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LOGROTATE(8)                      System Administrator's Manual                      LOGROTATE(8)

NAME
       logrotate - rotates, compresses, and mails system logs

SYNOPSIS
       logrotate  [--debug]  [--verbose]  [--log  file] [--force] [--state file] [--mail command]
       config_file [config_file2 ...]

DESCRIPTION
       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.

       Normally, logrotate is run as a daily cron job.  It will not modify a log more  than  once
       in  one  day unless the criterion for that log is based on the log's size and logrotate is
       being run more than once each day, or unless the -f or --force option is used.

       Any number of config files may be given on the command line. Later config files may  over-
       ride  the options given in earlier files, so the order in which the logrotate config files
       are listed is important.  Normally, a single config file which includes any  other  config
       files  which  are needed should be used.  See below for more information on how to use the
       include directive to accomplish this.  If a directory is given on the command line,  every
       file in that directory is used as a config file.

       If  no command line arguments are given, logrotate will print version and copyright infor-
       mation, along with a short usage summary.  If any errors occur while rotating logs, logro-
       tate will exit with non-zero status.

OPTIONS
       -?, --help
              Prints help message.

       -d, --debug
              Turn on debug mode, which means that no changes are made to the logs and the logro-
              tate state file is not updated.  Only debug messages are printed.

       -f, --force
              Tells logrotate to force the rotation, even if it doesn't think this is  necessary.
              Sometimes this is useful after adding new entries to a logrotate config file, or if
              old log files have been removed by hand, as the new files will be created, and log-
              ging will continue correctly.

       -l, --log file
              Tells  logrotate to log verbose output into the log_file. The verbose output logged
              to that file is the same as when running logrotate with -v switch. The log file  is
              overwritten on every logrotate execution.

       -m, --mail command
              Tells  logrotate which command to use when mailing logs. This command should accept
              the following arguments:

              1) the subject of the message given with '-s subject'
              2) the recipient.

              The command must then read a message on standard input and mail it to  the  recipi-
              ent. The default mail command is /usr/bin/mail.

       -s, --state statefile
              Tells logrotate to use an alternate state file.  This is useful if logrotate is be-
              ing run as a different user for various sets of log files.  The default state  file
              is /var/lib/logrotate/status.

       --usage
              Prints a short usage message.

       -v, --verbose
              Turns on verbose mode, for example to display messages during rotation.

CONFIGURATION FILE
       logrotate  reads  everything  about the log files it should be handling from the series of
       configuration files specified on the command line.  Each configuration file can set global
       options  (local  definitions  override global ones, and later definitions override earlier
       ones) and specify logfiles to rotate. A simple configuration file looks like this:

       # sample logrotate configuration file
       compress

       /var/log/messages {
           rotate 5
           weekly
           postrotate
               /usr/bin/killall -HUP syslogd
           endscript
       }

       "/var/log/httpd/access.log" /var/log/httpd/error.log {
           rotate 5
           mail recipient AT example.org
           size 100k
           sharedscripts
           postrotate
               /usr/bin/killall -HUP httpd
           endscript
       }

       /var/log/news/* {
           monthly
           rotate 2
           olddir /var/log/news/old
           missingok
           postrotate
               kill -HUP $(cat /var/run/inn.pid)
           endscript
           nocompress
       }

       ~/log/*.log {}

       The first few lines set global options; in the example, logs are compressed after they are
       rotated.   Note  that comments may appear anywhere in the config file as long as the first
       non-whitespace character on the line is a #.

       Values are separated from directives by whitespace and/or an optional =.  Numbers must  be
       specified in a format understood by strtoul(3).

       The  next section of the config file defines how to handle the log file /var/log/messages.
       The log will go through five weekly rotations before being removed. After the log file has
       been  rotated  (but  before  the  old version of the log has been compressed), the command
       /usr/bin/killall -HUP syslogd will be executed.

