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- logRotate
logRotate¶
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Definition¶
-
logRotate
¶ The
logRotate
command is an administrative command that allows you to rotate the MongoDB logs to prevent a single logfile from consuming too much disk space.You must issue the
logRotate
command against the admin database in the form:{ logRotate: 1 }
Note
Your
mongod
instance needs to be running with the--logpath [file]
option.You may also rotate the logs by sending a
SIGUSR1
signal to themongod
process. If yourmongod
has a process ID of 2200, here’s how to send the signal on Linux:kill -SIGUSR1 2200
Behavior¶
Changed in version 3.0.0.
The systemLog.logRotate
setting or --logRotate
option
specify logRotate
’s behavior.
When systemLog.logRotate
or --logRotate
are set to
rename
, logRotate
renames the existing log file by
appending the current timestamp to the filename. The appended timestamp
has the following form:
<YYYY>-<mm>-<DD>T<HH>-<MM>-<SS>
Then logRotate
creates a new log file with the same
name as originally specified by the systemLog.path
setting to
mongod
or mongos
.
When systemLog.logRotate
or --logRotate
are set to
reopen
, logRotate
follows the typical Linux/Unix
behavior, and simply closes the log file, and then reopens a log file
with the same name. With reopen
, mongod
expects that
another process renames the file prior to the rotation, and that the
reopen results in the creation of a new file.