MailcowBackup/etc/logwatch
2018-10-22 00:45:37 -06:00
..
conf Logwatch logfile-group and service definiton file 2018-10-22 00:43:14 -06:00
scripts Logwatch service script to process logfile 2018-10-22 00:45:37 -06:00
readme.md Logwatch service script to process logfile 2018-10-22 00:45:37 -06:00

Using Logwatch to monitor backup script

The backup script's log file has been set up so that utilities like Logwatch can easily parse it. In order to make that happen, a LogFile Group file, Service and Script have to be created for Logwatch to generate reports. The correct (general) directory structure has been created in this git archive already. Below are the details of each file.

Contents

LogFile Group file (/etc/logwatch/conf/logfiles/backup.conf)

Log file location

Update this as needed to point to the location and name of the log file generated by the backup script. Remember, by default, the log file is created in the same directory as the script itself.

LogFile = /path/to/your/backup.log
...

Best practices suggest you use the -l flag to change this location to something like /var/log/backup.log, for example. In that case, the entry would look like:

LogFile = /var/log/backup.log
...

Archive location and name format

If you want Logwatch to process old (archived) log files generated by something like Logrotate, then you have to specify the location and file name format of those files. I've included the generalized compressed format of such rotated files as the default in the script. Suppose you store your log files in the recommended location (/var/log/) and are using Logrotate with compression enabled, the archive line would look like:

...
Archive = /var/log/backup.log.?.gz
...

This would tell Logwatch, when the archive option is set to true, that your backup.log files are archived as: backup.log.1.gz, backup.log.2.gz, etc. and are all located in /var/log/.

Note: This line is totally optional and only used if you set the archive option in Logwatch to true (default). You can comment/delete this line if you wish.

External script for timestamp processing

Since the log file uses a non-standard (according to Logwatch) method of datestamping, a custom filter had to be created. See the relevant section of this document for more information.

The script file is called with an * before the filename.

...
*sqFullStampAnywhere
...

If you change the name of this file, you will have to change this line. Remember that whatever you type here as a name is converted to all-lowercase so your filename should be all lowercase also.

Service definition file (/etc/logwatch/conf/services/backup.conf)

LogFile Group file definition

The service file needs to know what group of log files it is responsible for processing. This MUST match the name of your LogFile Group file:

LogFile = backup
...

If you change your LogFile Group filename, then update it here too without the .conf extension.

Report title

The Logwatch output file (html or text) is divided into sections. You can define the title to be anything that has meaning for you. I have arbitrarily chosen "System and NextCloud Backup" but you can change it to anything you want by modifying the line:

...
Title = "System and NextCloud Backup"

Detail level

If you want to set the detail level of this service differently from your other services (which will use the --detail switch value or the value in your logwatch.conf), then you can define that level here. By default, it appears like this in the service configuration file:

...
# Override the detail level for this service
# Remember the levels are: 0, 1-4, 5, 6+
# Detail = 0

Simply change it to the value you want enforced. For example, here I'm setting it to output level 5 regardless of whatever settings everything else is using.

# Override the detail level for this service
# Remember the levels are: 0, 1-4, 5, 6+
Detail = 5

Service script (/etc/logwatch/scripts/services/backup)

Logwatch calls any script with a name that matches the service name. You'll notice that I just named everything backup to keep things simple. You can change this to whatever you want, however. If you changed the service name to "NCbackup.conf", for example, you would have to rename this script file to "NCbackup" with no extension. Note: The script is a PERL file (note the shebang) but it can be written in any language.

In essence, Logwatch just spits out the log file(s) defined in the LogFile Group file as standard input (STDIN) for the script and then takes whatever is output (STDOUT) from the script to assemble into it's report.

Detail levels

The script supports four (4) detail levels as follows:

  • Level 0: Summary output only
    • This will display an aggregate total of certain logged elements. It will display the total number successful script executions (SQL dump OK, borg backup OK and borg prune OK), total generated warnings and total errors encountered that stopped the normal execution of the script. All totals are relative to the reporting period Logwatch is using (--range parameter).

