Adjust the mysql-log-rotate script in several ways: * Use the correct log file pathname for Red Hat installations. * Enable creation of the log file by logrotate (needed since /var/log/ isn't writable by mysql user); and set the same 640 permissions we normally use. * Comment out the actual rotation commands, so that user must edit the file to enable rotation. This is unfortunate, but the fact that the script will probably fail without manual configuration (to set a root password) means that we can't really have it turned on by default. Fortunately, in most configurations the log file is low-volume and so rotation is not critical functionality. See discussions at RH bugs 799735, 547007 * Note they are from Fedora 15 / 16 Update 3/2017 * it would be big unexpected change for anyone upgrading, if we start shipping it now. Maybe it is good candidate for shipping with MariaDB 10.2 ? * the 'mysqladmin flush logs' doesn´t guarantee, no entries are lost during flushing, the operation is not atomic. We should not ship it in that state Update 6/2018 * the SIGHUP causes server to flush all logs. No password admin needed, the only constraint is beeing able to send the SIGHUP to the process and read the mysqld pid file, which root can. * Submited as PR: https://github.com/MariaDB/server/pull/807 --- mariadb-10.3.19/support-files/mysql-log-rotate.sh 2019-11-03 17:03:27.000000000 +0100 +++ mariadb-10.3.19/support-files/mysql-log-rotate.sh_patched 2019-11-06 15:07:54.205379672 +0100 @@ -3,23 +3,10 @@ # in the [mysqld] section as follows: # # [mysqld] -# log-error=@localstatedir@/mysqld.log -# -# If the root user has a password you have to create a -# /root/.my.cnf configuration file with the following -# content: -# -# [mysqladmin] -# password = -# user= root -# -# where "" is the password. -# -# ATTENTION: This /root/.my.cnf should be readable ONLY -# for root ! +# log-error=@LOG_LOCATION@ -@localstatedir@/mysqld.log { - # create 600 mysql mysql +@LOG_LOCATION@ { + create 600 mysql mysql notifempty daily rotate 3 @@ -27,11 +14,9 @@ compress postrotate # just if mysqld is really running - if test -x @bindir@/mysqladmin && \ - @bindir@/mysqladmin ping &>/dev/null - then - @bindir@/mysqladmin --local flush-error-log \ - flush-engine-log flush-general-log flush-slow-log - fi + if [ -e @PID_FILE_DIR@/@DAEMON_NO_PREFIX@.pid ] + then + kill -1 $(<@PID_FILE_DIR@/@DAEMON_NO_PREFIX@.pid) + fi endscript }