cmd has to configured to be able to open the log in the correct line number.

logplot will automatically identify different trends in the plotted entries. You can toggle the visibility of these trends by clicking items in the legend.

Here's an example of a bit bigger log which contains 100k entries, 13 different states, and 15 different trends.

$ logplot doc/examples/log_huge.txt -c doc/examples/user_conf_huge.yaml

example plot huge

And the same with three most occuring trends filtered out.

example plot huge filtered