Javier Fernández-Sanguino Peña <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [2004:01:07:18:52:45+0100] scribed: > On Mon, Jan 05, 2004 at 01:04:18AM -0600, Michael D Schleif wrote: > > I have been using tiger for nearly a year. Several months ago, a new > > test was added in: > > > > /usr/lib/tiger/scripts/check_finddeleted > > I wrote this (probably too agressive test) after reading one of Brain > Hatch's excellent articles [1]. It's probably written in a very broad way > (to catch all the culprits) but fires off in many common cases. > > Since Tiger 3.2.1 provides an "ignore" mechanism (similar to logcheck's) > you can add those common cases to your tiger.ignore file. In bug # 225112 > I mention some common ones (in my case) which include the following regular > expressions (for apache):
Yes, I use several ignore regexps -- I had hoped that there is some configuration option that I missed. > Server /usr/sbin/apache \(pid \d+\) is using deleted files > The parent process of server /usr/sbin/apache \(pid \d+\) is using deleted > files > Program apache \(pid \d+, parent \d+\) is using a deleted file: .* > /tmp/session_mm_apache0.sem \(deleted\) <snip /> Yes, I found these helpful. However, `\d' does *NOT* work on my system; rather, I had to change these to `[0-9]' -- and, yes, I did debug these with egrep, with same result. Thank you. -- Best Regards, mds mds resource 877.596.8237 - Dare to fix things before they break . . . - Our capacity for understanding is inversely proportional to how much we think we know. The more I know, the more I know I don't know . . . --
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