♫ I'm a lumberjack and I'm ok! I sleep when idle, then I ship logs all day! I parse your logs, I eat the JVM agent for lunch! ♫
(This project was recently renamed from 'lumberjack' to 'logstash-forwarder' to make its intended use clear. The 'lumberjack' name now remains as the network protocol, and 'logstash-forwarder' is the name of the program. It's still the same lovely log forwarding program you love.)
If you have questions and cannot find answers, please join the #logstash irc channel on freenode irc or ask on the logstash-users@googlegroups.com mailing list.
A tool to collect logs locally in preparation for processing elsewhere!
Perceived Problems: Some users view logstash releases as "large" or have a generalized fear of Java.
Actual Problems: Logstash, for right now, runs with a footprint that is not friendly to underprovisioned systems such as EC2 micro instances; on other systems it is fine. This project will exist until that is resolved.
Few log transport mechanisms provide security, low latency, and reliability.
The lumberjack protocol used by this project exists to provide a network protocol for transmission that is secure, low latency, low resource usage, and reliable.
logstash-forwarder is configured with a json file you specify with the -config flag:
logstash-forwarder -config yourstuff.json
Here's a sample, with comments in-line to describe the settings. Comments are invalid in JSON, but logstash-forwarder will strip them out for you if they're the only thing on the line:
{
# The network section covers network configuration :)
"network": {
# A list of downstream servers listening for our messages.
# logstash-forwarder will pick one at random and only switch if
# the selected one appears to be dead or unresponsive
"servers": [ "localhost:5043" ],
# The path to your client ssl certificate (optional)
"ssl certificate": "./logstash-forwarder.crt",
# The path to your client ssl key (optional)
"ssl key": "./logstash-forwarder.key",
# The path to your trusted ssl CA file. This is used
# to authenticate your downstream server.
"ssl ca": "./logstash-forwarder.crt",
# Network timeout in seconds. This is most important for
# logstash-forwarder determining whether to stop waiting for an
# acknowledgement from the downstream server. If an timeout is reached,
# logstash-forwarder will assume the connection or server is bad and
# will connect to a server chosen at random from the servers list.
"timeout": 15
},
# The list of files configurations
"files": [
# An array of hashes. Each hash tells what paths to watch and
# what fields to annotate on events from those paths.
{
"paths": [
# single paths are fine
"/var/log/messages",
# globs are fine too, they will be periodically evaluated
# to see if any new files match the wildcard.
"/var/log/*.log"
],
# A dictionary of fields to annotate on each event.
"fields": { "type": "syslog" }
}, {
# A path of "-" means stdin.
"paths": [ "-" ],
"fields": { "type": "stdin" }
}, {
"paths": [
"/var/log/apache/httpd-*.log"
],
"fields": { "type": "apache" }
}
]
}
Any part of config can use environment variables as $VAR
or ${VAR}
. They will be evaluated before processing JSON, allowing to pass any structure.
You can also read an entire directory of JSON configs by specifying a directory instead of a file with the -config
option.
This program will reject SSL/TLS certificates which have a subject which does not match the servers
value, for any given connection. For example, if you have "servers": [ "foobar:12345" ]
then the 'foobar' server MUST use a certificate with subject or subject-alternative that includes CN=foobar
. Wildcards are supported also for things like CN=*.example.com
. If you use an IP address, such as "servers": [ "1.2.3.4:12345" ]
, your ssl certificate MUST use an IP SAN with value "1.2.3.4". If you do not, the TLS handshake will FAIL and the lumberjack connection will close due to trust problems.
Creating a correct SSL/TLS infrastructure is outside the scope of this document.
As a very poor example (largely due unpredictability in your system's defaults for openssl), you can try the following command as an example for creating a self-signed certificate/key pair for use with a server named "logstash.example.com":
openssl req -x509 -batch -nodes -newkey rsa:2048 -keyout lumberjack.key -out lumberjack.crt -subj /CN=logstash.example.com
The above example will create an SSL cert for the host 'logstash.example.com'. You cannot use /CN=1.2.3.4
to create an SSL certificate for an IP address. In order to do a certificate with an IP address, you must create a certificate with an "IP Subject Alternative" or often called "IP SAN". Creating a certificate with an IP SAN is difficult and annoying, so I highly recommend you use hostnames only. If you have no DNS available to you, it is still often easier to set hostnames in /etc/hosts than it is to create a certificate with an IP SAN.
logstash-forwarder needs the .crt
file, and logstash will need both .key
and .crt
files.
