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logadm (1)
  • >> logadm (1) ( Solaris man: Команды и прикладные программы пользовательского уровня )
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    NAME

    logadm - manage endlessly growing log files
     
    

    SYNOPSIS

    logadm 
    

    logadm [-options] logname...
    

     

    DESCRIPTION

    logadm is a general log rotation tool that is suitable for running from cron(1M).

    Without arguments, logadm reads the /etc/logadm.conf file, and for every entry found in that file checks the corresponding log file to see if it should be rotated. Typically this check is done each morning by an entry in the root's crontab.

    If the logname argument is specified, logadm renames the corresponding log file by adding a suffix so that the most recent log file ends with .0 (that is, logfile.0), the next most recent ends with .1 (that is, logfile.1), and so forth. By default, ten versions of old log files are kept (that is, logfile.0 through logfile.9). At the point when what would be the eleventh file is logged, logadm automatically deletes the oldest version to keep the count of files at ten.

    logadm takes a number of options. You can specify these options on the command line or in the /etc/logadm.conf file. The logadm command searches /etc/logadm.conf for lines of the form logname options

    logname

    Identifies an entry in /etc/logadm.conf. This can be a name or the pathname of the log file. If you specify a log file, rather than a name, for this field, it must be a fully qualified pathname.

    options

    Identifies command line options exactly as they would be entered on the command line. This allows commonly used log rotation policies to be stored in the /etc/logadm.conf file. See EXAMPLES.

    If options are specified both in /etc/logadm.conf and on the command line, those in the /etc/logadm.conf file are applied first. Therefore, the command line options override those in /etc/logadm.conf.

    Log file names specified in /etc/logadm.conf may contain filename substitution characters such as * and ?, that are supported by csh(1).

    Two options control when a log file is rotated. They are: -s size -p period.

    When using more than one of these options at a time, there is an implied and between them. This means that all conditions must be met before the log is rotated.

    If neither of these two options are specified, the default conditions for rotating a log file are: -s 1b -p 1w, which means the log file is only rotated if the size is non-zero and if at least 1 week has passed since the last time it was rotated.

    By specifying -p never as a rotation condition, any other rotation conditions are ignored and logadm moves on to the expiration of old log files. By specifying -p now as a rotation condition, a log rotation is forced.

    Unless specified by the -o, -g, or -m options, logadm replaces the log file (after renaming it) by creating an empty file whose owner, group ID, and permissions match the original file.

    Three options control when old log files are expired: -A age -C count -S size. These options expire the oldest log files until a particular condition or conditions are met. For example, the combination -C 5 and the -S 10m options expires old log files until there are no more than 5 of the and their combined disk usage is no more than 10 megabytes. If none of these options are specified, the default expiration is -C 10 which keeps ten old log files. If no files are to be expired, use -C 0 to prevent expiration by default.  

    OPTIONS

    The following options are supported:

    -a post_command

    Execute the post_command after renaming the log file. post_command is passed to sh -c.

    Specify post_command as a valid shell command. Use quotes to protect spaces or shell metacharacters in post_command.

    This option can be used to restart a daemon that is writing to the file. When rotating multiple logs with one logadm command, post_command is executed only once after all the logs are rotated, not once per rotated log.

    -A age

    Delete any versions that have not been modified for the amount of time specified by age.

    Specify age as a number followed by an h (hours), d (days), w(weeks), m (months), or y (years).

    -b pre_command

    Execute pre_command before renaming the log file. pre_command is passed to sh -c.

    Specify pre_command as a valid shell command. Use quotes to protect spaces or shell metacharacters in the pre_command.

    This option can be used to stop a daemon that is writing to the file. When rotating multiple logs with one logadm command, pre_command is executed only once before all the logs are rotated, not once per rotated log.

    -c

    Rotate the log file by copying it and truncating the original logfile to zero length, rather than renaming the file.

    -C count

    Delete the oldest versions until there are not more than count files left.

