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These docs are for v5.0. Click to read the latest docs for v2024.3.

Command-line Client

The Seq command-line client supports logging (seqcli log), searching (search), tailing (tail), querying (query) and JSON or plain-text log file ingestion (ingest), as well as a number of administration tasks.

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Getting started

seqcli is installed by default with the Windows installer. For macOS and Linux, unzip the release for your operating system from the project's GitHub releases page.

To set a default server URL, run:

seqcli config -k connection.serverUrl -v https://your-seq-server

The API key will be stored in your SeqCli.json configuration file; on Windows, this is encrypted using DPAPI; on Mac/Linux the key is currently stored in plain text. As an alternative to storing the API key in configuration, it can be passed to each command via the --apikey= argument.

seqcli is also available as a Docker container under datalust/seqcli:

docker run --rm --net host datalust/seqcli:latest <command> [<args>]

Use Docker networks and volumes to make local files and other containers accessible to seqcli within its container.

Commands

Usage:

seqcli <command> [<args>]

Available commands:

  • apikey
  • config — View and set fields in the SeqCli.json file; run with no arguments to list all fields.
  • dashboard
  • help — Show information about available commands.
  • ingest — Send log events from a file or STDIN.
  • log — Send a structured log event to the server.
  • query — Execute an SQL query and receive results in CSV format.
  • search — Retrieve log events that match a given filter.
  • signal
  • tail — Stream log events matching a filter.
  • user
  • version — Print the current executable version.

apikey remove

Remove an API key from the server.

Example:

seqcli apikey remove -t 'Test API Key'
OptionDescription
-t, --title=VALUEThe title of the API key(s) to remove
-i, --id=VALUEThe id of a single API key to remove
-s, --server=VALUEThe URL of the Seq server; by default the connection.serverUrl value will be used
-a, --apikey=VALUEThe API key to use when connecting to the server; by default connection.apiKey value will be used

apikey list

List available API keys.

Example:

seqcli apikey list
OptionDescription
-t, --title=VALUEThe title of the API key(s) to list
-i, --id=VALUEThe id of a single API key to list
--jsonPrint events in newline-delimited JSON (the default is plain text)
--no-colorDon't colorize text output
-s, --server=VALUEThe URL of the Seq server; by default the connection.serverUrl value will be used
-a, --apikey=VALUEThe API key to use when connecting to the server; by default connection.apiKey value will be used

apikey create

Create an API key for ingestion.

Example:

seqcli apikey create -t 'Test API Key' -p Environment=Test
OptionDescription
-t, --title=VALUEA title for the API key
--token=VALUEA pre-allocated API key token; by default, a new token will be generated and written to STDOUT
-p, --property=NAME=VALUESpecify name/value properties, e.g. -p Customer=C123 -p Environment=Production
--filter=VALUEA filter to apply to incoming events
--minimum-level=VALUEThe minimum event level/severity to accept; the default is to accept all events
--use-server-timestampsDiscard client-supplied timestamps and use server clock values
-s, --server=VALUEThe URL of the Seq server; by default the connection.serverUrl value will be used
-a, --apikey=VALUEThe API key to use when connecting to the server; by default connection.apiKey value will be used
--jsonPrint events in newline-delimited JSON (the default is plain text)
--no-colorDon't colorize text output

config

View and set fields in the SeqCli.json file; run with no arguments to list all fields.

OptionDescription
-k, --key=VALUEThe field, for example connection.serverUrl
-v, --value=VALUEThe field value; if not specified, the command will print the current value
-c, --clearClear the field

dashboard render

Produce a CSV or JSON result set from a dashboard chart.

