On Tue, 2006-08-22 at 21:04 -0500, Troy Curtis Jr wrote:
> Logwatch is really designed to be run as a cronjob which sends you an
> email after it has parsed through your logs. The configuration for
> logwatch is located in the /etc/log.d/ directory. In that directory
> you will find many scripts
Logwatch is really designed to be run as a cronjob which sends you an
email after it has parsed through your logs. The configuration for
logwatch is located in the /etc/log.d/ directory. In that directory
you will find many scripts and configuration options for a wide range
of different log file
> Does anyone know of a practical way to review all the various logs on
> the system each day? Does it just come down to a brisk scroll through
> the previous day's rotated logs?
>
Isn't that why logwatch was created?
I emerged logwatch, but even though the man pages reference the
command 'log
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Grant wrote:
> Does anyone know of a practical way to review all the various logs on
> the system each day? Does it just come down to a brisk scroll through
> the previous day's rotated logs?
>
> - Grant
Depending on what you're requirements are, tr
On 8/21/06, Grant <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Does anyone know of a practical way to review all the various logs on
the system each day? Does it just come down to a brisk scroll through
the previous day's rotated logs?
Isn't that why logwatch was created?
--
Collins Richey
If you fill yo
Does anyone know of a practical way to review all the various logs on
the system each day? Does it just come down to a brisk scroll through
the previous day's rotated logs?
- Grant
--
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