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Top Forums Shell Programming and Scripting Strange behavior of find and rm command Post 302943791 by Don Cragun on Tuesday 12th of May 2015 10:21:51 PM
Old 05-12-2015
Nothing says that the other process that removed, moved, or deleted that file was being run by another find command nor that it had been started by cron. Anybody logged on to your network with write access to the directory in question could remove a file. And, by the time you see the error message, that process could already be gone. There might not be a running process left to find. If you have process accounting running, you might be able to find who was running another process at the time find reported the error.

Of course if you were running the two copies of the same script at the same time, you could easily see several errors like that as they fight with each other trying to be the first one to find and process the selected files. But, if you have only seen this once, it is more likely that someone manually removed a file while your cron job was running.
 

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epylog(8)							Applications/System							 epylog(8)

NAME
epylog - Syslog new log notifier and parser. SYNOPSIS
epylog [-c epylog.conf] [-d LOGLEVEL] [--last PERIOD] [--store-offsets] [--quiet] [--cron] DESCRIPTION
Epylog is a new log notifier and parser which runs periodically out of cron, looks at your logs, processes the entries in order to present them in a more comprehensive format, and then provides you with the output. It is written specifically with large network clusters in mind where a lot of machines (around 50 and upwards) log to the same loghost using syslog or syslog-ng. Alternatively, Epylog can be invoked from the command line and provide a log report based on a certain provided time period. In this case it relies on syslog timestamps to find the offsets, as opposed to the end-of-log offsets stored during the last run, though this behavior is not as reliable and is easily thwarted by skewed clocks. OPTIONS
-c config.file Provide an alternative config file to Epylog. By default, it will look in /etc/epylog/epylog.conf. -d LOGLEVEL Logging level. The default is 1. 0 will produce no output except for critical errors (useful for cron runs). 2 and above are debug- ging levels. 5 is the most verbose. --last PERIOD Will make a report on events that occurred in the last PERIOD. PERIOD can be either "hour", "day", "week", "month", or more granu- lar: "1h", "2h", "3d", "2w", etc. When --last is specified, epylog will ignore the saved offsets and locate the entries by time- stamps. CAUTION: this process is not to be trusted, since the timestamps are not checked for any validity when arriving to the loghost. One reporting machine with a skewed clock may confuse Epylog enough to miss a lot of valid entries. --store-offsets When specified, will store the offset of the last log entry processed in offsets.xml. During the cron runs epylog relies on the off- set information to find out what new entries to process. This is more trustworthy than relying on timestamps. The default behavior is not to store the offsets, as this allows to run epylog both from cron and manually without the two interfering with each-other. The location of offset.xml is specified in epylog.conf. See epylog.conf(5) for more details. --quiet In every way identical to -d 0. --cron This is essentially --quiet --store-offsets, plus a lockfile will be created and consulted, preventing more than one instance of epylog from running. You can still run epylog manually -- the lockfile is only checked when running in --cron mode. FEATURES
The core of epylog is written in python. It handles things like timestamp lookups, unwrapping of "last message repeated" lines, han- dling of rotated files, preparing and publishing the reports, etc. The modules are pluggable and can be either "internal", written in python, or external. External modules can be written in any lan- guage, but at a price of some convenience. For more info see epylog-modules(5). INITIAL RUN
Depending on the size of your logs, you might want to initialize your offsets before letting epylog run from cron. When the off- sets.xml file is missing, epylog will by default process the entire log, and depending on your configuration, that can be a lot of entries. A good way to init epylog is to run: epylog --last day --store-offsets FILES
/etc/epylog/epylog.conf /usr/sbin/epylog /etc/cron.daily/epylog.cron /etc/epylog/* /var/lib/epylog/* /usr/share/epylog/modules/* EXAMPLES
The useful way to run from a command line is with --last. E.g.: epylog --last day epylog --last 2w When running from cron, you want to store the offsets and not rely on timestamps. There is a mode that allows you to do this: epylog --cron AUTHORS
Konstantin Ryabitsev <icon@linux.duke.edu> SEE ALSO
epylog.conf(5) epylog-modules(5) Konstantin Ryabitsev 1.0 epylog(8)
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