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Apps

Autoscan

Check Status

docker ps | grep autoscan

Restart Container

docker restart autoscan

Previous Activity

cat /opt/autoscan/activity.log

Live Log

tail -F /opt/autoscan/activity.log

Cloudplow

Check Status

sudo systemctl status cloudplow.service

Previous Activity

cat /opt/cloudplow/cloudplow.log

Older logs are named as cloudplow.log.1, cloudplow.log.2, etc.

Live Log

tail -F /opt/cloudplow/cloudplow.log

or

sudo journalctl -o cat -fu cloudplow.service

Sometimes, debug-level logging can be useful. To enable this, make this change in the service file and restart the service.

In this file: /etc/systemd/system/cloudplow.service, change the log level to "DEBUG":

...
WorkingDirectory=/opt/cloudplow/
ExecStart=/usr/bin/python3 /opt/cloudplow/cloudplow.py run --loglevel=DEBUG  <<<<< RIGHT THERE
ExecStopPost=/bin/rm -rf /opt/cloudplow/locks
Restart=always
...

You should only enable debug logging while you need it to track down a problem.

Remote Mount

Pick one of these.

Rclone VFS

Check Status

The services that saltbox creates are named with this pattern: saltbox_managed_rclone_nameofremote.service; and in these examples are referred to as SERVICE_FILE.service. nameofremote is the name defined in the remotes section of settings.yml.

sudo systemctl status SERVICE_FILE.service

See a live log

sudo journalctl -o cat -fu SERVICE_FILE.service

Union Mount

Check Status

sudo systemctl status mergerfs.service

See a live log

sudo journalctl -o cat -fu mergerfs.service

Docker

Find the container name: docker ps -a

Live logs

Live log (from the beginning of the log)

docker logs --follow <container_name>

Live log (from the last 10 lines of the log)

docker logs --follow --tail 10 <container_name>

Examples

docker logs -f plex

Note: --follow = -f