From: | brian <brian(at)zijn-digital(dot)com> |
---|---|
To: | pgsql-general(at)postgresql(dot)org |
Subject: | Re: Current log files when rotating? |
Date: | 2008-11-10 18:58:02 |
Message-ID: | 4918843A.808@zijn-digital.com |
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Thread: | |
Lists: | pgsql-general |
Greg Smith wrote:
> Let's say you're using logging_collector and you've put some %-escapes
> into log_filename for daily log rotation. Perhaps it's daily rotation
> with this pattern:
>
> log_filename = 'postgresql-%Y-%m-%d.log'
>
> Is there any good way to ask the server what log file name it's
> currently writing to? I was trying to write something that does a
> "tail" on the current log, and was hoping there was a simple way to
> figure out which file that goes against. Looking for the latest
> timestamp or running strftime would both work I guess, those just seemed
> a little heavy (was hoping for an "alias"-sized answer) to figure out
> something that the server certainly knows.
>
As long as you're using a reasonable[1] format for the date, you could
simply list postgresql-*.log and grab the last filename.
[1] eg. Year-Month-day, which will always be ordered properly.
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