Plugin list
dmesg
It reads kernel events from /dev/kmsg
More details...
fake
It provides an API to test pipelines and other plugins.
More details...
file
It watches for files in the provided directory and reads them line by line.
Each line should contain only one event. It also correctly handles rotations (rename/truncate) and symlinks.
From time to time, it instantly releases and reopens descriptors of the completely processed files.
Such behavior allows files to be deleted by a third party software even though file.d
is still working (in this case the reopening will fail).
A watcher is trying to use the file system events to detect file creation and updates.
But update events don't work with symlinks, so watcher also periodically manually fstat
all tracking files to detect changes.
⚠ It supports the commitment mechanism. But "least once delivery" is guaranteed only if files aren't being truncated.
However, file.d
correctly handles file truncation, there is a little chance of data loss.
It isn't a file.d
issue. The data may have been written just before the file truncation. In this case, you may miss to read some events.
If you care about the delivery, you should also know that the logrotate
manual clearly states that copy/truncate may cause data loss even on a rotating stage.
So use copy/truncate or similar actions only if your data isn't critical.
In order to reduce potential harm of truncation, you can turn on notifications of file changes.
By default the plugin is notified only on file creations. Note that following for changes is more CPU intensive.
⚠ Use add_file_name plugin if you want to add filename to events.
Reading docker container log files:
pipelines:
example_docker_pipeline:
input:
type: file
watching_dir: /var/lib/docker/containers
offsets_file: /data/offsets.yaml
filename_pattern: "*-json.log"
persistence_mode: async
More details...
http
Reads events from HTTP requests with the body delimited by a new line.
Also, it emulates some protocols to allow receiving events from a wide range of software that use HTTP to transmit data.
E.g. file.d
may pretend to be Elasticsearch allows clients to send events using Elasticsearch protocol.
So you can use Elasticsearch filebeat output plugin to send data to file.d
.
⚠ Currently event commitment mechanism isn't implemented for this plugin.
Plugin answers with HTTP code OK 200
right after it has read all the request body.
It doesn't wait until events are committed.
Example:
Emulating elastic through http:
pipelines:
example_k8s_pipeline:
settings:
capacity: 1024
input:
# define input type.
type: http
# pretend elastic search, emulate it's protocol.
emulate_mode: "elasticsearch"
# define http port.
address: ":9200"
actions:
# parse elastic search query.
- type: parse_es
# decode elastic search json.
- type: json_decode
# field is required.
field: message
output:
# Let's write to kafka example.
type: kafka
brokers: [kafka-local:9092, kafka-local:9091]
default_topic: yourtopic-k8s-data
use_topic_field: true
topic_field: pipeline_kafka_topic
# Or we can write to file:
# type: file
# target_file: "./output.txt"
Setup:
# run server.
# config.yaml should contains yaml config above.
go run ./cmd/file.d --config=config.yaml
# now do requests.
curl "localhost:9200/_bulk" -H 'Content-Type: application/json' -d \
'{"index":{"_index":"index-main","_type":"span"}}
{"message": "hello", "kind": "normal"}
'
More details...
journalctl
Reads journalctl
output.
More details...
k8s
It reads Kubernetes logs and also adds pod meta-information. Also, it joins split logs into a single event.
Source log file should be named in the following format:
[pod-name]_[namespace]_[container-name]-[container-id].log
E.g. my_pod-1566485760-trtrq_my-namespace_my-container-4e0301b633eaa2bfdcafdeba59ba0c72a3815911a6a820bf273534b0f32d98e0.log
An information which plugin adds:
k8s_node
– node name where pod is running;
k8s_node_label_*
– node labels;
k8s_pod
– pod name;
k8s_namespace
– pod namespace name;
k8s_container
– pod container name;
k8s_label_*
– pod labels.
⚠ Use add_file_name plugin if you want to add filename to events.
