Watching something be written to a file live with tailRedirect output of remote python app started through ssh to fileUbuntu RFID Screensaver lock-unlockHow can I offer an XP-compatible migration to Linux Mint?Is there a command in Linux which waits till it will be terminated?Ctrl+c in a sub process is killing a nohup'ed process earlier in the scripthow to get cronjob running every minuteCtrl-C'd an in-place recursive gzip - is this likely to have broken anything?Getting output of another script while preserving line-breakssocat and rich terminal again“Ctrl + c” combination works different on different SSH clients

Is it unprofessional to ask if a job posting on GlassDoor is real?

Is it possible to run Internet Explorer on OS X El Capitan?

Why is consensus so controversial in Britain?

In a Spin are Both Wings Stalled?

Does a druid starting with a bow start with no arrows?

Doing something right before you need it - expression for this?

Today is the Center

Facing a paradox: Earnshaw's theorem in one dimension

What to put in ESTA if staying in US for a few days before going on to Canada

Is delete *p an alternative to delete [] p?

Twin primes whose sum is a cube

What's the point of deactivating Num Lock on login screens?

What does it mean to describe someone as a butt steak?

Can I ask the recruiters in my resume to put the reason why I am rejected?

Fully-Firstable Anagram Sets

Python: return float 1.0 as int 1 but float 1.5 as float 1.5

Took a trip to a parallel universe, need help deciphering

How can I prevent hyper evolved versions of regular creatures from wiping out their cousins?

intersection of two sorted vectors in C++

What is going on with Captain Marvel's blood colour?

In Romance of the Three Kingdoms why do people still use bamboo sticks when papers are already invented?

Were any external disk drives stacked vertically?

Could gravitational lensing be used to protect a spaceship from a laser?

Why can't we play rap on piano?



Watching something be written to a file live with tail


Redirect output of remote python app started through ssh to fileUbuntu RFID Screensaver lock-unlockHow can I offer an XP-compatible migration to Linux Mint?Is there a command in Linux which waits till it will be terminated?Ctrl+c in a sub process is killing a nohup'ed process earlier in the scripthow to get cronjob running every minuteCtrl-C'd an in-place recursive gzip - is this likely to have broken anything?Getting output of another script while preserving line-breakssocat and rich terminal again“Ctrl + c” combination works different on different SSH clients






.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty height:90px;width:728px;box-sizing:border-box;








21















I have a python program which is, slowly, generating some output.



I want to capture that in a file, but I also thought I could watch it live with tail.



So in one terminal I'm doing :



python myprog.py > output.txt


and in another terminal :



tail -f output.txt


But it seems like the tail isn't showing me anything while the python program is running.



If I hit ctrl-c to kill the python script, suddenly the tail of output.txt starts filling up. But not while python is running.



What am I doing wrong?










share|improve this question



















  • 9





    How about python myprog.py | tee output.txt instead?

    – n8te
    yesterday






  • 3





    @n8te tee might show the same problem if the program isn't flushing the output buffer regularly. This needs flush() and tee.

    – JPhi1618
    22 hours ago






  • 1





    stdbuf can be used to alter the buffering status of file descriptors.

    – studog
    6 hours ago











  • Terminology: There is no pipe anywhere in this scenario. There's a redirect to a regular file. (Which causes C stdio and Python to decide to make stdout full-buffered instead of line-buffered because it's not a TTY). Pipes are a different type of file (a buffer inside the kernel). I edited your question to correct that.

    – Peter Cordes
    6 hours ago












  • Probably not needed in your situation but if you don't want to terminate the program you can use gdb and call fflush: see stackoverflow.com/questions/8251269/…

    – Mark Wagner
    6 hours ago

















21















I have a python program which is, slowly, generating some output.



I want to capture that in a file, but I also thought I could watch it live with tail.



So in one terminal I'm doing :



python myprog.py > output.txt


and in another terminal :



tail -f output.txt


But it seems like the tail isn't showing me anything while the python program is running.



If I hit ctrl-c to kill the python script, suddenly the tail of output.txt starts filling up. But not while python is running.



What am I doing wrong?










share|improve this question



















  • 9





    How about python myprog.py | tee output.txt instead?

    – n8te
    yesterday






  • 3





    @n8te tee might show the same problem if the program isn't flushing the output buffer regularly. This needs flush() and tee.

    – JPhi1618
    22 hours ago






  • 1





    stdbuf can be used to alter the buffering status of file descriptors.

    – studog
    6 hours ago











  • Terminology: There is no pipe anywhere in this scenario. There's a redirect to a regular file. (Which causes C stdio and Python to decide to make stdout full-buffered instead of line-buffered because it's not a TTY). Pipes are a different type of file (a buffer inside the kernel). I edited your question to correct that.

    – Peter Cordes
    6 hours ago












  • Probably not needed in your situation but if you don't want to terminate the program you can use gdb and call fflush: see stackoverflow.com/questions/8251269/…

    – Mark Wagner
    6 hours ago













21












21








21


1






I have a python program which is, slowly, generating some output.



