in reply to Re^6: How to do a manual "logrotate" on a given file?
in thread How to do a manual "logrotate" on a given file?

Thanks for explaining what 'rotating' means in that context.
I don't think it's fine to suggest such a strategy to someone seeking answer, without giving any indication that it may not work at all, and just keeping it for yourself that what you suggest only works in your specific setup.
Isn't this a bit harsh? I posted a solution that I've used in the past and works for me, and cited its source (from a very knowledgeable and well-known Perl programmer). What else should I do? I honestly wasn't aware of the potential pitfalls, and I certainly wasn't "keeping information to myself" in a malicious way. My specific setup and usage are really not that arcane: a standard logfile that is accessed by a single process. The OP itself stated that his usage would be pretty much this one, so the solution actually helped.

Are you suggesting that it would have been better to just not answer at all?

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Re^8: How to do a manual "logrotate" on a given file?
by matze77 (Friar) on Nov 25, 2009 at 14:37 UTC

    Thank you both for your knowledge you shared, since the file is not locked at copy time (i Updated the Question) it is a rather simple copy task for me, but it is good to know i feel like it might have hit me sometime later ...

    Thanks in Advance
    MH
Re^8: How to do a manual "logrotate" on a given file?
by JavaFan (Canon) on Nov 25, 2009 at 08:11 UTC
    Are you suggesting that it would have been better to just not answer at all?
    If the choices are between an answer that 1) doesn't solve the OP's problem, 2) only works in very specific cases, and 3) is destructive otherwise on the one hand, and no answer on the other hand, I'd prefer no answer.
      Good, then I'm glad I answered, because it so happens that my reply doesn't fit in your description.