Difference between revisions of "Limit the size of .log files & the journal"
Limit the size of .log files & the journal (view source)
Revision as of 14:36, 15 August 2013
, 10 years ago→My settings in logrotate.conf don't effect all of the .log files?
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Script files that are called via the logrotate.conf file take precedence over the global settings in logrotate.conf . That means that if you call a script from logrotate.conf that is located in the /etc/logrotate.d directory, then that script is more powerful than any of the global setting in logrotate.conf . | Script files that are called via the logrotate.conf file take precedence over the global settings in logrotate.conf . That means that if you call a script from logrotate.conf that is located in the /etc/logrotate.d directory, then that script is more powerful than any of the global setting in logrotate.conf . | ||
I use a script '''/etc.logrotate.d/rotate.logs''' that is set to work on all *.log files, & it does. The | I use a script '''/etc.logrotate.d/rotate.logs''' that is set to work on all *.log files, & it does. The two that don't get rotated are called '''faillog''' & lastlog''' , apart from not having the '''.log''' file extension, these two files are not normal log files, they are accessed via terminal commands of the same name. | ||
<br clear="all"/> | <br clear="all"/> |