I want to capture that in a file, but I also thought I could watch it live with tail.



So in one terminal I'm doing :



python myprog.py > output.txt


and in another terminal :



tail -f output.txt


But it seems like the tail isn't showing me anything while the python program is running.



If I hit ctrl-c to kill the python script, suddenly the tail of output.txt starts filling up. But not while python is running.



What am I doing wrong?










share|improve this question
















I have a python program which is, slowly, generating some output.



I want to capture that in a file, but I also thought I could watch it live with tail.



So in one terminal I'm doing :



python myprog.py > output.txt


and in another terminal :



tail -f output.txt


But it seems like the tail isn't showing me anything while the python program is running.



If I hit ctrl-c to kill the python script, suddenly the tail of output.txt starts filling up. But not while python is running.



What am I doing wrong?







linux command-line redirection stdout






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 6 hours ago









Peter Cordes

2,4751621




2,4751621










asked yesterday









interstarinterstar

415413




415413







  • 9





    How about python myprog.py | tee output.txt instead?

    – n8te
    yesterday






  • 3





    @n8te tee might show the same problem if the program isn't flushing the output buffer regularly. This needs flush() and tee.

    – JPhi1618
    22 hours ago






  • 1





    stdbuf can be used to alter the buffering status of file descriptors.

    – studog
    6 hours ago











  • Terminology: There is no pipe anywhere in this scenario. There's a redirect to a regular file. (Which causes C stdio and Python to decide to make stdout full-buffered instead of line-buffered because it's not a TTY). Pipes are a different type of file (a buffer inside the kernel). I edited your question to correct that.

    – Peter Cordes
    6 hours ago












  • Probably not needed in your situation but if you don't want to terminate the program you can use gdb and call fflush: see stackoverflow.com/questions/8251269/…

    – Mark Wagner
    6 hours ago












  • 9





    How about python myprog.py | tee output.txt instead?

    – n8te
    yesterday






  • 3





    @n8te tee might show the same problem if the program isn't flushing the output buffer regularly. This needs flush() and tee.

    – JPhi1618
    22 hours ago






  • 1





    stdbuf can be used to alter the buffering status of file descriptors.

    – studog
    6 hours ago











  • Terminology: There is no pipe anywhere in this scenario. There's a redirect to a regular file. (Which causes C stdio and Python to decide to make stdout full-buffered instead of line-buffered because it's not a TTY). Pipes are a different type of file (a buffer inside the kernel). I edited your question to correct that.

    – Peter Cordes
    6 hours ago












  • Probably not needed in your situation but if you don't want to terminate the program you can use gdb and call fflush: see stackoverflow.com/questions/8251269/…

    – Mark Wagner
    6 hours ago







9




9





How about python myprog.py | tee output.txt instead?

– n8te
yesterday





How about python myprog.py | tee output.txt instead?

– n8te
yesterday




3




3





@n8te tee might show the same problem if the program isn't flushing the output buffer regularly. This needs flush() and tee.

– JPhi1618
22 hours ago





@n8te tee might show the same problem if the program isn't flushing the output buffer regularly. This needs flush() and tee.

– JPhi1618
22 hours ago




1




1





stdbuf can be used to alter the buffering status of file descriptors.

– studog
6 hours ago





stdbuf can be used to alter the buffering status of file descriptors.

– studog
6 hours ago













Terminology: There is no pipe anywhere in this scenario. There's a redirect to a regular file. (Which causes C stdio and Python to decide to make stdout full-buffered instead of line-buffered because it's not a TTY). Pipes are a different type of file (a buffer inside the kernel). I edited your question to correct that.

– Peter Cordes
6 hours ago






Terminology: There is no pipe anywhere in this scenario. There's a redirect to a regular file. (Which causes C stdio and Python to decide to make stdout full-buffered instead of line-buffered because it's not a TTY). Pipes are a different type of file (a buffer inside the kernel). I edited your question to correct that.

– Peter Cordes
6 hours ago














Probably not needed in your situation but if you don't want to terminate the program you can use gdb and call fflush: see stackoverflow.com/questions/8251269/…

– Mark Wagner
6 hours ago





Probably not needed in your situation but if you don't want to terminate the program you can use gdb and call fflush: see stackoverflow.com/questions/8251269/…

– Mark Wagner
6 hours ago










5 Answers
5






active

oldest

votes


















29














You may also need to explicitly flush the buffer for it to get piped upon generation. This is because output is typically only printed when the pipe's buffer fills up (which is in kilobytes I belive), and when the stdin message ends. This is probably to save on read/writes. You could do this after every print, or if you are looping, after the last print within the loop.



import sys
...
print('Some message')
sys.stdout.flush()





share|improve this answer










New contributor




Davey is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.