Example:
pipelines:
example_k8s_pipeline:
input:
type: k8s
offsets_file: /data/offsets.yaml
file_config: // customize file plugin
persistence_mode: sync
read_buffer_size: 2048
More details...
kafka
It reads events from multiple Kafka topics using sarama
library.
It guarantees at "at-least-once delivery" due to the commitment mechanism.
Example
Standard example:
pipelines:
example_pipeline:
input:
type: kafka
brokers: [kafka:9092, kafka:9091]
topics: [topic1, topic2]
offset: newest
# output plugin is not important in this case, let's emulate s3 output.
output:
type: s3
file_config:
retention_interval: 10s
endpoint: "s3.fake_host.org:80"
access_key: "access_key1"
secret_key: "secret_key2"
bucket: "bucket-logs"
bucket_field_event: "bucket_name"
More details...
Actions
add_file_name
It adds a field containing the file name to the event.
It is only applicable for input plugins k8s and file.
More details...
add_host
It adds field containing hostname to an event.
More details...
convert_date
It converts field date/time data to different format.
More details...
convert_log_level
It converts the log level field according RFC-5424.
More details...
convert_utf8_bytes
It converts multiple UTF-8-encoded bytes to corresponding characters.
Supports unicode (\u...
and \U...
), hex (\x...
) and octal (\{0-3}{0-7}{0-7}
) encoded bytes.
Note: Escaped and unescaped backslashes are treated the same.
For example, the following 2 values will be converted to the same result:
\x68\x65\x6C\x6C\x6F
and \\x68\\x65\\x6C\\x6C\\x6F
=> hello
Examples
pipelines:
example_pipeline:
...
actions:
- type: convert_utf8_bytes
fields:
- obj.field
...
The original event:
{
"obj": {
"field": "\\xD0\\xA1\\xD0\\x98\\xD0\\xA1\\xD0\\xA2\\xD0\\x95\\xD0\\x9C\\xD0\\x90.xml"
}
}
The resulting event:
{
"obj": {
"field": "СИСТЕМА.xml"
}
}
The original event:
{
"obj": {
"field": "$\\110\\145\\154\\154\\157\\054\\040\\146\\151\\154\\145\\056\\144!"
}
}
The resulting event:
{
"obj": {
"field": "$Hello, file.d!"
}
}
The original event:
{
"obj": {
"field": "$\\u0048\\u0065\\u006C\\u006C\\u006F\\u002C\\u0020\\ud801\\udc01!"
}
}
The resulting event:
{
"obj": {
"field": "$Hello, 𐐁!"
}
}
The original event:
{
"obj": {
"field": "{\"Dir\":\"C:\\\\Users\\\\username\\\\.prog\\\\120.67.0\\\\x86_64\\\\x64\",\"File\":\"$Storage$\\xD0\\x9F\\xD1\\x80\\xD0\\xB8\\xD0\\xB7\\xD0\\xBD\\xD0\\xB0\\xD0\\xBA.20.tbl.xml\"}"
}
}
The resulting event:
{
"obj": {
"field": "{\"Dir\":\"C:\\\\Users\\\\username\\\\.prog\\\\120.67.0\\\\x86_64\\\\x64\",\"File\":\"$Storage$Признак.20.tbl.xml\"}"
}
}
More details...
debug
It logs event to stderr. Useful for debugging.
It may sample by logging the first
N entries each tick.
If more events are seen during the same interval
,
every thereafter
message is logged and the rest are dropped.
For example,
- type: debug
interval: 1s
first: 10
thereafter: 5
This will log the first 10 events in a one second interval as-is.
Following that, it will allow through every 5th event in that interval.
More details...
discard
It drops an event. It is used in a combination with match_fields
/match_mode
parameters to filter out the events.
An example for discarding informational and debug logs:
pipelines:
example_pipeline:
...
actions:
- type: discard
match_fields:
level: /info|debug/
...
