Stand-Alone File and Log Viewer
SeeStream is a stand-alone file and log viewer with powerful display and search capabilities. Log files
created by LogStream are viewable with timestamp, signal trace, error, and packet information to aid in
debugging protocols and other serial streams.
More than one instance of SeeStream can run concurrently to view more than one file or even two locations
in the same file!
SeeStream Features
- Two independent movable cursors with delta timestamping.
- WYSIWYG printing of user-customizable display options.
- Character-class capable text search engine.
- Binary data searching with optional masking and user-selected comparison logic.
- Signal trace, timestamp, filter and driver packet displays.
- Live mode to view incoming data as it arrives.
- Signal, error, filter packet, and log gap searches.
- User-configurable display number base from 2-36.
- Fully mouse-aware cursor motion (including drag).
- Configuration file management to store common or specific viewing options.
- View LogStream files, MicroTAP files or any other type of file.
View Anything: View LogStream files, MicroTAP files or any other file (as raw data)!
Flexible Display: This is the main SeeStream window. Notice the right-click menu which offers
fast access to the most common operations. Select optional address, data, ASCII translation, signal
trace, and packet background fields. The display base of the data fields can be set from 2-36 (this
example is in Hex).
Dual Timestamped Cursors: Two movable cursors (click and/or drag) allow arrival, elapsed
(e.g., inter-character gap) and duration (e.g., packet length) time measurements with millisecond
resolution. Each cursor has a slaved twin in the (optional) ASCII equivalents section shown at the
right hand side. Either of the twin cursors in a pair can be grabbed to position both twins on the
screen. All cursors can be moved using the keyboard, as well.
Cursor Timestamps: The timestamps and addresses for the data under the cursors are displayed in
the timestamp bar at the bottom of the display. Bytes received in error have a red X. The A cursor is
positioned on a byte received with Break and Framing errors.
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