  • 4





    If you have read this far, please don't be thinking of closing and re-opening the file to do this, the seeks will be a problem, especially for very large files. (I've seen this done!).

    – mckenzm
    21 hours ago






  • 2





    You can also use print's flush parameter to do just as well. For example, print('some message', flush=True).

    – Dan
    13 hours ago







  • 4





    It has nothing to do with the pipe's buffer, but with the stdout mechanism which doesn't flush after newline if it doesn't write to a tty.

    – glglgl
    11 hours ago


















18














Instead of trying to tail a live file, use tee instead. It was made to do exactly what you're trying to do.



From man tee:




tee(1) - Linux man page



Name tee - read from standard input and write to standard output and files



Synopsis



tee [OPTION]... [FILE]...


Description



Copy standard input to each FILE, and also to standard output.



-a, --append 
append to the given FILEs, do not overwrite
-i, --ignore-interrupts
ignore interrupt signals
--help
display this help and exit
--version
output version information and exit


If a FILE is -, copy again to standard output.




So in your case you'd run:



python myprog.py | tee output.txt


EDIT: As others have pointed out, this answer will run into the same issue OP was originally having unless sys.stdout.flush() is used in the python program as described in Davey's accepted answer. The testing I did before posting this answer did not accurately reflect OP's use-case.



tee can still be used as an alternative--albeit less than optimal--method of displaying the output while also writing to the file, but Davey's answer is clearly the correct and best answer.






share|improve this answer

























  • tail in another thread is a good solution for when you've started the application before you decide you want to see the output though.

    – Baldrickk
    17 hours ago






  • 7





    That requires a permanent console session, this is why it’s often much easier to use tail -F or even better the follow function of less. But in all cases the flush should be used.

    – eckes
    16 hours ago






  • 3





    This won't solve the problem that the OP is having. Python's output to the pipe will be buffered just like output to the file.

    – Barmar
    7 hours ago


















7














Run python with the unbuffered flag:



python -u myprog.py > output.txt


Output will then print in real time.






share|improve this answer








New contributor




BHC is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.



























    3














    Terminology: There is no pipe anywhere in this scenario. (I edited the question to fix that). Pipes are a different type of file (a buffer inside the kernel).



    This is a redirect to a regular file.



    C stdio, and Python, default to making stdout line-buffered when it's connected to a TTY, otherwise it's full-buffered. Line-buffered means the buffer is flushed after a newline. Full-buffered means it's only flushed to become visible to the OS (i.e. with a write() system call) when it's full.



    You will see output eventually, in chunks of maybe 4kiB at a time. (I don't know the default buffer size.) This is generally more efficient, and means fewer writes to your actual disk. But not great for interactive monitoring, because output is hidden inside the memory of the writing process until it's flushed.



    On Stack Overflow, there's a Disable output buffering Python Q&A which lists many ways to get unbuffered (or line-buffered?) output to stdout in Python. The question itself summarizes the answers.



    Options include running python -u (Or I guess putting #!/usr/bin/python -u at the top of your script), or using the PYTHONUNBUFFERED environment variable for that program. Or explicit flushing after some/all print functions, like @Davey's answer suggests.




    Some other programs have similar options, e.g. GNU grep has --line-buffered, and GNU sed has -u / --unbuffered, for use-cases like this, or for example piping the output of your python program. e.g. ./slowly-output-stuff | grep --line-buffered 'foo.*bar'.






    share|improve this answer






























      0














      Another option (if you don't care about the contents, just the progress) is pv:



      NAME
      pv - monitor the progress of data through a pipe

      SYNOPSIS
      pv [OPTION] [FILE]...
      pv [-h|-V]


      Introduce this in your pipeline and it will show you the number of bytes processed as well as the speed they go through the pipeline.



      If the content is what you actually want to monitor, then tee is the best choice, as the other answer indicates.






      share|improve this answer


















      • 1





        There's no pipeline, just file redirection. And it won't solve the buffering problem.

        – Barmar
        7 hours ago











      Your Answer








      StackExchange.ready(function()
      var channelOptions =
      tags: "".split(" "),
      id: "3"
      ;
      initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

      StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
      // Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
      if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
      StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
      createEditor();
      );

      else
      createEditor();

      );

      function createEditor()
      StackExchange.prepareEditor(
      heartbeatType: 'answer',
      autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
      convertImagesToLinks: true,
      noModals: true,
      showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
      reputationToPostImages: 10,
      bindNavPrevention: true,
      postfix: "",
      imageUploader:
      brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
      contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
      allowUrls: true
      ,
      onDemand: true,
      discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
      ,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
      );



      );













      draft saved

      draft discarded


















      StackExchange.ready(
      function ()
      StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fsuperuser.com%2fquestions%2f1421123%2fwatching-something-be-written-to-a-file-live-with-tail%23new-answer', 'question_page');

      );

      Post as a guest















      Required, but never shown

























      5 Answers
      5






      active

      oldest

      votes








      5 Answers
      5






      active

      oldest

      votes









      active

      oldest

      votes






      active

      oldest

      votes









      29














      You may also need to explicitly flush the buffer for it to get piped upon generation. This is because output is typically only printed when the pipe's buffer fills up (which is in kilobytes I belive), and when the stdin message ends. This is probably to save on read/writes. You could do this after every print, or if you are looping, after the last print within the loop.



      import sys
      ...
      print('Some message')
      sys.stdout.flush()





      share|improve this answer










      New contributor




      Davey is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.















