SHOW
ais show
command
AIS CLI show
command can universally be used to view summaries and details on a cluster and its nodes, buckets and objects, running and finished jobs - in short, all managed entities (see below).
The command is a “hub” for all information-viewing commands that are currently supported:
$ ais show --help
COMMANDS:
auth show entity in authn
object show object properties
bucket show bucket properties
cluster main dashboard: show cluster at-a-glance (nodes, software versions, utilization, capacity, memory and more)
performance show performance counters, throughput, latency, disks, used/available capacities (press <TAB-TAB> to select specific view)
storage show storage usage and utilization, disks and mountpaths
rebalance show rebalance status and stats
config show CLI, cluster, or node configurations (nodes inherit cluster and have local)
remote-cluster show attached AIS clusters
job show running and finished jobs ('--all' for all, or press <TAB-TAB> to select, '--help' for more options)
log for a given node: show its current log (use '--refresh' to update, '--help' for details)
tls show TLS certificate: version, issuer's common name, from/to validity bounds
For easy usage, all show
commands have been aliased to their respective top-level counterparts:
$ ais show <command>
is equivalent to:
$ ais <command> show
For instance,
ais show performance
is an alias forais performance
- both can be used interchangeably.
As a general rule, instead of remembering any of the above (as well as any of the below), type (e.g.)
ais perf<TAB-TAB>
and pressEnter
.
You can also hit
` maybe a few more times while typing a few more letters in between. Any combination will work.
When part-typing, part-TABing a sequence of words that (will eventually) constitute a valid AIS CLI command, type
--help
at any time. This will display short description, command-line options, usage examples, and other context-sensitive information.
For usage examples, another way to quickly find them would be a good-and-old keyword search. E.g.,
cd aistore; grep -n "ais.*cp" docs/cli/*.md
, and similar. Additional useful tricks (includingais search
) are also mentioned elsewhere in the documentation.
As far as ais show
, the command currently extends as follows:
$ ais show <TAB-TAB>
auth bucket performance rebalance remote-cluster log
object cluster storage config job tls
In other words, there are currently 11 subcommands that are briefly described in the rest of this text.
Table of Contents
ais show performance
ais show job
ais show cluster
ais show auth
ais show bucket
ais show object
ais show storage
ais show config
ais show remote-cluster
ais show rebalance
ais show log
ais show performance
The command has 5 subcommands:
$ ais show performance
counters throughput latency capacity disk
The command provides a quick single-shot overview of cluster performance. If you type ais show performance
and instead of <TAB-TAB>
hit Enter
, the command will show performance counters, aggregated cluster throughput statistics, and the other 3 tables (latency, capacity, disk IO) - in sequence, one after another.
The command’s help screen follows below - notice the command-line options (aka flags):
$ ais show performance --help
NAME:
ais show performance - show performance counters, throughput, latency, disks, used/available capacities (press <TAB-TAB> to select specific view)
USAGE:
ais show performance command [command options] [TARGET_ID]
COMMANDS:
counters show (GET, PUT, DELETE, RENAME, EVICT, APPEND) object counts, as well as:
- numbers of list-objects requests;
- (GET, PUT, etc.) cumulative and average sizes;
- associated error counters, if any.
throughput show GET and PUT throughput, associated (cumulative, average) sizes and counters
latency show GET, PUT, and APPEND latencies and average sizes
capacity show target mountpaths, disks, and used/available capacity
disk show disk utilization and read/write statistics
OPTIONS:
--refresh value interval for continuous monitoring;
valid time units: ns, us (or µs), ms, s (default), m, h
--count value used together with '--refresh' to limit the number of generated reports (default: 0)
--all when printing tables, show all columns including those that have only zero values
--no-headers, -H display tables without headers
--regex value regular expression to select table columns (case-insensitive), e.g.: --regex "put|err"
--units value show statistics and/or parse command-line specified sizes using one of the following _units of measurement_:
iec - IEC format, e.g.: KiB, MiB, GiB (default)
si - SI (metric) format, e.g.: KB, MB, GB
raw - do not convert to (or from) human-readable format
--average-size show average GET, PUT, etc. request size
--help, -h show help
As one would maybe expect, --refresh
, --units
and all the other listed flags universally work across all performance
subcommands.
