Linux Logging Configuration: Difference between revisions
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# system-specific logs may be also be configured here. | # system-specific logs may be also be configured here. | ||
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More details on the configuration file syntax can be obtained with | |||
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man logrotate | |||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
Revision as of 18:28, 25 June 2017
Internal
rsyslogd Configuration
The main rsyslogd configuration file is /etc/rsyslog.conf.
The configuration file contains global directives, rules and modules. A rule consists of filter and action. The filters can be facility/priority-based, property-based and expression-based.
For more details on rsyslogd configuration see
rsyslogd Log Rotation Configuration
rsyslogd-managed log files can be automatically rotated. The logrotate package contains a cron task that rotates log files based on the configuration found in /etc/logrotate.conf and /etc/logrotate.d/. The essential configuration is similar to:
# rotate log files weekly weekly # keep 4 weeks worth of backlogs rotate 4 # create new (empty) log files after rotating old ones create # use date as a suffix of the rotated file dateext # uncomment this if you want your log files compressed #compress # RPM packages drop log rotation information into this directory include /etc/logrotate.d # no packages own wtmp and btmp -- we'll rotate them here /var/log/wtmp { monthly create 0664 root utmp minsize 1M rotate 1 } /var/log/btmp { missingok monthly create 0600 root utmp rotate 1 } # system-specific logs may be also be configured here.
More details on the configuration file syntax can be obtained with
man logrotate
journald Configuration
More details about journald.