If so you can setup a mrnet file in /etc/logrotate.d as show below and it will compress rename and rotate your logfile for you when it exceeds 5k in size (see man logrotate for more info).
Hi, I am trying to unzip a file that I unmounted onto a unix machine from a cd I had burned in a Windows machine. The file I am trying to unzip is a .tar file... it was originally a .tar.gz file because it was zipped using gzip. I have tried:
% gzip -d hpux.tar (where hpux.tar is the file... (2 Replies)
Gurus,
My own stupidity (or ignorance...or both) put me in the situation I am in and I need help please:
1-My shell account (OS: HP UX v11) contains several work directories (/docs, /scripts...)
2-Our sysadmin has implemented aggressive disk quotas so I have to compress the files I put here... (2 Replies)
ciao a tutti,
premesso che sono un principiante di unix, avrei bisogno di gzip/gunzip e SOPRATTUTTO delle istruzioni (ahimè dettagliatissime, come per un bimbo!) per installarlo...
grazie mille,
ciao (1 Reply)
Hi All,
I have some files which are 01.tar.gz, 02.tar.gz,03.tar.gz ........30.tar.gz.
when I want to extract the files I 'm using this command "gzip -dc *.tar.gz | tar -xvf -" but it just uncompress 01.tar.gz
how can I uncompress all of them ?
thanx
alice (2 Replies)
Hi all,
I have a file(Say x) and need to zip using gzip with the date&Timestamp(Something like x01012007.......) . Can you please tell me the command.
Thanks (2 Replies)
Hi Experts!!
I was creating a zip file in a server which had zip installed in it. I have another server in which zip is not there and i am instructed to make use of gzip to compress files. I would need your help to know the way to create a gzip file.
1) I do the following to create the zip... (5 Replies)
Hi,
I want to gzip files in loop.
for i in `ls *.xml`;
do
gzip $i;
done
But i am gettin error like "/usr/bin/ls: Arg list too long"
Also please tell me how to do it with while loop and also using find and then exec. (7 Replies)
Hi All,
I have a random test file: test.txt, size: 146
$ ll test.txt
$ 146 test.txt
Take 1:
$ cat test.txt | gzip > test.txt.gz
$ ll test.txt.gz
$ 124 test.txt.gz
Take 2:
$ gzip test.txt
$ ll test.txt.gz
$ 133 test.txt.gz
As you can see, gzipping a file and piping into gzip... (1 Reply)
Hi Gurus,
I have a requirement to zip a file using gzip and ftp it to target server.
I am using a gzip script as below.
gzip.sh
#!/bin/ksh
/usr/bin/gzip -9 $1
Filename for gzip.sh is passed by an application program.
so the output for ./gzip.sh Test_YYYYMMDDHHMMSS.txt (file name is... (1 Reply)
how to zip all log file in a folder expect the latest
gzip * ---> will zip all log files but I don't want the latest file to be zipped
ex: file1, file2, file3, file4, file5
any single command to gzip all files excpet file5 ? (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: rmann
2 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
epylog-modules
epylog-modules(5) Applications/System epylog-modules(5)NAME
epylog-modules - epylog module cofiguration.
SYNOPSIS
epylog uses pluggable modules to perform analysis and report on syslog strings. This manpage explains the format of the module config
files.
modules.d
Epylog config files are placed in the modules.d directory of the cfgdir specified in epylog.conf. Any file ending in .conf in that direc-
tory is considered a module config file. Most common location for modules.d directory is in /etc/epylog/modules.d.
module.conf
The name of the config file doesn't carry much meaning, however it MUST end in .conf in order to be recognized as a module config file.
The config file for each module is separated into two parts: [module] and [conf].
[module]
desc The description of the module. It will be shown in the final report.
exec This is where the "body" of the module is located. Most modules that come with the distribution will be placed in /usr/share/epy-
log/modules, but depending on your setup, you may place them elsewhere.
files List the logfiles requested by this module in this field. Separate multiple entries by comma. Epylog will handle rotated files, but
you need to specify the mask appropriately. E.g. the most common logrotate setup will place rotated files in the same directory and
add .0, .1, .2, etc to the end of the file. Therefore, a file entry would look like so:
/var/log/filename[.#]
If you have compression turned on, your entry will look like so:
/var/log/filename[.#.gz]
Lastly, for advanced configurations, more complex entries may be required. E.g. if your logrotate saves rotated files in a subdirec-
tory in /var/log, you can specify it like so:
/var/log/[rotate/]filename[.#.gz]
This will work, too:
/var/log/filename[/var/rotate/filename.#.gz]
In any case, "#" will be where the increments will go.
enabled
Can be either "yes" or "no". If "no" is specified, Epylog will completely ignore this module.
internal
Can be either "yes" or "no". If "yes", then the module is handled as an internal module, and if "no", then the external module API
is used. See doc/modules.txt for more information about the module APIs.
outhtml
Specifies whether the output produced by the module is HTML or not. Can be either "yes" or "no".
priority
An unsigned int. Most commonly a number from 0 to 10. Modules with the lowest number will be considered the highest prioroty and
will be both invoked and presented in the final report before the others.
[conf]
This is where per-module configuration directives go. Some modules have these, some don't. Look in the module config file -- the available
values should be listed and described there.
COMMENTS
Lines starting with "#" will be considered commented out.
AUTHORS
Konstantin Ryabitsev <icon@linux.duke.edu>
SEE ALSO epylog(8), Epylog(3), epylog.conf(5)Konstantin Ryabitsev 1.0 epylog-modules(5)