Rotate, compress, remove, and mail system log files
The logrotate utility is designed to simplify the administration of log
files on a system that generates a lot of log files. Logrotate allows
the automatic rotation, compression, removal, and mailing of log files.
Logrotate can be set to handle a log file daily, weekly, monthly, or
when the log file reaches a certain size. Normally, logrotate runs as a
daily cron job.
- Developed at Base:System
- Sources inherited from project openSUSE:Factory
-
3
derived packages
- Download package
-
Checkout Package
osc -A https://api.opensuse.org checkout openSUSE:Factory:Rebuild/logrotate && cd $_
- Create Badge
Refresh
Refresh
Source Files
Filename | Size | Changed |
---|---|---|
logrotate-3.13.0-systemd_add_home_env.patch | 0000000470 470 Bytes | |
logrotate-3.14.0.tar.xz | 0000155988 152 KB | |
logrotate-rpmlintrc | 0000000063 63 Bytes | |
logrotate.changes | 0000029070 28.4 KB | |
logrotate.default | 0000000517 517 Bytes | |
logrotate.spec | 0000003400 3.32 KB | |
logrotate.wtmp | 0000000147 147 Bytes |
Revision 60 (latest revision is 75)
Yuchen Lin (maxlin_factory)
accepted
request 635479
from
Tomáš Chvátal (scarabeus_iv)
(revision 60)
- Rebase the logrotate-3.13.0-systemd_add_home_env.patch to be unified patch again - Use noun phrase. Trim filler wording from description. Add a note that it is unrelated to journald. - Version update to 3.14.0: * make configure show support status for SELinux and ACL at the end * make logrotate build again on FreeBSD * move wtmp and btmp definitions from logrotate.conf to separate configuration files in logrotate.d * print a warning about logrotate doing nothing when -d is used * do not reject executable config files * add hardening options to logrotate.service in examples * fix spurious compressor failure when using su and compress * keep logrotate version in .tarball-version in release tarballs * introduce the hourago configuration directive * ignore empty patterns in tabooext to avoid exclusion of everything * properly report skipped test cases instead of pretending success
Comments 0