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TAIL(1)			    General Commands Manual		       TAIL(1)

NAME
       tail -- display the last	part of	a file

SYNOPSIS
       tail  [-F  |  -f	 |  -r]	 [-qv]	[-b  number  |	-c number | -n number]
	    [file ...]

DESCRIPTION
       The tail	utility	displays the contents of  file	or,  by	 default,  its
       standard	input, to the standard output.

       The  display  begins  at	a byte,	line or	512-byte block location	in the
       input.  Numbers having a	leading	plus (`+') sign	are  relative  to  the
       beginning  of the input,	for example, "-c +2" starts the	display	at the
       second byte of the input.  Numbers having a leading minus (`-') sign or
       no explicit sign	are relative to	the end	of the input, for example, "-n
       2" displays the last two	lines of the input.  The default starting  lo-
       cation is "-n 10", or the last 10 lines of the input.

       The options are as follows:

       -b number, --blocks=number
	       The location is number 512-byte blocks.

       -c number, --bytes=number
	       The location is number bytes.

       -f      The  -f	option	causes	tail  to  not stop when	end of file is
	       reached,	but rather to wait for additional data to be  appended
	       to  the	input.	The -f option is ignored if the	standard input
	       is a pipe, but not if it	is a FIFO.

       -F      The -F option implies the -f option, but	tail will  also	 check
	       to  see if the file being followed has been renamed or rotated.
	       The file	is closed and reopened	when  tail  detects  that  the
	       filename	being read from	has a new inode	number.

	       If the file being followed does not (yet) exist or if it	is re-
	       moved,  tail  will  keep	looking	and will display the file from
	       the beginning if	and when it is created.

	       The -F option is	the same as the	 -f  option  if	 reading  from
	       standard	input rather than a file.

       -n number, --lines=number
	       The location is number lines.

       -q, --quiet, --silent
	       Suppresses  printing  of	 headers when multiple files are being
	       examined.

       -r      The -r option causes the	input to be displayed in  reverse  or-
	       der, by line.  Additionally, this option	changes	the meaning of
	       the  -b,	 -c  and -n options.  When the -r option is specified,
	       these options specify the number	of bytes,  lines  or  512-byte
	       blocks  to  display, instead of the bytes, lines	or blocks from
	       the beginning or	end of the input from which to begin the  dis-
	       play.   The  default for	the -r option is to display all	of the
	       input.

       -v, --verbose
	       Prepend each file with a	header.

       If more than a single file is specified,	or if the -v option  is	 used,
       each  file  is  preceded	 by a header consisting	of the string "==> XXX
       <==" where XXX is the name of the  file.	  The  -q  flag	 disables  the
       printing	of the header in all cases.

       All number arguments may	also be	specified with size suffixes supported
       by expand_number(3).

EXIT STATUS
       The tail	utility	exits 0	on success, and	>0 if an error occurs.

EXAMPLES
       To display the last 500 lines of	the file foo:

	     $ tail -n 500 foo

       Keep /var/log/messages open, displaying to the standard output anything
       appended	to the file:

	     $ tail -F /var/log/messages

SEE ALSO
       cat(1), head(1),	sed(1),	expand_number(3)

STANDARDS
       The  tail  utility  is  expected	 to  be	 a  superset  of  the IEEE Std
       1003.2-1992 ("POSIX.2") specification.  In particular, the -F,  -b  and
       -r options are extensions to that standard.

       The historic command line syntax	of tail	is supported by	this implemen-
       tation.	 The  only difference between this implementation and historic
       versions	of tail, once the command line	syntax	translation  has  been
       done, is	that the -b, -c	and -n options modify the -r option, i.e., "-r
       -c  4"  displays	 the  last 4 characters	of the last line of the	input,
       while the historic tail (using the historic syntax "-4cr") would	ignore
       the -c option and display the last 4 lines of the input.

HISTORY
       A tail command appeared in PWB UNIX.

FreeBSD	13.2			 July 12, 2022			       TAIL(1)

NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | EXIT STATUS | EXAMPLES | SEE ALSO | STANDARDS | HISTORY

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