Mark Watts wrote:
My "problem" can be solved by grep, but since anvil's statistics are of no
immediate use to me, I see little point in filling my logs with them.
These are not your logs. These are system logs. are you "System"? :)
you can have your log rotation program to remove what you d
Mark Watts writes:
My "problem" can be solved by grep, but since anvil's statistics are of no
immediate use to me, I see little point in filling my logs with them.
Perhaps you could take a look at syslog-ng. I believe it is able to filter
out lines based on expressions. Or pretty much any sys
On Monday 01 September 2008 14:21:56 Wietse Venema wrote:
> Mark Watts:
> > Is there a mechanism to reduce/stop the logging that anvil does?
>
> No. Anvil logs something when it terminates (Postfix is not receiving
> mail), and it logs something every 10 minutes or so when Postfix
> is busy.
>
> >
Mark Watts:
> Is there a mechanism to reduce/stop the logging that anvil does?
No. Anvil logs something when it terminates (Postfix is not receiving
mail), and it logs something every 10 minutes or so when Postfix
is busy.
> I have a low-traffic mail server and I'd prefer anvil to not log anythin