For instance, you could continuously run several screens to simultaneously display a variety of performance-related aspects:
# screen #1
$ ais show performance counters --refresh 5
# screen #2
$ ais show performance throughput --refresh 5
and so on - all the 5 tables with 5-seconds periodicity, or any other time interval(s) of your choosing.
As far as continuous monitoring goes, this (approach) has a chance to provide a good overall insight. A poor-man’s addition, if you will, to the popular (and also supported) tools such as Grafana and Prometheus. But available with zero setup out of the box (which is a plus).
What’s running
Use ais show performance
and its variations in combination with ais show job
(and variations). The latter shows what’s running in the cluster, and thus combining the two may make sense.
See also
ais show job
$ ais show job --help
NAME:
ais show job - show running and/or finished jobs
- 'show job tco-cysbohAGL' - show a given (multi-object copy/transform) job identified by its unique ID;
- 'show job copy-listrange' - show all running multi-object copies;
- 'show job copy-objects' - same as above (using display name);
- 'show job copy-objects --all' - show both running and already finished (or stopped) multi-object copies;
- 'show job list' - show all running list-objects jobs;
- 'show job ls' - same as above;
- 'show job ls --refresh 10' - same as above with periodic _refreshing_ every 10 seconds;
- 'show job ls --refresh 10 --count 4' - same as above but only for the first four 10-seconds intervals;
- 'show job prefetch-listrange' - show all running prefetch jobs;
- 'show job prefetch' - same as above;
- 'show job prefetch --refresh 1m' - show all running prefetch jobs at 1 minute intervals (until Ctrl-C);
- 'show job --all' - show absolutely all jobs, running and already finished
press <TAB-TAB> to select, '--help' for more options.
USAGE:
ais show job [command options] [NAME] [JOB_ID] [NODE_ID] [BUCKET]
OPTIONS:
--refresh value time interval for continuous monitoring; can be also used to update progress bar (at a given interval);
valid time units: ns, us (or µs), ms, s (default), m, h
--count value used together with '--refresh' to limit the number of generated reports, e.g.:
'--refresh 10 --count 5' - run 5 times with 10s interval (default: 0)
--json, -j json input/output
--all all jobs, including finished and aborted
--regex value regular expression to select jobs by name, kind, or description, e.g.: --regex "ec|mirror|elect"
--no-headers, -H display tables without headers
--verbose, -v show extended statistics
--units value show statistics and/or parse command-line specified sizes using one of the following _units of measurement_:
iec - IEC format, e.g.: KiB, MiB, GiB (default)
si - SI (metric) format, e.g.: KB, MB, GB
raw - do not convert to (or from) human-readable format
--date-time override the default hh:mm:ss (hours, minutes, seconds) time format - include calendar date as well
--progress show progress bar(s) and progress of execution in real time
--log value filename to log metrics (statistics)
--help, -h show help
The command has no statically defined subcommands. When you type ais show job <TAB-TAB>
, the resulting set of shell completions will only include job names (aka “kinds”) that are currently running. Example:
$ ais show job <TAB-TAB>
move-bck rebalance
Just maybe to reiterate the same slightly differently: ais show job <TAB-TAB>
won’t produce anything useful iff the cluster currently doesn’t run any jobs
On the other hand, job-identifying selections [NAME] [JOB_ID] [NODE_ID] [BUCKET]
:
- are all optional, and
- can be typed in an arbitrary order
Example:
$ ais show job xhcTyUfJF t[Kritxhbt]
is the same as:
$ ais show job t[Kritxhbt] xhcTyUfJF
In both cases, we are asking a specific target node (denoted as NODE_ID
in the command’s help) for a specific job ID (denoted as JOB_ID
).
Selection-wise, this would be the case of ultimate specificity. Accordingly, on the opposite side of the spectrum would be something like:
$ ais show job --all
The --all
flag always defines the broadest scope possible, and so the query ais show job --all
includes absolutely all jobs, running and finished (succeeded and aborted).