More details...
flatten
It extracts the object keys and adds them into the root with some prefix. If the provided field isn't an object, an event will be skipped.
Example:
pipelines:
example_pipeline:
...
actions:
- type: flatten
field: animal
prefix: pet_
...
It transforms {"animal":{"type":"cat","paws":4}}
into {"pet_type":"b","pet_paws":"4"}
.
More details...
join
It makes one big event from the sequence of the events.
It is useful for assembling back together "exceptions" or "panics" if they were written line by line.
Also known as "multiline".
⚠ Parsing the whole event flow could be very CPU intensive because the plugin uses regular expressions.
Consider match_fields
parameter to process only particular events. Check out an example for details.
Example of joining Go panics:
pipelines:
example_pipeline:
...
actions:
- type: join
field: log
start: '/^(panic:)|(http: panic serving)/'
continue: '/(^\s*$)|(goroutine [0-9]+ \[)|(\([0-9]+x[0-9,a-f]+)|(\.go:[0-9]+ \+[0-9]x)|(\/.*\.go:[0-9]+)|(\(...\))|(main\.main\(\))|(created by .*\/.*\.)|(^\[signal)|(panic.+[0-9]x[0-9,a-f]+)|(panic:)/'
match_fields:
stream: stderr // apply only for events which was written to stderr to save CPU time
...
More details...
join_template
Alias to "join" plugin with predefined start
and continue
parameters.
⚠ Parsing the whole event flow could be very CPU intensive because the plugin uses regular expressions.
Consider match_fields
parameter to process only particular events. Check out an example for details.
Example of joining Go panics:
pipelines:
example_pipeline:
...
actions:
- type: join_template
template: go_panic
field: log
match_fields:
stream: stderr // apply only for events which was written to stderr to save CPU time
...
More details...
json_decode
It decodes a JSON string from the event field and merges the result with the event root.
If the decoded JSON isn't an object, the event will be skipped.
More details...
json_encode
It replaces field with its JSON string representation.
Example:
pipelines:
example_pipeline:
...
actions:
- type: json_encode
field: server
...
It transforms {"server":{"os":"linux","arch":"amd64"}}
into {"server":"{\"os\":\"linux\",\"arch\":\"amd64\"}"}
.
More details...
It extracts a field from JSON-encoded event field and adds extracted field to the event root.
If extracted field already exists in the event root, it will be overridden.
More details...
keep_fields
It keeps the list of the event fields and removes others.
More details...
mask
Mask plugin matches event with regular expression and substitutions successfully matched symbols via asterix symbol.
You could set regular expressions and submatch groups.
Example:
pipelines:
example_pipeline:
...
actions:
- type: mask
metric_subsystem_name: "some_name"
ignore_fields:
- trace_id
masks:
- mask:
re: "\b(\d{1,4})\D?(\d{1,4})\D?(\d{1,4})\D?(\d{1,4})\b"
groups: [1,2,3]
...
More details...
modify
It modifies the content for a field or add new field. It works only with strings.
You can provide an unlimited number of config parameters. Each parameter handled as cfg.FieldSelector
:cfg.Substitution
.
Note: When used to add new nested fields, each child field is added step by step, which can cause performance issues.
Example:
pipelines:
example_pipeline:
...
actions:
- type: modify
my_object.field.subfield: value is ${another_object.value}.
...
The resulting event could look like:
{
"my_object": {
"field": {
"subfield":"value is 666."
}
},
"another_object": {
"value": 666
}
Filters
Sometimes it is required to extract certain data from fields and for that purpose filter chains were added.
Filters are added one after another using pipe '|' symbol and they are applied to the last value in the chain.
For example, in expression ${field|re("(test-pod-\w+)",-1,[1],",")|re("test-pod-(\w+)",-1,[1],",")}
first the value of 'field' is retrieved,
then the data extracted using first regular expression and formed into a new string, then the second regular expression is applied
and its result is formed into a value to be put in modified field.
