cronosplit(1) - Linux man page
Name
cronosplit - split log files into cronolog-compatible filesSynopsis
cronosplit --template=TEMPLATE [--print-invalid] [--help] [--version] file ...Description
Options
cronosplit accepts the following options and arguments:
- --template=TEMPLATE
- specifies the template for the output log files (using the format specifiers described below).
- --verbose
- print additional status messages to the standard error stream.
- --debug
- print debug messages to the standard error stream.
- --help
- print a help message and then exit.
- --version
- print version information and exit.
Template format
Each character in the template represents a character in the expanded filename, except for date and time format specifiers, which are replaced by their expansion. Format specifiers consist of a '%' followed by one of the following characters:- %
- a literal % character
- n
- a new-line character
- t
- a horizontal tab character
Time fields:
- H
- hour (00..23)
- I
- hour (01..12)
- p
- the locale's AM or PM indicator
- M
- minute (00..59)
- S
- second (00..61, which allows for leap seconds)
- X
- the locale's time representation (e.g.: "15:12:47")
- Z
- time zone (e.g. GMT), or nothing if the time zone cannot be determined
Date fields:
- a
- the locale's abbreviated weekday name (e.g.: Sun..Sat)
- A
- the locale's full weekday name (e.g.: Sunday .. Saturday)
- b
- the locale's abbreviated month name (e.g.: Jan .. Dec)
- B
- the locale's full month name, (e.g.: January .. December)
- c
- the locale's date and time (e.g.: "Sun Dec 15 14:12:47 GMT 1996")
- d
- day of month (01 .. 31)
- j
- day of year (001 .. 366)
- m
- month (01 .. 12)
- U
- week of the year with Sunday as first day of week (00..53, where week 1 is the week containing the first Sunday of the year)
- W
- week of the year with Monday as first day of week (00..53, where week 1 is the week containing the first Monday of the year)
- w
- day of week (0 .. 6, where 0 corresponds to Sunday)
- x
- locale's date representation (e.g. today in Britain: "12/04/96")
- y
- year without the century (00 .. 99)
- Y
- year with the century (1970 .. 2038)
Other specifiers may be available depending on the C library's implementation of the strftime function.
See Also
apache(1m) cronolog(1m) date(1) strftime(3) environ(5)More information and the latest version of cronolog and cronosplit can be obtained from
http://www.ford-mason.co.uk/resources/cronolog/
If you have any suggestions, bug reports, fixes, or enhancements, please mail them to the author.
More about Apache
Documentation for the Apache http server is available fromAuthor
Andrew Ford <A.Ford@ford-mason.co.uk>cronosplit is based on a script called splitlog by Roy Fielding, which is part of the wwwstat package.