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Amazon ELB

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| | |
| --- | --- |
| Version | 2.38.2 (View all) |
| Compatible Kibana version(s) | 8.16.2 or higher |
| Supported Serverless project types
What’s this? | Security
Observability |
| Subscription level
What’s this? | Basic |

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The Amazon ELB integration allows you to monitor Amazon Elastic Load Balancing (ELB)—a tool that distributes application traffic to multiple targets.

Use the Amazon ELB integration to collect logs and metrics with detailed information about requests sent to the load balancer. Then visualize that data in Kibana, create alerts to notify you if something goes wrong, and reference those logs and metrics when troubleshooting an issue.

For example, you could use this data to analyze traffic patterns, view healthy and unhealthy hosts, and track connection and backend errors.

Important

Extra AWS charges on API requests will be generated by this integration. Check API Requests for more details.

The Amazon ELB integration collects two types of data: logs and metrics.

Logs help you keep a record of events happening in Amazon ELB. Logs collected by the Amazon ELB integration include the time a request was received, the client’s IP address, latencies, request paths, server responses, and more. See more details in the Logs reference.

Metrics give you insight into the state of Amazon ELB. Metrics collected by the Amazon ELB integration include the host name, IP address, average latency, and more. See more details in the Metrics reference.

You need Elasticsearch for storing and searching your data and Kibana for visualizing and managing it. You can use our hosted Elasticsearch Service on Elastic Cloud, which is recommended, or self-manage the Elastic Stack on your own hardware.

Before using any AWS integration you will need:

  • AWS Credentials to connect with your AWS account.
  • AWS Permissions to make sure the user you’re using to connect has permission to share the relevant data.

For more details about these requirements, please take a look at the AWS integration documentation.

Use this integration if you only need to collect data from the Amazon ELB service.

If you want to collect data from two or more AWS services, consider using the AWS integration. When you configure the AWS integration, you can collect data from as many AWS services as you’d like.

For step-by-step instructions on how to set up an integration, see the Getting started guide.

To send classic ELB access logs to an S3 bucket, see enable access logs for classic load balancer.

For an application load balancer, see enable access log for application load balancer and enable connection log for application load balancer.

For a network load balancer, see enable access log for network load balancer.

The CloudWatch logs input has several advanced options to fit specific use cases.

AWS CloudWatch Logs sometimes takes extra time to make the latest logs available to clients like the Agent.

The CloudWatch integration offers the latency setting to address this scenario. Latency translates the query’s time range to consider the CloudWatch Logs latency. For example, a 5m latency means the integration will query CloudWatch for logs available 5 minutes ago.

If you are collecting log events from multiple log groups using log_group_name_prefix, you should review the value of the number_of_workers.

The number_of_workers setting defines the number of workers assigned to reading from log groups. Each log group matching the log_group_name_prefix requires a worker to keep log ingestion as close to real-time as possible. For example, if log_group_name_prefix matches five log groups, then number_of_workers should be set to 5. The default value is 1.

The elb dataset collects logs from AWS ELBs.

ECS Field Reference

Please refer to the following document for detailed information on ECS fields.

ECS Field Reference

Please refer to the following document for detailed information on ECS fields.