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azcopy_sync/run_azcopy-rotae-log.md
2025-09-20 16:15:21 +01:00

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##Log rotate

# /etc/logrotate.d/azure_logs

/opt/AZURE/*.txt {
    weekly
    missingok
    rotate 4
    compress
    delaycompress
    notifempty
    create 0644 root root
}

~/.azcopy/*.log {
    weekly
    missingok
    rotate 4
    compress
    delaycompress
    notifempty
    create 0644 root root
}

Explanation:

  • weekly: Rotate the logs on a weekly basis.
  • missingok: If the log file is missing, go on to the next one without issuing an error message.
  • rotate 4: Keep only the last 4 weeks of logs.
  • compress: Compress the rotated logs using gzip.
  • delaycompress: Delay compression until the next rotation cycle. This means the current log file will not be compressed immediately after rotation, but the previous log files will be.
  • notifempty: Do not rotate the log if it is empty.
  • create 0644 root root: Create new log files with owner root and group root, and permissions 0644.

Steps to Apply the Configuration:

  1. Save the above configuration in /etc/logrotate.d/azure_logs.
  2. Ensure that the logrotate service is enabled and running on your system.
  3. Test the logrotate configuration with the following command to ensure there are no syntax errors:
sudo logrotate -d /etc/logrotate.d/azure_logs

The -d option runs logrotate in debug mode, which will show you what actions would be taken without actually performing them.

  1. If everything looks good, you can force a rotation to test it:
sudo logrotate -f /etc/logrotate.d/azure_logs

This will rotate the logs immediately according to the specified configuration.

By following these steps, your logs in /opt/AZURE and ~/.azcopy should be rotated weekly, compressed, and kept for only the last 4 weeks.