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Re: Postgres 9.6.2 and pg_log

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De : David G. Johnston [mailto:david.g.johnston@xxxxxxxxx]
Envoyé : Monday, April 24, 2017 1:34 PM
À : Mark Watson
Cc : (pgsql-general@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx)
Objet : Re: [GENERAL] Postgres 9.6.2 and pg_log

 

On Mon, Apr 24, 2017 at 8:43 AM, Mark Watson <mark.watson@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:

Good day all,

 

I just noticed an anomaly regarding the logging. I have my logging set up as follows:

log_filename = 'postgresql-%d.log'

log_truncate_on_rotation = on

 

​I don't see "log_rotation_age" and/or "log_rotation_size" here [1] and at least one needs to be set in order to enable actual rotation; the "truncate" option simply tells PostgreSQL what to do when encountering a file with the same name during the rotation process.​

 

log_rotation_age apparently has under-documented intelligence since I would expect a server that starts up mid-hour and uses a 60 minute rotation to rotate mid-hour as well so the log would contain 1 hours worth of data but the leading hours would be different.  The examples in log_truncate_on_rotation indicate that this isn't the case.  I have not tested reality or read the source.

 

This is on Windows 10, 64-bit

PostgreSQL 9.2.2, compiled by Visual C++ build 1800, 64-bit

(EnterpriseDB installer)

 

Note that this is not a major concern on my end; postgres 9.6.2 has otherwise been running flawlessly.

 

 

​Um...you're reporting a very outdated 9.2 release in the supposed copy-paste job above but claiming 9.6.2 ...

 

 

David J.

 

Thanks, David,

The lines log_rotation_age and log_rotation_size are commented, and currently are:

#log_rotation_age = 1d                                 # Automatic rotation of logfiles will

                                                                                # happen after that time.  0 disables.

#log_rotation_size = 10MB                          # Automatic rotation of logfiles will

                                                                                # happen after that much log output.

                                                                                # 0 disables.

 

 

I see from your reference article that the log_rotation_age is now in minutes, and I will adjust that to 1440 (1 day). I don’t know where the “1d” came from. I know it used to be like this in earlier versions.

 

Mark Watson


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