fmorgue is a Python tool for mirroring files permanently to a remote server. In contrast to rsync and friends, it identifies missing files on the server only based on modification time and size, which makes it suitable for archiving rotated log files.
The package installs two new shell commands, 'fmorgue' for the client application, and 'fmorgue-server'.
The client application
The fmorgue client is expected to be called on a regular base, e.g. as cron job. It inspects the given list of files and asks the server which files need to be transfered. In case some of the files are missing, they are immediately transferred to the server.
Example:
fmorgue http://my.archive.example.com/ /var/log/*.log
Try 'fmorgue -h'.
The server application
The fmorgue server can either run as standalone application on a dedicated port, or as CGI script. In both operation modes, the server must be told were to store the retreived data.
In standalone mode, you have to define the directory as command-line parameter.
In CGI mode, you have to create a config file in '/etc/fmorgue' The configuration file should look like this:
# Configuration file for fmorgue
[fmorgue-server]
dir=/tmp/
# Possible values: yes/no
withhostname=no
# Possible values: yes/no
withorigname=no
You also need to configure your web server, e.g. by adding a ScriptAlias directive.
By default, the files are renamed according to their modification time, since the original file name is expected to be changing (think logrotate). You can add the original host name and file name to the generated file name on server side.
Requirements:
- Python
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