daiyue
daiyue

Reputation: 7448

How to define seperated indexes for different logs in Filebeat/ELK?

I am wondering how to create separated indexes for different logs fetched into logstash (which were later passed onto elasticsearch), so that in kibana, I can define two indexes for them and discover them.

In my case, I have a few client servers (each of which is installed with filebeat) and a centralized log server (ELK). Each client server has different kinds of logs, e.g. redis.log, python logs, mongodb logs, that I like to sort them into different indexes and stored in elasticsearch.

Each client server also serves different purposes, e.g. databases, UIs, applications. Hence I also like to give them different index names (by changing output index in filebeat.yml?).

Upvotes: 7

Views: 13357

Answers (4)

rex wan
rex wan

Reputation: 41

I have read all of the above. Finds out my way.

input {
    stdin {
    }
    jdbc {
      type => "jdbc"
      ....
    }
    http_poller {
        type=>"api"
      ....
    }

}
filter {
....
}
output {
    elasticsearch {
        hosts => ["jlkjkljljkljk"]
        index => "%{type}_index"
        document_id => "%{id}"
    }
    stdout {
        codec => json_lines
    }
}

Upvotes: 0

user4985526
user4985526

Reputation:

filebeat.yml

filebeat.prospectors:

- input_type: log
    paths:
    - /var/log/*.log
  fields: {log_type: toolsmessage}


- input_type: log
  paths:
    - /etc/httpd/logs/ssl_access_*
  fields: {log_type: toolsaccess}

in the logstash.conf.

input {
  beats {
    port => "5043"
  }
}

filter {
  if ([fields][log_type] == "toolsmessage") {
    mutate {
      replace => {
        "[type]" => "toolsmessage"
      }
    }
  }
  else if ([fields][log_type] == "toolsaccess") {
    mutate {
      replace => {
        "[type]" => "toolsaccess"
      }
    }
  }
}

output {
  elasticsearch {
    hosts => ["10.111.119.211:9200"]
    index => "%{type}_index"
  }
 #stdout { codec => rubydebug }
}

Upvotes: 2

A J
A J

Reputation: 2583

In your Filebeat configuration you can use document_type to identify the different logs that you have. Then inside of Logstash you can set the value of the type field to control the destination index.

However before you separate your logs into different indices you should consider leaving them in a single index and using either type or some custom field to distinguish between log types. See index vs type.

Example Filebeat prospector config:

filebeat:
  prospectors:
    - paths:
        - /var/log/redis/*.log
      document_type: redis

    - paths:
        - /var/log/python/*.log
      document_type: python

    - paths:
        - /var/log/mongodb/*.log
      document_type: mongodb

Example Logstash config:

input {
  beats {
    port => 5044
  }
}

output {
  # Customize elasticsearch output for Filebeat.
  if [@metadata][beat] == "filebeat" {
    elasticsearch {
      hosts => "localhost:9200"
      manage_template => false
      # Use the Filebeat document_type value for the Elasticsearch index name.
      index => "%{[@metadata][type]}-%{+YYYY.MM.dd}"
      document_type => "log"
    }
  }
}

Upvotes: 7

alpert
alpert

Reputation: 4655

In logstash you can define multiple input, filter or output plugins with the help of tags:

input {
    file {
            type => "redis"
            path => "/home/redis/log"
    }
    file {
            type => "python"
            path => "/home/python/log"
    }
} 
filter {
    if [type] == "redis" {
            # processing .......
    }
    if [type] == "python" {
            # processing .......
    }
}
output {
    if [type] == "redis" {
            # output to elasticsearch redis
            index => "redis" 
    }
    if [type] == "python" {
            # output to elasticsearch python
            index => "python"
    }
}

Upvotes: 1

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