Expand discussion of logfile management a little bit.

This commit is contained in:
Tom Lane 2001-11-20 04:27:49 +00:00
parent 7107c3d0cc
commit bb2ff5f2d4
2 changed files with 63 additions and 8 deletions

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$Header: /cvsroot/pgsql/doc/src/sgml/maintenance.sgml,v 1.7 2001/11/18 22:17:30 tgl Exp $
$Header: /cvsroot/pgsql/doc/src/sgml/maintenance.sgml,v 1.8 2001/11/20 04:27:49 tgl Exp $
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<chapter id="maintenance">
@ -34,10 +34,8 @@ $Header: /cvsroot/pgsql/doc/src/sgml/maintenance.sgml,v 1.7 2001/11/18 22:17:30
</para>
<para>
It is also necessary to rotate the database server log file that is specified
when the <application>postmaster</application> is started. If you are using
<application>syslog</application>, you can send a <literal>SIGHUP</literal>
signal to the syslog daemon to force it to start writing a new log file.
Something else that might need periodic attention is log file management.
This is discussed in <xref linkend="logfile-maintenance">.
</para>
<para>
@ -367,6 +365,61 @@ VACUUM
</sect2>
</sect1>
<sect1 id="logfile-maintenance">
<title>Log File Maintenance</title>
<indexterm zone="logfile-maintenance">
<primary>log files</primary>
</indexterm>
<para>
It's a good idea to save the database server's log output somewhere,
rather than just routing it to <filename>/dev/null</>. The log output
is invaluable when it comes time to diagnose problems. However, the
log output tends to be voluminuous (especially at higher debug levels)
and you won't want to save it indefinitely. You need to <quote>rotate</>
the log files so that new log files are started and old ones thrown
away every so often.
</para>
<para>
If you simply direct the postmaster's stderr into a file, the only way
to truncate the log file is to stop and restart the postmaster. This
may be okay for development setups but you won't want to run a production
server that way.
</para>
<para>
The simplest production-grade approach to managing log output is to send it
all to <application>syslog</> and let <application>syslog</> deal with file
rotation. To do this, make sure <productname>Postgres</> was built with
the <option>--enable-syslog</> configure option, and set
<literal>syslog</> to 2
(log to syslog only) in <filename>postgresql.conf</>.
Then you can send a <literal>SIGHUP</literal> signal to the
<application>syslog</> daemon whenever you want to force it to start
writing a new log file.
</para>
<para>
On many systems, however, syslog is not very reliable, particularly
with large log messages; it may truncate or drop messages just when
you need them the most. You may find it more useful to pipe the
<application>postmaster</>'s stderr to some type of log rotation script.
If you start the postmaster with <application>pg_ctl</>, then the
postmaster's stderr is already redirected to stdout, so you just need a
pipe command:
<screen>
<userinput>pg_ctl start | logrotate</userinput>
</screen>
The <productname>Postgres</> distribution doesn't include a suitable
log rotation program, but there are many available on the net;
one is included in the Apache distribution, for example.
</para>
</sect1>
</chapter>
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<Chapter Id="runtime">
@ -171,9 +171,11 @@ NOTICE: Initializing database with en_US collation order.
<screen>
&gt; <userinput>postmaster -D /usr/local/pgsql/data &gt; logfile 2&gt;&amp;1 &amp;</userinput>
</screen>
It is an extremely good idea to keep the server output around
somewhere, as indicated here. It will help both for auditing
It is an extremely good idea to keep the server's stdout and stderr
output around somewhere, as suggested here. It will help both for auditing
purposes and to diagnose problems.
(See <xref linkend="logfile-maintenance"> for a more thorough discussion
of logfile handling.)
</para>
<para>