Log input
[7.16.0]
The log input is deprecated. Please use the the filestream input
for sending log files to outputs.
It’s possible to use this input type only in combination with the allow_deprecated_use: true
setting as a part of the input configuration.
Use the log
input to read lines from log files.
To configure this input, specify a list of glob-based paths
that must be crawled to locate and fetch the log lines.
Example configuration:
filebeat.inputs:
- type: log
paths:
- /var/log/messages
- /var/log/*.log
You can apply additional configuration settings (such as fields
, include_lines
, exclude_lines
, multiline
, and so on) to the lines harvested from these files. The options that you specify are applied to all the files harvested by this input.
To apply different configuration settings to different files, you need to define multiple input sections:
filebeat.inputs:
- type: log 1
paths:
- /var/log/system.log
- /var/log/wifi.log
- type: log 2
paths:
- "/var/log/apache2/*"
fields:
apache: true
fields_under_root: true
- Harvests lines from two files:
system.log
andwifi.log
. - Harvests lines from every file in the
apache2
directory, and uses thefields
configuration option to add a field calledapache
to the output.
Make sure a file is not defined more than once across all inputs because this can lead to unexpected behaviour.
Filebeat does not support reading from network shares and cloud providers.
However, one of the limitations of these data sources can be mitigated if you configure Filebeat adequately.
By default, Filebeat identifies files based on their inodes and device IDs. However, on network shares and cloud providers these values might change during the lifetime of the file. If this happens Filebeat thinks that file is new and resends the whole content of the file. To solve this problem you can configure file_identity
option. Possible values besides the default inode_deviceid
are path
and inode_marker
.
Selecting path
instructs Filebeat to identify files based on their paths. This is a quick way to avoid rereading files if inode and device ids might change. However, keep in mind if the files are rotated (renamed), they will be reread and resubmitted.
The option inode_marker
can be used if the inodes stay the same even if the device id is changed. You should choose this method if your files are rotated instead of path
if possible. You have to configure a marker file readable by Filebeat and set the path in the option path
of inode_marker
.
The content of this file must be unique to the device. You can put the UUID of the device or mountpoint where the input is stored. The following example oneliner generates a hidden marker file for the selected mountpoint /logs
: Please note that you should not use this option on Windows as file identifiers might be more volatile.
$ lsblk -o MOUNTPOINT,UUID | grep /logs | awk '{print $2}' >> /logs/.filebeat-marker
To set the generated file as a marker for file_identity
you should configure the input the following way:
filebeat.inputs:
- type: log
paths:
- /logs/*.log
file_identity.inode_marker.path: /logs/.filebeat-marker
When dealing with file rotation, avoid harvesting symlinks. Instead use the paths
setting to point to the original file, and specify a pattern that matches the file you want to harvest and all of its rotated files. Also make sure your log rotation strategy prevents lost or duplicate messages. For more information, see Log rotation results in lost or duplicate events.
Furthermore, to avoid duplicate of rotated log messages, do not use the path
method for file_identity
. Or exclude the rotated files with exclude_files
option.
The log
input supports the following configuration options plus the Common options described later.
A list of glob-based paths that will be crawled and fetched. All patterns supported by Go Glob are also supported here. For example, to fetch all files from a predefined level of subdirectories, the following pattern can be used: /var/log/*/*.log
. This fetches all .log
files from the subfolders of /var/log
. It does not fetch log files from the /var/log
folder itself. It is possible to recursively fetch all files in all subdirectories of a directory using the optional recursive_glob
settings.
Filebeat starts a harvester for each file that it finds under the specified paths. You can specify one path per line. Each line begins with a dash (-).
Enable expanding **
into recursive glob patterns. With this feature enabled, the rightmost **
in each path is expanded into a fixed number of glob patterns. For example: /foo/**
expands to /foo
, /foo/*
, /foo/*/*
, and so on. If enabled it expands a single **
into a 8-level deep *
pattern.
This feature is enabled by default. Set recursive_glob.enabled
to false to disable it.
The file encoding to use for reading data that contains international characters. See the encoding names recommended by the W3C for use in HTML5.