       The  next  section  defines  the  parameters  for   both   /var/log/httpd/access.log   and
       /var/log/httpd/error.log.   Each  is  rotated whenever it grows over 100k in size, and the
       old logs files are mailed (uncompressed) to recipient AT example.org after  going  through  5
       rotations,  rather  than being removed. The sharedscripts means that the postrotate script
       will only be run once (after the old logs have been compressed), not  once  for  each  log
       which is rotated.  Note that log file names may be enclosed in quotes (and that quotes are
       required if the name contains spaces).  Normal shell quoting rules apply, with ', ", and \
       characters supported.

       The  next  section defines the parameters for all of the files in /var/log/news. Each file
       is rotated on a monthly basis.  This is considered a single rotation directive and if  er-
       rors occur for more than one file, the log files are not compressed.

       The  last  section  uses  tilde expansion to rotate log files in the home directory of the
       current user. This is only available, if your glob library supports tilde  expansion.  GNU
       glob does support this.

       Please use wildcards with caution.  If you specify *, logrotate will rotate all files, in-
       cluding previously rotated ones.  A way around this is to use the olddir  directive  or  a
       more exact wildcard (such as *.log).

       Here is more information on the directives which may be included in a logrotate configura-
       tion file:

   DIRECTIVES
       These directives may be included in a logrotate configuration file:

       compress
              Old versions of log files are compressed with gzip(1) by default. See  also  nocom-
              press.

       compresscmd
              Specifies which command to use to compress log files.  The default is gzip(1).  See
              also compress.

       uncompresscmd
              Specifies which command to use to uncompress log files.  The default is gunzip(1).

       compressext
              Specifies which extension to use on compressed logfiles, if compression is enabled.
              The default follows that of the configured compression command.

       compressoptions
              Command  line  options  may be passed to the compression program, if one is in use.
              The default, for gzip(1), is "-6" (biased towards high compression at  the  expense
              of  speed).  If you use a different compression command, you may need to change the
              compressoptions to match.

       copy   Make a copy of the log file, but don't change the original at all.  This option can
              be  used,  for  instance,  to make a snapshot of the current log file, or when some
              other utility needs to truncate or parse the file.  When this option is  used,  the
              create option will have no effect, as the old log file stays in place.

       copytruncate
              Truncate the original log file to zero size in place after creating a copy, instead
              of moving the old log file and optionally creating a new one.  It can be used  when
              some  program  cannot  be told to close its logfile and thus might continue writing
              (appending) to the previous log file forever.  Note that there is a very small time
              slice  between  copying  the  file and truncating it, so some logging data might be
              lost.  When this option is used, the create option will have no effect, as the  old
              log file stays in place.

       create mode owner group, create owner group
              Immediately  after  rotation  (before the postrotate script is run) the log file is
              created (with the same name as the log file just rotated).  mode specifies the mode
              for the log file in octal (the same as chmod(2)), owner specifies the user name who
              will own the log file, and group specifies the group the log file will  belong  to.
              Any  of  the log file attributes may be omitted, in which case those attributes for
              the new file will use the same values as the original log file for the omitted  at-
              tributes. This option can be disabled using the nocreate option.

       createolddir mode owner group
              If  the directory specified by olddir directive does not exist, it is created. mode
              specifies the mode for the olddir directory in octal (the same as chmod(2)),  owner
              specifies  the user name who will own the olddir directory, and group specifies the
              group the olddir directory will belong to. This option can be  disabled  using  the
              nocreateolddir option.

       daily  Log files are rotated every day.

       dateext
              Archive  old versions of log files adding a date extension like YYYYMMDD instead of
              simply adding a number. The extension may be configured using  the  dateformat  and
              dateyesterday options.

