The log truncation doesn't happen because postgres
has a protection to avoid truncating a log file that appears to be the same as the one it's currently logging into. Otherwise that would mean loosing the latest log entries, which seems hardly ever desirable.
In fact, the doc on log_truncate_on_rotation
says:
However, truncation will occur only when a new file is being opened
due to time-based rotation, not during server startup or size-based
rotation
To solve this, you should change log_filename
from 'postgresql-%a.log'
to a name with a time granularity that is compatible with the log_rotation_size
. As an example:
log_filename = postgresql-%a-%H.log
With these settings, the purpose of log_truncate_on_rotation
would be to overwrite the log of the previous day at the same hour for the same application name if it happens to exist.
I assume that you are just testing the log rotation feature, because in reality 10Kb
is too small to be useful, and overriding previous logs is dubious in production use. If you have hard constraints on the size of logs, you should combine the logfile switching done by postgres with an external cron job that aggressively removes the older logs as opposed to relying only on log_truncate_on_rotation
.