Here’s at a glance:
$ ais show job --help
NAME:
ais show job - show running and finished jobs ('--all' for all, or press <TAB-TAB> to select, '--help' for options)
USAGE:
ais show job [command options] [NAME] [JOB_ID] [NODE_ID] [BUCKET]
OPTIONS:
--refresh value interval for continuous monitoring;
valid time units: ns, us (or µs), ms, s (default), m, h
--count value used together with '--refresh' to limit the number of generated reports (default: 0)
--json, -j json input/output
--all all jobs, including finished and aborted
--regex value regular expression to select jobs by name, kind, or description, e.g.: --regex "ec|mirror|elect"
--no-headers, -H display tables without headers
--verbose, -v verbose
--units value show statistics and/or parse command-line specified sizes using one of the following _units of measurement_:
iec - IEC format, e.g.: KiB, MiB, GiB (default)
si - SI (metric) format, e.g.: KB, MB, GB
raw - do not convert to (or from) human-readable format
--progress show progress bar(s) and progress of execution in real time
--log value path to file where the metrics will be saved
--help, -h show help
Example: show all currently running jobs, and narrow the selection to a given target node:
$ ais show job t[ugoFtqUrrm]
NODE ID KIND BUCKET OBJECTS BYTES START END STATE
ugoFtqUrrm vOYSo5pHG ec-get mybucket-ec-rebalance - - 12-03 10:32:25 - Running
ugoFtqUrrm b4Ks45pHv ec-get mybucket-obj-n-slice 9 42.36MiB 12-03 10:31:33 - Running
ugoFtqUrrm vUYSo5pHvS ec-put mybucket-ec-rebalance 3 1.43MiB 12-03 10:32:25 - Running
ugoFtqUrrm Kobs45pHvS ec-put mybucket-obj-n-slice 9 4.75MiB 12-03 10:31:33 - Running
ugoFtqUrrm U8UcSo5pHv ec-resp mybucket-ec-rebalance 18 89.45MiB 12-03 10:32:25 - Running
ugoFtqUrrm M8M6sodqmv ec-resp mybucket-obj-n-slice 13 64.49MiB 12-03 10:31:34 - Idle
ugoFtqUrrm Ioa31VqaB list mybucket-ec-rebalance 5 - 12-03 10:32:32 12-03 10:32:42 Aborted
ugoFtqUrrm X3H381Vqau list mybucket-ec-rebalance 3 - 12-03 10:32:29 12-03 10:32:42 Aborted
ugoFtqUrrm g5 rebalance - 6 25.59MiB 12-03 10:32:32 12-03 10:32:39 Finished
Example: show a job by name, and include finished/aborted:
$ ais show job resilver --all
resilver[G0p7yXYiUg]
NODE ID KIND OBJECTS BYTES START END STATE
HAAt8090 G0p7yXYiUg resilver 11 18.38KiB 13:04:51 13:04:51 Finished
JVnt8086 G0p7yXYiUg resilver 10 14.86KiB 13:04:51 13:04:51 Finished
LDgt8088 G0p7yXYiUg resilver 14 20.81KiB 13:04:51 13:04:51 Finished
OBIt8089 G0p7yXYiUg resilver 4 7.04KiB 13:04:51 13:04:51 Finished
VUCt8091 G0p7yXYiUg resilver 9 14.50KiB 13:04:51 13:04:51 Finished
qVJt8087 G0p7yXYiUg resilver 9 14.21KiB 13:04:51 13:04:51 Finished
Here and elsewhere in the documentation, CLI colors used to highlight certain (notable) items on screen - are not shown.
On a related note: coloring can be disabled via
ais config cli set no_color
.
Example: continuous monitoring
$ ais show job --refresh 5
rebalance[g2]
NODE ID KIND OBJECTS BYTES START END STATE
HAAt8090 g2 rebalance 2072 3.05MiB 13:35:00 - Running
JVnt8086 g2 rebalance 2 2.08KiB 13:35:00 - Running
LDgt8088 g2 rebalance 4 6.46KiB 13:35:00 - Running
OBIt8089 g2 rebalance 4 7.39KiB 13:35:00 - Running
VUCt8091 g2 rebalance - - 13:35:00 - Running
qVJt8087 g2 rebalance - - 13:35:00 - Running
------------------------------------------------------------------------
rebalance[g2]
NODE ID KIND OBJECTS BYTES START END STATE
HAAt8090 g2 rebalance 2072 3.05MiB 13:35:00 - Running
JVnt8086 g2 rebalance 2 2.08KiB 13:35:00 - Running
LDgt8088 g2 rebalance 4 6.46KiB 13:35:00 - Running
OBIt8089 g2 rebalance 4 7.39KiB 13:35:00 - Running
VUCt8091 g2 rebalance - - 13:35:00 - Running
qVJt8087 g2 rebalance - - 13:35:00 - Running
------------------------------------------------------------------------
No running jobs. Use '--all' to show all, '--all' <TAB-TAB> to select, '--help' for details.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
ec-get[wHUgmjFaJ]
NODE ID BUCKET OBJECTS BYTES ERRORS QUEUE AVG TIME START END ABORTED
OBIt8089 wHUgmjFaJ ais://TESTAISBUCKET-ec-rebalance - - - - - 13:35:24 - false
ec-get[P3SqrpURnv]
NODE ID BUCKET OBJECTS BYTES ERRORS QUEUE AVG TIME START END ABORTED
VUCt8091 P3SqrpURnv ais://TESTAISBUCKET-ec-rebalance - - - - - 13:35:24 - false
ec-get[u3pGCzmh4]
NODE ID BUCKET OBJECTS BYTES ERRORS QUEUE AVG TIME START END ABORTED
JVnt8086 u3pGCzmh4 ais://TESTAISBUCKET-ec-rebalance - - - - - 13:35:24 - false
...
