redis/redis-2.4.6-redis.conf.patch

45 lines
1.7 KiB
Diff

--- redis-2.4.6/redis.conf.orig 2012-01-13 09:01:20.032263652 +0100
+++ redis-2.4.6/redis.conf 2012-01-13 09:02:57.223037913 +0100
@@ -18,7 +18,7 @@
# When running daemonized, Redis writes a pid file in /var/run/redis.pid by
# default. You can specify a custom pid file location here.
-pidfile /var/run/redis.pid
+pidfile /var/run/redis/redis.pid
# Accept connections on the specified port, default is 6379.
# If port 0 is specified Redis will not listen on a TCP socket.
@@ -27,7 +27,7 @@
# If you want you can bind a single interface, if the bind option is not
# specified all the interfaces will listen for incoming connections.
#
-# bind 127.0.0.1
+bind 127.0.0.1
# Specify the path for the unix socket that will be used to listen for
# incoming connections. There is no default, so Redis will not listen
@@ -45,12 +45,12 @@
# verbose (many rarely useful info, but not a mess like the debug level)
# notice (moderately verbose, what you want in production probably)
# warning (only very important / critical messages are logged)
-loglevel verbose
+loglevel notice
# Specify the log file name. Also 'stdout' can be used to force
# Redis to log on the standard output. Note that if you use standard
# output for logging but daemonize, logs will be sent to /dev/null
-logfile stdout
+logfile /var/log/redis/redis.log
# To enable logging to the system logger, just set 'syslog-enabled' to yes,
# and optionally update the other syslog parameters to suit your needs.
@@ -104,7 +104,7 @@
# Also the Append Only File will be created inside this directory.
#
# Note that you must specify a directory here, not a file name.
-dir ./
+dir /var/lib/redis/
################################# REPLICATION #################################