Valid encodings:
plain
: plain ASCII encodingutf-8
orutf8
: UTF-8 encodinggbk
: simplified Chinese charatersiso8859-6e
: ISO8859-6E, Latin/Arabiciso8859-6i
: ISO8859-6I, Latin/Arabiciso8859-8e
: ISO8859-8E, Latin/Hebrewiso8859-8i
: ISO8859-8I, Latin/Hebrewiso8859-1
: ISO8859-1, Latin-1iso8859-2
: ISO8859-2, Latin-2iso8859-3
: ISO8859-3, Latin-3iso8859-4
: ISO8859-4, Latin-4iso8859-5
: ISO8859-5, Latin/Cyrilliciso8859-6
: ISO8859-6, Latin/Arabiciso8859-7
: ISO8859-7, Latin/Greekiso8859-8
: ISO8859-8, Latin/Hebrewiso8859-9
: ISO8859-9, Latin-5iso8859-10
: ISO8859-10, Latin-6iso8859-13
: ISO8859-13, Latin-7iso8859-14
: ISO8859-14, Latin-8iso8859-15
: ISO8859-15, Latin-9iso8859-16
: ISO8859-16, Latin-10cp437
: IBM CodePage 437cp850
: IBM CodePage 850cp852
: IBM CodePage 852cp855
: IBM CodePage 855cp858
: IBM CodePage 858cp860
: IBM CodePage 860cp862
: IBM CodePage 862cp863
: IBM CodePage 863cp865
: IBM CodePage 865cp866
: IBM CodePage 866ebcdic-037
: IBM CodePage 037ebcdic-1040
: IBM CodePage 1140ebcdic-1047
: IBM CodePage 1047koi8r
: KOI8-R, Russian (Cyrillic)koi8u
: KOI8-U, Ukranian (Cyrillic)macintosh
: Macintosh encodingmacintosh-cyrillic
: Macintosh Cyrillic encodingwindows1250
: Windows1250, Central and Eastern Europeanwindows1251
: Windows1251, Russian, Serbian (Cyrillic)windows1252
: Windows1252, Legacywindows1253
: Windows1253, Modern Greekwindows1254
: Windows1254, Turkishwindows1255
: Windows1255, Hebrewwindows1256
: Windows1256, Arabicwindows1257
: Windows1257, Estonian, Latvian, Lithuanianwindows1258
: Windows1258, Vietnamesewindows874
: Windows874, ISO/IEC 8859-11, Latin/Thaiutf-16-bom
: UTF-16 with required BOMutf-16be-bom
: big endian UTF-16 with required BOMutf-16le-bom
: little endian UTF-16 with required BOM
The plain
encoding is special, because it does not validate or transform any input.
A list of regular expressions to match the lines that you want Filebeat to exclude. Filebeat drops any lines that match a regular expression in the list. By default, no lines are dropped. Empty lines are ignored.
If multiline settings are also specified, each multiline message is combined into a single line before the lines are filtered by exclude_lines
.
The following example configures Filebeat to drop any lines that start with DBG
.
filebeat.inputs:
- type: log
...
exclude_lines: ['^DBG']
See Regular expression support for a list of supported regexp patterns.
A list of regular expressions to match the lines that you want Filebeat to include. Filebeat exports only the lines that match a regular expression in the list. By default, all lines are exported. Empty lines are ignored.
If multiline settings also specified, each multiline message is combined into a single line before the lines are filtered by include_lines
.
The following example configures Filebeat to export any lines that start with ERR
or WARN
:
filebeat.inputs:
- type: log
...
include_lines: ['^ERR', '^WARN']
If both include_lines
and exclude_lines
are defined, Filebeat executes include_lines
first and then executes exclude_lines
. The order in which the two options are defined doesn’t matter. The include_lines
option will always be executed before the exclude_lines
option, even if exclude_lines
appears before include_lines
in the config file.
The following example exports all log lines that contain sometext
, except for lines that begin with DBG
(debug messages):
filebeat.inputs:
- type: log
...
include_lines: ['sometext']
exclude_lines: ['^DBG']
See Regular expression support for a list of supported regexp patterns.
The size in bytes of the buffer that each harvester uses when fetching a file. The default is 16384.
The maximum number of bytes that a single log message can have. All bytes after max_bytes
are discarded and not sent. This setting is especially useful for multiline log messages, which can get large. The default is 10MB (10485760).