list[n2O4CJxUg]
NODE ID KIND BUCKET OBJECTS BYTES START END STATE
HAAt8090 n2O4CJxUg list ais://TESTAISBUCKET-ec-rebalance 10 32.51MiB 13:36:55 - Idle
JVnt8086 n2O4CJxUg list ais://TESTAISBUCKET-ec-rebalance 16 52.96MiB 13:36:55 - Idle
LDgt8088 n2O4CJxUg list ais://TESTAISBUCKET-ec-rebalance 2 3.59MiB 13:36:55 - Idle
OBIt8089 n2O4CJxUg list ais://TESTAISBUCKET-ec-rebalance 6 11.72MiB 13:36:55 - Idle
VUCt8091 n2O4CJxUg list ais://TESTAISBUCKET-ec-rebalance 10 37.53MiB 13:36:55 - Idle
list[J-bfCJxVp]
NODE ID KIND BUCKET OBJECTS BYTES START END STATE
qVJt8087 J-bfCJxVp list ais://TESTAISBUCKET-ec-rebalance 22 60.91MiB 13:37:18 - Idle
rebalance[g8]
NODE ID KIND OBJECTS BYTES START END STATE
HAAt8090 g8 rebalance 4 27.46MiB 13:37:18 - Running
JVnt8086 g8 rebalance 2 4.42MiB 13:37:18 - Running
LDgt8088 g8 rebalance 2 9.96MiB 13:37:18 - Running
OBIt8089 g8 rebalance 4 23.49MiB 13:37:18 - Running
VUCt8091 g8 rebalance 32 - 13:37:18 - Running
qVJt8087 g8 rebalance 6 39.38MiB 13:37:18 - Running
^[^C$ ais show job --refresh 5
rebalance[g15]
NODE ID KIND OBJECTS BYTES START END STATE
HAAt8090 g15 rebalance 648 971.49KiB 13:40:54 - Running
JVnt8086 g15 rebalance 688 1.01MiB 13:40:54 - Running
LDgt8088 g15 rebalance 554 833.21KiB 13:40:54 - Running
OBIt8089 g15 rebalance 734 1.07MiB 13:40:54 - Running
VUCt8091 g15 rebalance - - 13:40:54 - Running
qVJt8087 g15 rebalance 694 1.02MiB 13:40:54 - Running
------------------------------------------------------------------------
...
