From: | Steve Crawford <scrawford(at)pinpointresearch(dot)com> |
---|---|
To: | Oliver Elphick <olly(at)lfix(dot)co(dot)uk>, "Rajesh Kumar Mallah(dot)" <mallah(at)trade-india(dot)com> |
Cc: | Mintoo Lall <tlqmail(at)yahoo(dot)com>, pgsql-admin(at)postgresql(dot)org |
Subject: | Re: Postgres server output log |
Date: | 2003-01-30 17:10:42 |
Message-ID: | 20030130171042.ADD63103EF@polaris.pinpointresearch.com |
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Thread: | |
Lists: | pgsql-admin |
This is OK. The script isn't HUPping PostgreSQL, it is HUPping syslog.
I think configuring PostgreSQL to write to syslog is the correct way to go.
Once you decide to route the messages to syslogy you get everything that
syslog offers such as:
directing output to files, pipes or central log servers (in any combination)
selectively dropping or writing messages based on severity
many ready-made management tools like logrotate
many ready-made monitoring tools like swatch and logwatch
You can even choose alternate versions of the syslog daemon - I have one
server runing msyslogd (Modular Syslog Daemon) with the PostgreSQL module
installed so I can write syslog entries for a project directly into a
PostgreSQL database for retrieval or analysis.
So my advice is to complie/configure PostgreSQL to use syslog and use the
myriad of available syslog tools for management and analysis.
Cheers,
Steve
On Thursday 30 January 2003 4:40 am, Oliver Elphick wrote:
> On Thu, 2003-01-30 at 05:22, Rajesh Kumar Mallah. wrote:
> > This is someones' elses' posting that i have preserved
> > shud be useful.
>
> ...
>
> > ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~`
> >
> > Well,
> > the most correct way to do a logrotate is ( Redhat ):
>
> ...
>
> > 2) Put on the directory /etc/logrotate.d a file called
> > 'postgres' with the following lines:
> >
> > /var/log/postgresql.log {
> > compress
> > rotate 2
> > size=10000k
> > errors mendola(at)bigfoot(dot)com
> > create 0664 postgres postgres
> > daily
> > postrotate
> > /usr/bin/killall -HUP syslogd
> > endscript
> > }
>
> ...
>
> This won't work as it stands with PostgreSQL, because the hangup signal
> does not make the postmaster reopen the log file. Instead of that
> postrotate section, you need to use logrotate's copytruncate option,
> which will copy the logfile to another file before zeroing the logfile.
>
> Depending on what is being logged, you may want to change the
> permissions to 660; there may be stuff in the logs that you don't want
> to reveal to the world. (With copytruncate, I think the create option
> applies to the copy files rather than to the original logfile.)
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