      • 4





        If you have read this far, please don't be thinking of closing and re-opening the file to do this, the seeks will be a problem, especially for very large files. (I've seen this done!).

        – mckenzm
        21 hours ago






      • 2





        You can also use print's flush parameter to do just as well. For example, print('some message', flush=True).

        – Dan
        13 hours ago







      • 4





        It has nothing to do with the pipe's buffer, but with the stdout mechanism which doesn't flush after newline if it doesn't write to a tty.

        – glglgl
        11 hours ago















      29














      You may also need to explicitly flush the buffer for it to get piped upon generation. This is because output is typically only printed when the pipe's buffer fills up (which is in kilobytes I belive), and when the stdin message ends. This is probably to save on read/writes. You could do this after every print, or if you are looping, after the last print within the loop.



      import sys
      ...
      print('Some message')
      sys.stdout.flush()





      share|improve this answer










      New contributor




      Davey is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.















      • 4





        If you have read this far, please don't be thinking of closing and re-opening the file to do this, the seeks will be a problem, especially for very large files. (I've seen this done!).

        – mckenzm
        21 hours ago






      • 2





        You can also use print's flush parameter to do just as well. For example, print('some message', flush=True).

        – Dan
        13 hours ago







      • 4





        It has nothing to do with the pipe's buffer, but with the stdout mechanism which doesn't flush after newline if it doesn't write to a tty.

        – glglgl
        11 hours ago













      29












      29








      29







      You may also need to explicitly flush the buffer for it to get piped upon generation. This is because output is typically only printed when the pipe's buffer fills up (which is in kilobytes I belive), and when the stdin message ends. This is probably to save on read/writes. You could do this after every print, or if you are looping, after the last print within the loop.



      import sys
      ...
      print('Some message')
      sys.stdout.flush()





      share|improve this answer










      New contributor




      Davey is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.










      You may also need to explicitly flush the buffer for it to get piped upon generation. This is because output is typically only printed when the pipe's buffer fills up (which is in kilobytes I belive), and when the stdin message ends. This is probably to save on read/writes. You could do this after every print, or if you are looping, after the last print within the loop.



      import sys
      ...
      print('Some message')
      sys.stdout.flush()






      share|improve this answer










      New contributor




      Davey is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.









      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer








      edited 21 hours ago









      user2313067

      2,1001911




      2,1001911






      New contributor




      Davey is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.









      answered yesterday









      DaveyDavey

      32625




      32625




      New contributor




      Davey is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.





      New contributor





      Davey is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.






      Davey is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.







      • 4





        If you have read this far, please don't be thinking of closing and re-opening the file to do this, the seeks will be a problem, especially for very large files. (I've seen this done!).

        – mckenzm
        21 hours ago






      • 2





        You can also use print's flush parameter to do just as well. For example, print('some message', flush=True).

        – Dan
        13 hours ago







      • 4





        It has nothing to do with the pipe's buffer, but with the stdout mechanism which doesn't flush after newline if it doesn't write to a tty.

        – glglgl
        11 hours ago












      • 4





        If you have read this far, please don't be thinking of closing and re-opening the file to do this, the seeks will be a problem, especially for very large files. (I've seen this done!).

        – mckenzm
        21 hours ago






      • 2





        You can also use print's flush parameter to do just as well. For example, print('some message', flush=True).

        – Dan
        13 hours ago







      • 4





        It has nothing to do with the pipe's buffer, but with the stdout mechanism which doesn't flush after newline if it doesn't write to a tty.

        – glglgl
        11 hours ago







      4




      4





      If you have read this far, please don't be thinking of closing and re-opening the file to do this, the seeks will be a problem, especially for very large files. (I've seen this done!).

      – mckenzm
      21 hours ago





      If you have read this far, please don't be thinking of closing and re-opening the file to do this, the seeks will be a problem, especially for very large files. (I've seen this done!).

      – mckenzm
      21 hours ago




      2




      2





      You can also use print's flush parameter to do just as well. For example, print('some message', flush=True).

      – Dan
      13 hours ago






      You can also use print's flush parameter to do just as well. For example, print('some message', flush=True).

      – Dan
      13 hours ago





      4




      4





      It has nothing to do with the pipe's buffer, but with the stdout mechanism which doesn't flush after newline if it doesn't write to a tty.

      – glglgl
      11 hours ago





      It has nothing to do with the pipe's buffer, but with the stdout mechanism which doesn't flush after newline if it doesn't write to a tty.

