Re: Current log files when rotating?

From: "Scott Marlowe" <scott(dot)marlowe(at)gmail(dot)com>
To: jd(at)commandprompt(dot)com
Cc: depesz(at)depesz(dot)com, "Greg Smith" <gsmith(at)gregsmith(dot)com>, pgsql-general(at)postgresql(dot)org
Subject: Re: Current log files when rotating?
Date: 2008-11-10 19:51:57
Message-ID: dcc563d10811101151h1f98f34ah32657e743c1be9ab@mail.gmail.com
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On Mon, Nov 10, 2008 at 12:44 PM, Joshua D. Drake <jd(at)commandprompt(dot)com> wrote:
> On Mon, 2008-11-10 at 20:12 +0100, hubert depesz lubaczewski wrote:
>> On Mon, Nov 10, 2008 at 01:46:14PM -0500, Greg Smith wrote:
>> > 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.
>>
>> it's not nice, but it works:
>> alias pgtail='/bin/ls -1 /var/log/postgresql/postgresql*log | tail -n 1 | xargs tail -f'
>>
>> of course it has some assumptions:
>> 1. your logs are in /var/log/postgresql/ directory (easy to change)
>> 2. your logs are named in such way that sorting them alphabetically will
>> sort them chronologically (i.e. %Y-%m-%d or something similar) (not easy
>> to change)
>
> Hmm what about just "ls -tu"
>
> Which if I am reading the man page correctly sorts by last access time.

ls -tr1 filename*|tail -n 1 will give you the most recently modified
file. -tu will give you the file last accessed which may or may not
be the file you want.

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