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Diffstat (limited to 'source/a/logrotate/logrotate.conf')
-rw-r--r-- | source/a/logrotate/logrotate.conf | 50 |
1 files changed, 50 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/source/a/logrotate/logrotate.conf b/source/a/logrotate/logrotate.conf new file mode 100644 index 000000000..27b03e134 --- /dev/null +++ b/source/a/logrotate/logrotate.conf @@ -0,0 +1,50 @@ +# /etc/logrotate.conf +# +# logrotate is designed to ease administration of systems that generate large +# numbers of log files. It allows automatic rotation, compression, removal, and +# mailing of log files. Each log file may be handled daily, weekly, monthly, or +# when it grows too large. +# +# logrotate is normally run daily from root's crontab. +# +# For more details, see "man logrotate". + +# rotate log files weekly: +weekly + +# keep 4 weeks worth of backlogs: +rotate 4 + +# create new (empty) log files after rotating old ones: +create + +# uncomment if you want to use the date as a suffix of the rotated file +#dateext + +# uncomment this if you want your log files compressed: +#compress + +# some packages install log rotation information in this directory: +include /etc/logrotate.d + +# Rotate /var/log/wtmp: +/var/log/wtmp { + monthly + create 0664 root utmp + minsize 1M + rotate 1 +} + +# Rotate /var/log/btmp: +/var/log/btmp { + monthly + create 0600 root root + rotate 1 +} + +# Note that /var/log/lastlog is not rotated. This is intentional, and it should +# not be. The lastlog file is a database, and is also a sparse file that takes +# up much less space on the drive than it appears. + +# system-specific logs may be also be configured below: + |