# This is the MariaDB configuration for the logrotate utility # # Note that on most Linux systems logs are written to journald, which has its # own rotation scheme. # # Read https://mariadb.com/kb/en/error-log/ to learn more about logging and # https://mariadb.com/kb/en/rotating-logs-on-unix-and-linux/ about rotating logs. @localstatedir@/mysqld.log @localstatedir@/mariadb.log @logdir@/*.log { # Depends on a mysql@localhost unix_socket authenticated user with RELOAD privilege @su_user@ # If any of the files listed above is missing, skip them silently without # emitting any errors missingok # If file exists but is empty, don't rotate it notifempty # Run monthly monthly # Keep 6 months of logs rotate 6 # If file is growing too big, rotate immediately maxsize 500M # If file size is too small, don't rotate at all minsize 50M # Compress logs, as they are text and compression will save a lot of disk space compress # Don't compress the log immediately to avoid errors about "file size changed while zipping" delaycompress # Don't run the postrotate script for each file configured in this file, but # run it only once if one or more files were rotated sharedscripts # After each rotation, run this custom script to flush the logs. Note that # this assumes that the mariadb-admin command has database access, which it # has thanks to the default use of Unix socket authentication for the 'mysql' # (or root on Debian) account used everywhere since MariaDB 10.4. postrotate if test -r /etc/mysql/debian.cnf then EXTRAPARAM='--defaults-file=/etc/mysql/debian.cnf' fi if test -x @bindir@/mariadb-admin then @bindir@/mariadb-admin $EXTRAPARAM --local flush-error-log \ flush-engine-log flush-general-log flush-slow-log fi endscript }