newsyslog.conf man page on GhostBSD

Man page or keyword search:  
man Server   9747 pages
apropos Keyword Search (all sections)
Output format
GhostBSD logo
[printable version]

NEWSYSLOG.CONF(5)	    BSD File Formats Manual	     NEWSYSLOG.CONF(5)

NAME
     newsyslog.confnewsyslog(8) configuration file

DESCRIPTION
     The newsyslog.conf file is used to set log file rotation configuration
     for the newsyslog(8) utility.  Configuration may designate that logs are
     rotated based on size, last rotation time, or time of day.	 The
     newsyslog.conf file can also be used to designate secure permissions to
     log files at rotation time.  During initialization, newsyslog(8) reads a
     configuration file, normally /etc/newsyslog.conf, to determine which logs
     may potentially be rotated and archived.  Each line has five mandatory
     fields and four optional fields, separated with whitespace.  Blank lines
     or lines beginning with ‘#’ are ignored.  If ‘#’ is placed in the middle
     of the line, the ‘#’ character and the rest of the line after it is
     ignored.  To prevent special meaning, the ‘#’ character may be escaped
     with ‘\’; in this case preceding ‘\’ is removed and ‘#’ is treated as an
     ordinary character.  The fields of the configuration file are as follows:

     logfile_name
	     Name of the system log file to be archived, or one of the literal
	     strings “⟨default⟩”, or “⟨include⟩”.  The special default entry
	     will only be used if a log file name is given as a command line
	     argument to newsyslog(8), and if that log file name is not
	     matched by any other line in the configuration file.  The include
	     entry is used to include other configuration files and supports
	     globbing.

     owner:group
	     This optional field specifies the owner and group for the archive
	     file.  The ‘:’ is essential regardless if the owner or group
	     field is left blank or contains a value.  The field may be
	     numeric, or a name which is present in /etc/passwd or /etc/group.

     mode    Specify the file mode of the log file and archives.

     count   Specify the maximum number of archive files which may exist.
	     This does not consider the current log file.

     size    When the size of the log file reaches size in kilobytes, the log
	     file will be trimmed as described above.  If this field contains
	     an asterisk (‘*’), the log file will not be trimmed based on
	     size.

     when    The when field may consist of an interval, a specific time, or
	     both.  If the when field contains an asterisk (‘*’), log rotation
	     will solely depend on the contents of the size field.  Otherwise,
	     the when field consists of an optional interval in hours, usually
	     followed by an ‘@’-sign and a time in restricted ISO 8601 format.
	     Additionally, the format may also be constructed with a ‘$’ sign
	     along with a rotation time specification of once a day, once a
	     week, or once a month.

	     If a time is specified, the log file will only be trimmed if
	     newsyslog(8) is run within one hour of the specified time.	 If an
	     interval is specified, the log file will be trimmed if that many
	     hours have passed since the last rotation.	 When both a time and
	     an interval are specified then both conditions must be satisfied
	     for the rotation to take place.

	     There is no provision for the specification of a timezone.	 There
	     is little point in specifying an explicit minutes or seconds com‐
	     ponent in the current implementation, since the only comparison
	     is “within the hour”.

	     ISO 8601 restricted time format:

	     The lead-in character for a restricted ISO 8601 time is an ‘@’
	     sign.  The particular format of the time in restricted ISO 8601
	     is: [[[[[cc]yy]mm]dd][T[hh[mm[ss]]]]].  Optional date fields
	     default to the appropriate component of the current date;
	     optional time fields default to midnight; hence if today is Janu‐
	     ary 22, 1999, the following date specifications are all equiva‐
	     lent:

		   ‘19990122T000000’
		   ‘990122T000000’
		   ‘0122T000000’
		   ‘22T000000’
		   ‘T000000’
		   ‘T0000’
		   ‘T00’
		   ‘22T’
		   ‘T’
		   ‘’

	     Day, week, and month time format:

	     The lead-in character for day, week, and month specification is a
	     ‘$’ sign.	The particular format of day, week, and month specifi‐
	     cation is: [Dhh], [Ww[Dhh]], and [Mdd[Dhh]], respectively.
	     Optional time fields default to midnight.	The ranges for day and
	     hour specifications are:

		   hh	   hours, range 0..23
		   w	   day of week, range 0..6, 0 = Sunday
		   dd	   day of month, range 1..31, or one of the letters
			   ‘L’ or ‘l’ to specify the last day of the month.