These options make it possible for Filebeat to decode logs structured as JSON messages. Filebeat processes the logs line by line, so the JSON decoding only works if there is one JSON object per line.
The decoding happens before line filtering and multiline. You can combine JSON decoding with filtering and multiline if you set the message_key
option. This can be helpful in situations where the application logs are wrapped in JSON objects, as with like it happens for example with Docker.
Example configuration:
json.keys_under_root: true
json.add_error_key: true
json.message_key: log
You must specify at least one of the following settings to enable JSON parsing mode:
keys_under_root
- By default, the decoded JSON is placed under a "json" key in the output document. If you enable this setting, the keys are copied top level in the output document. The default is false.
overwrite_keys
- If
keys_under_root
and this setting are enabled, then the values from the decoded JSON object overwrite the fields that Filebeat normally adds (type, source, offset, etc.) in case of conflicts. expand_keys
- If this setting is enabled, Filebeat will recursively de-dot keys in the decoded JSON, and expand them into a hierarchical object structure. For example,
{"a.b.c": 123}
would be expanded into{"a":{"b":{"c":123}}}
. This setting should be enabled when the input is produced by an ECS logger. add_error_key
- If this setting is enabled, Filebeat adds a "error.message" and "error.type: json" key in case of JSON unmarshalling errors or when a
message_key
is defined in the configuration but cannot be used. message_key
- An optional configuration setting that specifies a JSON key on which to apply the line filtering and multiline settings. If specified the key must be at the top level in the JSON object and the value associated with the key must be a string, otherwise no filtering or multiline aggregation will occur.
document_id
- Option configuration setting that specifies the JSON key to set the document id. If configured, the field will be removed from the original json document and stored in
@metadata._id
ignore_decoding_error
- An optional configuration setting that specifies if JSON decoding errors should be logged or not. If set to true, errors will not be logged. The default is false.
Options that control how Filebeat deals with log messages that span multiple lines. See Multiline messages for more information about configuring multiline options.
A list of regular expressions to match the files that you want Filebeat to ignore. By default no files are excluded.
The following example configures Filebeat to ignore all the files that have a gz
extension:
filebeat.inputs:
- type: log
...
exclude_files: ['\.gz$']
See Regular expression support for a list of supported regexp patterns.
If this option is enabled, Filebeat ignores any files that were modified before the specified timespan. Configuring ignore_older
can be especially useful if you keep log files for a long time. For example, if you want to start Filebeat, but only want to send the newest files and files from last week, you can configure this option.
You can use time strings like 2h (2 hours) and 5m (5 minutes). The default is 0, which disables the setting. Commenting out the config has the same effect as setting it to 0.
You must set ignore_older
to be greater than close_inactive
.
The files affected by this setting fall into two categories:
- Files that were never harvested
- Files that were harvested but weren’t updated for longer than
ignore_older
For files which were never seen before, the offset state is set to the end of the file. If a state already exist, the offset is not changed. In case a file is updated again later, reading continues at the set offset position.
The ignore_older
setting relies on the modification time of the file to determine if a file is ignored. If the modification time of the file is not updated when lines are written to a file (which can happen on Windows), the ignore_older
setting may cause Filebeat to ignore files even though content was added at a later time.
To remove the state of previously harvested files from the registry file, use the clean_inactive
configuration option.
Before a file can be ignored by Filebeat, the file must be closed. To ensure a file is no longer being harvested when it is ignored, you must set ignore_older
to a longer duration than close_inactive
.
If a file that’s currently being harvested falls under ignore_older
, the harvester will first finish reading the file and close it after close_inactive
is reached. Then, after that, the file will be ignored.
The close_*
configuration options are used to close the harvester after a certain criteria or time. Closing the harvester means closing the file handler. If a file is updated after the harvester is closed, the file will be picked up again after scan_frequency
has elapsed. However, if the file is moved or deleted while the harvester is closed, Filebeat will not be able to pick up the file again, and any data that the harvester hasn’t read will be lost. The close_*
settings are applied synchronously when Filebeat attempts to read from a file, meaning that if Filebeat is in a blocked state due to blocked output, full queue or other issue, a file that would otherwise be closed remains open until Filebeat once again attempts to read from the file.