      This is the recommended reporting level. It does not take up much space and is quick to read. If you notice warnings and/or errors, you should consult the full logs.

  • Levels 1-4: Critical messages
    • This uses the data which is summarized by Level 0 but outputs the actual messages in the log file. For example, you will see the actual text of the errors logged instead of just a total number of errors. This level of reporting is useful when initially monitoring the script's operation since you can see the actual text of any generated warnings/errors.
  • Level 5: Verbose (debugging) output
    • Like the previous level, this outputs the actual messages found in the log file. However, it also includes [INFO] tags which contain logged operational messages such as created temporary directories, entering/exiting maintenance mode, what source files are being used to determine extra file inclusions/exclusions, etc. This level of reporting is useful in diagnosing why errors are occurring or if you just want more insight into how the script works.

      This level of output will make your Logwatch reports longer and consume more of your time to review. You should not use this level day-to-day.

  • Levels 6+: Complete log file dump
    • Any number greater than 5 passed as a detail level will trigger the script to dump the entire log file out to Logwatch line-by-line. This is useful only if you are debugging an issue and cannot get access to the actual raw log file itself. The actual log file is colour-coded which makes it much easier to read for debugging purposes.

      Use this detail level only when you need to see the entire log file and cannot otherwise access the log file.

Timestamp processing script (/etc/logwatch/scripts/shared/sqfullstampanywhere)

This is basically a modified version of the 'applyeurodate' script that comes with Logwatch. It had to be modified to search within [square brackets] and to accept characters coming before the stamp (i.e. ANSI colour codes). If you change the 'stamp' variable in the backup script to update the timestamp to your liking (which to totally fine!) then you'll probably have to update this file. There are two lines you need to modify to suit your new 'stamp' variable.

The time format specification

'$SearchDate' is the variable used in the PERL script to do exactly what it says, search for the date stamp. I have it set up to look for the format 'year-month-date hour:minute:second'. Note, we don't care about brackets or anything here, we're just defining the format of the date/time stamp.

...
$SearchDate = TimeFilter('%Y-%m-%d %H:%M:%S');
...

If you changed the 'stamp' variable so it was formatted as 'month/day/year hour:minute' (ex: '[09/27/2018 18:38]') then you'd update the $SearchDate variable as follows (note: no mention of the square brackets!):

...
$SearchDate = TimeFilter('%m/%d/%Y %H:%M');
...

The search REGEX

The PERL script uses a 'regular expression' (REGEX) to search within the log file for '$SearchDate'. For the default datestamp, this specification looks like:

...
if ($ThisLine =~ m/\[$SearchDate\] /o) {
...

The REGEX appears between 'm/' and '/o'. In this case, it searches for '$SearchDate' inside [square brackets] appearing anywhere on the line. This is because ANSI colour-codes often appear before the datestamp in the default log file. If you have modified this so that your datestamp appears at the beginning of the line and in the example format in the section above (using slashes instead of dashes) then you'd rewrite this REGEX as follows:

...
if ($ThisLine =~ m/^\[$SearchDate\] /o) {
...

or using regular brackets anywhere on the line:

...
if ($ThisLine =~ m/\($SearchDate\) /o) {
...

or without any brackets but appearing at the beginning of the line:

...
if ($ThisLine =~ m/^$SearchDate /o) {
...

Testing

Run logwatch --help and note the options. You can test just this service locally on your screen with the following command (assuming you kept default names for everything):

# Summary output, entire duration of log file
logwatch --service backup --output stdout --format text --range all --detail 0

# Minimal detail, yesterday only
logwatch --service backup --output stdout --format text --range yesterday --detail 3

# Verbose output, today only
logwatch --service backup --output stdout --format text --range today --detail 5

Final thoughts

That's it! I'm a horrible PERL programmer so if anyone can optimize/improve the script file used for Logwatch then please do it! Otherwise, I hope this made sense and helped you integrate the backup script with Logwatch for easy monitoring :-)