SYNOPSIS
rotatelogs [ -l ] logfile [ rotationtime [ offset ]] | [ filesizeM ]
SUMMARY
rotatelogs is a simple program for use in conjunction with Apache's
piped logfile feature. For example:
CustomLog "|bin/rotatelogs /var/logs/logfile 86400" common
This creates the files /var/logs/logfile.nnnn where nnnn is the system
time at which the log nominally starts (this time will always be a mul-
tiple of the rotation time, so you can synchronize cron scripts with
it). At the end of each rotation time (here after 24 hours) a new log
is started.
CustomLog "|bin/rotatelogs /var/logs/logfile 5M" common
This configuration will rotate the logfile whenever it reaches a size
of 5 megabytes.
ErrorLog "|bin/rotatelogs /var/logs/errorlog.%Y-%m-%d-%H_%M_%S 5M"
This configuration will rotate the error logfile whenever it reaches a
size of 5 megabytes, and the suffix to the logfile name will be created
of the form errorlog.YYYY-mm-dd-HH_MM_SS.
OPTIONS
-l Causes the use of local time rather than GMT as the base for the
interval. Note that using -l in an environment which changes the
GMT offset (such as for BST or DST) can lead to unpredictable
results!
logfile
The path plus basename of the logfile. If logfile includes any
'%' characters, it is treated as a format string for strf-
time(3). Otherwise, the suffix .nnnnnnnnnn is automatically
added and is the time in seconds. Both formats compute the start
time from the beginning of the current period.
PORTABILITY
The following logfile format string substitutions should be supported
by all strftime(3) implementations, see the strftime(3) man page for
library-specific extensions.
o %A - full weekday name (localized)
o %a - 3-character weekday name (localized)
o %B - full month name (localized)
o %b - 3-character month name (localized)
o %c - date and time (localized)
o %d - 2-digit day of month
o %H - 2-digit hour (24 hour clock)
o %I - 2-digit hour (12 hour clock)
o %j - 3-digit day of year
o %M - 2-digit minute
o %m - 2-digit month
o %p - am/pm of 12 hour clock (localized)
o %S - 2-digit second
o %U - 2-digit week of year (Sunday first day of week)
o %W - 2-digit week of year (Monday first day of week)
o %w - 1-digit weekday (Sunday first day of week)
o %Z - time zone name
o %% - literal `%'
Apache HTTP Server 2004-06-20 ROTATELOGS(8)
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