You need to rotate your logs. Set the logfile_rotate parameter in your
squid.conf to the number of old copies you want to keep. Squid will
automatically delete the logs that are older than logfile_rotate value *
rotation interval this way.
Set cron to `kill -USR1 squid <pid>` at the time that you want the logs to
rotate. I have my systems rotate logs at 23:59 each day (and earlier for
some remote sites) to accomodate the automated log processing scripts I
run on a stats server.
-Bill
On Thu, 26 Mar 1998, Adalto Silva Correia Filho wrote:
>
> Dear friends,
>
> I've recently installed squid-1.1.20 and I'm having a little
> concern about the size of my logs (access, cache and store). They're
> increasing very fast, and I doubt if they are still worth having.
>
> Could anyone tell me what to do to minimize the logs sizes
> without affecting the squid performance?
>
> I'll be expecting any answers.
>
> Thanks in advance,
>
> Adalto S. Correia Filho
Received on Thu Mar 26 1998 - 10:04:46 MST
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