Example:

seqcli dashboard render -i dashboard-159 -c 'Response Time (ms)' --last 7d --by 1h
OptionDescription
-i, --id=VALUEThe id of a single dashboard to render
-c, --chart=VALUEThe title of a chart on the dashboard to render
--last=VALUEA duration over which the chart should be rendered, e.g. 7d; this will be aligned to an interval boundary; either --last or --start and --end must be specified
--by=VALUEThe time-slice interval for the chart data, as a duration, e.g. 1h
--start=VALUEISO 8601 date/time to query from
--end=VALUEDate/time to query to
--signal=VALUEA signal expression or list of intersected signal ids to apply, for example signal-1,signal-2
--timeout=VALUEThe query execution timeout in milliseconds
--jsonPrint events in newline-delimited JSON (the default is plain text)
--no-colorDon't colorize text output
-s, --server=VALUEThe URL of the Seq server; by default the connection.serverUrl value will be used
-a, --apikey=VALUEThe API key to use when connecting to the server; by default connection.apiKey value will be used

dashboard remove

Remove a dashboard from the server.

Example:

seqcli dashboard remove -i dashboard-159
OptionDescription
-t, --title=VALUEThe title of the dashboard(s) to remove
-i, --id=VALUEThe id of a single dashboard to remove
-o, --owner=VALUEThe id of the user to remove dashboards for; by default, shared dashboards are listed
-s, --server=VALUEThe URL of the Seq server; by default the connection.serverUrl value will be used
-a, --apikey=VALUEThe API key to use when connecting to the server; by default connection.apiKey value will be used

dashboard list

List dashboards.

Example:

seqcli dashboard list
OptionDescription
-t, --title=VALUEThe title of the dashboard(s) to list
-i, --id=VALUEThe id of a single dashboard to list
-o, --owner=VALUEThe id of the user to list dashboards for; by default, shared dashboards are listed
--jsonPrint events in newline-delimited JSON (the default is plain text)
--no-colorDon't colorize text output
-s, --server=VALUEThe URL of the Seq server; by default the connection.serverUrl value will be used
-a, --apikey=VALUEThe API key to use when connecting to the server; by default connection.apiKey value will be used

help

Show information about available commands.

Example:

seqcli help search
OptionDescription
-m, --markdownGenerate markdown for use in documentation

ingest

Send log events from a file or STDIN.

Example:

seqcli ingest -i events.txt --json --filter="@Level <> 'Debug'" -p Environment=Test
OptionDescription
-i, --input=VALUEFile to ingest; if not specified, STDIN will be used
--invalid-data=VALUESpecify how invalid data is handled: fail (default) or ignore
-p, --property=NAME=VALUESpecify name/value properties, e.g. -p Customer=C123 -p Environment=Production
-x, --extract=VALUEAn extraction pattern to apply to plain-text logs (ignored when --json is specified)
--jsonRead the events as JSON (the default assumes plain text)
-f, --filter=VALUEFilter expression to select a subset of events
--send-failure=VALUESpecify how connection failures are handled: fail (default), retry, continue, or ignore
-s, --server=VALUEThe URL of the Seq server; by default the connection.serverUrl value will be used
-a, --apikey=VALUEThe API key to use when connecting to the server; by default connection.apiKey value will be used

log

Send a structured log event to the server.

Example:

seqcli log -m 'Hello, {Name}!' -p Name=World -p App=Test
OptionDescription
-m, --message=VALUEA message to associate with the event (the default is to send no message); https://messagetemplates.org syntax is supported
-l, --level=VALUEThe level or severity of the event (the default is Information)
-t, --timestamp=VALUEThe event timestamp as ISO-8601 (the current UTC timestamp will be used by default)
-x, --exception=VALUEAdditional exception or error information to send, if any
-p, --property=NAME=VALUESpecify name/value properties, e.g. -p Customer=C123 -p Environment=Production
-s, --server=VALUEThe URL of the Seq server; by default the connection.serverUrl value will be used
-a, --apikey=VALUEThe API key to use when connecting to the server; by default connection.apiKey value will be used

query

Execute an SQL query and receive results in CSV format.

Example:

seqcli query -q "select count(*) from stream group by @Level" --start="2018-02-28T13:00Z"
OptionDescription
-q, --query=VALUEThe query to execute
--start=VALUEISO 8601 date/time to query from
--end=VALUEDate/time to query to
--signal=VALUEA signal expression or list of intersected signal ids to apply, for example signal-1,signal-2
--timeout=VALUEThe query execution timeout in milliseconds
--jsonPrint events in newline-delimited JSON (the default is plain text)
--no-colorDon't colorize text output
-s, --server=VALUEThe URL of the Seq server; by default the connection.serverUrl value will be used
-a, --apikey=VALUEThe API key to use when connecting to the server; by default connection.apiKey value will be used

search

Retrieve log events that match a given filter.

