# You can use this to rotate the /var/log/radius/* files, simply copy # it to /etc/logrotate.d/radiusd # # Global options for all files # dateext maxage 365 rotate 99 missingok compress delaycompress notifempty # # The main server log # /var/log/radius/radius.log { copytruncate } # # Session monitoring utilities # /var/log/radius/checkrad.log /var/log/radius/radwatch.log { nocreate size=+1024k } # # SQL log files # /var/log/radius/sqllog.sql { nocreate size=+2048k } # There are different detail-rotating strategies you can use. One is # to write to a single detail file per IP and use the rotate config # below. Another is to write to a daily detail file per IP with: # detailfile = ${radacctdir}/%{Client-IP-Address}/%Y%m%d-detail # (or similar) in radiusd.conf, without rotation. If you go with the # second technique, you will need another cron job that removes old # detail files. You do not need to comment out the below for method #2. /var/log/radius/radacct/*/detail { nocreate }