Revert "Logwatch service script to process logfile"
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# Using Logwatch to monitor backup script <!-- omit in toc -->
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The backup script's log file has been set up so that utilities like Logwatch can
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easily parse it. In order to make that happen, a LogFile Group file, Service
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and Script have to be created for Logwatch to generate reports. The correct
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(general) directory structure has been created in this git archive already.
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Below are the details of each file.
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## Contents <!-- omit in toc -->
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- [LogFile Group file (/etc/logwatch/conf/logfiles/backup.conf)](#logfile-group-file-etclogwatchconflogfilesbackupconf)
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- [Log file location](#log-file-location)
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- [Archive location and name format](#archive-location-and-name-format)
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- [External script for timestamp processing](#external-script-for-timestamp-processing)
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- [Service definition file (/etc/logwatch/conf/services/backup.conf)](#service-definition-file-etclogwatchconfservicesbackupconf)
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- [LogFile Group file definition](#logfile-group-file-definition)
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- [Report title](#report-title)
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- [Detail level](#detail-level)
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- [Service script (/etc/logwatch/scripts/services/backup)](#service-script-etclogwatchscriptsservicesbackup)
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- [Detail levels](#detail-levels)
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- [Timestamp processing script (/etc/logwatch/scripts/shared/sqfullstampanywhere)](#timestamp-processing-script-etclogwatchscriptssharedsqfullstampanywhere)
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- [The time format specification](#the-time-format-specification)
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- [The search REGEX](#the-search-regex)
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- [Testing](#testing)
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- [Final thoughts](#final-thoughts)
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## LogFile Group file (/etc/logwatch/conf/logfiles/backup.conf)
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### Log file location
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Update this as needed to point to the location and name of the log file
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generated by the backup script. Remember, by default, the log file is created
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in the same directory as the script itself.
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```Ini
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LogFile = /path/to/your/backup.log
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...
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```
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Best practices suggest you use the *-l*
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flag to change this location to something like */var/log/backup.log*, for
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example. In that case, the entry would look like:
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```Ini
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LogFile = /var/log/backup.log
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...
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```
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### Archive location and name format
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If you want Logwatch to process old (archived) log files generated by something
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like *Logrotate*, then you have to specify the location and file name format of
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those files. I've included the generalized compressed format of such rotated
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files as the default in the script. Suppose you store your log files in the
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recommended location (*/var/log/*) and are using *Logrotate* with compression
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enabled, the archive line would look like:
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```Ini
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...
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Archive = /var/log/backup.log.?.gz
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...
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```
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This would tell Logwatch, when the archive option is set to true, that your
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*backup.log* files are archived as: *backup.log.1.gz*, *backup.log.2.gz*, etc.
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and are all located in */var/log/*.
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**Note: This line is totally optional and only used if you set the archive
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option in Logwatch to true (default). You can comment/delete this line if you
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wish.**
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### External script for timestamp processing
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Since the log file uses a non-standard (according to Logwatch) method of
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datestamping, a custom filter had to be created. See the
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[relevant](#timestamp-processing-script-etclogwatchscriptssharedsqfullstampanywhere)
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section of this document for more information.
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The script file is called with an *\** before the filename.
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```Ini
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...
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*sqFullStampAnywhere
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...
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```
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If you change the name of this file, you will have to change this line.
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Remember that whatever you type here as a name is converted to all-lowercase
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so your filename should be all lowercase also.
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## Service definition file (/etc/logwatch/conf/services/backup.conf)
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### LogFile Group file definition
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The service file needs to know what group of log files it is responsible for
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processing. This MUST match the name of your *LogFile Group file*:
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```Ini
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LogFile = backup
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...
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```
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If you change your LogFile Group filename, then update it here too without the
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*.conf* extension.
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### Report title
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The Logwatch output file (html or text) is divided into sections. You can
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define the title to be anything that has meaning for you. I have arbitrarily
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chosen *"System and NextCloud Backup"* but you can change it to anything you want by
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modifying the line:
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```Ini
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...
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Title = "System and NextCloud Backup"
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```
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### Detail level
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If you want to set the *detail* level of this service differently from your
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other services (which will use the *--detail* switch value or the value in your
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*logwatch.conf*), then you can define that level here. By default, it appears
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like this in the service configuration file:
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```Ini
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...
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# Override the detail level for this service
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# Remember the levels are: 0, 1-4, 5, 6+
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# Detail = 0
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```
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Simply change it to the value you want enforced. For example, here I'm setting
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it to output level 5 regardless of whatever settings everything else is using.