Example:

seqcli search -f "@Exception like '%TimeoutException%'" -c 30
OptionDescription
-f, --filter=VALUEA filter to apply to the search, for example Host = 'xmpweb-01.example.com'
-c, --count=VALUEThe maximum number of events to retrieve; the default is 1
--start=VALUEISO 8601 date/time to query from
--end=VALUEDate/time to query to
--jsonPrint events in newline-delimited JSON (the default is plain text)
--no-colorDon't colorize text output
--signal=VALUEA signal expression or list of intersected signal ids to apply, for example signal-1,signal-2
-s, --server=VALUEThe URL of the Seq server; by default the connection.serverUrl value will be used
-a, --apikey=VALUEThe API key to use when connecting to the server; by default connection.apiKey value will be used

signal remove

Remove a signal from the server.

Example:

seqcli signal remove -t 'Test Signal'
OptionDescription
-t, --title=VALUEThe title of the signal(s) to remove
-i, --id=VALUEThe id of a single signal to remove
-o, --owner=VALUEThe id of the user to remove signals for; by default, shared signals are listed
-s, --server=VALUEThe URL of the Seq server; by default the connection.serverUrl value will be used
-a, --apikey=VALUEThe API key to use when connecting to the server; by default connection.apiKey value will be used

signal list

List available signals.

Example:

seqcli signal list
OptionDescription
-t, --title=VALUEThe title of the signal(s) to list
-i, --id=VALUEThe id of a single signal to list
-o, --owner=VALUEThe id of the user to list signals for; by default, shared signals are listed
--jsonPrint events in newline-delimited JSON (the default is plain text)
--no-colorDon't colorize text output
-s, --server=VALUEThe URL of the Seq server; by default the connection.serverUrl value will be used
-a, --apikey=VALUEThe API key to use when connecting to the server; by default connection.apiKey value will be used

signal import

Import signals in newline-delimited JSON format.

Example:

seqcli signal import -i ./Exceptions.json
OptionDescription
-i, --input=VALUEFile to import; if not specified, STDIN will be used
-o, --owner=VALUEThe id of the user to import signals for; by default, shared signals are listed
-s, --server=VALUEThe URL of the Seq server; by default the connection.serverUrl value will be used
-a, --apikey=VALUEThe API key to use when connecting to the server; by default connection.apiKey value will be used

signal create

Create a signal.

Example:

seqcli signal create -t 'Exceptions' -f "@Exception is not null"
OptionDescription
-t, --title=VALUEA title for the signal
--description=VALUEA description for the signal
-f, --filter=VALUEFilter to associate with the signal
--group=VALUEAn explicit group name to associate with the signal; the default is to infer the group from the filter
--no-groupSpecify that no group should be inferred; the default is to infer the group from the filter
--protectedSpecify that the signal is editable only by administrators
-s, --server=VALUEThe URL of the Seq server; by default the connection.serverUrl value will be used
-a, --apikey=VALUEThe API key to use when connecting to the server; by default connection.apiKey value will be used
--jsonPrint events in newline-delimited JSON (the default is plain text)
--no-colorDon't colorize text output

tail

Stream log events matching a filter.

OptionDescription
-f, --filter=VALUEAn optional server-side filter to apply to the stream, for example @Level = 'Error'
--jsonPrint events in newline-delimited JSON (the default is plain text)
--no-colorDon't colorize text output
--signal=VALUEA signal expression or list of intersected signal ids to apply, for example signal-1,signal-2
-s, --server=VALUEThe URL of the Seq server; by default the connection.serverUrl value will be used
-a, --apikey=VALUEThe API key to use when connecting to the server; by default connection.apiKey value will be used

user remove

Remove a user from the server.

Example:

seqcli user remove -n alice
OptionDescription
-n, --name=VALUEThe username of the user(s) to remove
-i, --id=VALUEThe id of a single user to remove
-s, --server=VALUEThe URL of the Seq server; by default the connection.serverUrl value will be used
-a, --apikey=VALUEThe API key to use when connecting to the server; by default connection.apiKey value will be used

user list

List users.

