Hi.
I'm installed yum-cron and set:
# by default MAILTO is unset, so crond mails the output by itself # example: MAILTO=root MAILTO="root@domain.org.ua"
I see in log that yum-cron done it's job:
# grep "yum" /var/log/cron Aug 11 03:08:02 venti run-parts(/etc/cron.daily)[4516]: starting 0yum.cron Aug 11 03:49:30 venti run-parts(/etc/cron.daily)[4761]: finished 0yum.cron
And I see that packages really updated, but - I don't see email notifications in my mail box... I got notification from spamd, for example, but nothing from yum-cron.
How can i find it in maillog? Some text from 'Subject'?
# grep "yum" /var/log/maillog
Doesn't give result.
Or - some other way to check?
Thanks for tips.
On Mon, Aug 11, 2014 at 7:30 AM, 1th@setevoy.kiev.ua wrote:
Hi.
I'm installed yum-cron and set:
# by default MAILTO is unset, so crond mails the output by itself # example: MAILTO=root MAILTO="root@domain.org.ua"
I see in log that yum-cron done it's job:
# grep "yum" /var/log/cron Aug 11 03:08:02 venti run-parts(/etc/cron.daily)[4516]: starting 0yum.cron Aug 11 03:49:30 venti run-parts(/etc/cron.daily)[4761]: finished 0yum.cron
And I see that packages really updated, but - I don't see email notifications in my mail box... I got notification from spamd, for example, but nothing from yum-cron.
Anything run by cron.daily scripts result in _one_ email (unless of course the script being run by cron.daily sends mail itself).
If you want a separate message, set up a cronjob separate from cron.daily in cron.d
How can i find it in maillog? Some text from 'Subject'?
# grep "yum" /var/log/maillog
grep for "run-parts /etc/cron.daily"
Doesn't give result.
Or - some other way to check?
Thanks for tips. _______________________________________________ CentOS mailing list CentOS@centos.org http://lists.centos.org/mailman/listinfo/centos