From 2f0d0bf4d4077029dbc5c9aaa52b195ccdb66ec8 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: ainsley Date: Mon, 3 Feb 2020 16:34:37 -0600 Subject: [PATCH] corrections based on kozlovic comments - use logfile_size_limit --- nats-server/configuration/logging.md | 4 ++-- 1 file changed, 2 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) diff --git a/nats-server/configuration/logging.md b/nats-server/configuration/logging.md index 9276375..8a7eda2 100644 --- a/nats-server/configuration/logging.md +++ b/nats-server/configuration/logging.md @@ -64,13 +64,13 @@ All of these settings are available in the configuration file as well. debug: false trace: true logtime: false -log_size_limit: 1GB +logfile_size_limit: 1GB log_file: "/tmp/nats-server.log" ``` ### Log Rotation -Introduced in NATS Server v2.1.4, NATS allows for auto-rotation of log files when the size is greater than the configured limit. The backup files will have the same name as the original log file with the suffix .yyyy.mm.dd.hh.mm.ss.micros. +Introduced in NATS Server v2.1.4, NATS allows for auto-rotation of log files when the size is greater than the configured limit set in `logfile_size_limit`. The backup files will have the same name as the original log file with the suffix .yyyy.mm.dd.hh.mm.ss.micros. You can also use NATS-included mechanisms with [logrotate](https://github.com/logrotate/logrotate), a simple standard Linux utility to rotate logs available on most distributions like Debian, Ubuntu, RedHat \(CentOS\), etc., to make log rotation simple.