journalctl can help you with that, e.g if you use postfix for MTA # journalctl --no-hostname -o short-iso --since -24h -u postfix
2022-01-17T03:19:14+0000 postfix/pickup[932305]: D8D2E40FFC: uid=0 from=<root> 2022-01-17T03:19:14+0000 postfix/cleanup[932955]: D8D2E40FFC: message-id=<20220117031914.D8D2E40FFC@mail.local> 2022-01-17T03:19:14+0000 postfix/qmgr[1458]: D8D2E40FFC: from=<root@mail.local>, size=2916, nrcpt=1 (queue active) 2022-01-17T03:19:14+0000 postfix/local[932957]: D8D2E40FFC: to=<root@mail.local>, orig_to=<root>, relay=local, delay=0.09, delays=0.07/0.02/0/0, dsn=2.0.0, status=sent (delivered to mailbox) 2022-01-17T03:19:14+0000 postfix/qmgr[1458]: D8D2E40FFC: removed -- Rabin On Mon, 17 Jan 2022 at 10:59, אורי <u...@speedy.net> wrote: > Hi, > > I want to check mail.log for how many emails are sent every day. The > format of my mail.log is something like this: > > Jan 17 08:49:23 www .... (the rest of the log) > > I'm running a command such as: > > cat mail.log* |fgrep "status=sent (250 Ok"|awk '{print $1" "$2}'|sort > -n|uniq -c > > And I receive the number of emails sent every day. But the date doesn't > contain the year, the months are sorted alphabetically and the line of Jan > 17 comes before the line of Jan 2. I would like to sort the lines according > to the date order such as in yyyy-mm-dd and with including the year. How do > I do it? > > אורי > u...@speedy.net > _______________________________________________ > Linux-il mailing list > Linux-il@cs.huji.ac.il > http://mailman.cs.huji.ac.il/mailman/listinfo/linux-il >
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