From: Martin Mares Date: Wed, 18 Mar 2009 13:50:22 +0000 (+0100) Subject: Updated libucw config from upstream. X-Git-Tag: python-dummy-working~113 X-Git-Url: http://mj.ucw.cz/gitweb/?a=commitdiff_plain;h=444ccced0e7f4a91e84372edf5cebc3dee26386c;p=moe.git Updated libucw config from upstream. --- diff --git a/cf/libucw b/cf/libucw index ae12f43..b92efad 100644 --- a/cf/libucw +++ b/cf/libucw @@ -1,4 +1,4 @@ -# Configuration of libucw modules +# Configuration of the UCW library and related utilities (included by cf/sherlock) ######## Memory Mapped Access to Files ########################################## @@ -22,6 +22,15 @@ FBDirect { } +######## Atomic Multi-Threaded I/O on Files ##################################### + +FBAtomic { + +# Enable tracing +#Trace 1 + +} + ######## Parametrized I/O on Files ############################################## FBParam { @@ -51,9 +60,18 @@ WriteBack 1 Tempfiles { -# Filename prefix for temporary files ("pid(-tid)-counter" is appended) -# The directory should not be writeable by malicious users. -Prefix tmp/temp +# By default, we use the system's default temporary directory ($TMPDIR or /tmp), +# but sometimes it is better to store the temporary files in the local tree. +Dir tmp + +# Prefix of temporary file names +Prefix temp- + +# By default, we append a random number to Prefix to get a temporary file name. +# If Prefix points to a directory that is not writable by malicious users, +# we can be less careful and use more consistent names of temporary files +# formed by adding "pid(-tid)-counter" instead. +PublicDir 0 } @@ -154,3 +172,73 @@ MaxRepeatLength 4 MaxOccurences 4 } + +######## Logging ################################################################ + +Logging { + +# In this section, you can define various logging streams which can be referred to by other sections. + +# Stream { +# # The name of the stream +# Name test-log +# +# # When it should log the messages to a file, a name of the file should be specified. +# # Escape sequences for current date and time as described in strftime(3) can be used. +# FileName log/test-%Y%m%d +# +# # Instead of a file, a syslog facility can be specified. See syslog(3) for an explanation. +# SyslogFacility daemon +# +# # You can request that syslog includes a process ID in each message. Due to inflexibility +# # of the syslog protocol, all syslog streams active at a moment must agree on this setting. +# # (default: 0) +# SyslogPID 1 +# +# # When logging to files, timestamps with microsecond precision can be requested. (default: 0) +# Microseconds 1 +# +# # Messages logged to this stream can be restricted to a subset of severity levels. +# # Available levels are: debug info warn error info_r warn_r error_r fatal. +# # This configuration item is a bitmap with a default of "all", so we need the ":reset" operator. +# Levels:reset info warn error fatal +# +# # Similarly, messages can be restricted to a subset of message types. The types are +# # specific for each program. This configuration item is a list of type names; by default +# # it is empty, which is equivalent to all types being enabled. +# Types:reset default foo +# +# # Should the message types be logged? They usually do not carry much useful +# # information for the viewer of the log, so they are not included by default, +# # but you might want to see them when tuning the Types setting. (default: 0) +# ShowTypes 1 +# +# # If an error occurs when logging a message to this stream, the program normally +# # logs a special error message to the other streams and continues running. You can +# # however request to exit the program in such cases, so that the log files are +# # guaranteed to be complete. (default: 0) +# ErrorsFatal 1 +# +# # Let stderr of the program point to this file-based log_stream (default: 0) +# StdErrFollows 1 +# +# # Some events are logworthy, but they could happen too frequently and flood the log. +# # You can avoid the flooding by setting up a rate limiter for a specific subset of +# # message types. If more limiters match the type of a message, only the last one applies. +# Limit { +# # A list of message types (default: empty = all types) +# Types default foo +# +# # The maximum allowed sustained rate (messages/second, may be fractional) +# Rate 1 +# +# # Maximum length of a burst temporarily exceeding the rate (default: try to guess) +# Burst 2 +# } +# +# # The messages that have passed the filters and limiters can be forwarded to other +# # log streams. Logging loops are not healthy for your program :) (a list of stream names) +# Substream another-stream +# } + +}