This is the semi-official 'all-in-one' Logstash cookbook.
This cookbook is in transition from being a regular cookbook to following the Library Cookbook pattern.
While you can still use the agent
and server
recipes, they are only used for testing and don't supply attributes
when they call the LWRPs within. The power of this cookbook now comes from the LWRPs
being used directly.
If you are using logstash < 1.2 you might want to use the 0.6.x branch. If you are using logstash < 1.4 you might want to use the 0.7.x branch.
All of the requirements are explicitly defined in the recipes. Every effort has been made to utilize Opscode's cookbooks.
However if you wish to use an external ElasticSearch cluster, you will need to install that yourself and change the relevant attributes for discovery. The same applies to integration with Graphite.
This cookbook has been tested together with the following cookbooks, see the Berksfile for more details
- Heavywater Graphite Cookbook - This is the one I use
- Karmi's ElasticSearch Cookbook
- RiotGames RBENV cookbook
- @lusis Kibana cookbook
This will be deprecated soon in favor of an external library cookbook.
node['logstash']['beaver']['repo']
- URL or repository to install beaver from (using pip).node['logstash']['beaver']['server_role']
- The role of the node behaving as a Logstashserver
/indexer
.node['logstash']['beaver']['server_ipaddress']
- Server IP address to use (needed when not using server_role).node['logstash']['beaver']['inputs']
- Array of input plugins configuration (Supported: file). For example:
override['logstash']['beaver']['inputs'] = [
{ :file =>
{
:path => ["/var/log/nginx/*log"],
:type => "nginx",
:tags => ["logstash","nginx"]
}
},
{ :file =>
{
:path => ["/var/log/syslog"],
:type => "syslog",
:tags => ["logstash","syslog"]
}
}
]
node['logstash']['beaver']['outputs']
- Array of output plugins configuration (Supported: amq, redis, stdout, zeromq). For example:
override['logstash']['beaver']['outputs'] = [
{
:amqp => {
:port => "5672",
:exchange => "rawlogs",
:name => "rawlogs_consumer"
}
}
]
This example sets up the amqp output and uses the recipe defaults for the host value
node['logstash']['source']['repo']
- The git repo to use for the source code of Logstashnode['logstash']['source']['sha']
- The sha/branch/tag of the repo you wish to clone. Usesnode['logstash']['server']['version']
by default.node['logstash']['source']['java_home']
- yourJAVA_HOME
location. Needed explicity forant
when building JRuby
node['logstash']['index_cleaner']['days_to_keep']
- Integer number of days from today of Logstash index to keep.node['logstash']['index_cleaner']['cron']['minute']
- Minute to run the index_cleaner cron jobnode['logstash']['index_cleaner']['cron']['hour']
- Hour to run the index_cleaner cron jobnode['logstash']['index_cleaner']['cron']['log_file']
- Path to direct the index_cleaner cron job's stdout and stderr
These now do all the heavy lifting.
This will install a logstash instance. It will take defaults from attributes for most attributes.
This will create system init scripts for managing logstash instance. It will take defaults from attributes for most attributes.
experimental support for pleaserun has been added. Only native
for Ubuntu 12.04
has been thoroughly tested.
This will create logstash config files. It will take defaults from attributes for most attributes.
This will install custom grok patterns for logstash. It will take defaults from attributes for most attributes:
This will install the logstash community plugins:
We've done our best to make this intuitive and easy to use.
- the value directly in the resource call.
- the value from the hash node['logstash']['instance'][name]
- the value from the hash node['logstash']['instance']['default']
There is a search helper library libraries/search.rb
which will help you search for values such as elasticsearch_ip
. see the server
recipe for an example of its usage.
vagrant up precise64
bundle exec rake
Any and all contributions are welcome. We do ask that you test your contributions with the testing framework before you send a PR.
Documentation contributions will earn you lots of hugs and kisses.
A proper readme is forthcoming but in the interim....
These two recipes show how to install and configure logstash instances via the provided LWRPs
- recipes/server.rb - This would be your indexer node
- recipes/agent.rb - This would be a local host's agent for collection
Every attempt (and I mean this) was made to ensure that the following objectives were met:
- Any agent install can talk to a server install
- Kibana web interface can talk to the server install
- Each component works OOB and with each other
- Utilize official opscode cookbooks where possible
This setup makes HEAVY use of roles. Additionally, ALL paths have been made into attributes. Everything I could think of that would need to be customized has been made an attribute.