See also
- definitions:
xaction
vsjob
- CLI:
ais job
command - CLI:
dsort
(distributed shuffle) - CLI:
download
from any remote source - built-in
rebalance
- multi-object operations
- reading, writing, and listing archives
- copying buckets
ais show cluster
The first command to think of when deploying a new cluster. Useful as well when looking for the shortest quickest summary of what’s running and what’s going on. The subcommands and brief description follows:
# ais show cluster <TAB-TAB>
proxy target smap bmd config stats
$ ais show cluster --help
NAME:
ais show cluster - main dashboard: show cluster at-a-glance (nodes, software versions, utilization, capacity, memory and more)
USAGE:
ais show cluster command [command options] [NODE_ID] | [target [NODE_ID]] | [proxy [NODE_ID]] | [smap [NODE_ID]] | [bmd [NODE_ID]] | [config [NODE_ID]] | [stats [NODE_ID]]
COMMANDS:
smap show cluster map (Smap)
bmd show bucket metadata (BMD)
config show cluster and node configuration
stats (alias for "ais show performance") show performance counters, throughput, latency, disks, used/available capacities (press <TAB-TAB> to select specific view)
OPTIONS:
--refresh value interval for continuous monitoring;
valid time units: ns, us (or µs), ms, s (default), m, h
--count value used together with '--refresh' to limit the number of generated reports (default: 0)
--json, -j json input/output
--no-headers, -H display tables without headers
--help, -h show help
Example usage with no parameters and a different endpoint
$ export AIS_ENDPOINT=http://10.0.1.148:51080
$ ais show cluster
PROXY MEM USED(%) MEM AVAIL UPTIME K8s POD STATUS
p[EciZrNdH][P] 0.01% 363.51GiB 94d ais-proxy-2 online
p[HPpnlgpj] 0.01% 363.66GiB 94d ais-proxy-0 online
p[LZOkYuAf] 0.01% 362.62GiB 94d ais-proxy-8 online
p[NXDmWuAV] 0.01% 363.68GiB 94d ais-proxy-6 online
p[OzRhyuOB] 0.01% 363.73GiB 94d ais-proxy-4 online
p[WwpvNugq] 0.01% 363.17GiB 94d ais-proxy-9 online
p[cAQpRMET] 0.01% 363.56GiB 94d ais-proxy-1 online
p[eYQteCHG] 0.01% 363.81GiB 94d ais-proxy-7 online
p[ehkGLcSD] 0.01% 363.57GiB 94d ais-proxy-3 online
p[reZqfbjy] 0.01% 363.67GiB 94d ais-proxy-5 online
TARGET MEM USED(%) MEM AVAIL CAP USED(%) CAP AVAIL CPU USED(%) UPTIME K8s POD STATUS
t[KopwySra] 0.15% 363.54GiB 77.67% 31.825TiB 15.38% 94d ais-target-1 online
t[MgHbIvNG] 0.16% 363.65GiB 77.00% 30.941TiB 14.06% 94d ais-target-4 online
t[WoLgoQEW] 0.16% 363.72GiB 78.00% 31.763TiB 17.67% 94d ais-target-7 online
t[fXFQnenn] 0.11% 363.83GiB 78.00% 31.751TiB 18.12% 94d ais-target-6 online
t[fwKlswQP] 0.16% 363.62GiB 78.33% 31.758TiB 19.81% 94d ais-target-5 online
t[tFUiHCCO] 0.16% 363.76GiB 79.00% 31.617TiB 19.47% 94d ais-target-8 online
t[tfNkAtFk] 0.16% 363.55GiB 77.33% 31.875TiB 19.70% 94d ais-target-2 online
t[uxvpIDPc] 0.15% 362.57GiB 77.67% 31.846TiB 16.56% 94d ais-target-0 online
t[vAWmZZPv] 0.11% 363.68GiB 78.67% 31.608TiB 23.09% 94d ais-target-3 online
t[wSJzGVnU] 0.10% 363.33GiB 76.67% 30.972TiB 17.13% 94d ais-target-9 online
Summary:
Proxies: 10 (0 unelectable)
Targets: 10
Cluster Map: version 1512, UUID AGetvIKTz, primary p[EciZrNdH]
Deployment: K8s
Status: 20 online
Rebalance: n/a
Authentication: disabled
Version: 3.12.85636aa
Build: 2022-11-16T17:55:50+0000
AIS_ENDPOINT
is part of theAIS_**
environment.
AIS_ENDPOINT
can point to any AIS gateway (proxy) in a given cluster. Does not necessarily have to be the primary gateway.
For CLI, in particular,
AIS_ENDPOINT
overrides cluster’s endpoint that’s currently configured. To view or change the configured endpoint (or any other CLI configuration item), runais config cli
.
See also
ais show auth
The following subcommands are currently supported:
cluster show registered clusters
role show existing user roles
user show users or user details
config show AuthN server configuration
Refer to ais auth
documentation for details and examples.
ais show bucket
Show bucket properties.
Refer to ais bucket
documentation for details and examples.
ais show object
Show object details.
Refer to ais object
documentation for details and examples.
ais show storage
Show storage usage and utilization in the cluster. Show disks and mountpaths - for a single selected node or for all storage nodes.
