I'm just saying that, although you may not have any individual log files that are very large, they probably total to be a similar size as my single large file. I wanted to confirm that analog was looking at your .gz files.
I haven't set up analog to look at .gz files. Therefore, when I rolled my logs, it began only looking at the new, nearly empty logs. The problem went away. Therefore, I conclude that it may be related to number of log entries, even if those entries are distributed among many files. Try moving most of your files away temporarily and see if that solves the problem for you too. Not that its a permanent fix, mind you, but at least we might get to the bottom of what's up. Stephen -- are you basically telling us that analog 5.03 is not stable on OS X? Is there a version that doesn't have this problem? On Thursday, September 27, 2001, at 02:32 AM, Kefauver, Charles wrote: > I don't quite get you. In my log rolling process, I gzip the logs, and > then analog reads directly the compressed logs. > > Charles > > At 1:40 AM -0700 9/27/01, Mark Edwards wrote: >> However, you must be setting analog to gunzip your old logs, right? I >> didn' >> t do that, so analog is only looking at nearly blank logs, and the >> problem went away. >> >> I think it may have something to do with number of requests to process. >> >> On Thursday, September 27, 2001, at 01:37 AM, Kefauver, Charles wrote: >>> >>> I roll my logs daily, so I have a lot of small logs, it doesn't help. >>> >>> Charles -- Mark Edwards San Francisco, CA [EMAIL PROTECTED] +------------------------------------------------------------------------ | This is the analog-help mailing list. To unsubscribe from this | mailing list, go to | http://lists.isite.net/listgate/analog-help/unsubscribe.html | | List archives are available at | http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/ | http://lists.isite.net/listgate/analog-help/archives/ | http://www.tallylist.com/archives/index.cfm/mlist.7 +------------------------------------------------------------------------
