If you downloaded the Opmantek VM then the mongod.conf for logrotate is already in place for you and maybe you just need to modify the settings. Otherwise the steps and sample are below.
Note: You can find all of your logrotate configuration files in /etc/logroate.d/, Logrotate is a job ran daily by cron
There are a few options you should look at before making your configuration file: Logrotate Man page. Considerations include:
- Do you need to rotate your log daily or weekly?
- How many past logs do you need to keep?
- Compression and how you handle it.
- Open a terminal session to your Opmantek server
- Find the location of your mongod.log file. This can be done by cat /etc/mongod.conf you will find the log location under the systemLog section. Copy the full path and paste it in a notepad for later.
- Making your logrotate mongod file: (**Note this is the default we ship with in our VM. Depending on your company standards it may need edits)
vi /etc/logrotate.d/mongod.conf
vi mongod# Replace /var/log/mongodb/mongod.log with your log location (step 1) if different /var/log/mongodb/mongod.log { weekly maxsize 500M rotate 50 missingok compress delaycompress notifempty create 640 mongod mongod sharedscripts postrotate kill -SIGUSR1 $(pidof mongod) >/dev/null 2>&1||: endscript }
- Save and quit
- Testing your new logrotate: logrotate --debug /etc/logrotate.d/mongod.log
- Any errors you have will appear in your output.
Thats it! It is advised to revisit your logs after a few cycles (Days or Weeks) to ensure your operating as expected and make any tweaks that you see fit.