Show heroku app logs in the browser in real time - heroku

I can do Heroku logs -tail --app myapp and see what goes on when things happen in the app.
Would there be a way to show the output of logs -tail in the browser in real time just like I can do with the Heroku client?
I know it is a strange question, anyone has an idea?
Cheers.

You need to use something like Papertrail and then a syslog drain to send your heroku logs to them.

you can use heroku client library for login and then heroku logs -t as system command to display the output on browser.
#heroku = Heroku::Client.new(account.email, account.password)
`heroku logs -t `
Hope this will help you.

heroku logs --tail is all you need to enter. I got this from the Heroku documentation.

Related

Error: Missing required flag: -a, --app APP app to run command against

I am new to Heroku and I keep getting the above error - everything looks good to go when I deploy in heroku, connect to my github repo etc.. but I keep getting this error.
Its a node/express app and works exactly as I'd like locally but it won't deploy. Any help would be appreciated.
For getting logs of particular heroku app, use:
heroku logs --app=app_name
For example: your app name is 'chatapp'
heroku logs -app=chatapp
just run the command with the --app flag, followed by the app name.
I like how the --app flag is "mandatory" according to the official documentation, but the lone usage example in the official documentation doesn't use the --app flag.
Anyway, it's not really mandatory. It's just implicit, usually. You have to tell Heroku which app you're using, with something like:
$ heroku git:remote -a your_app_name
and then it stops wondering which app to run these commands on.
you did not set git remote to your application, do that first by,
heroku git:remote -a your_app_name
To expand a little further on this (just for the benefit of other new users encountering a similar issue) - below is an example of a command you could enter in macOS Terminal:
heroku logs --tail --app yourexampleservername
If you have deployed yourexampleservername to Heroku, this should then display a log.

Inspect Heroku local logs

I have an app that's deployed to production, but I'm also testing it locally.
When I run heroku logs --tail, I get the production logs. I can see when I make a request to the webapp and it shows up instantly in the logs.
However, my app on heroku local returns me a "500 Server Error." I want to inspect these logs to understand why. However, I can't find these logs. Is there a command like heroku local logs --tail?
In order to see logs in IDE or Console use below command
Local:
I'm using Python script and the same deployed in heroku. I want to run locally by using heroku local command and would like to see logs in console but it is not showing logs in IDE Console. So for workaround i tried below command and it works well. Now I can see logs in the IDE itself.
E.g. for Python Script:
heroku local:run python test.py
E.g. for Rails:
heroku local:run rails console
Production:
heroku logs --tail --app <app-name>

Cannot get initialAdminPassword for jenkins on heroku

I am trying to get started with jenkins on heroku but I came across a problem is that now after deloying jenkins to heroku it wants to get the administrator password, and shows me this path /app/.jenkins/secrets/initialAdminPassword
I ssh'd into my heroku app and tried cat ( path ) but it shows there is no path like that on my heroku bash.
To set up my heroku server I followed this https://gist.github.com/jordansissel/2313443
I attached a picture of me trying in different ways
You can log out and then writeheroku logs --app yourappname
The password can be found there on the logs. If you cant see it, then restart the dynos.

How to see untrimmed logs on Heroku Local

I'm running a NodeJS app on heroku local, however all my console.log statements and error messages get trimmed.
For example:
forego | starting web.1 on port 5000
web.1 | module.js:339
I don't see the full error logs. How to avoid this trimming of error messages?
heroku local will run whatever processes you tell it to in the Procfile. If you'd like to stream your development log, simply add something like log: tail -f log/development.log to your Procfile. You'll also want to make sure that you create a second Procfile (I use Procfile.dev) for this. Replace the log file path with wherever your desired log file is located.
Cheers!
Did you try?
$ heroku help local
Source: https://devcenter.heroku.com/articles/heroku-local
Is this deployed already? If so:
On terminal/bash:
$ heroku logs
On your heroku account:
1) Go to you account and then apps and then the log for that app