      – glglgl
      11 hours ago













      18














      Instead of trying to tail a live file, use tee instead. It was made to do exactly what you're trying to do.



      From man tee:




      tee(1) - Linux man page



      Name tee - read from standard input and write to standard output and files



      Synopsis



      tee [OPTION]... [FILE]...


      Description



      Copy standard input to each FILE, and also to standard output.



      -a, --append 
      append to the given FILEs, do not overwrite
      -i, --ignore-interrupts
      ignore interrupt signals
      --help
      display this help and exit
      --version
      output version information and exit


      If a FILE is -, copy again to standard output.




      So in your case you'd run:



      python myprog.py | tee output.txt


      EDIT: As others have pointed out, this answer will run into the same issue OP was originally having unless sys.stdout.flush() is used in the python program as described in Davey's accepted answer. The testing I did before posting this answer did not accurately reflect OP's use-case.



      tee can still be used as an alternative--albeit less than optimal--method of displaying the output while also writing to the file, but Davey's answer is clearly the correct and best answer.






      share|improve this answer

























      • tail in another thread is a good solution for when you've started the application before you decide you want to see the output though.

        – Baldrickk
        17 hours ago






      • 7





        That requires a permanent console session, this is why it’s often much easier to use tail -F or even better the follow function of less. But in all cases the flush should be used.

        – eckes
        16 hours ago






      • 3





        This won't solve the problem that the OP is having. Python's output to the pipe will be buffered just like output to the file.

        – Barmar
        7 hours ago















      18














      Instead of trying to tail a live file, use tee instead. It was made to do exactly what you're trying to do.



      From man tee:




      tee(1) - Linux man page



      Name tee - read from standard input and write to standard output and files



      Synopsis



      tee [OPTION]... [FILE]...


      Description



      Copy standard input to each FILE, and also to standard output.



      -a, --append 
      append to the given FILEs, do not overwrite
      -i, --ignore-interrupts
      ignore interrupt signals
      --help
      display this help and exit
      --version
      output version information and exit


      If a FILE is -, copy again to standard output.




      So in your case you'd run:



      python myprog.py | tee output.txt


      EDIT: As others have pointed out, this answer will run into the same issue OP was originally having unless sys.stdout.flush() is used in the python program as described in Davey's accepted answer. The testing I did before posting this answer did not accurately reflect OP's use-case.



      tee can still be used as an alternative--albeit less than optimal--method of displaying the output while also writing to the file, but Davey's answer is clearly the correct and best answer.






      share|improve this answer

























      • tail in another thread is a good solution for when you've started the application before you decide you want to see the output though.

        – Baldrickk
        17 hours ago






      • 7





        That requires a permanent console session, this is why it’s often much easier to use tail -F or even better the follow function of less. But in all cases the flush should be used.

        – eckes
        16 hours ago






      • 3





        This won't solve the problem that the OP is having. Python's output to the pipe will be buffered just like output to the file.

        – Barmar
        7 hours ago













      18












      18








      18







      Instead of trying to tail a live file, use tee instead. It was made to do exactly what you're trying to do.



      From man tee:




      tee(1) - Linux man page



      Name tee - read from standard input and write to standard output and files



      Synopsis



      tee [OPTION]... [FILE]...


      Description



      Copy standard input to each FILE, and also to standard output.



      -a, --append 
      append to the given FILEs, do not overwrite
      -i, --ignore-interrupts
      ignore interrupt signals
      --help
      display this help and exit
      --version
      output version information and exit


      If a FILE is -, copy again to standard output.




      So in your case you'd run:



      python myprog.py | tee output.txt


      EDIT: As others have pointed out, this answer will run into the same issue OP was originally having unless sys.stdout.flush() is used in the python program as described in Davey's accepted answer. The testing I did before posting this answer did not accurately reflect OP's use-case.



      tee can still be used as an alternative--albeit less than optimal--method of displaying the output while also writing to the file, but Davey's answer is clearly the correct and best answer.






      share|improve this answer















      Instead of trying to tail a live file, use tee instead. It was made to do exactly what you're trying to do.



      From man tee:




      tee(1) - Linux man page



      Name tee - read from standard input and write to standard output and files



      Synopsis



      tee [OPTION]... [FILE]...


      Description



      Copy standard input to each FILE, and also to standard output.



      -a, --append 
      append to the given FILEs, do not overwrite
      -i, --ignore-interrupts
      ignore interrupt signals
      --help
      display this help and exit
      --version
      output version information and exit


      If a FILE is -, copy again to standard output.




      So in your case you'd run:



      python myprog.py | tee output.txt


      EDIT: As others have pointed out, this answer will run into the same issue OP was originally having unless sys.stdout.flush() is used in the python program as described in Davey's accepted answer. The testing I did before posting this answer did not accurately reflect OP's use-case.



      tee can still be used as an alternative--albeit less than optimal--method of displaying the output while also writing to the file, but Davey's answer is clearly the correct and best answer.







      share|improve this answer














      share|improve this answer



      share|improve this answer








      edited 4 hours ago

























      answered yesterday









      n8ten8te

      5,33972235




      5,33972235












      • tail in another thread is a good solution for when you've started the application before you decide you want to see the output though.