Again, creating a correct SSL/TLS certificate authority or generally doing certificate management is outside the scope of this document.
If you see an error like this:
x509: cannot validate certificate for 1.2.3.4 because it doesn't contain any IP SANs
It means you are telling logstash-forwarder to connect to a host by IP address, and therefore you must include an IP SAN in your certificate. Generating an SSL certificate with an IP SAN is quite annoying, so I HIGHLY recommend you use dns names and set the CN in your cert to your dns name.
- Minimize resource usage where possible (CPU, memory, network).
- Secure transmission of logs.
- Configurable event data.
- Easy to deploy with minimal moving parts.
- Simple inputs only:
- Follows files and respects rename/truncation conditions.
- Accepts
STDIN
, useful for things likevarnishlog | logstash-forwarder...
.
-
Install go
-
Compile logstash-forwarder
Note: Do not use gccgo for this project. If you don't know what that means, you're probably OK to ignore this.
git clone git://github.com/elasticsearch/logstash-forwarder.git
cd logstash-forwarder
go build -o logstash-forwarder
gccgo note: Using gccgo is not recommended because it produces a binary with a
runtime dependency on libgo. With the normal go compiler, this dependency
doesn't exist and, as a result, makes it easier to deploy. You can check if you
are using gccgo by running go version
and if it outputs something like go version xgcc
, you're probably not using gccgo, and I recommend you don't.
You can also check the resulting binary by doing ldd ./logstash-forwarder
and
seeing if libgo
appears in the output; if it appears, then you are using gccgo,
and I recommend you don't.
You can make native packages of logstash-forwarder.
To do this, a recent version of Ruby is required. At least version 2.0.0 or
newer. If you are using your OS distribution's version of Ruby, especially on
Red Hat- or Debian-derived systems (Ubuntu, CentOS, etc), you will need to install
ruby and whatever the "ruby development" package is called for your system.
On Red Hat systems, you probably want yum install ruby-devel
. On Debian systems,
you probably want apt-get install ruby-dev
.
Prerequisite steps to prepare ruby to build your packages are:
gem install bundler
bundle install
The bundle install
will install any Ruby library dependencies that are used
in building packages.
Now build an rpm:
make rpm
Or:
make deb
If you don't use rpm or deb make targets as above, you can skip this section.
Packages install to /opt/logstash-forwarder
.
There are no run-time dependencies.
Generally:
logstash-forwarder -config logstash-forwarder.conf
See logstash-forwarder -help
for all the flags. The -config
option is required and logstash-forwrder will not run without it.
The config file is documented further up in this file.
And also note that logstash-forwarder runs quietly when all is a-ok. If you want informational feedback, use the verbose
flag to enable log emits to stdout.
Fatal errors are always sent to stderr regardless of the -quiet
command-line option and process exits with a non-zero status.
- You'll need an SSL CA to verify the server (host) with.
- You can specify custom fields for each set of paths in the config file. Any
number of these may be specified. I use them to set fields like
type
and other custom attributes relevant to each log.
Logstash supports all certificates, including self-signed certificates. To generate a certificate, you can run the following command:
$ openssl req -x509 -batch -nodes -newkey rsa:2048 -keyout logstash-forwarder.key -out logstash-forwarder.crt -days 365
This will generate a key at logstash-forwarder.key
and the 1-year valid certificate at logstash-forwarder.crt
. Both the server that is running logstash-forwarder as well as the logstash instances receiving logs will require these files on disk to verify the authenticity of messages.
Recommended file locations:
- certificates:
/etc/pki/tls/certs/logstash-forwarder/
- keys:
/etc/pki/tls/private/logstash-forwarder/
In logstash, you'll want to use the lumberjack input, something like:
input {
lumberjack {
# The port to listen on
port => 12345
# The paths to your ssl cert and key
ssl_certificate => "path/to/ssl.crt"
ssl_key => "path/to/ssl.key"
# Set this to whatever you want.
type => "somelogs"
}
}
Below is valid as of 2012/09/19
- Sets small resource limits (memory, open files) on start up based on the number of files being watched.
- CPU: sleeps when there is nothing to do.
- Network/CPU: sleeps if there is a network failure.
- Network: uses zlib for compression.
- Uses OpenSSL to verify the server certificates (so you know who you are sending to).
- Uses OpenSSL to transport logs.
- The protocol supports sending a
string:string
map.
See LICENSE file.