From 23685502f3f923930cc9c24a1e2e99b5173d2a37 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001
From: David Luevano Alvarado
Date: Thu, 15 Jun 2023 04:26:29 -0600
Subject: fix typos on arch logs entry, add temp jellyfin entry
---
live/blog/a/arch_logs_flooding_disk.html | 7 ++++---
live/blog/rss.xml | 6 +++---
2 files changed, 7 insertions(+), 6 deletions(-)
(limited to 'live/blog')
diff --git a/live/blog/a/arch_logs_flooding_disk.html b/live/blog/a/arch_logs_flooding_disk.html
index 4b8bd19..8903f85 100644
--- a/live/blog/a/arch_logs_flooding_disk.html
+++ b/live/blog/a/arch_logs_flooding_disk.html
@@ -91,13 +91,13 @@
It’s been a while since I’ve been running a minimal server on a VPS, and it is a pretty humble VPS with just 32 GB of storage which works for me as I’m only hosting a handful of services. At some point I started noticing that the disk keept filling up on each time I checked.
Turns out that out of the box, Arch has a default config for systemd
‘s journald
that keeps a persistent journal
log, but doesn’t have a limit on how much logging is kept. This means that depending on how many services, and how aggresive they log, it can be filled up pretty quickly. For me I had around 15 GB of logs, from the normal journal
directory, nginx
directory and my now unused prosody
instance.
For prosody
it was just a matter of deleting the directory as I’m not using it anymore, which freed around 4 GB of disk space.
-For journal
I did a combination of configuring SystemMaxUse
and creating a Namespace for all “email” related services as mentioned in the Arch wiki: systemd/Journal; basically just configuring /etc/systemd/journald.conf
(and /etc/systemd/journald@email.con
with the comment change) with:
-[Journal]
+For journal
I did a combination of configuring SystemMaxUse
and creating a Namespace for all “email” related services as mentioned in the Arch wiki: systemd/Journal; basically just configuring /etc/systemd/journald.conf
(and /etc/systemd/journald@email.conf
with the comment change) with:
+[Journal]
Storage=persistent
SystemMaxUse=100MB # 50MB for the "email" Namespace
And then for each service that I want to use this “email” Namespace I add:
-[Service]
+[Service]
LogNamespace=email
Which can be changed manually or by executing systemctl edit service_name.service
and it will create an override file which will be read on top of the normal service configuration. Once configured restart by running systemctl daemon-reload
and systemctl restart service_name.service
(probably also restart systemd-journald
).
@@ -142,6 +142,7 @@ LogNamespace=email
By David Luévano
Created: Thu, Jun 15, 2023 @ 10:22 UTC
+
Modified: Thu, Jun 15, 2023 @ 10:24 UTC
Tags:
code, english, server, short, tools, tutorial
diff --git a/live/blog/rss.xml b/live/blog/rss.xml
index 9c7de3e..d96d238 100644
--- a/live/blog/rss.xml
+++ b/live/blog/rss.xml
@@ -37,13 +37,13 @@
It’s been a while since I’ve been running a minimal server on a VPS, and it is a pretty humble VPS with just 32 GB of storage which works for me as I’m only hosting a handful of services. At some point I started noticing that the disk keept filling up on each time I checked.
Turns out that out of the box, Arch has a default config for systemd
‘s journald
that keeps a persistent journal
log, but doesn’t have a limit on how much logging is kept. This means that depending on how many services, and how aggresive they log, it can be filled up pretty quickly. For me I had around 15 GB of logs, from the normal journal
directory, nginx
directory and my now unused prosody
instance.
For prosody
it was just a matter of deleting the directory as I’m not using it anymore, which freed around 4 GB of disk space.
-For journal
I did a combination of configuring SystemMaxUse
and creating a Namespace for all “email” related services as mentioned in the Arch wiki: systemd/Journal; basically just configuring /etc/systemd/journald.conf
(and /etc/systemd/journald@email.con
with the comment change) with:
-[Journal]
+For journal
I did a combination of configuring SystemMaxUse
and creating a Namespace for all “email” related services as mentioned in the Arch wiki: systemd/Journal; basically just configuring /etc/systemd/journald.conf
(and /etc/systemd/journald@email.conf
with the comment change) with:
+[Journal]
Storage=persistent
SystemMaxUse=100MB # 50MB for the "email" Namespace
And then for each service that I want to use this “email” Namespace I add:
-[Service]
+[Service]
LogNamespace=email
Which can be changed manually or by executing systemctl edit service_name.service
and it will create an override file which will be read on top of the normal service configuration. Once configured restart by running systemctl daemon-reload
and systemctl restart service_name.service
(probably also restart systemd-journald
).
--
cgit v1.2.3-70-g09d2