Hi Jose, That’s a very clear explanation, thank you. Is this actually explained in any documentation? How did you find out these details? Regards, == Graham From: Jose Alf. [mailto:[email protected]] Sent: 31 May 2026 21:04 To: Graham Jones; [email protected] Subject: Re: [stunnel-users] Stunnel Show Log Window Hi Graham, Yes. You are absolutely right. I was a bit confused with your question at first. I apologize. If we don't uncomment the output=filename.ext line, the log lines won't be written to any disk file. In this case, On Windows, the log lines go to the Log Window you mention. This is implemented as a circular buffer kept in RAM with hardcoded capacity for 1000 lines. That is, you will only see the last 1000 lines sent to the log and older lines are silently discarded. No crashes should happen. Best Regards, Jose -- On Sunday, May 31, 2026 at 10:57:37 AM GMT-5, Graham Jones <[email protected]> wrote: Hi Jose, Thanks for the explanation about stunnel.log My config file has the line: ;output = stunnel.log I understand this to mean that the file stunnel.log is NOT created. And there is no evidence of this file anywhere. But the GUI allows me to see a "log window". So my question is: what happens when this "log window" fills up? Regards, == Graham
-----Original Message-----
From: Josealf.rm [mailto:[email protected]]
Sent: 31 May 2026 12:46
Subject: Re: [stunnel-users] Stunnel Show Log Window
Hi Graham,
Stunnel does not implement automatic log rotation and it will not overwrite
earlier log entries. It will always try to append new entries at the end. By
default, the log file is named stunnel.log. If you run out of storage, stunnel
will probably crash. In Unix-like OSes like Linux or FreeBSD, you can configure
OS tasks to gracefully handle the log management. Periodically the stunnel
server process is stopped, the oldest log file is deleted and/or compressed
and the newest/current log is renamed. Then stunnel is started and a new
stunnel log is created. In Windows you could do something similar by creating
a suitable script or batch file and running it via Task Scheduler.
Regards
Jose
On 31/05/2026, at 1:26 AM, Graham Jones via stunnel-users <stunnel-
[email protected]> wrote:
I'm new to Stunnel.
stunnel 5.78 on x64-pc-mingw32-gnu platform Windows 7 Pro.
I see the option to "Show Log Window". I have read the manual. I see
there
is an option to specify an output file; I am not using this option.
My question:
When the space allocated to the log information fills up, what happens?
Does stunnel overwrite the oldest log entries first? Or does it crash?
Regards,
== Graham
_______________________________________________
stunnel-users mailing list -- [email protected]
To unsubscribe send an email to [email protected]