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Corrupted empty files are relatively common. I think they are created
when a coredump for a user who never logged anything before is
attempted to be written, but the write does not succeed because the
coredump is too big, but there are probably other ways to create
those, especially if the machine crashes at the right time.
Non-corrupted empty files can also happen, e.g. if a journal file is
opened, but nothing is ever successfully written to it and it is
rotated because of MaxFileSec=. Either way, each "empty" journal file
costs around 3 MB, and there's little point in keeping them around.
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The vacuum code used to stop vacuuming after one deletion, even
when max_use was still exceeded.
Also make usage a uint64_t, as the code already pretends it is one.
Signed-off-by: Jan Alexander Steffens (heftig) <jan.steffens@gmail.com>
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This also enables time-based rotation (but not vacuuming) after 1month,
so that not more one month of journal is lost at a time per vacuuming.
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Make sure to allocate enough space for readdir_r().
https://bugzilla.redhat.com/show_bug.cgi?id=858754
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