By default, the recipes look for the following roles (defined as attributes so they can be overridden):
graphite_server
-node['logstash']['graphite_role']
elasticsearch_server
-node['logstash']['elasticsearch_role']
logstash_server
-node['logstash']['kibana']['elasticsearch_role']
andnode['logstash']['agent']['server_role']
The reason for giving kibana
its own role assignment is to allow you
to point to existing ES clusters/logstash installs.
The reason for giving agent
its own role assignment is to allow the
server
and agent
recipes to work together.
Yes, if you have a graphite installation with a role of
graphite_server
, logstash will send stats of events received to
logstash.events
.
The template to use for configuration is made an attribute as well. This allows you to define your OWN logstash configuration file without mucking with the default templates.
The server
will, by default, enable the embedded ES server. This can
be overriden as well.
See the server
and agent
attributes for more details.
Both agent
and server
support an attribute for how to install. By
default this is set to jar
to use the 1.1.1preview as it is required
to use elasticsearch 0.19.4. The current release is defined in
attributes if you choose to go the source
route.
Here are some basic steps
- Create a role called
logstash_server
and assign it the following recipes:logstash::server
- Assign the role to a new server
- Assign the
logstash::agent
recipe to another server
If there is a system found with the logstash_server
role, the agent
will automatically configure itself to send logs to it over tcp port
5959. This is, not coincidently, the port used by the chef logstash
handler.
If there is NOT a system with the logstash_server
role, the agent
will use a null output. The default input is to read files from
/var/log/*.log
excluding and gzipped files.
If you point your browser to the logstash_server
system's ip
address, you should get the kibana web interface.
Do something to generate a new line in any of the files in the agent's watch path (I like to SSH to the host), and the events will start showing up in kibana. You might have to issue a fresh empty search.
The pyshipper
recipe will work as well but it is NOT wired up to
anything yet.
If you want to use chef templates to drive your configs you'll want to set the following:
- example using
agent
,server
works the same way. - The actual template file for the following would resolve to
templates/default/apache.conf.erb
and be installed to/opt/logstash/agent/etc/conf.d/apache.conf
- Each template has a hash named for it to inject variables in
node['logstash']['agent']['config_templates_variables']
node['logstash']['agent']['config_file'] = "" # disable data drive templates ( can be left enabled if want both )
node['logstash']['agent']['config_templates'] = { "apache" => "config/apache.conf.erb }
node['logstash']['agent']['config_templates_cookbook'] = 'logstash'
node['logstash']['agent']['config_templates_variables'] = { apache: { type: 'apache' } }
DEPRECATED!
While this may work ... it is no longer being actively supported by the maintainers of this cookbook.
We will accept PRs
.
The current templates for the agent and server are written so that you can provide ruby hashes in your roles that map to inputs, filters, and outputs. Here is a role for logstash_server.
There are two formats for the hashes for filters and outputs that you should be aware of ...
This is for logstash < 1.2.0 and uses the old pattern of setting 'type' and 'tags' in the plugin to determine if it should be run.
filters: [
grok: {
type: "syslog"
match: [
"message",
"%{SYSLOGTIMESTAMP:timestamp} %{IPORHOST:host} (?:%{PROG:program}(?:\[%{POSINT:pid}\])?: )?%{GREEDYDATA:message}"
]
},
date: {
type: "syslog"
match: [
"timestamp",
"MMM d HH:mm:ss",
"MMM dd HH:mm:ss",
"ISO8601"
]
}
]
This is for logstash >= 1.2.0 and uses the new pattern of conditionals if 'type' == "foo" {}
Note: the condition applies to all plugins in the block hash in the same object.
filters: [
{
condition: 'if [type] == "syslog"',
block: {
grok: {
match: [
"message",
"%{SYSLOGTIMESTAMP:timestamp} %{IPORHOST:host} (?:%{PROG:program}(?:\[%{POSINT:pid}\])?: )?%{GREEDYDATA:message}"
]
},
date: {
match: [
"timestamp",
"MMM d HH:mm:ss",
"MMM dd HH:mm:ss",
"ISO8601"
]
}
}
}
]
These examples show the legacy format and need to be updated for logstash >= 1.2.0
name "logstash_server"
description "Attributes and run_lists specific to FAO's logstash instance"
default_attributes(
:logstash => {
:server => {
:enable_embedded_es => false,
:inputs => [
:rabbitmq => {
:type => "all",
:host => "<IP OF RABBIT SERVER>",
:exchange => "rawlogs"
}
],
:filters => [
:grok => {
:type => "haproxy",
:pattern => "%{HAPROXYHTTP}",
:patterns_dir => '/opt/logstash/server/etc/patterns/'
}
],
:outputs => [
:file => {
:type => 'haproxy',
:path => '/opt/logstash/server/haproxy_logs/%{request_header_host}.log',
:message_format => '%{client_ip} - - [%{accept_date}] "%{http_request}" %{http_status_code} ....'
