3

I have the following logrotate script

/path/to/folder {
   daily
   rotate 30
   notifempty
   sharedscripts
   copytruncate
   compress
   dateext


   preremove
     if file --mime-type "$1" | grep -q gzip$; then
          mkdir -p /path/to/archive/folder && cp $1 $_
     fi
   endscript
}

  • What I am trying to achieve:-

    Before removal of a log file after a retention of 30 days, copy to another folder.

I am running this logstash config on debug mode

logrotate -d $CONFIG_FILE

By the looks of the logs, the rotation is working fine, but it does not even run the preremove script. I have not run this config on live yet, as I wanted to test it before doing that.

logrotate version 3.8.6

6
  • 1
    Notice that preremove runs /bin/sh, where you might have no $_ available (at least POSIX sh doesn't seem to require it). Also, make sure to quote "$1" everywhere, and single quote 'gzip$'. Try adding debug output like echo blah >> /tmp/debug to see if the script gets run. Apr 29, 2019 at 13:12
  • @BenjaminW. I tried replacing $_ with the path/to/archived/folder - still did not work. I also tried echo "testing" in the preremove script. It does not seem to be running.
    – RPT
    Apr 29, 2019 at 13:59
  • I'm not sure where standard output for logrotate goes – did you try redirecting it to a file for the echo debug statement? Apr 29, 2019 at 14:37
  • @BenjaminW. It does not seem to be going into the preremove script. Putting an echo outside the preremove block throws an error unknown option 'echo'. But when it is inside preremove block it does not throw that error.
    – RPT
    Apr 29, 2019 at 14:49
  • 1
    I'm not sure, to be honest. I'd try running it in non-debug mode on some test files instead of the real logs. Apr 29, 2019 at 15:01

3 Answers 3

2

I'm not sure whether you're asking why preremove isn't running, or whether your script looks OK.

Preremove, and how to test

I don't believe that logrotate will ever run a preremove script if it's not removing files (per -d). I set up a test case and ran it under strace. The logrotate -d found the files that needed to be removed and wrote that it would have removed them, but did not run the preremove code. Honestly this makes sense to me, and is what I expect, since the preremove could do things as damaging as the deletion itself.

To perform a test, I think you need to reproduce your live environment in another directory and just actually run it. Don't use full size files, just use dummy files with a few lines. Create a script to build your test folder, so you can reproduce the test easily. Use touch to set timestamps. For example:

for n in $(seq 1 30); do
    cp test.log test.log.$n
    gzip test.log.$n
    touch -d "now - $n day" test.log.$n.gz
done

The script itself

  • grep -q gzip$ is wrong. The $ will disappear in the shell parse. You need to enclose this in single quotes.
  • As someone else wrote, I would not expect $_ to work. Repeat the directory name, or use a variable in the script.
  • I don't think you need the \ escapes at EOL, as suggested.
  • You probably want cp -p, as someone suggested.
  • If your files are large, the cp will be slow. If your archive is on the same filesystem, consider using ln (not ln -s!) instead. This will be instant.
  • Using file --mime-type probably works fine, but frankly I'd just base it on the file name in this case, since logrotate will reliably append .gz on any file for which file would return gzip. expr "$1" : '.*gz$' will give a nonzero number as standard output for any $1 that ends in .gz. It will give exactly the number 0 as standard output for a filename that does not end in .gz.
0

I think your condition itself is not coming true can you put echo before preremove to debug. Try to execute your if condition manually and see.

# file --mime-type * | grep -i *.1
audit.log.1: text/plain
# file --mime-type * | grep -i *.1$
# file --mime-type * | grep -q *.1$
# file --mime-type * | grep -q *.1
0

You might be missing line continuation escapes as seen in some examples

preremove
    # debug line
    systemd-cat -t "rot-pre-rm" echo "preremove block, file: $1"
    if file --mime-type "$1" | grep -q gzip$; then \
        cp -p "$1" /path/to/archive/syslog/; \
    fi; \
endscript
4
  • Does not seem to be working running them in the -d mode
    – RPT
    May 2, 2019 at 3:16
  • you can also put the code is a shell script and invoke it.
    – LMC
    May 2, 2019 at 3:18
  • It seems as though the preremove block is not even run. I tried invoking the snippet within preremove putting it another shell script with some echo. Does not seem to run.
    – RPT
    May 2, 2019 at 3:25
  • Add systemd-cat echo "preremove block" outside the if-else, then check with journalctl. If systemd is not pesent on your host, use just an echo. May be the ifconditions are not met.
    – LMC
    May 4, 2019 at 15:58

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.