Hey,
Welcome to the world of servers. : Once you get it all setup it should
not be allot of work for you. It runs with very low maintenance.
Most the Linux I seen do already rotate the logs. You just have to
sometimes tell the programs where your icecast logs are to be rotated.
David.
On Wed, Aug 9, 2017 at 3:33 PM, Will R <willr at rice.edu> wrote:
> [Will R] Appears to be Redhat.
>
> Will R
> ----------------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Message: 1
> Date: Tue, 8 Aug 2017 22:46:01 -0500
> From: "Will Robedee" <WillR at rice.edu>
> To: <icecast at xiph.org>
> Subject: [Icecast] Newbie Questions
> Message-ID: <036d01d310c2$05091ee0$0f1b5ca0$@rice.edu>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"
>
> I inherited an icecast server at a radio station. I am not a linux/unix
> person. I am able to use putty and winscp to gain access. I can use sudo
> -s -H to gain root level access (dangerous, I know), but I do not know the
> OS (or even which OS variant).
>
> First question, how do I determine what OS is being used?
>
> Next question, I want to use logrotate.d to rotate (and archive) logs on a
> monthly basis. How is that done?
>
> What is a PID?
>
> (Yes, I am a newbie!)
>
> Will R
>
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> ------------------------------
>
> Message: 2
> Date: Wed, 09 Aug 2017 18:21:50 +1200
> From: Jake <jake at jakebriggs.com>
> To: Icecast streaming server user discussions <icecast at xiph.org>
> Subject: Re: [Icecast] Newbie Question
> Message-ID: <1098CE68-01E2-438F-87AB-2C52B122CE1C at jakebriggs.com>
> Content-Type: text/plain; charset="utf-8"
>
> Well first I guess Google :P
>
> Run 'uname -a' and that might give you a hint if the kernel
isn't custom.
>
> Also you could try the following:
>
> 'cat /etc/*version'
> 'cat /etc/debian_version'
> 'lsb_release -a:
> 'cat /etc/redhat-release'
> 'cat /etc/fedora-release'
>
> If none of those commands help, then it might be something more exotic -
> but let's try the easy ones first.
>
> A PID is a process id - every process has one, and they are assigned
> depending on when they run.
>
> The logrotate question might be better answered once you know the version
> of linux that's running.
>
> Jake
>
>
>
> On 9 August 2017 3:46:01 PM NZST, Will Robedee <WillR at rice.edu>
wrote:
> >I inherited an icecast server at a radio station. I am not a
> >linux/unix person. I am able to use putty and winscp to gain access.
> >I can use sudo -s -H to gain root level access (dangerous, I know), but
> >I do not know the OS (or even which OS variant).
> >
> >First question, how do I determine what OS is being used?
> >
> >Next question, I want to use logrotate.d to rotate (and archive) logs
> >on a monthly basis. How is that done?
> >
> >What is a PID?
> >
> >(Yes, I am a newbie!)
> >
> >Will R
> >
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