When this option is enabled, Filebeat closes the file handle if a file has not been harvested for the specified duration. The counter for the defined period starts when the last log line was read by the harvester. It is not based on the modification time of the file. If the closed file changes again, a new harvester is started and the latest changes will be picked up after scan_frequency
has elapsed.
We recommended that you set close_inactive
to a value that is larger than the least frequent updates to your log files. For example, if your log files get updated every few seconds, you can safely set close_inactive
to 1m
. If there are log files with very different update rates, you can use multiple configurations with different values.
Setting close_inactive
to a lower value means that file handles are closed sooner. However this has the side effect that new log lines are not sent in near real time if the harvester is closed.
The timestamp for closing a file does not depend on the modification time of the file. Instead, Filebeat uses an internal timestamp that reflects when the file was last harvested. For example, if close_inactive
is set to 5 minutes, the countdown for the 5 minutes starts after the harvester reads the last line of the file.
You can use time strings like 2h (2 hours) and 5m (5 minutes). The default is 5m.
Only use this option if you understand that data loss is a potential side effect.
When this option is enabled, Filebeat closes the file handler when a file is renamed. This happens, for example, when rotating files. By default, the harvester stays open and keeps reading the file because the file handler does not depend on the file name. If the close_renamed
option is enabled and the file is renamed or moved in such a way that it’s no longer matched by the file patterns specified for the path, the file will not be picked up again. Filebeat will not finish reading the file.
Do not use this option when path
based file_identity
is configured. It does not make sense to enable the option, as Filebeat cannot detect renames using path names as unique identifiers.
WINDOWS: If your Windows log rotation system shows errors because it can’t rotate the files, you should enable this option.
When this option is enabled, Filebeat closes the harvester when a file is removed. Normally a file should only be removed after it’s inactive for the duration specified by close_inactive
. However, if a file is removed early and you don’t enable close_removed
, Filebeat keeps the file open to make sure the harvester has completed. If this setting results in files that are not completely read because they are removed from disk too early, disable this option.
This option is enabled by default. If you disable this option, you must also disable clean_removed
.
WINDOWS: If your Windows log rotation system shows errors because it can’t rotate files, make sure this option is enabled.
Only use this option if you understand that data loss is a potential side effect.
When this option is enabled, Filebeat closes a file as soon as the end of a file is reached. This is useful when your files are only written once and not updated from time to time. For example, this happens when you are writing every single log event to a new file. This option is disabled by default.
Only use this option if you understand that data loss is a potential side effect. Another side effect is that multiline events might not be completely sent before the timeout expires.
When this option is enabled, Filebeat gives every harvester a predefined lifetime. Regardless of where the reader is in the file, reading will stop after the close_timeout
period has elapsed. This option can be useful for older log files when you want to spend only a predefined amount of time on the files. While close_timeout
will close the file after the predefined timeout, if the file is still being updated, Filebeat will start a new harvester again per the defined scan_frequency
. And the close_timeout for this harvester will start again with the countdown for the timeout.
This option is particularly useful in case the output is blocked, which makes Filebeat keep open file handlers even for files that were deleted from the disk. Setting close_timeout
to 5m
ensures that the files are periodically closed so they can be freed up by the operating system.
If you set close_timeout
to equal ignore_older
, the file will not be picked up if it’s modified while the harvester is closed. This combination of settings normally leads to data loss, and the complete file is not sent.
When you use close_timeout
for logs that contain multiline events, the harvester might stop in the middle of a multiline event, which means that only parts of the event will be sent. If the harvester is started again and the file still exists, only the second part of the event will be sent.
This option is set to 0 by default which means it is disabled.
The clean_*
options are used to clean up the state entries in the registry file. These settings help to reduce the size of the registry file and can prevent a potential inode reuse issue.
Only use this option if you understand that data loss is a potential side effect.
When this option is enabled, Filebeat removes the state of a file after the specified period of inactivity has elapsed. The state can only be removed if the file is already ignored by Filebeat (the file is older than ignore_older
). The clean_inactive
setting must be greater than ignore_older + scan_frequency
to make sure that no states are removed while a file is still being harvested. Otherwise, the setting could result in Filebeat resending the full content constantly because clean_inactive
removes state for files that are still detected by Filebeat. If a file is updated or appears again, the file is read from the beginning.
The clean_inactive
configuration option is useful to reduce the size of the registry file, especially if a large amount of new files are generated every day.