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```Ini
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# Override the detail level for this service
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# Remember the levels are: 0, 1-4, 5, 6+
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Detail = 5
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```
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## Service script (/etc/logwatch/scripts/services/backup)
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Logwatch calls any script with a name that **matches the service name**. You'll
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notice that I just named everything *backup* to keep things simple. You can
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change this to whatever you want, however. If you changed the service name to
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*"NCbackup*.conf", for example, you would have to rename this script file to
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"*NCbackup*" with no extension. Note: The script is a PERL file (note the
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shebang) but it can be written in any language.
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In essence, Logwatch just spits out the log file(s) defined in the LogFile Group
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file as standard input (STDIN) for the script and then takes whatever is output
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(STDOUT) from the script to assemble into it's report.
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### Detail levels
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The script supports four (4) detail levels as follows:
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- **Level 0: Summary output only**
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- This will display an aggregate total of certain logged elements. It will
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display the total number successful script executions (SQL dump OK, borg
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backup OK and borg prune OK), total generated warnings and total errors
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encountered that stopped the normal execution of the script. All totals are
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relative to the reporting period Logwatch is using (--range parameter).
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**This is the recommended reporting level.** It does not take up much space
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and is quick to read. If you notice warnings and/or errors, you should
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consult the full logs.
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- **Levels 1-4: Critical messages**
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- This uses the data which is summarized by Level 0 but outputs the actual
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messages in the log file. For example, you will see the actual text of the
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errors logged instead of just a total number of errors. This level of
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reporting is useful when *initially* monitoring the script's operation since
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you can see the actual text of any generated warnings/errors.
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- **Level 5: Verbose (debugging) output**
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- Like the previous level, this outputs the actual messages found in the log
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file. However, it also includes *[INFO] tags* which contain logged
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operational messages such as created temporary directories, entering/exiting
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maintenance mode, what source files are being used to determine extra file
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inclusions/exclusions, etc. This level of reporting is useful in diagnosing
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why errors are occurring or if you just want more insight into how the
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script works.
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**This level of output will make your Logwatch reports longer and consume
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more of your time to review. You should not use this level day-to-day.**
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- **Levels 6+: Complete log file dump**
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- Any number greater than 5 passed as a detail level will trigger the script
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to dump the entire log file out to Logwatch line-by-line. This is useful
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only if you are debugging an issue and cannot get access to the actual raw
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log file itself. The actual log file is colour-coded which makes it much
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easier to read for debugging purposes.
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**Use this detail level only when you need to see the entire log file and
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cannot otherwise access the log file.**
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## Timestamp processing script (/etc/logwatch/scripts/shared/sqfullstampanywhere)
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This is basically a modified version of the '*applyeurodate*' script that comes
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with Logwatch. It had to be modified to search within [square brackets] and to
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accept characters coming before the stamp (i.e. ANSI colour codes). If you
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change the '**stamp**' variable in the backup script to update the timestamp to
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your liking (which to totally fine!) then you'll probably have to update this
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file. There are two lines you need to modify to suit your new '**stamp**'
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variable.
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### The time format specification
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'*$SearchDate*' is the variable used in the PERL script to do exactly what it
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says, search for the date stamp. I have it set up to look for the format
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'*year-month-date hour:minute:second*'. Note, we don't care about brackets or
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anything here, we're just defining the format of the date/time stamp.
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```Perl
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...
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$SearchDate = TimeFilter('%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S');
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...
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```
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If you changed the '**stamp**' variable so it was formatted as '*month/day/year
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hour:minute*' (ex: '*[09/27/2018 18:38]*') then you'd update the **$SearchDate**
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variable as follows (note: no mention of the square brackets!):
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```Perl
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...
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$SearchDate = TimeFilter('%m/%d/%Y %H:%M');
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...
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```
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### The search REGEX
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The PERL script uses a '*regular expression*' (REGEX) to search within the log file for
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'*$SearchDate*'. For the default datestamp, this specification looks like:
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```Perl
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...
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if ($ThisLine =~ m/\[$SearchDate\] /o) {
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...
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```
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The REGEX appears between '*m/*' and '*/o*'. In this case, it searches for
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'*$SearchDate*' inside [square brackets] appearing anywhere on the line. This
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is because ANSI colour-codes often appear before the datestamp in the default
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log file. If you have modified this so that your datestamp appears at the
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beginning of the line and in the example format in the section above (using
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slashes instead of dashes) then you'd rewrite this REGEX as follows:
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```Perl
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...
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if ($ThisLine =~ m/^\[$SearchDate\] /o) {
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...
