Usually, the logrotate
service takes care of renaming log files each night or so to avoid logs becoming huge. That will rename your.log
to your.log.1
, the next time to your.log.2.gz
, etc. Here is how to make that happen out of band (you should rarely need to do that).
Logrotate won't touch all your logs automagically. There is a config file for each service which you can tell logrotate to use.
So if you need logs to be rotated right now, do this (as root):
logrotate --force PATH_TO_CONFIG_FILE
For example, to rotate all your Apache logs (warning: this usually restarts Apache as well):
logrotate --force /etc/logrotate.d/apache2
Remember that an alternative is to use timestamped logs and logrotate might not touch those for you. If you have them, cast some other kind of magic.
Posted by Arne Hartherz to makandra dev (2013-04-04 11:45)