Hi Braden,
On Tue, Jun 29, 2010 at 08:50, Braden McDaniel braden@endoframe.com wrote:
On Tue, 2010-06-29 at 08:24 +0200, Benjamin Griese wrote:
Good morning. Please set logging in your hdb/bdb config ldif. This logfile should be the default.
I'm wrong, you were right:
It's some time ago I visited my ldap config files :)
./cn=config.ldif:olcLogLevel: none ./cn=config.ldif:olcLogLevel: trace ./cn=config.ldif:olcLogLevel: packets ./cn=config.ldif:olcLogLevel: args ./cn=config.ldif:olcLogLevel: conns ./cn=config.ldif:olcLogLevel: BER ./cn=config.ldif:olcLogLevel: filter ./cn=config.ldif:olcLogLevel: config ./cn=config.ldif:olcLogLevel: ACL ./cn=config.ldif:olcLogLevel: stats ./cn=config.ldif:olcLogLevel: stats2 ./cn=config.ldif:olcLogLevel: shell ./cn=config.ldif:olcLogLevel: parse ./cn=config.ldif:olcLogLevel: sync
I grep'ed the above log types which you can define (at least the few I know).
Okay... I don't understand exactly what the log file is. My database lives in /var/lib/ldap. There is a file in this directory named "log.0000000001"; however, it does not appear to be a text file.
The file /var/log/messages is correct, seems like a little misunderstanding.
Your mentioned file is the internal logging of the backend database itself. You don't have to care about that file/these files in most cases. I think its main purpose is to correct corrupted DBs when your ldap-server crashed.
Please be sure to always reply to the mailinglist.
I would have, but your last response to me did not go to the mailing list. ;-)
Sorry for my fault, I havn't recognized that either. :)
-- Braden McDaniel braden@endoframe.com