This config option is also useful to prevent Filebeat problems resulting from inode reuse on Linux. For more information, see Inode reuse causes Filebeat to skip lines.
Every time a file is renamed, the file state is updated and the counter for clean_inactive
starts at 0 again.
During testing, you might notice that the registry contains state entries that should be removed based on the clean_inactive
setting. This happens because Filebeat doesn’t remove the entries until it opens the registry again to read a different file. If you are testing the clean_inactive
setting, make sure Filebeat is configured to read from more than one file, or the file state will never be removed from the registry.
When this option is enabled, Filebeat cleans files from the registry if they cannot be found on disk anymore under the last known name. This means also files which were renamed after the harvester was finished will be removed. This option is enabled by default.
If a shared drive disappears for a short period and appears again, all files will be read again from the beginning because the states were removed from the registry file. In such cases, we recommend that you disable the clean_removed
option.
You must disable this option if you also disable close_removed
.
How often Filebeat checks for new files in the paths that are specified for harvesting. For example, if you specify a glob like /var/log/*
, the directory is scanned for files using the frequency specified by scan_frequency
. Specify 1s to scan the directory as frequently as possible without causing Filebeat to scan too frequently. We do not recommend to set this value <1s
.
If you require log lines to be sent in near real time do not use a very low scan_frequency
but adjust close_inactive
so the file handler stays open and constantly polls your files.
The default setting is 10s.
This functionality is in technical preview and may be changed or removed in a future release. Elastic will work to fix any issues, but features in technical preview are not subject to the support SLA of official GA features.
If you specify a value other than the empty string for this setting you can determine whether to use ascending or descending order using scan.order
. Possible values are modtime
and filename
. To sort by file modification time, use modtime
, otherwise use filename
. Leave this option empty to disable it.
If you specify a value for this setting, you can use scan.order
to configure whether files are scanned in ascending or descending order.
The default setting is disabled.
This functionality is in technical preview and may be changed or removed in a future release. Elastic will work to fix any issues, but features in technical preview are not subject to the support SLA of official GA features.
Specifies whether to use ascending or descending order when scan.sort
is set to a value other than none. Possible values are asc
or desc
.
The default setting is asc
.
If this option is set to true, Filebeat starts reading new files at the end of each file instead of the beginning. When this option is used in combination with log rotation, it’s possible that the first log entries in a new file might be skipped. The default setting is false.
This option applies to files that Filebeat has not already processed. If you ran Filebeat previously and the state of the file was already persisted, tail_files
will not apply. Harvesting will continue at the previous offset. To apply tail_files
to all files, you must stop Filebeat and remove the registry file. Be aware that doing this removes ALL previous states.
You can use this setting to avoid indexing old log lines when you run Filebeat on a set of log files for the first time. After the first run, we recommend disabling this option, or you risk losing lines during file rotation.
The symlinks
option allows Filebeat to harvest symlinks in addition to regular files. When harvesting symlinks, Filebeat opens and reads the original file even though it reports the path of the symlink.
When you configure a symlink for harvesting, make sure the original path is excluded. If a single input is configured to harvest both the symlink and the original file, Filebeat will detect the problem and only process the first file it finds. However, if two different inputs are configured (one to read the symlink and the other the original path), both paths will be harvested, causing Filebeat to send duplicate data and the inputs to overwrite each other’s state.
The symlinks
option can be useful if symlinks to the log files have additional metadata in the file name, and you want to process the metadata in Logstash. This is, for example, the case for Kubernetes log files.
Because this option may lead to data loss, it is disabled by default.
The backoff options specify how aggressively Filebeat crawls open files for updates. You can use the default values in most cases.
The backoff
option defines how long Filebeat waits before checking a file again after EOF is reached. The default is 1s, which means the file is checked every second if new lines were added. This enables near real-time crawling. Every time a new line appears in the file, the backoff
value is reset to the initial value. The default is 1s.
The maximum time for Filebeat to wait before checking a file again after EOF is reached. After having backed off multiple times from checking the file, the wait time will never exceed max_backoff
regardless of what is specified for backoff_factor
. Because it takes a maximum of 10s to read a new line, specifying 10s for max_backoff
means that, at the worst, a new line could be added to the log file if Filebeat has backed off multiple times. The default is 10s.