When run with no subcommands, ais show storage
defaults to ais show storage disk
.
In addition, the command support the following subcommands:
# ais show storage <TAB-TAB>
disk mountpath capacity summary
And with brief subcommand descriptions:
$ ais show storage --help
NAME:
ais show storage - show storage usage and utilization, disks and mountpaths
USAGE:
ais show storage command [command options] [TARGET_ID]
COMMANDS:
disk show disk utilization and read/write statistics
mountpath show target mountpaths
capacity show target mountpaths, disks, and used/available capacity
summary show bucket sizes and %% of used capacity on a per-bucket basis
OPTIONS:
--refresh value interval for continuous monitoring;
valid time units: ns, us (or µs), ms, s (default), m, h
--count value used together with '--refresh' to limit the number of generated reports (default: 0)
--json, -j json input/output
--help, -h show help
Refer to ais storage
documentation for details and examples.
ais show config
Show daemon configuration.
Refer to ais cluster
documentation for details and examples.
ais show remote-cluster
Show information about attached AIS clusters.
Refer to ais cluster
documentation for details and examples.
ais show rebalance
Display details about the most recent rebalance xaction.
Flag | Type | Description | Default |
---|---|---|---|
--refresh |
duration |
Watch global rebalance at a given refresh interval. The usual unit suffixes are supported and include m (for minutes), s (seconds), ms (milliseconds). Press Ctrl-C to stop monitoring. |
` ` |
--all |
bool |
If set, show all rebalance xactions | false |
Example
$ ais show rebalance
REB ID NODE OBJECTS RECV SIZE RECV OBJECTS SENT SIZE SENT START TIME END TIME ABORTED
g1 CASGt8088 0 0B 0 0B 03-25 17:33:54 - false
g1 DMwvt8089 0 0B 0 0B 03-25 17:33:54 - false
g1 ejpCt8086 0 0B 0 0B 03-25 17:33:54 - false
g1 kiuvt8091 0 0B 0 0B 03-25 17:33:54 - false
g1 oGvbt8090 0 0B 0 0B 03-25 17:33:54 - false
g1 xZntt8087 0 0B 0 0B 03-25 17:33:54 - false
$ ais show rebalance
REB ID NODE OBJECTS RECV SIZE RECV OBJECTS SENT SIZE SENT START TIME END TIME ABORTED
g1 CASGt8088 0 0B 0 0B 03-25 17:33:54 03-25 17:34:09 false
g1 DMwvt8089 0 0B 0 0B 03-25 17:33:54 03-25 17:34:08 false
g1 ejpCt8086 0 0B 0 0B 03-25 17:33:54 03-25 17:34:08 false
g1 kiuvt8091 0 0B 0 0B 03-25 17:33:54 03-25 17:34:08 false
g1 oGvbt8090 0 0B 0 0B 03-25 17:33:54 03-25 17:34:08 false
g1 xZntt8087 0 0B 0 0B 03-25 17:33:54 03-25 17:34:09 false
Rebalance completed.
ais show log
There are 3 enumerated log severities and, respectively, 3 types of logs generated by each node:
- error
- warning
- info
Example 1. Show “info” log:
# Use <TAB-TAB> auto-completion to select a node (run `ais show cluster` to show details)
$ ais show log
p[f6ytNhIhb] p[OqlWpgwrY] ...
t[jkrt8Nkqi] t[Juwzq371P] ...
# Type `p[O`<TAB-TAB> to complete the node ID and then use `less` (for instance) to search, scroll or page down (or up), etc.
$ ais show log p[OqlWpgwrY] | less
Log file created at: 2021/04/11 10:58:38
Running on machine: u18044
Binary: Built with gc go1.15.3 for linux/amd64
Log line format: L hh:mm:ss.uuuuuu file:line] msg
I 10:58:38.122973 config.go:1611 log.dir: "/ais/log"; l4.proto: tcp; port: 51080; verbosity: 3
...
:
Example 2: show errors and/or warnings
By default, ais show log
shows “info” log (that also contains all warnings and errors).
To show only errors, run:
ais show log OqlWpgwrY --severity=error
# or, same
ais show log OqlWpgwrY --severity=e | more
For warnings and errors, run:
ais show log OqlWpgwrY --severity=warning
# or, same
ais show log OqlWpgwrY --severity=w | less