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```
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or using regular brackets anywhere on the line:
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```Perl
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...
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if ($ThisLine =~ m/\($SearchDate\) /o) {
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...
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```
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or without any brackets but appearing at the beginning of the line:
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```Perl
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...
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if ($ThisLine =~ m/^$SearchDate /o) {
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...
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```
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## Testing
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Run *logwatch --help* and note the options. You can test just this service
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locally on your screen with the following command (assuming you kept default
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names for everything):
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```Bash
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# Summary output, entire duration of log file
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logwatch --service backup --output stdout --format text --range all --detail 0
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# Minimal detail, yesterday only
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logwatch --service backup --output stdout --format text --range yesterday --detail 3
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# Verbose output, today only
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logwatch --service backup --output stdout --format text --range today --detail 5
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```
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## Final thoughts
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That's it! I'm a horrible PERL programmer so if anyone can optimize/improve the
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script file used for Logwatch then please do it! Otherwise, I hope this made
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sense and helped you integrate the backup script with Logwatch for easy
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monitoring :-)
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@ -1,112 +0,0 @@
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#!/usr/bin/perl
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#############################################################################
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# $Id$
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#############################################################################
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# Log: Backup script (backup)
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# Revision 1.0 2018/10/16
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# Written by Asif Bacchus
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#############################################################################
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use strict;
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### Get Logwatch detail level (or default to 0)
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my $detailLevel = $ENV{'LOGWATCH_DETAIL_LEVEL'} || 0;
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### Declare variables
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my $summaryErr;
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my $summaryWarn;
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my $summarySuccess;
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my %reportHash = ();
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my $key;
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### Minimal detail level: provide summary data only
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if ($detailLevel == 0) {
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### process logfile and summarize message types
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while (defined(my $ThisLine = <STDIN>)) {
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if ($ThisLine =~ /\-- \[ERROR\] /) {
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$summaryErr++;
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}
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elsif ($ThisLine =~ /\-- \[WARNING\] /) {
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$summaryWarn++;
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}
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elsif ($ThisLine =~ /All processes completed successfully/) {
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$summarySuccess++;
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}
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}
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### fill hash table with headings and summary counts
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if ($summarySuccess > 0) {
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$reportHash{"All processes successfully completed"} = $summarySuccess;
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}
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if ($summaryWarn > 0) {
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$reportHash{"Warnings issued"} = $summaryWarn;
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}
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if ($summaryErr > 0) {
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$reportHash{"Errors encountered"} = $summaryErr;
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}
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### print hash table
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foreach $key (sort keys %reportHash) {
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print "$key: $reportHash{$key}\n";
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}
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}
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### Levels 1-4 provide the actual error, warning and success messages instead
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### of a summary count
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elsif ($detailLevel >= 1 && $detailLevel <= 4) {
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while (defined(my $ThisLine = <STDIN>)) {
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if ($ThisLine =~ /\-- \[ERROR\] /) {
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print $ThisLine;
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}
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elsif ($ThisLine =~ /\-- \[WARNING\] /) {
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print $ThisLine;
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}
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elsif ($ThisLine =~ /\-- \[SUCCESS\] /) {
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print $ThisLine;
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}
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}
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}
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### Level 5 is similiar to levels 1-4 except it also reports informational
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### messages such as the location of script created files, variable checks,
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### etc. This is useful when verifying the script's operation.
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elsif ($detailLevel == 5) {
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while (defined(my $ThisLine = <STDIN>)) {
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if ($ThisLine =~ /\-- \[ERROR\] /) {
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print $ThisLine;
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}
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elsif ($ThisLine =~ /\-- \[WARNING\] /) {
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print $ThisLine;
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}
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elsif ($ThisLine =~ /\-- \[SUCCESS\] /) {
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print $ThisLine;
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}
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elsif ($ThisLine =~ /\-- \[INFO\] /) {
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print $ThisLine;
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}
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}
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}
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### Any level above 5 will echo the entire log including the debugging notes
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### within the script meant for troubleshooting. Using this level of detail
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### should only be done if you cannot view the actual log file directly for
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### whatever reason. The actual log file is colour-coded for easier debugging.
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elsif ($detailLevel > 5) {
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while (defined(my $ThisLine = <STDIN>)) {
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print $ThisLine;
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}
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}
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### Exit gracefully
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exit (0);
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# vi: shiftwidth=3 tabstop=3 et
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# Local Variables:
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# mode: perl
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# perl-indent-level: 3
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# indent-tabs-mode: nil
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# End:
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