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1.9 KiB
1.9 KiB
NS.tail() method
Open the tail window of a script.
Signature:
tail(fn?: string, host?: string, ...args: any[]): void;
Parameters
Parameter | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
fn | string | Optional. Filename of the script being tailed. If omitted, the current script is tailed. |
host | string | Optional. Hostname of the script being tailed. Defaults to the server this script is running on. If args are specified, this is not optional. |
args | any[] | Arguments for the script being tailed. |
Returns:
void
Remarks
RAM cost: 0 GB
Opens a script’s logs. This is functionally the same as the tail Terminal command.
If the function is called with no arguments, it will open the current script’s logs.
Otherwise, the fn, hostname/ip, and args… arguments can be used to get the logs from another script. Remember that scripts are uniquely identified by both their names and arguments.
Example 1
// NS1:
//Open logs from foo.script on the current server that was run with no args
tail("foo.script");
//Get logs from foo.script on the foodnstuff server that was run with no args
tail("foo.script", "foodnstuff");
//Get logs from foo.script on the foodnstuff server that was run with the arguments [1, "test"]
tail("foo.script", "foodnstuff", 1, "test");
Example 2
// NS2:
//Open logs from foo.script on the current server that was run with no args
ns.tail("foo.script");
//Get logs from foo.script on the foodnstuff server that was run with no args
ns.tail("foo.script", "foodnstuff");
//Get logs from foo.script on the foodnstuff server that was run with the arguments [1, "test"]
ns.tail("foo.script", "foodnstuff", 1, "test");