        – Baldrickk
        17 hours ago






      • 7





        That requires a permanent console session, this is why it’s often much easier to use tail -F or even better the follow function of less. But in all cases the flush should be used.

        – eckes
        16 hours ago






      • 3





        This won't solve the problem that the OP is having. Python's output to the pipe will be buffered just like output to the file.

        – Barmar
        7 hours ago

















      • tail in another thread is a good solution for when you've started the application before you decide you want to see the output though.

        – Baldrickk
        17 hours ago






      • 7





        That requires a permanent console session, this is why it’s often much easier to use tail -F or even better the follow function of less. But in all cases the flush should be used.

        – eckes
        16 hours ago






      • 3





        This won't solve the problem that the OP is having. Python's output to the pipe will be buffered just like output to the file.

        – Barmar
        7 hours ago
















      tail in another thread is a good solution for when you've started the application before you decide you want to see the output though.

      – Baldrickk
      17 hours ago





      tail in another thread is a good solution for when you've started the application before you decide you want to see the output though.

      – Baldrickk
      17 hours ago




      7




      7





      That requires a permanent console session, this is why it’s often much easier to use tail -F or even better the follow function of less. But in all cases the flush should be used.

      – eckes
      16 hours ago





      That requires a permanent console session, this is why it’s often much easier to use tail -F or even better the follow function of less. But in all cases the flush should be used.

      – eckes
      16 hours ago




      3




      3





      This won't solve the problem that the OP is having. Python's output to the pipe will be buffered just like output to the file.

      – Barmar
      7 hours ago





      This won't solve the problem that the OP is having. Python's output to the pipe will be buffered just like output to the file.

      – Barmar
      7 hours ago











      7














      Run python with the unbuffered flag:



      python -u myprog.py > output.txt


      Output will then print in real time.






      share|improve this answer








      New contributor




      BHC is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
      Check out our Code of Conduct.
























        7














        Run python with the unbuffered flag:



        python -u myprog.py > output.txt


        Output will then print in real time.






        share|improve this answer








        New contributor




        BHC is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
        Check out our Code of Conduct.






















          7












          7








          7







          Run python with the unbuffered flag:



          python -u myprog.py > output.txt


          Output will then print in real time.






          share|improve this answer








          New contributor




          BHC is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
          Check out our Code of Conduct.










          Run python with the unbuffered flag:



          python -u myprog.py > output.txt


          Output will then print in real time.







          share|improve this answer








          New contributor




          BHC is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
          Check out our Code of Conduct.









          share|improve this answer



          share|improve this answer






          New contributor




          BHC is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
          Check out our Code of Conduct.









          answered 9 hours ago









          BHCBHC

          711




          711




          New contributor




          BHC is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
          Check out our Code of Conduct.





          New contributor





          BHC is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
          Check out our Code of Conduct.






          BHC is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
          Check out our Code of Conduct.





















              3














              Terminology: There is no pipe anywhere in this scenario. (I edited the question to fix that). Pipes are a different type of file (a buffer inside the kernel).



              This is a redirect to a regular file.



              C stdio, and Python, default to making stdout line-buffered when it's connected to a TTY, otherwise it's full-buffered. Line-buffered means the buffer is flushed after a newline. Full-buffered means it's only flushed to become visible to the OS (i.e. with a write() system call) when it's full.



              You will see output eventually, in chunks of maybe 4kiB at a time. (I don't know the default buffer size.) This is generally more efficient, and means fewer writes to your actual disk. But not great for interactive monitoring, because output is hidden inside the memory of the writing process until it's flushed.



              On Stack Overflow, there's a Disable output buffering Python Q&A which lists many ways to get unbuffered (or line-buffered?) output to stdout in Python. The question itself summarizes the answers.



              Options include running python -u (Or I guess putting #!/usr/bin/python -u at the top of your script), or using the PYTHONUNBUFFERED environment variable for that program. Or explicit flushing after some/all print functions, like @Davey's answer suggests.




              Some other programs have similar options, e.g. GNU grep has --line-buffered, and GNU sed has -u / --unbuffered, for use-cases like this, or for example piping the output of your python program. e.g. ./slowly-output-stuff | grep --line-buffered 'foo.*bar'.






              share|improve this answer



























                3














                Terminology: There is no pipe anywhere in this scenario. (I edited the question to fix that). Pipes are a different type of file (a buffer inside the kernel).



                This is a redirect to a regular file.



                C stdio, and Python, default to making stdout line-buffered when it's connected to a TTY, otherwise it's full-buffered. Line-buffered means the buffer is flushed after a newline. Full-buffered means it's only flushed to become visible to the OS (i.e. with a write() system call) when it's full.