heroku - how to see all the logs

I have a small app on heroku. Whenever I want to see the logs I go to the command line and do
heroku logs
That only shows me about 100 lines. Is there not a way to see complete logs for our application on heroku?
Update (thanks to dawmail333):
heroku logs -n 1500
or, to tail the logs live
heroku logs -t
Heroku log documentation
If you need more than a few thousand lines you can Use heroku's Syslog Drains
Alternatively (old method):
$ heroku run rails c
File.open('log/production.log', 'r').each_line { |line| puts line }
Logging has greatly improved in heroku!
$ heroku logs -n 500
Better!
$ heroku logs --tail
references: http://devcenter.heroku.com/articles/logging
UPDATED
These are no longer add-ons, but part of the default functionality :)
Heroku treats logs as time-ordered streams of events. Accessing *.log files on the filesystem is not recommended in such an environment for a variety of reasons.
First, if your app has more than one dyno then each log file only represents a partial view into the events of your app. You would have to manually aggregate all the files to get the full view.
Second, the filesystem on Heroku is ephemeral meaning whenever your dyno is restarted or moved (which happens about once a day)the log files are lost. So you only get at most a day's view into that single dyno's logs.
Finally, on the Cedar stack running heroku console or even heroku run bash does not connect you to a currently running dyno. It spawns a new one specifically for the bash command. This is called a one-off process. As such, you won't find the log files for your other dynos that are running the actual http processes on the one spawned for heroku run.
Logging, and visibility in general, is a first-class citizen on Heroku and there are several tools that address these issues. First, to see a real-time stream of application events across all dynos and all layers of the application/stack use the heroku logs -t command to tail output to your terminal.
$ heroku logs -t
2010-09-16T15:13:46-07:00 app[web.1]: Processing PostController#list (for 208.39.138.12 at 2010-09-16 15:13:46) [GET]
2010-09-16T15:13:46-07:00 app[web.1]: Rendering template within layouts/application
2010-09-16T15:13:46-07:00 heroku[router]: GET myapp.heroku.com/posts queue=0 wait=0ms service=1ms bytes=975
2010-09-16T15:13:47-07:00 app[worker.1]: 2 jobs processed at 16.6761 j/s, 0 failed ...
This works great for observing the behavior of your application right now. If you want to store the logs for longer periods of time you can use one of the many logging add-ons that provide log retention, alerting and triggers.
Lastly, if you want to store the log files yourself you can setup your own syslog drain to receive the stream of events from Heroku and post-process/analyze yourself.
Summary: Don't use heroku console or heroku run bash to view static log files. Pipe into Heroku's stream of log events for your app using heroku logs or a logging add-on.
Well, the above answers are very helpful it will help you to view from the command line. Whereas if you want to check from GUI so you have to log into your Heroku account and then select your application and finally click on view logs
Follow on Heroku logging
To view your logs we have:
logs command retrives 100 log lines by default.
heroku logs
show maximum 200 lines, --num (or -n) option.
heroku logs -n 200
Show logs in real time
heroku logs --tail
If you have many apps on heroku
heroku logs --app your_app_name
Also see individual streams/filters.
E.g tail only your application logs
heroku logs --source app -t
Or see only the router logs
heroku logs --ps router
Or chain them together
heroku logs --source app --ps worker
So good..
You can access your log files using Heroku's Command Line
Interface (CLI Usage).
If Heroku's CLI is installed and you know your application name (like https://myapp.herokuapp.com/), then you can run the following command:
heroku logs --tail --app=myapp
You can also access the logs in a real-time stream using:
heroku logs --source app --tail --app=myapp
If the logs tell you something like this:
npm ERR! A complete log of this run can be found in:
npm ERR! /app/.npm/_logs/2017-07-11T08_29_45_291Z-debug.log
Then you can also access them using the bash terminal via Heroku CLI:
heroku run bash --app=myapp
less ./.npm/_logs/2017-07-11T08_29_45_291Z-debug.log
heroku logs -t shows us the live logs.
Might be worth it to add something like the free Papertrail plan to your app. Zero configuration, and you get 7 days worth of logging data up to 10MB/day, and can search back through 2 days of logs.
My solution is to get complete log the first time the application start, like:
heroku logs -n 1500 > log
then add fgrep -vf to keep it up to date, like:
heroku logs -n 1500 > newlog ; fgrep -vf log newlog >> log
for continuous logging, just iterate it using watch for every x minutes (or seconds).
You need to use -t or --tail option and you need to define your heroku app name.
heroku logs -t --app app_name
for WAR files:
I did not use github, instead I uploaded directly, a WAR file ( which I found to be much easier and faster ).
So the following helped me:
heroku logs --app appname
Hope it will help someone.
You need to have some logs draining implemented and should be draining your logs there, to see all of the logs (manage historical logs as well):
First option - Splunk can be used: you can drain all your logs like:
heroku drains:add syslog+tls://splunk-server.com:514 -a app_name
And then login into your splunk server and search for any number of logs. I am using Splunk and this is working perfectly fine for me.
Second option - You can purchase add on to your App, like given below: (I haven't used these options, however these are the available ones).
Timber.io
Sumo Logic
LogEnteries
Log DNA
Papertrail
You can also have a look at below options: If you want to have your
logs in JSON format, as it will help if your are pushing your logs to
external system like Splunk/ELK, it would become easy (performance
wise also) to search in JSON.
https://github.com/goodeggs/heroku-log-normalizer
It is not having Readme.md, but some explanation is given at https://github.com/goodeggs/bites/issues/20
Lastly
And you can always use below command as mentioned by other users already:
The following command will tail the generating logs on heroku
heroku logs -t -a <app_name>
The following comand will show the 1000 number of lines of logs from heroku
heroku logs -n 1000 -a <app_name>
Note only 1500 latest lines of logs are available and rest of them gets deleted from heroku dyno.
To see the detailed log you need to put two lines in the production.rb file:
config.logger = Logger.new(STDOUT)
config.logger.level = Logger::DEBUG
and then by running
heroku logs -t
you can see the detailed logs.
I prefer to do it this way
heroku logs --tail | tee -a herokuLogs
You can leave the script running in background and you can simply filter the logs from the text file the way you want anytime.
heroku logs -t shows us the live logs.
heroku logs -n 1500 for specific number of logs
But still I would recommend to use paper trail add-on which have certain benefits and has free basic plan.
I suggest using an addon, I use Logentries. To use it, run in your command line:
heroku addons:create logentries:le_tryit
(that command creates the addon for a free account but clearly you can upgrade if you want)
Logentries allows you to save up to 5GB of log volume per month. That info is searchable by their command search within the last 7 days and it has real-time alerts.
So to answer your question, by using this addon you ensure that your logs aren't lost anymore when you reach the 1500 lines that Heroku saves by default.
Hope this helps! Have a great day!
You can use
heroku logs -n 1500
But this is not a recommended approach(in other word doesn't show you the real picture)
I would suggest you plug some logging tool. ( sumoLogic, paper trail n all ) as an add-on
They all have a free version( with few limitations, though enough for a small app or dev env, which will provide good insight and tool to analyze logs )
I was running into a situation where in my apps' dashboard, when I went to:
More > View logs
I wouldn't get an output, just hung...
So I did a google and found this:
Heroku CLI plugin to list and create builds for Heroku apps.
I installed it and ran:
heroku builds -a example-app /* Lists 10 most recently created builds for example-app, that's where you get the id for the next step*/
Then enter:
heroku builds:output your-app-id-number -a example-app
And that's it, you should get back what you normally see in the dashboard GUI or locally.
Hope this helps someone like it did me!
If your code is in python,
You can use the heroku3 pip library to access the logs for your Heroku app.
First, you'll need to install the library by running.
pip install heroku3
Then, you can use the following code to access your logs:
import heroku3
# Connect to the Heroku API
conn = heroku3.from_key('YOUR_API_KEY')
# Get the app you want to access logs for
app = conn.app('YOUR_APP_NAME')
# Access the logs
logs = app.logs().stream()
# Print the logs
for line in logs:
print(line)
Make sure to replace YOUR_API_KEY and YOUR_APP_NAME with the appropriate values for your app.
Additionally, you can use the heroku logs --tail
command in your command line to stream the logs for your Heroku app. Make sure you are logged in and you have the access to the app.
For cedar stack see:
https://devcenter.heroku.com/articles/oneoff-admin-ps
you need to run:
heroku run bash ...

Resources