Currently available filters are:
-
regex filter
- re(regex string, limit int, groups []int, separator string)
, filters data using regex
, extracts limit
occurrences,
takes regex groups listed in groups
list, and if there are more than one extracted element concatenates result using separator
.
Negative value of limit
means all occurrences are extracted, limit
0 means no occurrences are extracted, limit
greater than 0 means
at most limit
occurrences are extracted.
-
trim filter
- trim(mode string, cutset string)
, trims data by the cutset
substring. Available modes are all
- trim both sides,
left
- trim only left, right
- trim only right.
Examples:
Example #1:
Data: {"message:"info: something happened"}
Substitution: level: ${message|re("(\w+):.*",-1,[1],",")}
Result: {"message:"info: something happened","level":"info"}
Example #2:
Data: {"message:"re1 re2 re3 re4"}
Substitution: extracted: ${message|re("(re\d+)",2,[1],",")}
Result: {"message:"re1 re2 re3 re4","extracted":"re1,re2"}
Example #3:
Data: {"message:"service=service-test-1 exec took 200ms"}
Substitution: took: ${message|re("service=([A-Za-z0-9_\-]+) exec took (\d+\.?\d*(?:ms|s|m|h))",-1,[2],",")}
Result: {"message:"service=service-test-1 exec took 200ms","took":"200ms"}
Example #4:
Data: {"message:"{\"service\":\"service-test-1\",\"took\":\"200ms\"}\n"}
Substitution: message: ${message|trim("right","\n")}
Result: {"message:"{\"service\":\"service-test-1\",\"took\":\"200ms\"}"}
More details...
move
It moves fields to the target field in a certain mode.
In allow
mode, the specified fields
will be moved;
in block
mode, the unspecified fields
will be moved.
Examples
pipelines:
example_pipeline:
...
actions:
- type: move
mode: allow
target: other
fields:
- log.stream
- zone
...
The original event:
{
"service": "test",
"log": {
"level": "error",
"message": "error occurred",
"ts": "2023-10-30T13:35:33.638720813Z",
"stream": "stderr"
},
"zone": "z501"
}
The resulting event:
{
"service": "test",
"log": {
"level": "error",
"message": "error occurred",
"ts": "2023-10-30T13:35:33.638720813Z"
},
"other": {
"stream": "stderr",
"zone": "z501"
}
}
pipelines:
example_pipeline:
...
actions:
- type: move
mode: block
target: other
fields:
- log
...
The original event:
{
"service": "test",
"log": {
"level": "error",
"message": "error occurred",
"ts": "2023-10-30T13:35:33.638720813Z",
"stream": "stderr"
},
"zone": "z501",
"other": {
"user": "ivanivanov"
}
}
The resulting event:
{
"log": {
"level": "error",
"message": "error occurred",
"ts": "2023-10-30T13:35:33.638720813Z"
},
"other": {
"user": "ivanivanov",
"service": "test",
"zone": "z501"
}
}
More details...
parse_es
It parses HTTP input using Elasticsearch /_bulk
API format. It converts sources defining create/index actions to the events. Update/delete actions are ignored.
Check out the details in Elastic Bulk API.
More details...
parse_re2
It parses string from the event field using re2 expression with named subgroups and merges the result with the event root.
More details...
remove_fields
It removes the list of the event fields and keeps others.
More details...
rename
It renames the fields of the event. You can provide an unlimited number of config parameters. Each parameter handled as cfg.FieldSelector
:string
.
When override
is set to false
, the field won't be renamed in the case of field name collision.
Sequence of rename operations isn't guaranteed. Use different actions for prioritization.
Example:
pipelines:
example_pipeline:
...
actions:
- type: rename
override: false
my_object.field.subfield: new_sub_field
...
The resulting event could look like:
{
"my_object": {
"field": {
"new_sub_field":"value"
}
},
More details...
set_time
It adds time field to the event.
More details...
split
It splits array of objects into different events.