}
]
}
}
)
run_list(
"role[elasticsearch_server]",
"recipe[logstash::server]"
)
It will produce the following logstash.conf file
input {
amqp {
exchange => 'rawlogs'
host => '<IP OF RABBIT SERVER>'
name => 'rawlogs_consumer'
type => 'all'
}
}
filter {
grok {
pattern => '%{HAPROXYHTTP}'
patterns_dir => '/opt/logstash/server/etc/patterns/'
type => 'haproxy'
}
}
output {
stdout { debug => true debug_format => "json" }
elasticsearch { host => "127.0.0.1" cluster => "logstash" }
file {
message_format => '%{client_ip} - - [%{accept_date}] "%{http_request}" %{http_status_code} ....'
path => '/opt/logstash/server/haproxy_logs/%{request_header_host}.log'
type => 'haproxy'
}
}
Here is an example using multiple filters
default_attributes(
:logstash => {
:server => {
:filters => [
{ :grep => {
:type => 'tomcat',
:match => { '@message' => '([Ee]xception|Failure:|Error:)' },
:add_tag => 'exception',
:drop => false
} },
{ :grep => {
:type => 'tomcat',
:match => { '@message' => 'Unloading class ' },
:add_tag => 'unloading-class',
:drop => false
} },
{ :multiline => {
:type => 'tomcat',
:pattern => '^\s',
:what => 'previous'
} }
]
}
}
)
It will produce the following logstash.conf file
filter {
grep {
add_tag => 'exception'
drop => false
match => ['@message', '([Ee]xception|Failure:|Error:)']
type => 'tomcat'
}
grep {
add_tag => 'unloading-class'
drop => false
match => ["@message", "Unloading class "]
type => 'tomcat'
}
multiline {
patterns_dir => '/opt/logstash/patterns'
pattern => '^\s'
type => 'tomcat'
what => 'previous'
}
}
Grok pattern files can be generated using attributes as follows
default_attributes(
:logstash => {
:patterns => {
:apache => {
:HTTP_ERROR_DATE => '%{DAY} %{MONTH} %{MONTHDAY} %{TIME} %{YEAR}',
:APACHE_LOG_LEVEL => '[A-Za-z][A-Za-z]+',
:ERRORAPACHELOG => '^\[%{HTTP_ERROR_DATE:timestamp}\] \[%{APACHE_LOG_LEVEL:level}\](?: \[client %{IPORHOST:clientip}\])?',
},
:mywebapp => {
:MYWEBAPP_LOG => '\[mywebapp\]',
},
},
[...]
}
)
This will generate the following files:
/opt/logstash/server/etc/patterns/apache
APACHE_LOG_LEVEL [A-Za-z][A-Za-z]+
ERRORAPACHELOG ^\[%{HTTP_ERROR_DATE:timestamp}\] \[%{APACHE_LOG_LEVEL:level}\](?: \[client %{IPORHOST:clientip}\])?
HTTP_ERROR_DATE %{DAY} %{MONTH} %{MONTHDAY} %{TIME} %{YEAR}
/opt/logstash/server/etc/patterns/mywebapp
MYWEBAPP_LOG \[mywebapp\]
This patterns will be included by default in the grok and multiline filters.
- Vagrant 1.2.1+
- Vagrant Berkshelf Plugin
vagrant plugin install vagrant-berkshelf
- Vagrant Omnibus Plugin
vagrant plugin install vagrant-omnibus
Uses the Box Name to determine the run list ( based on whether its Debian or RHEL based ).
See chef_json and chef_run_list variables to change recipe behavior.
Run Logstash on Ubuntu Lucid : vagrant up lucid32
or vagrant up lucid64
Run Logstash on Centos 6 32bit : vagrant up centos6_32
Logstash will listen for syslog messages on tcp/5140
- Currently only tested on Ubuntu Natty, Precise, and RHEL 6.2.
- Author: John E. Vincent
- Author: Bryan W. Berry (bryan.berry@gmail.com)
- Author: Richard Clamp (@richardc)
- Author: Juanje Ojeda (@juanje)
- Author: @benattar
- Author: Paul Czarkowski (@pczarkowski)
- Copyright: 2012, John E. Vincent
- Copyright: 2012, Bryan W. Berry
- Copyright: 2012, Richard Clamp
- Copyright: 2012, Juanje Ojeda
- Copyright: 2012, @benattar
- Copyright: 2014, Paul Czarkowski
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License.