I'm just trying out the RC1 release of 8.3, and I'm seeing something strange with the logging configuration. What I want PostgreSQL to do is put a log file "postgresql.log" in "/var/log/pgsql" - I have an application that handles log rotations, so would prefer to do it with that, rather than have PostgreSQL do the rotation.
I would have thought my config shown below would have made this happen, but it doesn't appear so. Instead PostgreSQL creates a file called "postgresql.log.1200003749" in /var/log/pgsql.
Best of it is, I cannot work out what those numbers mean. The time at which PostgreSQL was started was 22:37 on 10th Jan 2008. So I can figure out that "3749" is probably the minutes and seconds. The process IDs are in the 32,200s so it's not the PID either.
Is this a bug, or am I just missing something?
My postgresql.conf reads:
# - Where to Log -
log_destination = 'stderr' # Valid values are combinations of # stderr, csvlog, syslog and eventlog, # depending on platform. csvlog # requires logging_collector to be on.
# This is used when logging to stderr: logging_collector = on # Enable capturing of stderr and csvlog # into log files. Required to be on for # csvlogs. # (change requires restart)
# These are only used if logging_collector is on: log_directory = '/var/log/pgsql' # directory where log files are written, # can be absolute or relative to PGDATA log_filename = 'postgresql.log ' # log file name pattern, # can include strftime() escapes #log_truncate_on_rotation = off # If on, an existing log file of the # same name as the new log file will be # truncated rather than appended to. # But such truncation only occurs on # time-driven rotation, not on restarts # or size-driven rotation. Default is # off, meaning append to existing files # in all cases. log_rotation_age = 0 # Automatic rotation of logfiles will # happen after that time. 0 to disable. log_rotation_size = 0 # Automatic rotation of logfiles will