    If no expire options (-A, -C, or -S) are specified, -C 10 is the default. To prevent the default expire rule from being added automatically, specify -C 0 .

    -e mail_addr

    Send error messages by email to mail_addr.

    As logadm is typically run from cron(1M), error messages are captured by cron and mailed to the owner of the crontab.

    This option is useful if you want the mail regarding error messages to go to another address instead. If no errors are encountered, no mail message is generated.

    -E cmd

    Execute cmd to expire the file, rather than deleting the old log file to expire it.

    cmd is passed it to sh -c. The file is considered expired after cmd completes. If the old log file is not removed or renamed by the cmd, logadm considers it for expiration the next time that it runs on the specified log file. If present, the keyword $file is expanded in the specified cmdto the name of the file being expired.

    This option is useful for tasks such as mailing old log files to administrators, or copying old log files to long term storage.

    -f conf_file

    Use conf_file instead of /etc/logadm.conf.

    This option allows non-root users to keep their own logadm configuration files.

    -g group

    Create a new empty file with the ID specified by group, instead of preserving the group ID of the log file.

    Specify group by name or by numeric group ID, as accepted by chgrp(1).

    This option requires the ability to change file group ownership using the chgrp(1) command.

    -h

    Print a help message that describes logadm's options.

    -l

    Use local time rather than the Coordinated Universal Time (UTC) when naming rotated log files (see the discussion of percent sequences in the templates supplied with the -t option).

    -m mode

    Create a new empty file with the mode specified by mode, instead of preserving the mode of the log file.

    Specify mode in any form that is accepted by the chmod(1) command.

    -M cmd

    Use cmd to rename the log file. If the keyword $file is specified, it is expanded to the name of the log file. Similarly, the keyword $nfile is expanded to the new name of the log file. The $nfile keyword is only available with commands provided with the -M option. After the command completes, the log file is replaced by the rotate file. The default cmd is "/bin/mv $file$nfile".

    -n

    Print the actions that the logadm command will perform without actually performing them.

    This option is useful for checking arguments before making any changes to the system.

    It is important to remember, however, that since log rotating actions are only printed with this option, logadm might not find files that need expiring, but if run without the -n logadm might create a file that needs expiring by performing the log rotating actions. Therefore, if you see no files being expired with the -n option, files still might be expired without it.

    -N

    Prevent an error message if the specified logfile does not exist. Normally, logadm produces an error message if the log file is not found. With -N, if the log file doesn't exist logadm moves on to the expire rules (if any) and then to the next log file (if any), without creating the empty replacement log file.

    -o owner

    Create the new empty file with owner, instead of preserving the owner of the log file.

    Specify owner in any form that is accepted by the chown(1) command.

    -p period

    Rotate a log file after the specified time period (period).

    Specify period as a number followed by d for days, h for hours, w for weeks, m for months (30 days) or y for years. There are also two special values for period: now and never. "-p now" forces log rotation. "-p never" forces no log rotation.

    -P timestamp

    Used by logadm to record the last time the log was rotated in /etc/logadm.conf.

    This option uses timestamp to determine if the log rotation period has passed. The format of timestamp matches the format generated by ctime(3C), with quotes around it to protect embedded spaces. timestamp is always recorded in the Coordinated Universal Time (UTC) timezone.

    -r

    Remove any entries corresponding to the specified logname from the /etc/logadm.conf.

    -R cmd

    Run the cmd when an old log file is created by a log rotation. If the keyword $file is embedded in the specified command, it is expanded to the name of the old log file just created by log rotation.

    This option is useful for processing log file contents after rotating the log. cmd is executed by passing it to sh -c. When rotating multiple logs with one logadm command, the command supplied with -R is executed once every time a log is rotated. This is useful for post-processing a log file (that is, sorting it, removing uninteresting lines, etc.). The -a option is a better choice for restarting daemons after log rotation.

    -s size

    Rotate the log file only if its size is greater than or equal to size.

