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Diffstat (limited to '')
-rw-r--r-- | redhat/freeradius-logrotate | 61 |
1 files changed, 61 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/redhat/freeradius-logrotate b/redhat/freeradius-logrotate new file mode 100644 index 0000000..7767806 --- /dev/null +++ b/redhat/freeradius-logrotate @@ -0,0 +1,61 @@ +# +# You can use this to rotate the /var/log/radius/* files, simply copy +# it to /etc/logrotate.d/radiusd +# + +# +# The main server log +# +/var/log/radius/radius.log { + # Common options + monthly + rotate 4 + missingok + compress + delaycompress + su radiusd radiusd + + copytruncate +} + + +# +# Session monitoring utilities and SQL log files (in order) +# +/var/log/radius/checkrad.log /var/log/radius/radwatch.log +/var/log/radius/sqllog.sql +{ + # Common options + monthly + rotate 4 + missingok + compress + delaycompress + su radiusd radiusd + + nocreate +} + + +# +# There are different detail-rotating strategies you can use. One is +# to write to a single detail file per IP and use the rotate config +# below. Another is to write to a daily detail file per IP with: +# +# detailfile = ${radacctdir}/%{Client-IP-Address}/%Y%m%d-detail +# +# (or similar) in radiusd.conf, without rotation. If you go with the +# second technique, you will need another cron job that removes old +# detail files. You do not need to comment out the below for method #2. +# +/var/log/radius/radacct/*/detail { + # Common options + monthly + rotate 4 + missingok + compress + delaycompress + su radiusd radiusd + + nocreate +} |