       dateformat format_string
              Specify  the  extension for dateext using the notation similar to strftime(3) func-
              tion. Only %Y %m %d %H %M %S %V and %s specifiers are allowed.  The  default  value
              is  -%Y%m%d  except  hourly, which uses -%Y%m%d%H as default value.  Note that also
              the character separating log name from the extension  is  part  of  the  dateformat
              string.  The  system  clock must be set past Sep 9th 2001 for %s to work correctly.
              Note that the datestamps generated by this format must be lexically sortable  (that
              is  first  the year, then the month then the day. For example 2001/12/01 is ok, but
              01/12/2001 is not, since 01/11/2002 would sort lower while it is later).   This  is
              because when using the rotate option, logrotate sorts all rotated filenames to find
              out which logfiles are older and should be removed.

       dateyesterday
              Use yesterday's instead of today's date to create the dateext  extension,  so  that
              the  rotated  log  file  has  a date in its name that is the same as the timestamps
              within it.

       datehourago
              Use hour ago instead of current date to create the dateext extension, so  that  the
              rotated  log  file has a hour in its name that is the same as the timestamps within
              it.  Useful with rotate hourly.

       delaycompress
              Postpone compression of the previous log file to the  next  rotation  cycle.   This
              only  has  effect when used in combination with compress.  It can be used when some
              program cannot be told to close its logfile and thus might continue writing to  the
              previous log file for some time.

       extension ext
              Log  files  with  ext extension can keep it after the rotation.  If compression  is
              used,  the compression extension (normally .gz) appears after ext. For example  you
              have  a  logfile named mylog.foo and want to rotate it to mylog.1.foo.gz instead of
              mylog.foo.1.gz.

       hourly Log files are rotated every hour. Note that usually logrotate is configured  to  be
              run  by  cron daily. You have to change this configuration and run logrotate hourly
              to be able to really rotate logs hourly.

       addextension ext
              Log files are given the final extension ext after rotation. If  the  original  file
              already  ends  with  ext,  the extension is not duplicated, but merely moved to the
              end, that is both filename and filenameext would get rotated to  filename.1ext.  If
              compression is used, the compression extension (normally .gz) appears after ext.

       ifempty
              Rotate  the log file even if it is empty, overriding the notifempty option (ifempty
              is the default).

       include file_or_directory
              Reads the file given as an argument as if it was included inline where the  include
              directive appears. If a directory is given, most of the files in that directory are
              read in alphabetic order before processing of the  including  file  continues.  The
              only  files which are ignored are files which are not regular files (such as direc-
              tories and named pipes) and files whose names end with one of the taboo  extensions
              or patterns, as specified by the tabooext or taboopat directives, respectively.

       mail address
              When  a log is rotated out of existence, it is mailed to address. If no mail should
              be generated by a particular log, the nomail directive may be used.

       mailfirst
              When using the mail command, mail the just-rotated file, instead of  the  about-to-
              expire file.

       maillast
              When using the mail command, mail the about-to-expire file, instead of the just-ro-
              tated file (this is the default).

       minage count
              Do not rotate logs which are less than <count> days old.

       maxage count
              Remove rotated logs older than <count> days. The age is only checked if the logfile
              is  to  be  rotated. The files are mailed to the configured address if maillast and
              mail are configured.

       maxsize size
              Log files are rotated when they grow bigger than size bytes even before  the  addi-
              tionally  specified time interval (daily, weekly, monthly, or yearly).  The related
              size option is similar except that it is mutually exclusive with the time  interval
              options, and it causes log files to be rotated without regard for the last rotation
              time.  When maxsize is used, both the size and timestamp of a log file are  consid-
              ered.

       minsize  size
              Log files are rotated when they grow bigger than size bytes, but not before the ad-
              ditionally specified time interval (daily, weekly, monthly, or  yearly).   The  re-
              lated size option is similar except that it is mutually exclusive with the time in-
              terval options, and it causes log files to be rotated without regard for  the  last
              rotation time.  When minsize is used, both the size and timestamp of a log file are
              considered.

       missingok
              If the log file is missing, go on to the next one without issuing an error message.
              See also nomissingok.

       monthly
              Log  files are rotated the first time logrotate is run in a month (this is normally
              on the first day of the month).

