## Name tail - Print the end of a file ## Synopsis ```**sh $ tail [-f] [-n number] [file] ``` ## Description `tail` prints the specified `number` (10 by default) of lines at the end of `file`. ## Options * `-f`, `--follow`: Output data as it is written to the file * `-n number`, `--lines number`: Print the specified number of lines ## Arguments * `file`: Target file. If unspecified or `-`, defaults to the standard input. ## Examples Print the last 10 lines of README.md: ```sh $ tail README.md ``` Print the last 42 lines of todo.txt: ```sh $ tail -n42 todo.txt ``` Print the last lines as they are written to logs.log: ```sh $ tail -f logs.log ``` ## See also * [`head`(1)](help://man/1/head) * [`cat`(1)](help://man/1/cat)