NAME File::Write::Rotate - Write to files that archive/rotate themselves VERSION version 0.03 SYNOPSIS use File::Write::Rotate; my $fwr = File::Write::Rotate->new( dir => '/var/log', # required prefix => 'myapp', # required #suffix => '.log', # default is '' size => 25*1024*1024, # default is 10MB, unless period is set histories => 12, # default is 10 ); # write, will write to /var/log/myapp.log, automatically rotate old log files # to myapp.log.1 when myapp.log reaches 25MB. will keep old log files up to # myapp.log.12. $fwr->write("This is a line\n"); $fwr->write("This is", " another line\n"); # compress old log files $fwr->compress; DESCRIPTION This module can be used to write to file, usually for logging, that can rotate itself. File will be opened in append mode. Locking will be done to avoid conflict when there are multiple writers. Rotation can be done by size (after a certain size is reached), by time (daily/monthly/yearly), or both. I first wrote this module for logging script STDERR output to files (see Tie::Handle::FileRotate). ATTRIBUTES METHODS $obj = File::Write::Rotate->new(%args) Create new object. Known arguments: * dir => STR (required) Directory to put the files in. * prefix => STR (required) Name of files. The files will be named like the following: "" will only be given if the "period" argument is set. If "period" is set to "yearly", "" will be "YYYY" (4-digit year). If "period" is "monthly", "" will be "YYYY-MM" (4-digit year and 2-digit month). If "period" is "daily", "" will be "YYYY-MM-DD" (4-digit year, 2-digit month, and 2-digit day). "" is either empty string for current file; or .1, .2 and so on for rotated files. .1 is the most recent rotated file, .2 is the next most recent, and so on. An example, with "prefix" set to "myapp": myapp # current file myapp.1 # most recently rotated myapp.2 # the next most recently rotated With "prefix" set to "myapp", "period" set to "monthly", "suffix" set to ".log": myapp.2012-12.log # file name for december 2012 myapp.2013-01.log # file name for january 2013 Like previous, but additionally with "size" also set (which will also rotate each period file if it exceeds specified size): myapp.2012-12.log # file(s) for december 2012 myapp.2012-12.log.1 myapp.2012-12.log.2 myapp.2013-01.log # file(s) for january 2013 All times will use local time, so you probably want to set "TZ" environment variable or equivalent methods to set time zone. * suffix => STR (default: '') Suffix to give to file names, usually file extension like ".log". See "prefix" for more details. If you use a yearly period, setting suffix is advised to avoid ambiguity with rotate suffix (for example, is "myapp.2012" the current file for year 2012 or file with 2012 rotate suffix?) * size => INT (default: 10*1024*1024) Maximum file size, in bytes, before rotation is triggered. The default is 10MB (10*1024*1024) *if* "period" is not set. If "period" is set, no default for "size" is provided, which means files will not be rotated for size (only for period). * histories => INT (default: 10) Number of rotated files to keep. After the number of files exceeds this, the oldest one will be deleted. 0 means not to keep any history, 1 means to only keep .1 file, and so on. $fwr->write(@args) Write to file. Will automatically rotate file if period changes or file size exceeds specified limit. When rotating, will only keep a specified number of histories and delete the older ones. Uses locking, so multiple writers do not clobber one another. Lock file is named """.lck". Will wait for up to 1 minute to acquire lock, will die if failed to acquire lock. Does not append newline so you'll have to do it yourself. $fwr->compress Compress old rotated files. Currently uses pigz or gzip program to do the compression. Extension given to compressed file is ".gz". Normally, should be done using a separate process so as to avoid blocking the writers. Will not lock writers, but will create """-compress.pid" PID file to prevent multiple compression processes running and to signal the writers to postpone rotation. After compression is finished, will remove the PID file, so rotation can be done again on the next "write()" if necessary. SEE ALSO Log::Dispatch::FileRotate, which inspires this module. Differences between File::Write::Rotate (FWR) and Log::Dispatch::FileRotate (LDFR) are as follows. Firstly, FWR is not part of the Log::Dispatch family. FWR does not use Date::Manip (to be tinier) and does not support DatePattern; instead, FWR replaces it with a simple daily/monthly/yearly period. FWR supports compressing and rotating compressed old files. Tie::Handle::FileRotate, which uses this module. AUTHOR Steven Haryanto COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE This software is copyright (c) 2012 by Steven Haryanto. This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.