                You will see output eventually, in chunks of maybe 4kiB at a time. (I don't know the default buffer size.) This is generally more efficient, and means fewer writes to your actual disk. But not great for interactive monitoring, because output is hidden inside the memory of the writing process until it's flushed.



                On Stack Overflow, there's a Disable output buffering Python Q&A which lists many ways to get unbuffered (or line-buffered?) output to stdout in Python. The question itself summarizes the answers.



                Options include running python -u (Or I guess putting #!/usr/bin/python -u at the top of your script), or using the PYTHONUNBUFFERED environment variable for that program. Or explicit flushing after some/all print functions, like @Davey's answer suggests.




                Some other programs have similar options, e.g. GNU grep has --line-buffered, and GNU sed has -u / --unbuffered, for use-cases like this, or for example piping the output of your python program. e.g. ./slowly-output-stuff | grep --line-buffered 'foo.*bar'.






                share|improve this answer

























                  3












                  3








                  3







                  Terminology: There is no pipe anywhere in this scenario. (I edited the question to fix that). Pipes are a different type of file (a buffer inside the kernel).



                  This is a redirect to a regular file.



                  C stdio, and Python, default to making stdout line-buffered when it's connected to a TTY, otherwise it's full-buffered. Line-buffered means the buffer is flushed after a newline. Full-buffered means it's only flushed to become visible to the OS (i.e. with a write() system call) when it's full.



                  You will see output eventually, in chunks of maybe 4kiB at a time. (I don't know the default buffer size.) This is generally more efficient, and means fewer writes to your actual disk. But not great for interactive monitoring, because output is hidden inside the memory of the writing process until it's flushed.



                  On Stack Overflow, there's a Disable output buffering Python Q&A which lists many ways to get unbuffered (or line-buffered?) output to stdout in Python. The question itself summarizes the answers.



                  Options include running python -u (Or I guess putting #!/usr/bin/python -u at the top of your script), or using the PYTHONUNBUFFERED environment variable for that program. Or explicit flushing after some/all print functions, like @Davey's answer suggests.




                  Some other programs have similar options, e.g. GNU grep has --line-buffered, and GNU sed has -u / --unbuffered, for use-cases like this, or for example piping the output of your python program. e.g. ./slowly-output-stuff | grep --line-buffered 'foo.*bar'.






                  share|improve this answer













                  Terminology: There is no pipe anywhere in this scenario. (I edited the question to fix that). Pipes are a different type of file (a buffer inside the kernel).



                  This is a redirect to a regular file.



                  C stdio, and Python, default to making stdout line-buffered when it's connected to a TTY, otherwise it's full-buffered. Line-buffered means the buffer is flushed after a newline. Full-buffered means it's only flushed to become visible to the OS (i.e. with a write() system call) when it's full.



                  You will see output eventually, in chunks of maybe 4kiB at a time. (I don't know the default buffer size.) This is generally more efficient, and means fewer writes to your actual disk. But not great for interactive monitoring, because output is hidden inside the memory of the writing process until it's flushed.



                  On Stack Overflow, there's a Disable output buffering Python Q&A which lists many ways to get unbuffered (or line-buffered?) output to stdout in Python. The question itself summarizes the answers.



                  Options include running python -u (Or I guess putting #!/usr/bin/python -u at the top of your script), or using the PYTHONUNBUFFERED environment variable for that program. Or explicit flushing after some/all print functions, like @Davey's answer suggests.




                  Some other programs have similar options, e.g. GNU grep has --line-buffered, and GNU sed has -u / --unbuffered, for use-cases like this, or for example piping the output of your python program. e.g. ./slowly-output-stuff | grep --line-buffered 'foo.*bar'.







                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered 6 hours ago









                  Peter CordesPeter Cordes

                  2,4751621




                  2,4751621





















                      0














                      Another option (if you don't care about the contents, just the progress) is pv:



                      NAME
                      pv - monitor the progress of data through a pipe

                      SYNOPSIS
                      pv [OPTION] [FILE]...
                      pv [-h|-V]


                      Introduce this in your pipeline and it will show you the number of bytes processed as well as the speed they go through the pipeline.



                      If the content is what you actually want to monitor, then tee is the best choice, as the other answer indicates.






                      share|improve this answer


















                      • 1





                        There's no pipeline, just file redirection. And it won't solve the buffering problem.

                        – Barmar
                        7 hours ago















                      0














                      Another option (if you don't care about the contents, just the progress) is pv:



                      NAME
                      pv - monitor the progress of data through a pipe

                      SYNOPSIS
                      pv [OPTION] [FILE]...
                      pv [-h|-V]


                      Introduce this in your pipeline and it will show you the number of bytes processed as well as the speed they go through the pipeline.



                      If the content is what you actually want to monitor, then tee is the best choice, as the other answer indicates.






                      share|improve this answer


















                      • 1





                        There's no pipeline, just file redirection. And it won't solve the buffering problem.