Example:

seqcli user list
OptionDescription
-n, --name=VALUEThe username of the user(s) to list
-i, --id=VALUEThe id of a single user to list
--jsonPrint events in newline-delimited JSON (the default is plain text)
--no-colorDon't colorize text output
-s, --server=VALUEThe URL of the Seq server; by default the connection.serverUrl value will be used
-a, --apikey=VALUEThe API key to use when connecting to the server; by default connection.apiKey value will be used

version

Print the current executable version.

Extraction patterns

The seqcli ingest command can be used for parsing plain text logs into structured log events.

seqcli ingest -x "{@t:timestamp} [{@l:level}] {@m:*}{:n}{@x:*}"

The -x argument above is an extraction pattern that will parse events like:

2018-02-21 13:29:00.123 +10:00 [ERR] The operation failed
System.DivideByZeroException: Attempt to divide by zero
  at SomeClass.SomeMethod()

Syntax

Extraction patterns have a simple high-level syntax:

  • Text that appears in the pattern is matched literally - so a pattern like Hello, world! will match logging statements that are made up of this greeting only,
  • Text between {curly braces} is a match expression that identifies a part of the event to be extracted, and
  • Literal curly braces are escaped by doubling, so {{ will match the literal text {, and }} matches }.

Match expressions have the form:

{name:matcher}

Both the name and matcher are optional, but either one or the other must be specified. Hence {@t:timestamp} specifies a name of @t and value timestamp, {IPAddress} specifies a name only, and {:n} a value only (in this case the built-in newline matcher).

The name is the property name to be extracted; there are four built-in property names that get special handling:

  • @t - the event's timestamp
  • @m - the textual message associated with the event
  • @l - the event's level
  • @x - the exception or backtrace associated with the event

Other property names are attached to the event payload, so {Elapsed:dec} will extract a property called Elapsed, using the dec decimal matcher.

Match expressions with no name are consumed from the input, but are not added to the event payload.

Matchers

Matchers identify chunks of the input event.

Different matchers are needed so that a piece of text like 200OK can be separated into separate properties, i.e. {StatusCode:nat}{Status:alpha}. Here, the nat (natural number) matcher also coerces the result into a numeric value, so that it is attached to the event payload numerically as 200 instead of as the text "200".

There are three kinds of matchers:

  • Matchers like alpha and nat are built-in named matchers.
  • The special matchers *, ** and so-on, are non-greedy content matchers; these will match any text up until the next pattern element matches (*), the next two elements match, and so-on. We saw this in action with the {@m:*}{:n} elements in the example - the message is all of the text up until the next newline.
  • More complex compound matchers are described using a sub-expression. These are prefixed with an equals sign =, like {Phone:={:nat}-{:nat}-{:nat}}. This will extract chunks of text like 123-456-7890 into the Phone property.

Processing

Extraction patterns are processed from left to right. When the first non-matching pattern is encountered, extraction stops; any remaining text that couldn't be matched will be attached to the resulting event in an @unmatched property.

Multi-line events are handled by looking for lines that start with the first element of the extraction pattern to be used. This works well if the first line of each event begins with something unambiguous like an iso8601dt timestamp; if the lines begin with less specific syntax, the first few elements of the extraction pattern might be grouped to identify the start of events more accurately:

{:=[{@t} {@l}]} {@m:*}

Here the literal text [, a timestamp token, adjacent space , level and closing ] are all grouped so that they constitute a single logical pattern element to identify the start of events.

When logs are streamed into seqcli ingest in real time, a 10 ms deadline is applied, within which any trailing lines that make up the event must be received.

Examples

Tail systemd logs:

journalctl -f -n 0 |
  seqcli ingest -x "{@t:syslogdt} {host} {ident:*}: {@m:*}{:n}" --invalid-data=ignore

Tail /var/log/syslog

tail -c 0 -F /var/log/syslog |
  seqcli ingest -x "{@t:syslogdt} {host} {ident:*}: {@m:*}{:n}"