1. Dovecot Logging 1. Internal Errors 2. Changing Log File Paths 3. Rotating Logs Dovecot Logging =============== *Dovecot always logs a detailed error message* if something goes wrong. If it doesn't, it's considered a bug and will be fixed. However almost always the problem is that you're looking at the wrong log file. By default Dovecot logs to syslog using *mail* facility. You can change the facility from 'syslog_facility' setting. You can also configure Dovecot to write to log files directly, see below. When using syslog, Dovecot uses 4 different logging levels: * *info*: Informational and debug messages. * *warning*: Warnings that don't cause an actual error, but are useful to know about. * *err*: Non-fatal errors. * *crit*: Fatal errors that cause the process to die. Where exactly these messages are logged depends entirely on your syslog configuration. Often everything is logged to '/var/log/mail.log' or '/var/log/maillog', and *err* and *crit* are logged to '/var/log/mail.err'. This is not necessarily true for your configuration though. You can find the correct log files using these methods: * Info log: After starting Dovecot, 'grep "starting up" /var/log/*'. It should show a line such as:'Dovecot v1.0.0 starting up' * Error logs: Use 'dovecot --log-error' command. Then 'grep "This is Dovecot's" /var/log/*' to find them. You should see: * With Dovecot v1.0.0 you'll find only the *crit* log: 'This is Dovecot's error log' * With Dovecot v1.0.1 you'll find all of them: * *warning*: 'This is Dovecot's warning log' * *err*: 'This is Dovecot's error log' * *crit*: 'This is Dovecot's fatal log' * You can also check your '/etc/syslog.conf' to see how it's configured. Internal Errors --------------- If IMAP or POP3 processes encounter some error, they don't show the exact reason for clients. Instead they show: ---%<------------------------------------------------------------------------- Internal error occurred. Refer to server log for more information. [2006-01-07 22:35:11] ---%<------------------------------------------------------------------------- The point is that whenever anything unexpected happens, Dovecot doesn't leak any extra information about it to clients. They don't need it and they might try to exploit it in some ways, so the less they know the better. The real error message is written to the error log file. The timestamp is meant to help you find it. Changing Log File Paths ----------------------- If you don't want to use syslog, or if you just can't find the Dovecot's error logs, you can make Dovecot log elsewhere as well: ---%<------------------------------------------------------------------------- log_path = /var/log/dovecot.log # If you want everything in one file, just don't specify info_log_path info_log_path = /var/log/dovecot-info.log ---%<------------------------------------------------------------------------- The error messages will go to file specified by 'log_path', while everything else goes to 'info_log_path'. If you do this, make sure you're really looking at the 'log_path' file for error messages, since the "Starting up" message is written to 'info_log_path' file. Rotating Logs ------------- If you change from syslog to an external log file, you can use logrotate (available on most recent linux distros) to maintain the Dovecot logfile so it doesn't grow beyond a manageable size. Save the below scriptlet as '/etc/logrotate.d/dovecot': ---%<------------------------------------------------------------------------- # dovecot SIGUSR1: Re-opens the log files. /var/log/dovecot*.log { missingok notifempty delaycompress sharedscripts postrotate /bin/kill -USR1 `cat /var/run/dovecot/master.pid 2>/dev/null` 2> /dev/null || true endscript } ---%<------------------------------------------------------------------------- *NOTE*: change the path to the logfile(s) and the master.pid file as appropriate for your system configuration. (This file was created from the wiki on 2007-06-15 04:42)