Files
asterisk/contrib/scripts
George Joseph 3f7ad66245 ast_coredumper: Add gzipping of binaries and display of signal info
The --tarball-coredump option now creates a gzipped tarball of
coredumps processed, their results txt files and copies of
/etc/os-release, /usr/sbin/asterisk, /usr/lib(64)/libasterisk* and
/usr/lib(64)/asterisk as those files are needed to properly examine
the coredump.  The file will be named
/tmp/asterisk.<timestamp>.coredumps.tar.gz or
/tmp/asterisk-<uniqueid>.coredumps.tar.gz if --tarball-uniqueid was
specified.

Added dumps of *_siginfo to the top of the txt files so you can
tell what signal was invoked.

Change-Id: Ib9ee6d83592d4b1bc90cb3419a05376a88d1ded9
2017-10-25 11:26:06 -06:00
..

messages-expire.pl

messages-expire finds messages more than X days old and deletes them. 
Because the older messages will be the lower numbers in the folder (msg0000
will be older than msg0005), just deleting msg0000 will not work. 
expire-messages then runs a routine that goes into every folder in every
mailbox to reorganize.  If the folder contains msg0000, no action is taken. 
If the folder does not, the rename routine takes the oldest message and
names it msg0000, the next oldest message and names it msg0001 and so on.

The file deletion is done by the -exec parameter to 'find'.  It would be far
more efficient to take the output from 'find' and just reorganize the
directories from which we deleted a file.  Something for the future...

Keep in mind that messages are deleted at the beginning of the script you
will have mailbox trouble if you check messages before the script
reorganizes your mailbox.

To use it, make sure the paths are right.  Adjust $age (originally set to
31) if necessary.