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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Logrotate - I am not able to rotate files using logrotate Post 302794023 by hanson44 on Monday 15th of April 2013 01:36:53 AM
Old 04-15-2013
Well, that's a little progress. It's not rotating because possibly:

- Files different between directory rotating and directory not rotating.
- State file "knows about" the directory, do does not rotate.
- Something messed up in the config file.

I noticed there is both -d and -v options to try. It sounds like you have already used at least one of those already, so you probably already have the diagnosis (thinks does not need to rotate).

I did notice there is a --force option to "force the rotation". Seems worth trying. I would try that.

Or, temporarily rename the state file, and try it to create new state file. Maybe the state file thinks "everything is OK".

Maybe you need to get rid of (archive somewhere else and delete from /var/log/) some of the old rotated files. Then start from scratch with the current log file.

I would save a directory listing (or just copy all the files somewhere), so in case it does something weird, you can return to previous state.

Hope this helps a little. Maybe someone else has better ideas.
 

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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)
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