# Find And Follow Server Logs Let's say you are authenticated with the AWS CLI and have the appropriate CloudWatch permissions. You have a few services running in production with associated logs. One of those is a Rails server. We want to run `aws logs tail`, but first we check how that command works. ```bash $ aws logs tail help ``` We see a bunch of options, but the only required one is `group_name` ("The name of the CloudWatch Logs group."). We may also notice the `--follow` flag which we'll want to use as well to keep incoming logs flowing. We need to determine the log group name for the Rails server. We can do that from the CLI as well (no need to dig into the web UI). ```bash $ aws logs describe-log-groups { "logGroups": [ { "logGroupName": "/aws/codebuild/fc-rails-app-abcefg-123456", "creationTime": 1739476650823, "metricFilterCount": 0, "arn": "arn:aws:logs:us-east-2:123456789:log-group:/aws/codebuild/fc-rails-app-abcefg-123456:*", "storedBytes": 65617, "logGroupClass": "STANDARD", "logGroupArn": "arn:aws:logs:us-east-2:123456789:log-group:/aws/codebuild/fc-rails-app-abcefg-123456" }, ... ] } ``` Because the group name is descriptive enough, we can find the log group we are interested in: `/aws/codebuild/fc-rails-app-abcefg-123456`. Now we know what we want to `tail`. ```bash $ aws logs tail /aws/codebuild/fc-rails-app-abcefg-123456 --follow ```