	     Some examples:

		   $D0	   rotate every night at midnight (same as @T00)
		   $D23	   rotate every day at 23:00 (same as @T23)
		   $W0D23  rotate every week on Sunday at 23:00
		   $W5D16  rotate every week on Friday at 16:00
		   $M1D0   rotate at the first day of every month at midnight
			   (i.e., the start of the day; same as @01T00)
		   $M5D6   rotate on every 5th day of month at 6:00 (same as
			   @05T06)

     flags   This optional field is made up of one or more characters that
	     specify any special processing to be done for the log files
	     matched by this line.  The following are valid flags:

	     B	     indicates that the log file is a binary file, or has some
		     special format.  Usually newsyslog(8) inserts an ASCII
		     message into a log file during rotation.  This message is
		     used to indicate when, and sometimes why the log file was
		     rotated.  If B is specified, then that informational mes‐
		     sage will not be inserted into the log file.

	     C	     indicates that the log file should be created if it does
		     not already exist, and if the -C option was also speci‐
		     fied on the command line.

	     D	     indicates that newsyslog(8) should set the UF_NODUMP flag
		     when creating a new version of this log file.  This
		     option would affect how the dump(8) command treats the
		     log file when making a file system backup.

	     G	     indicates that the specified logfile_name is a shell pat‐
		     tern, and that newsyslog(8) should archive all filenames
		     matching that pattern using the other options on this
		     line.  See glob(3) for details on syntax and matching
		     rules.

	     J	     indicates that newsyslog(8) should attempt to save disk
		     space by compressing the rotated log file using bzip2(1).

	     N	     indicates that there is no process which needs to be sig‐
		     naled when this log file is rotated.

	     U	     indicates that the file specified by path_to_pid_file
		     will contain the ID for a process group instead of a
		     process.  This option also requires that the first line
		     in that file be a negative value to distinguish it from a
		     process ID.

	     Z	     indicates that newsyslog(8) should attempt to save disk
		     space by compressing the rotated log file using gzip(1).

	     -	     a minus sign will not cause any special processing, but
		     it can be used as a placeholder to create a flags field
		     when you need to specify any of the following fields.

     path_to_pid_file
	     This optional field specifies the file name containing a daemon's
	     process ID or to find a group process ID if the U flag was speci‐
	     fied.  If this field is present, a signal_number is sent to the
	     process ID contained in this file.	 If this field is not present
	     and the N flag has not been specified, then a SIGHUP signal will
	     be sent to syslogd(8) or to the process id found in the file
	     specified by newsyslog(8)'s -S switch.  This field must start
	     with ‘/’ in order to be recognized properly.

     signal_number
	     This optional field specifies the signal number that will be sent
	     to the daemon process (or to all processes in a process group, if
	     the U flag was specified).	 If this field is not present, then a
	     SIGHUP signal will be sent.

SEE ALSO
     bzip2(1), gzip(1), syslog(3), chown(8), newsyslog(8), syslogd(8)

HISTORY
     This manual page first appeared in FreeBSD 4.10.

BSD				 July 23, 2010				   BSD
[top]

List of man pages available for GhostBSD

Copyright (c) for man pages and the logo by the respective OS vendor.

For those who want to learn more, the polarhome community provides shell access and support.

[legal] [privacy] [GNU] [policy] [cookies] [netiquette] [sponsors] [FAQ]
Tweet
Polarhome, production since 1999.
Member of Polarhome portal.
Based on Fawad Halim's script.
....................................................................
Vote for polarhome
Free Shell Accounts :: the biggest list on the net