    Specify size as a number followed by the letter b for bytes, k for kilobytes, m for megabytes, or g for gigabytes.

    -S size

    Delete the oldest versions until the total disk space used by the old log files is less than the specified size.

    Specify size as a number followed by the letter b for bytes, k for kilobytes, m for megabytes, or g for gigabytes.

    -t template

    Specify the template to use when renaming log files.

    template can be a simple name, such as /var/adm/oldfile, or it can contain special keywords which are expanded by logadm and are in the form $word. Allowed sequences are:

    $basename

    The log file name, without the directory name

    $dirname

    The directory of the file to be rotated

    $domain

    Expands to the output of domainname

    $file

    The full path name of the file to be rotated

    $isa

    Expands to the output of uname -p

    $machine

    Expands to the output of uname -m

    $n

    The version number, 0 is most recent, 1 is next most recent, and so forth

    $N

    The same as $n, but starts at 1 instead of zero

    $nodename

    Expands to the output of uname -n

    $platform

    Expands to the output of uname -i

    $release

    Expands to the output of uname -r

    $secs

    The number of seconds since 00:00:00 UTC, January 1,1970

    $zonename

    Expands to the output of zonename(1).

    To actually have the dollar sign character in the file name, use $$. Any percent sequences allowed by strftime(3C) are also allowed, for example, %d expands to the day of the month. To actually have a percent sign character in the file name, use %%. Both dollar-sign keywords and percent sequences can appear anywhere in the template. If the template results in a pathname with non-existent directories, they are created as necessary when rotating the log file.

    If no -t option is specified, the default template is $file.$n. Actual rotation of log files, where each version is shifted up until it expires is done using the $n keyword. If the template does not contain the $n keyword, the log file is simply renamed to the new name and then the expire rules, if any, are applied.

    -T pattern

    Normally logadm looks for a list of old log files by turning the template (specified with the -t option) into a pattern and finding existing files whose names match that pattern. The -T option causes the given pattern to be used instead.

    This option is useful if another program fiddles with the old log file names, like a cron job to compress them over time. The pattern is in the form of a pathname with special characters such as * and ? as supported by csh(1) filename substitution.

    -v

    Print information about the actions being executed in verbose mode.

    -V

    Validate the configuration file.

    This option validates that an entry for the specified logname exists in the /etc/logadm.conf file and is syntactically correct. If logname is not specified, all entries in the configuration file are validated. If a logname argument is specified, the command validates the syntax of that entry. If the entry is found, it is printed and the exit value of the command is true. Otherwise the exit value is false.

    -w entryname

    Write an entry into the config file (that is, /etc/logadm.conf) that corresponds to the current command line arguments. If an entry already existed for the specified entryname, it is removed first. This is the preferred method for updating /etc/logadm.conf, because it prevents syntax errors. The entryname is an argument to an invocation of logadm. entryname might be chosen as something easy to remember or it can be the pathname of the log file. If a pathname, rather than a name is used, it must be a fully qualified pathname.

    If no log file name is provided on a logadm command line, the entry name is assumed to be the same as the log file name. For example, the following two lines achieve the same thing, keeping two copies of rotated log files:

    % logadm -C2 -w mylog /my/really/long/log/file/name
    % logadm -C2 -w /my/really/long/log/file/name
    

    -z count

    Compress old log files after all other commands have been executed. count of the most recent log files are left uncompressed, therefore making the count most recent files easier to peruse. Use count of zero to compress all old logs.

    The compression is done with gzip(1) and the resulting log file has the suffix of .gz.

     

    OPERANDS

    The following operands are supported:

    logname

    Identifies the name of the entry in /etc/logadm.conf. If the log file name is specified in the logname field, it is assumed that logname is the same as the actual log file name.

     

    EXAMPLES

    Example 1 Rotating a File and Keeping Previous Versions

    The following example rotates the /var/adm/exacct/proc file, keeping ten previous versions in /var/adm/exacct/proc.0 through /var/adm/exacct/proc.9.