       nocompress
              Old versions of log files are not compressed. See also compress.

       nocopy Do not copy the original log file and leave it in place.  (this overrides the  copy
              option).

       nocopytruncate
              Do  not  truncate  the original log file in place after creating a copy (this over-
              rides the copytruncate option).

       nocreate
              New log files are not created (this overrides the create option).

       nocreateolddir
              olddir directory is not created by logrotate when it does not exist.

       nodelaycompress
              Do not postpone compression of the previous log file to  the  next  rotation  cycle
              (this overrides the delaycompress option).

       nodateext
              Do  not  archive  old versions of log files with date extension (this overrides the
              dateext option).

       nomail Do not mail old log files to any address.

       nomissingok
              If a log file does not exist, issue an error. This is the default.

       noolddir
              Logs are rotated in the directory they normally reside in (this overrides the  old-
              dir option).

       nosharedscripts
              Run  prerotate  and postrotate scripts for every log file which is rotated (this is
              the default, and overrides the sharedscripts option). The absolute path to the  log
              file is passed as first argument to the script. If the scripts exit with error, the
              remaining actions will not be executed for the affected log only.

       noshred
              Do not use shred when deleting old log files. See also shred.

       notifempty
              Do not rotate the log if it is empty (this overrides the ifempty option).

       olddir directory
              Logs are moved into directory for rotation. The directory must be on the same phys-
              ical  device as the log file being rotated, unless copy, copytruncate or renamecopy
              option is used. The directory is assumed to be relative to  the  directory  holding
              the  log  file  unless an absolute path name is specified. When this option is used
              all old versions of the log end up in directory.  This option may be overridden  by
              the noolddir option.

       postrotate/endscript
              The  lines  between postrotate and endscript (both of which must appear on lines by
              themselves) are executed (using /bin/sh) after the log file is rotated.  These  di-
              rectives  may only appear inside a log file definition. Normally, the absolute path
              to the log file is passed as first argument to  the  script.  If  sharedscripts  is
              specified,  whole pattern is passed to the script.  See also prerotate. See shared-
              scripts and nosharedscripts for error handling.

       prerotate/endscript
              The lines between prerotate and endscript (both of which must appear  on  lines  by
              themselves) are executed (using /bin/sh) before the log file is rotated and only if
              the log will actually be rotated. These directives may only  appear  inside  a  log
              file definition. Normally, the absolute path to the log file is passed as first ar-
              gument to the script.  If  sharedscripts is specified, whole pattern is  passed  to
              the  script.  See also postrotate.  See sharedscripts and nosharedscripts for error
              handling.

       firstaction/endscript
              The lines between firstaction and endscript (both of which must appear on lines  by
              themselves)  are  executed (using /bin/sh) once before all log files that match the
              wildcarded pattern are rotated, before prerotate script is run and only if at least
              one  log  will  actually be rotated.  These directives may only appear inside a log
              file definition. Whole pattern is passed to the script as first  argument.  If  the
              script exits with error, no further processing is done. See also lastaction.

       lastaction/endscript
              The  lines  between lastaction and endscript (both of which must appear on lines by
              themselves) are executed (using /bin/sh) once after all log files  that  match  the
              wildcarded pattern are rotated, after postrotate script is run and only if at least
              one log is rotated. These directives may only appear inside a log file  definition.
              Whole  pattern  is passed to the script as first argument. If the script exits with
              error, just an error message is shown (as  this  is  the  last  action).  See  also
              firstaction.

       preremove/endscript
              The  lines  between  preremove and endscript (both of which must appear on lines by
              themselves) are executed (using /bin/sh) once just before removal of  a  log  file.
              The  logrotate  will  pass  the  name of file which is soon to be removed. See also
              firstaction.

       rotate count
              Log files are rotated count times before being removed or  mailed  to  the  address
              specified  in a mail directive. If count is 0, old versions are removed rather than
              rotated. Default is 0.