For example:
{
"data": [
{ "message": "go" },
{ "message": "rust" },
{ "message": "c++" }
]
}
Split produces:
{ "message": "go" },
{ "message": "rust" },
{ "message": "c++" }
Parent event will be discarded.
If the value of the JSON field is not an array of objects, then the event will be pass unchanged.
More details...
throttle
It discards the events if pipeline throughput gets higher than a configured threshold.
More details...
Outputs
clickhouse
It sends the event batches to Clickhouse database using
Native format and
Native protocol.
File.d uses low level Go client - ch-go to provide these features.
More details...
devnull
It provides an API to test pipelines and other plugins.
More details...
elasticsearch
It sends events into Elasticsearch. It uses _bulk
API to send events in batches.
If a network error occurs, the batch will infinitely try to be delivered to the random endpoint.
More details...
file
It sends event batches into files.
More details...
gelf
It sends event batches to the GELF endpoint. Transport level protocol TCP or UDP is configurable.
It doesn't support UDP chunking. So don't use UDP if event size may be greater than 8192.
GELF messages are separated by null byte. Each message is a JSON with the following fields:
version
string=1.1
host
string
short_message
string
full_message
string
timestamp
number
level
number
_extra_field_1
string
_extra_field_2
string
_extra_field_3
string
Every field with an underscore prefix _
will be treated as an extra field.
Allowed characters in field names are letters, numbers, underscores, dashes, and dots.
More details...
kafka
It sends the event batches to kafka brokers using sarama
lib.
More details...
postgres
It sends the event batches to postgres db using pgx.
More details...
s3
Sends events to s3 output of one or multiple buckets.
bucket
is default bucket for events. Addition buckets can be described in multi_buckets
section, example down here.
Field "bucket_field_event" is filed name, that will be searched in event.
If appears we try to send event to this bucket instead of described here.
⚠ Currently bucket names for bucket and multi_buckets can't intersect.
⚠ If dynamic bucket moved to config it can leave some not send data behind.
To send this data to s3 move bucket dir from /var/log/dynamic_buckets/bucketName to /var/log/static_buckets/bucketName (/var/log is default path)
and restart file.d
Example
Standard example:
pipelines:
mkk:
settings:
capacity: 128
# input plugin is not important in this case, let's emulate http input.
input:
type: http
emulate_mode: "no"
address: ":9200"
actions:
- type: json_decode
field: message
output:
type: s3
file_config:
retention_interval: 10s
# endpoint, access_key, secret_key, bucket are required.
endpoint: "s3.fake_host.org:80"
access_key: "access_key1"
secret_key: "secret_key2"
bucket: "bucket-logs"
bucket_field_event: "bucket_name"
Example with fan-out buckets:
pipelines:
mkk:
settings:
capacity: 128
# input plugin is not important in this case, let's emulate http input.
input:
type: http
emulate_mode: "no"
address: ":9200"
actions:
- type: json_decode
field: message
output:
type: s3
file_config:
retention_interval: 10s
# endpoint, access_key, secret_key, bucket are required.
endpoint: "s3.fake_host.org:80"
access_key: "access_key1"
secret_key: "secret_key2"
bucket: "bucket-logs"
# bucket_field_event - event with such field will be sent to bucket with its value
# if such exists: {"bucket_name": "secret", "message": 123} to bucket "secret".
bucket_field_event: "bucket_name"
# multi_buckets is optional, contains array of buckets.
multi_buckets:
- endpoint: "otherS3.fake_host.org:80"
access_key: "access_key2"
secret_key: "secret_key2"
bucket: "bucket-logs-2"
- endpoint: "yet_anotherS3.fake_host.ru:80"
access_key: "access_key3"
secret_key: "secret_key3"
bucket: "bucket-logs-3"
More details...
splunk
It sends events to splunk.
More details...
stdout
It writes events to stdout(also known as console).
More details...
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