Hi guys,
Proxy1 and Proxy2 were getting without space, so i took the opportunity to run clear up a bit of space...
I've ran this and think we should cron it: sudo -u apachelog gzip `sudo -u apachelog find /var/log/httpd/ -mtime +7`
- gzip everything in /var/log/httpd that has more then 7 days
And discuss how many days before they are removed: i would say 60 days (tops), unless we can get a data-warehouse collector for long term logs.
Thanks, Paulo
Yeah, I think we should cron that too. Are the logs really necessary to archive?
On 8/3/07, Paulo Santos santosp@fedoraproject.org wrote:
Hi guys,
Proxy1 and Proxy2 were getting without space, so i took the opportunity to run clear up a bit of space...
I've ran this and think we should cron it: sudo -u apachelog gzip `sudo -u apachelog find /var/log/httpd/ -mtime +7`
- gzip everything in /var/log/httpd that has more then 7 days
And discuss how many days before they are removed: i would say 60 days (tops), unless we can get a data-warehouse collector for long term logs.
Thanks, Paulo
Paulo Santos wrote:
Hi guys,
Proxy1 and Proxy2 were getting without space, so i took the opportunity to run clear up a bit of space...
I've ran this and think we should cron it: sudo -u apachelog gzip `sudo -u apachelog find /var/log/httpd/ -mtime +7`
- gzip everything in /var/log/httpd that has more then 7 days
And discuss how many days before they are removed: i would say 60 days (tops), unless we can get a data-warehouse collector for long term logs.
Ahh yes, So we actually archive these logs onto a different box (where they are processed for stats and things) I'd say that its safe to remove any logs older then 2 weeks. Gziping them is a good idea but I'd setup the gzip on the processing box instead (otherwise we end up with an archive of two versions, the compressed and uncompressed versions.
-Mike
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