* explicitly specify the dirs that are getting rotated
* app log rules are now moved to logrotate.ejs
* we keep task logs for a week
Some testing notes:
* touch -d "10 days ago" foo
* logrotate /etc/logrotate.conf -v to test rotation. there is a state
file created in /var/lib/logrotate/status. If we have a 'daily' rule,
it will get processed only after a log line in status exists and it's atleast
1 day old timestamp.
https://github.com/logrotate/logrotate/blob/master/logrotate.c is quite
readable
logrotate config files may contain arbitrary commands which are
exectued as root, thus the config files have to be owned by root.
This is the reason we need the sudo scripts :-/
To test the generated scripts, just run:
$ logrotate /etc/logrotate.conf -v
Fixes#396