#! /bin/sh # Copyright (c) 1999 University of Cambridge. # See the file NOTICE for conditions of use and distribution. # Shell script for cycling exim main and reject log files. Each time it is run, # the files get "shuffled down" by one, the current one (e.g. mainlog) becoming # mainlog.01, the previous mainlog.01 becoming mainlog.02, and so on, up to the # limit configured here. The same happens to the reject logs. All those with # numbers greater than 1 are compressed. # This script should be called regularly (e.g. daily) by a root crontab # entry of the form # 1 0 * * * /opt/exim/bin/exicyclog # The following lines are generated from Exim's configuration file when # this source is built into a script, but you can subsequently edit them # without rebuilding things, as long are you are careful not to overwrite # the script in the next Exim rebuild/install. "Keep" is the number of old log # files that are required to be kept. "Compress" and "suffix" define your # chosen compression method. The others are provided because the location # of certain commands varies from OS to OS. Sigh. keep=10 compress=/usr/bin/gzip suffix=gz chown=/usr/bin/chown chgrp=/usr/bin/chgrp mv=/bin/mv rm=/bin/rm # End of editable lines ######################################################################### # See if this installation is using the esoteric "USE_NODE" feature of Exim, # in which it uses the host's name as a suffix for the configuration file name. # Set $hostsuffix if a suffixed file is found. configure_file_use_node= if [ "$configure_file_use_node" = "yes" ]; then host=`uname -n` if [ ! "$host" != "" ]; then if [ -f /usr/local/packages/exim-4.01/etc/configure.$host ]; then hostsuffix=.$host fi fi fi # Set the configuration file name config=/usr/local/packages/exim-4.01/etc/configure$hostsuffix # Determine if the log file path is set, and where the spool directory is. The # strings /usr/local/packages/exim-4.01/etc/configure and /usr/local/packages/exim-4.01/bin below are replaced by their compile- # time settings when this source is build into a script. Search for an # exim_path setting in the configure file; otherwise use the bin directory. # Call that version of Exim to find the spool directory and log file path. exim_path=`grep '^[ ]*exim_path' $config | sed 's/.*=[ ]*//'` if test "$exim_path" = ""; then exim_path=/usr/local/packages/exim-4.01/bin/exim; fi spool_directory=`$exim_path -C $config -bP spool_directory | sed 's/.*=[ ]*//'` log_file_path=`$exim_path -C $config -bP log_file_path | sed 's/.*=[ ]*//'` # If log_file_path contains only "syslog" then no Exim log files are in use. # We can't cycle anything. Complain and give up. if [ "$log_file_path" = "syslog" ] ; then echo "*** Exim is logging to syslog - no log files to cycle ***" exit 1 fi # Otherwise, remove ":syslog" or "syslog:" (some spaces allowed) and inspect # what remains. The simplistic regex originally used failed when a filename # contained "syslog", so we have to use three less general ones, because sed # doesn't have much power in its regexs. log_file_path=`echo "$log_file_path" | \ sed 's/^ *:\{0,1\} *syslog *:\{0,1\} *//;s/: *syslog *:/:/;s/: *syslog *$//'` # If log_file_path is empty, then the logs we are interested in are called # "mainlog" and "rejectlog" in the directory called "log" in the spool # directory. Otherwise we fish out the directory from the given path, and # also the names of the logs. if [ "$log_file_path" = "" ]; then logdir=$spool_directory/log mainlog=mainlog rejectlog=rejectlog else logdir=`echo $log_file_path | sed 's?/[^/]*$??'` logbase=`echo $log_file_path | sed 's?^.*/??'` mainlog=`echo $logbase | sed 's/%s/main/'` rejectlog=`echo $logbase | sed 's/%s/reject/'` fi # Get into the log directory to do the business. cd $logdir # If there is no main log file, do nothing. if [ ! -f $mainlog ]; then exit; fi # Find out the owner and group of the main log file so that we can re-instate # this on moved and compressed files, since some operating systems may change # things. This is a tedious bit of code, but it should work both in operating # systems where the -l option of ls gives the user and group, and those in which # you need -lg. The condition is that, if the fifth field of the output from # ls consists entirely of digits, then the third and fourth fields are the user # and group. a=`ls -lg $mainlog` b=`ls -l $mainlog` # These statements work fine in the Bourne or Korn shells, but not in Bash. # So for the benefit of systems whose /bin/sh is really Bash, they have been # changed to a messier form. # user=`echo "$a\n$b\n" | awk 'BEGIN { OFS=""} { if ($5 ~ /^[0-9]+$/) print $3; }'` # group=`echo "$a\n$b\n" | awk 'BEGIN { OFS=""} { if ($5 ~ /^[0-9]+$/) print $4; }'` user=`echo "$a $b " | awk 'BEGIN { OFS=""} { if ($5 ~ /^[0-9]+$/) { print $3; exit; } }'` group=`echo "$a $b " | awk 'BEGIN { OFS=""} { if ($5 ~ /^[0-9]+$/) { print $4; exit; } }'` # Now do the job. First remove the files that have "fallen off the bottom". # Look for both the compressed and uncompressed forms. if [ $keep -lt 10 ]; then keept=0$keep; else keept=$keep; fi; if [ -f $mainlog.$keept ]; then $rm $mainlog.$keept; fi; if [ -f $mainlog.$keept.$suffix ]; then $rm $mainlog.$keept.$suffix; fi; if [ -f $rejectlog.$keept ]; then $rm $rejectlog.$keept; fi; if [ -f $rejectlog.$keept.$suffix ]; then $rm $rejectlog.$keept.$suffix; fi; # Now rename all the previous old files by increasing their numbers by 1. # When the number is less than 10, insert a leading zero. count=$keep if [ $count -lt 10 ]; then countt=0$count; else countt=$count; fi; while [ $count -gt 1 ]; do old=`expr $count - 1` if [ $old -lt 10 ]; then oldt=0$old; else oldt=$old; fi; if [ -f $mainlog.$oldt ]; then $mv $mainlog.$oldt $mainlog.$countt elif [ -f $mainlog.$oldt.$suffix ]; then $mv $mainlog.$oldt.$suffix $mainlog.$countt.$suffix fi if [ -f $rejectlog.$oldt ]; then $mv $rejectlog.$oldt $rejectlog.$countt elif [ -f $rejectlog.$oldt.$suffix ]; then $mv $rejectlog.$oldt.$suffix $rejectlog.$countt.$suffix fi count=$old countt=$oldt done # Now rename the current files as 01 if [ -f $mainlog ]; then $mv $mainlog $mainlog.01 $chown $user:$group $mainlog.01 fi if [ -f $rejectlog ]; then $mv $rejectlog $rejectlog.01 $chown $user:$group $rejectlog.01 fi # Now scan the 02 and later files, compressing where necessary, and # ensuring that their owners and groups are correct. count=2; while [ $count -le $keep ]; do if [ $count -lt 10 ]; then countt=0$count; else countt=$count; fi if [ -f $mainlog.$countt ]; then $compress $mainlog.$countt; fi if [ -f $mainlog.$countt.$suffix ]; then $chown $user:$group $mainlog.$countt.$suffix fi if [ -f $rejectlog.$countt ]; then $compress $rejectlog.$countt; fi if [ -f $rejectlog.$countt.$suffix ]; then $chown $user:$group $rejectlog.$countt.$suffix fi count=`expr $count + 1` done # End of exicyclog