dbclean man page on Pidora

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dbclean(8)	      Distributed Checksum Clearinghouse	    dbclean(8)

NAME
     dbclean — Clean Distributed Checksum Clearinghouse Database

SYNOPSIS
     dbclean [-dfFNPSVq] [-i id] [-a [server-addr][,port]] [-h homedir]
	     [-H hash-file-dir] [-G on] [-R mode] [-s hash-size]
	     [-e seconds] [-E spamsecs] [-L ltype,facility.level]

DESCRIPTION
     Dbclean creates empty, rebuilds corrupted, and deletes or expires old
     reports of checksums from DCC databases.  It should be installed where it
     will be found with the path given the DCC server daemon when the daemon
     needs to expand the hash table.  See dccd(8).  It should also be run by
     the daily cron(8) job, /var/dcc/libexec/cron-dccd.

     The whitelist in /var/dcc/whitelist or /var/dcc/grey_whitelist are built
     into the DCC server's database.  Changes to the whitelist are not effec‐
     tive until dbclean is run.	 White or blacklists can also be used by DCC
     clients and work better.

   OPTIONS
     The following options are available.  Most of them should set by changing
     DBCLEAN_LOGDAYS and DBCLEAN_ARGS in the /var/dcc/dcc_conf control file.

     -d	  enables debugging output.  Additional -d options increase the number
	  of messages.

     -F	  uses write() instead of mmap() and msync() in some cases to modify
	  the DCC database.  This works better on some versions of Solaris
	  provided the entire DCC database fits in RAM and provided the file
	  system has not been tuned for the large, random accesses of a DCC
	  database.  It is the default on Solaris except when the database is
	  in a memory mapped file system or the entire database fits in RAM.
	  Do not use -F with -f or -H.

     -f	  uses mmap() and msync() to modify the DCC database.  Do not use -f
	  with -F or -H.

     -N	  creates a new, empty database.  There must not be an existing data‐
	  base and the DCC server, dccd(8), must not be running.

     -P	  expires old checksums from a database using the -e -and -E values
	  from the preceding use of dbclean.  -P cannot be used with -e or -E.
	  Using -P differs from not using -e or -E, because in the absence of
	  all three, their default values are used.

     -S	  says that the DCC server, dccd(8), is not running and so dbclean
	  should run stand-alone and not try to tell the DCC server about
	  changes to the database.  -i is not needed when -S is present.

     -V	  displays the version of the DCC database cleaner.  Two or more -V
	  options show the options with which it was built.

     -q	  quiets the announcement to stderr of the final results and debugging
	  messages turned on with -d.  Results are still sent to the system
	  log.

     -i id
	  specifies the DCC ID recognized by the local DCC server as its own.
	  This ID allows the DCC server to recognize commands from dbclean to
	  stop using the database while it is being cleaned.

     -a [server-addr][,port]
	  is commonly used to specify a UDP port or IP address of the local
	  server other than the default.

     -h homedir
	  overrides the default DCC home directory, /var/dcc.

     -H hash-file-dir
	  puts the /var/dcc/dcc_db.hash hash table file in the hash-file-dir
	  directory with a symbolic link.  Using -H to put the hash table in a
	  memory, "tmpfs", or "swap" file system such as /dev/shm or /tmp sig‐
	  nificantly speeds up the DCC server, dccd(8), on operating systems
	  such as Linux and Solaris that lack the MAP_NOSYNC flag for the
	  mmap(8) system call.

	  The memory file system must have space for two copies of the
	  dcc_db.hash file.  -H is undesirable on FreeBSD and other systems
	  with MAP_NOSYNC.  The DCC database file, /var/dcc/dcc_db, must be in
	  file system that endures operating system rebooting and not in a
	  memory file system.

	  Use or stop using -H by adding it to or removing it from
	  DBCLEAN_ARGS in /var/dcc/dcc_conf and manually running or waiting
	  for the nightly run of the /var/dcc/libexec/cron-dccd cron job.  Do
	  not use -H with -F or -f.

     -G on
	  cleans a greylist database in /var/dcc/grey_db and
	  /var/dcc/grey_db.hash instead of of a DCC server database.

     -R mode
	  repairs a database or does a quick cleaning.	Mode must be one of
	  the following:
	  bad	 to repair a broken database.
	  quick	 for a quick, superficial cleaning during the day.
	  hash	 to rebuild a hash not sent to disk before the system was
		 rebooted.
	  failsafe
		 to work around missing nightly cleaning by the cron(8) job,
		 /var/dcc/libexec/cron-dccd
	  del	 to finish processing a delete command received by dccd(8).

     -s hash-size
	  specifies a size for the hash table in /var/dcc/dcc_db.hash.	By
	  default the hash table is rebuilt to be approximately 80% full based
	  on an estimate of the number of distinct checksums in the database
	  file.

     -e seconds
	  specifies that reports older than seconds and with totals below 10
	  targets should be deleted.  Reports older than seconds of checksums
	  that have been reported more recently are summarized in the data‐
	  base.	 The default value is 1DAY or the value of -E, whichever is
	  smaller.  The 1 day default is reduced if the system does not appear
	  to have enough RAM to hold the database.  The minimum is 1 hour.
	  Seconds can also be NEVER or a number of hours, days, or weeks fol‐
	  lowed by HOURS, H, DAYS, D, WEEKS or W.

	  DCC servers that are not very busy and are isolated or do not
	  receive "floods" of checksums from busy servers should use longer
	  values to increase their chances of recognizing bulk mail.

     -E spamsecs
	  changes the expiration of checksums with more than 10 targets from
	  the default of 30DAYS or the explicit value of -e, whichever is
	  larger.  The default is reduced if the system does not have enough
	  RAM to hold the database.  Spamsecs can also be NEVER or a number of
	  hours, days, or weeks followed by HOURS, H, DAYS, D, WEEKS or W.

     -L ltype,facility.level
	  specifies how messages should be logged.  Ltype must be error, info,
	  or off to indicate which of the two types of messages are being con‐
	  trolled or to turn off all syslog(3) messages from dbclean.  Level
	  must be a syslog(3) level among EMERG, ALERT, CRIT, ERR, WARNING,
	  NOTICE, INFO, and DEBUG.  Facility must be among AUTH, AUTHPRIV,
	  CRON, DAEMON, FTP, KERN, LPR, MAIL, NEWS, USER, UUCP, and LOCAL0
	  through LOCAL7.  The default is equivalent to
		-L info,MAIL.NOTICE -L error,MAIL.ERR

     dbclean exits 0 on success, and > 0 if an error occurs.

FILES
     /var/dcc	   is the DCC home directory containing data and control
		   files.
     dcc_conf	   is the DCC control file.
     dcc_db	   is the main file containing mail checksums.
     dcc_db.hash   mail checksum database hash table.
     grey_db	   is the database of greylist checksums.
     grey_db.hash  is the greylist database hash table.
     dcc_db-new, dcc_db-new.hash, grey_db-new, grey_db-new.hash
		   new database and hash files until they are renamed.
     dcc_db-old, grey_db-old
		   previous database files.
     ids	   list of IDs and passwords, as described in dccd(8).
     whitelist	   contains the DCC server whitelist in the format described
		   in dcc(8).
     grey_whitelist
		   contains the greylist server whitelist.

SEE ALSO
     cdcc(8), cron(8), dcc(8), dccd(8), dblist(8), dccifd(8), dccm(8),
     dccproc(8).

HISTORY
     Implementation of dbclean was started at Rhyolite Software, in 2000.
     This document describes version 1.3.154.

			       December 03, 2013
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