This self-hosted app lets you get real time alerts from Docker container logs
If you run Docker containers, accessing log files is part and parcel of the experimentation process. Every app, service, and background job you set up throws lines of code into a never-ending stream of code. You'll usually find me neck-deep in Portainer's log screen, trying to figure out why a particular container failed or didn't run. You can scroll through these logs or tail them in the terminal, but that's only helpful if you're actively looking at the terminal. What happens when a container fails mysteriously in the dead of the night?
If you run Docker containers, accessing log files is part and parcel of the experimentation process. Every app, service, and background job you set up throws lines of code into a never-ending stream of code. You’ll usually find me neck-deep in Portainer’s log screen, trying to figure out why a particular container failed or didn’t run. You can scroll through these logs or tail them in the terminal, but that’s only helpful if you’re actively looking at the terminal. What happens when a container fails mysteriously in the dead of the night?
Novak Isaković
Serbia
Serbia
Published by: aplhsindia.in