    Tell logadm to copy the file and truncate it.

     % logadm -c /var/adm/exacct/proc
    

    Example 2 Rotating syslog

    The following example rotates syslog and keeps eight log files. Old log files are put in the directory /var/oldlogs instead of /var/log:

    % logadm -C8 -t'/var/oldlogs/syslog.$n' /var/log/syslog
    

    Example 3 Rotating /var/adm/sulog and Expiring Based on Age

    The following entry in the /etc/logadm.conf file rotates the /var/adm/sulog file and expires any copies older than 30 days.

    /var/adm/sulog -A 30d
    

    Example 4 Rotating Files and Expiring Based on Disk Usage

    The following entry in the /etc/logadm.conf file rotates the /var/adm/sulog file and expires old log files when more than 100 megabytes are used by the sum of all the rotated log files.

    /var/adm/sulog -S 100m
    

    Example 5 Creating an Entry that Stores the Logfile Name

    This example creates an entry storing the log file name and the fact that we want to keep 20 copies in /etc/logadm.conf, but the -p never means the entry is ignored by the normal logadm run from root's crontab every morning.

    % logadm -w locallog /usr/local/logfile -C20 -p never
    

    Use the following entry on the command line to override the -p never option:

     % logadm -p now locallog
    

    Example 6 Rotating the apache Error and Access Logs

    The following example rotates the apache error and access logs monthly to filenames based on current year and month. It keeps the 24 most recent copies and tells apache to restart after renaming the logs.

    This command is run once, and since the -w option is specified, an entry is made in /etc/logadm.conf so the apache logs are rotated from now on.

     % logadm -w apache -p 1m -C 24\
        -t '/var/apache/old-logs/$basename.%Y-%m'\
        -a '/usr/apache/bin/apachectl graceful'\
        '/var/apache/logs/*{access,error}_log'
    

    This example also illustrates that the entry name supplied with the -w option doesn't have to match the log file name. In this example, the entry name is apache and once the line has been run, the entry in /etc/logadm.conf can be forced to run by executing the following command:

    % logadm -p now apache
    

    Because the expression matching the apache log file names was enclosed in quotes, the expression is stored in /etc/logadm.conf, rather than the list of files that it expands to. This means that each time logadm runs from cron it expands that expression and checks all the log files in the resulting list to see if they need rotating.

    The following command is an example without the quotes around the log name expression. The shell expands the last argument into a list of log files that exist at the time the command is entered, and writes an entry to /etc/logadm.conf that rotates the files.

    logadm -w apache /var/apache/logs/*_log
    

     

    FILES

    /etc/logadm.conf

    configuration file for logadm command

     

    ATTRIBUTES

    See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:

    ATTRIBUTE TYPEATTRIBUTE VALUE

    AvailabilitySUNWcsu

    Interface Stability

     

    SEE ALSO

    chgrp(1), chmod(1), chown(1), csh(1), gzip(1), cron(1M), ctime(3C), strftime(3C), logadm.conf(4), attributes(5)  

    NOTES

    When logadm applies expire conditions (supplied by the -A, -C, and -S options), it deletes files, the oldest first, until the conditions are satisfied. If the template used for naming the old logs contained $n or $N, logadm picks the highest value of $n or $N found in the old log file names first. If the template used is something else, logadm uses the modification time to determine which files to expire first. This may not be the expected behavior if an old log file has been modified since it was rotated.

    Depending on log file sizes and number of log files, log file rotations can be very time-consuming.

    By default, logadm works in GMT. Therefore, all entries written to the /etc/logadm.conf file (see logadm.conf(4)) will have a GMT timestamp. Users can use the -l option to set logadm to local time.


     

    Index

    NAME
    SYNOPSIS
    DESCRIPTION
    OPTIONS
    OPERANDS
    EXAMPLES
    FILES
    ATTRIBUTES
    SEE ALSO
    NOTES


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