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From: Michael Tremer <michael.tremer@ipfire.org>
To: development@lists.ipfire.org
Subject: Re: Logwatch (randomly) skipping days => Feature!?
Date: Mon, 18 Feb 2019 14:48:52 +0000	[thread overview]
Message-ID: <2CEB9983-361F-4AD5-9586-5B9E48EAF3F6@ipfire.org> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <74ecb2e2-9fa9-9564-58e8-7e8ad2730907@ipfire.org>

[-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 3031 bytes --]

Cool.

I think logwatch might require to be started on the top of the hour.

But for logrotate it doesn’t matter much and I think we probably should run it a bit more often anyways. Maybe every 15 minutes or so...

-Michael 

> On 18 Feb 2019, at 13:14, Matthias Fischer <matthias.fischer(a)ipfire.org> wrote:
> 
> Hi,
> 
> On 18.02.2019 13:38, Michael Tremer wrote:
>> Hi,
>> 
>> I do not think that you have two reports in the larger file.
>> 
>> In the cronjob line the file is being overwritten (>) and not appended (>>).
> 
> I see.
> 
>> Is it possible that this conflicts with the logrotate job that is launched at the same time and logwatch tries to read files that are being rotated away?
> 
> This was my first suspicion. After changing the start time of the
> 'logwatch'-job the error did not occur again until now. I'll wait and watch.
> 
> Best,
> Matthias
> 
>> -Michael
>> 
>>> On 17 Feb 2019, at 15:01, Matthias Fischer <matthias.fischer(a)ipfire.org> wrote:
>>> 
>>> Hi,
>>> 
>>> On 17.02.2019 15:42, Tom Rymes wrote:
>>>> Is this a ticking issue where one log has two days’ data and the other is empty?
>>> 
>>> [Correction:
>>> Of course I meant '.../2019-01-26' ;-) ]
>>> 
>>> Looking an it - could be the case. The log created on 2019-01-28 is
>>> significantly bigger:
>>> 
>>> ***SNIP***
>>> ...
>>> -rw-r--r-- 1 root root  43698 Jan 24 00:01 2019-01-23
>>> -rw-r--r-- 1 root root  56469 Jan 25 00:01 2019-01-24
>>> -rw-r--r-- 1 root root  57936 Jan 26 00:01 2019-01-25
>>> -rw-r--r-- 1 root root      0 Jan 27 00:01 2019-01-26
>>> -rw-r--r-- 1 root root 114650 Jan 28 00:01 2019-01-27
>>> -rw-r--r-- 1 root root  40121 Jan 29 00:01 2019-01-28
>>> -rw-r--r-- 1 root root  38220 Jan 30 00:01 2019-01-29
>>> ...
>>> ***SNAP***
>>> 
>>> But what can I do about this? For now, I changed running time to
>>> "03 0 * * *".
>>> 
>>> Best,
>>> Matthias
>>> 
>>>>> On Feb 17, 2019, at 4:22 AM, Matthias Fischer <matthias.fischer(a)ipfire.org> wrote:
>>>>> 
>>>>> Hi,
>>>>> 
>>>>> I discovered something weird:
>>>>> 
>>>>> From time to time 'logwatch' does not create a daily log.
>>>>> 
>>>>> E.g.:
>>>>> The file '/var/log/logwatch/2019-14-26' exists, but size = 0 Bytes.
>>>>> 
>>>>> The same happened yesterday with '/var/log/logwatch/2019-02-16':
>>>>> 0 Bytes.
>>>>> 
>>>>> After running...
>>>>> 
>>>>> /usr/local/bin/logwatch > /var/log/logwatch/`date -I -d yesterday`; \
>>>>> LOGWATCH_KEEP=$(sed -ne 's/^LOGWATCH_KEEP=\([0-9]\+\)$/\1/p'
>>>>> /var/ipfire/logging/settings); \
>>>>> find /var/log/logwatch/ -ctime +${LOGWATCH_KEEP=56} -exec rm -f '{}' ';'
>>>>> 
>>>>> ...manually from console, file was created, everything looks ok.
>>>>> 
>>>>> 1. Can anyone confirm?
>>>>> 
>>>>> 2. With which parameter could I change the starting time "01 0 * * *" so
>>>>> that this doesn't happen again? I'm searching, but can't find a grip on
>>>>> this...
>>>>> 
>>>>> Best,
>>>>> Matthias
>>>> 
>>> 
>> 
>> 
> 


  reply	other threads:[~2019-02-18 14:48 UTC|newest]

Thread overview: 11+ messages / expand[flat|nested]  mbox.gz  Atom feed  top
2019-02-17  9:22 Matthias Fischer
2019-02-17 10:38 ` Tapani Tarvainen
2019-02-17 12:02   ` Matthias Fischer
2019-02-17 14:42 ` Tom Rymes
2019-02-17 15:01   ` Matthias Fischer
2019-02-18 12:38     ` Michael Tremer
2019-02-18 13:14       ` Matthias Fischer
2019-02-18 14:48         ` Michael Tremer [this message]
2019-04-01 16:28         ` Matthias Fischer
2019-04-01 16:34           ` Michael Tremer
2019-04-01 16:48             ` Matthias Fischer

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