       renamecopy
              Log file is renamed to temporary filename in the same directory  by  adding  ".tmp"
              extension  to  it. After that, postrotate script is run and log file is copied from
              temporary filename to final filename. This allows storing rotated log files on  the
              different  devices  using  olddir  directive. In the end, temporary filename is re-
              moved.

       size size
              Log files are rotated only if they grow bigger than size bytes. If size is followed
              by  k,  the  size  is assumed to be in kilobytes.  If the M is used, the size is in
              megabytes, and if G is used, the size is in gigabytes. So size 100, size 100k, size
              100M and size 100G are all valid.

       sharedscripts
              Normally,  prerotate  and  postrotate scripts are run for each log which is rotated
              and the absolute path to the log file is passed as first argument  to  the  script.
              That  means  a  single  script may be run multiple times for log file entries which
              match multiple files (such as the /var/log/news/*  example).  If  sharedscripts  is
              specified,  the  scripts are only run once, no matter how many logs match the wild-
              carded pattern, and whole pattern is passed to them.  However, if none of the  logs
              in the pattern require rotating, the scripts will not be run at all. If the scripts
              exit with error, the remaining actions will not be executed for any logs. This  op-
              tion overrides the nosharedscripts option and implies create option.

       shred  Delete  log files using shred -u instead of unlink().  This should ensure that logs
              are not readable after their scheduled deletion; this is off by default.  See  also
              noshred.

       shredcycles count
              Asks GNU shred(1) to overwrite log files count times before deletion.  Without this
              option, shred's default will be used.

       start count
              This is the number to use as the base for rotation. For example, if you specify  0,
              the  logs will be created with a .0 extension as they are rotated from the original
              log files.  If you specify 9, log files will be created with a  .9,  skipping  0-8.
              Files  will  still  be rotated the number of times specified with the rotate direc-
              tive.

       su user group
              Rotate log files set under this user and group instead of using default  user/group
              (usually  root). user specifies the user name used for rotation and group specifies
              the group used for rotation. If the user/group you specify here does not have  suf-
              ficient privilege to make files with the ownership you've specified in a create in-
              struction, it will cause an error.

       tabooext [+] list
              The current taboo extension list is changed (see the include directive for informa-
              tion  on the taboo extensions). If a + precedes the list of extensions, the current
              taboo extension list is augmented, otherwise it is replaced. At startup, the  taboo
              extension   list   ,v,   .cfsaved,  .disabled,  .dpkg-bak,  .dpkg-del,  .dpkg-dist,
              .dpkg-new, .dpkg-old, .rhn-cfg-tmp-*, .rpmnew, .rpmorig, .rpmsave, .swp, .ucf-dist,
              .ucf-new, .ucf-old, ~

       taboopat [+] list
              The  current  taboo glob pattern list is changed (see the include directive for in-
              formation on the taboo extensions and patterns). If a + precedes the list  of  pat-
              terns,  the  current  taboo pattern list is augmented, otherwise it is replaced. At
              startup, the taboo pattern list is empty.

       weekly [weekday]
              Log files are rotated once each weekday, or if the date is advanced by at  least  7
              days  since  the last rotation (while ignoring the exact time).  The weekday inter-
              pretation is following:  0 means Sunday, 1 means Monday, ..., 6 means Saturday; the
              special value 7 means each 7 days, irrespectively of weekday.  Defaults to 0 if the
              weekday argument is omitted.

       yearly Log files are rotated if the current year is not the same as the last rotation.

FILES
       /var/lib/logrotate/status   Default state file.
       /etc/logrotate.conf         Configuration options.

SEE ALSO
       chmod(2),   gunzip(1),    gzip(1),    mail(1),    shred(1),    strftime(3),    strtoul(3),
       <https://github.com/logrotate/logrotate>

AUTHORS
       Erik Troan, Preston Brown, Jan Kaluza.

       <https://github.com/logrotate/logrotate>

Linux                                         3.14.0                                 LOGROTATE(8)

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