On 3/18/20 8:04 AM, Kamil Dudka wrote:
> logrotate is a utility designed to simplify the administration of log files 
> on 
> a system which generates a lot of log files.  It used to be triggered by 
> cron.  
> The cron hook was unconditionally installed with logrotate but it took effect 
> only if a cron daemon was installed.
> 
> Starting with Fedora 30, logrotate is triggered by a systemd timer instead.  
> In order to make updates smoother, the timer was enabled on updates in case
> a cron daemon was configured on the system.
> 
> The timer is currently not enabled on fresh installs to avoid surprises (such 
> as data lost) on systems where logrotate is installed but not actually used.  
> logrotate can also be triggered independently of systemd/cron and can be even 
> run by non-privileged users to rotate logs they have access to.
> 
> Some people think that the logrotate timer should be enabled by default on 
> all 
> systems where the logrotate package is installed:
> 
>     https://bugzilla.redhat.com/1655153#c4
> 
> Do you think it would be a good idea?

I chimed in in the ticket too, but +1 from me.

I guess it would be worth analyzing the problem space a bit:

- in the past how many people do we think had logrotate installed and not cron?
- what are the worst case scenarios if logrotate.timer defaults to off?
- what are the worst case scenarios if logrotate.time defaults to on?

Dusty

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