                        – Barmar
                        7 hours ago













                      0












                      0








                      0







                      Another option (if you don't care about the contents, just the progress) is pv:



                      NAME
                      pv - monitor the progress of data through a pipe

                      SYNOPSIS
                      pv [OPTION] [FILE]...
                      pv [-h|-V]


                      Introduce this in your pipeline and it will show you the number of bytes processed as well as the speed they go through the pipeline.



                      If the content is what you actually want to monitor, then tee is the best choice, as the other answer indicates.






                      share|improve this answer













                      Another option (if you don't care about the contents, just the progress) is pv:



                      NAME
                      pv - monitor the progress of data through a pipe

                      SYNOPSIS
                      pv [OPTION] [FILE]...
                      pv [-h|-V]


                      Introduce this in your pipeline and it will show you the number of bytes processed as well as the speed they go through the pipeline.



                      If the content is what you actually want to monitor, then tee is the best choice, as the other answer indicates.







                      share|improve this answer












                      share|improve this answer



                      share|improve this answer










                      answered 10 hours ago









                      rrauenzarrauenza

                      1313




                      1313







                      • 1





                        There's no pipeline, just file redirection. And it won't solve the buffering problem.

                        – Barmar
                        7 hours ago












                      • 1





                        There's no pipeline, just file redirection. And it won't solve the buffering problem.

                        – Barmar
                        7 hours ago







                      1




                      1





                      There's no pipeline, just file redirection. And it won't solve the buffering problem.

                      – Barmar
                      7 hours ago





                      There's no pipeline, just file redirection. And it won't solve the buffering problem.

                      – Barmar
                      7 hours ago

















                      draft saved

                      draft discarded
















































                      Thanks for contributing an answer to Super User!


                      • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

                      But avoid


                      • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

                      • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.

                      To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




                      draft saved


                      draft discarded














                      StackExchange.ready(
                      function ()
                      StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fsuperuser.com%2fquestions%2f1421123%2fwatching-something-be-written-to-a-file-live-with-tail%23new-answer', 'question_page');

                      );

                      Post as a guest















                      Required, but never shown





















































                      Required, but never shown














                      Required, but never shown












                      Required, but never shown







                      Required, but never shown

































                      Required, but never shown














                      Required, but never shown












                      Required, but never shown







                      Required, but never shown







                      Popular posts from this blog

                      Disable / Remove link to Product Items in Cart Planned maintenance scheduled April 23, 2019 at 23:30 UTC (7:30pm US/Eastern) Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara Unicorn Meta Zoo #1: Why another podcast?How can I limit products that can be bought / added to cart?Remove item from cartHide “Add to Cart” button if specific products are already in cart“Prettifying” the custom options in cart pageCreate link in cart sidebar to view all added items After limit reachedLink products together in checkout/cartHow to Get product from cart and add it againHide action-edit on cart page if simple productRemoving Cart items - ObserverRemove wishlist items when added to cart

                      Helsingin valtaus Sisällysluettelo Taustaa | Yleistä sotatoimista | Osapuolet | Taistelut Helsingin ympäristössä | Punaisten antautumissuunnitelma | Taistelujen kulku Helsingissä | Valtauksen jälkeen | Tappiot | Muistaminen | Kirjallisuutta | Lähteet | Aiheesta muualla | NavigointivalikkoTeoksen verkkoversioTeoksen verkkoversioGoogle BooksSisällissota Helsingissä päättyi tasan 95 vuotta sittenSaksalaisten ylivoima jyräsi punaisen HelsinginSuomalaiset kuvaavat sotien jälkiä kaupungeissa – katso kuvat ja tarinat tutuilta kulmiltaHelsingin valtaus 90 vuotta sittenSaksalaiset valtasivat HelsinginHyökkäys HelsinkiinHelsingin valtaus 12.–13.4. 1918Saksalaiset käyttivät ihmiskilpiä Helsingin valtauksessa 1918Teoksen verkkoversioTeoksen verkkoversioSaksalaiset hyökkäävät Etelä-SuomeenTaistelut LeppävaarassaSotilaat ja taistelutLeppävaara 1918 huhtikuussa. KapinatarinaHelsingin taistelut 1918Saksalaisten voitonparaati HelsingissäHelsingin valtausta juhlittiinSaksalaisten Helsinki vuonna 1918Helsingin taistelussa kaatuneet valkokaartilaisetHelsinkiin haudatut taisteluissa kaatuneet punaiset12.4.1918 Helsingin valtauksessa saksalaiset apujoukot vapauttavat kaupunginVapaussodan muistomerkkejä Helsingissä ja pääkaupunkiseudullaCrescendo / Vuoden 1918 Kansalaissodan uhrien muistomerkkim

                      Adjektiivitarina Tarinan tekeminen | Esimerkki: ennen | Esimerkki: jälkeen | Navigointivalikko