Requirement: Set max_backoff
to be greater than or equal to backoff
and less than or equal to scan_frequency
(backoff <= max_backoff <= scan_frequency
). If max_backoff
needs to be higher, it is recommended to close the file handler instead and let Filebeat pick up the file again.
This option specifies how fast the waiting time is increased. The bigger the backoff factor, the faster the max_backoff
value is reached. The backoff factor increments exponentially. The minimum value allowed is 1. If this value is set to 1, the backoff algorithm is disabled, and the backoff
value is used for waiting for new lines. The backoff
value will be multiplied each time with the backoff_factor
until max_backoff
is reached. The default is 2.
The harvester_limit
option limits the number of harvesters that are started in parallel for one input. This directly relates to the maximum number of file handlers that are opened. The default for harvester_limit
is 0, which means there is no limit. This configuration is useful if the number of files to be harvested exceeds the open file handler limit of the operating system.
Setting a limit on the number of harvesters means that potentially not all files are opened in parallel. Therefore we recommended that you use this option in combination with the close_*
options to make sure harvesters are stopped more often so that new files can be picked up.
Currently if a new harvester can be started again, the harvester is picked randomly. This means it’s possible that the harvester for a file that was just closed and then updated again might be started instead of the harvester for a file that hasn’t been harvested for a longer period of time.
This configuration option applies per input. You can use this option to indirectly set higher priorities on certain inputs by assigning a higher limit of harvesters.
Different file_identity
methods can be configured to suit the environment where you are collecting log messages.
native
- The default behaviour of Filebeat is to differentiate between files using their inodes and device ids.
file_identity.native: ~
path
- To identify files based on their paths use this strategy.
Only use this strategy if your log files are rotated to a folder outside of the scope of your input or not at all. Otherwise you end up with duplicated events.
This strategy does not support renaming files. If an input file is renamed, Filebeat will read it again if the new path matches the settings of the input.
file_identity.path: ~
inode_marker
- If the device id changes from time to time, you must use this method to distinguish files. This option is not supported on Windows.
Set the location of the marker file the following way:
file_identity.inode_marker.path: /logs/.filebeat-marker
The following configuration options are supported by all inputs.
Use the enabled
option to enable and disable inputs. By default, enabled is set to true.
A list of tags that Filebeat includes in the tags
field of each published event. Tags make it easy to select specific events in Kibana or apply conditional filtering in Logstash. These tags will be appended to the list of tags specified in the general configuration.
Example:
filebeat.inputs:
- type: log
. . .
tags: ["json"]
Optional fields that you can specify to add additional information to the output. For example, you might add fields that you can use for filtering log data. Fields can be scalar values, arrays, dictionaries, or any nested combination of these. By default, the fields that you specify here will be grouped under a fields
sub-dictionary in the output document. To store the custom fields as top-level fields, set the fields_under_root
option to true. If a duplicate field is declared in the general configuration, then its value will be overwritten by the value declared here.
filebeat.inputs:
- type: log
. . .
fields:
app_id: query_engine_12
If this option is set to true, the custom fields are stored as top-level fields in the output document instead of being grouped under a fields
sub-dictionary. If the custom field names conflict with other field names added by Filebeat, then the custom fields overwrite the other fields.
A list of processors to apply to the input data.
See Processors for information about specifying processors in your config.
The ingest pipeline ID to set for the events generated by this input.
The pipeline ID can also be configured in the Elasticsearch output, but this option usually results in simpler configuration files. If the pipeline is configured both in the input and output, the option from the input is used.
The pipeline
is always lowercased. If pipeline: Foo-Bar
, then the pipeline name in Elasticsearch needs to be defined as foo-bar
.
If this option is set to true, fields with null
values will be published in the output document. By default, keep_null
is set to false
.
If present, this formatted string overrides the index for events from this input (for elasticsearch outputs), or sets the raw_index
field of the event’s metadata (for other outputs). This string can only refer to the agent name and version and the event timestamp; for access to dynamic fields, use output.elasticsearch.index
or a processor.
Example value: "%{[agent.name]}-myindex-%{+yyyy.MM.dd}"
might expand to "filebeat-myindex-2019.11.01"
.
By default, all events contain host.name
. This option can be set to true
to disable the addition of this field to all events. The default value is false
.