Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
147 lines (120 loc) · 4.67 KB

README.rst

File metadata and controls

147 lines (120 loc) · 4.67 KB

logstash formula

Install and configure Logstash for Debian and RedHat based systems using pillar data.

Note

See the full Salt Formulas installation and usage instructions.

Logstash requires Java, either the Oracle implementation or OpenJDK. Since that is outside the scope of this formula, you must ensure that Java is installed before applying this formula.

Available states

Install the logstash package, set up input/filter/output configuration files, and enable the service. Compatible only with Salt 2014.1.10+, due to requirement for "mapping" test in jinja 2.6.

Usage

See pillar.example for an example configuration.

Example

The easiest way to understand the formula is to look at an example. The following is example pillar data:

logstash:
    inputs:
        -
            plugin_name: file
            path:
                - /var/log/syslog
                - /var/log/authlog
            type: syslog
    filters:
        -
            plugin_name: grok
            match:
                message: '%{SYSLOGTIMESTAMP:syslog_timestamp} %{SYSLOGHOST:syslog_hostname} %{DATA:syslog_program}(?:\[%{POSINT:syslog_pid}\])?: %{GREEDYDATA:syslog_message}'
            add_field:
                received_at: '%{@timestamp}'
                received_from: '%{host}'
    outputs:
        -
            plugin_name: lumberjack
            hosts:
                - logs.example.com
            port: 5000
            ssl_certificate: /etc/ssl/certs/lumberjack.crt

That would result in this logstash config (the three separate files it would create are concatenated here):

input {
    file {
        path => [
            "/var/log/syslog",
            "/var/log/auth.log"
        ]
        type => "syslog"
    }
}
filter {
    grok {
        match => {
            message => "%{SYSLOGTIMESTAMP:syslog_timestamp} %{SYSLOGHOST:syslog_hostname} %{DATA:syslog_program}(?:\[%{POSINT:syslog_pid}\])?: %{GREEDYDATA:syslog_message}"
        }
        add_field => {
            received_at => "%{@timestamp}"
            received_from => "%{host}"
        }
    }
}
output {
    lumberjack {
        hosts => [
            "logs.example.com"
        ]
        port => "5000"
        ssl_certificate => "/etc/ssl/certs/lumberjack.crt"
    }
}

For a more complicated example, including conditionals, see pillar.example.

Pillar Data Explained

The pillar data is structured as a dictionary with key 'logstash', followed by three optional keys:

  • inputs: A list of input plugins, to be rendered in-order to /etc/logstash/conf.d/01-inputs.conf
  • filters: A list of filter plugins, to be rendered in-order to /etc/logstash/conf.d/02-filters.conf
  • outputs: A list of output plugins, to be rendered in-order to /etc/logstash/conf.d/03-outputs.conf

Each list item for any of the three plugin types contains arbitrary attributes of type string, number, dictionary, or list which will be rendered into Logstash's configuration syntax. For a list of plugins and their configuration attributes,see <http://logstash.net/docs/1.4.2/>.

Using Conditionals

The only plugin attributes that are unique for this formula is the "cond" attribute, which is used to set up conditionals. For example you may want to filter a logstash entry only if it meets certain criteria, such as being of a certain type. This formula supports if/else if/else by embedding the conditional to be used in the "cond" attribute of the plugin. For this reason, this formula does not support nested conditionals at this time. See pillar.example for an example of the conditional functionality.

Overriding Defaults

This formula sets up certain defaults in map.jinja, specifically:

  • Name of the logstash package is logstash
  • Name of the logstash service is logstash
  • The latest version of logstash available will be installed and kept up to date, instead of a one-time install of the latest version (e.g. use states.pkg.latest instead of states.pkg.installed)
  • The configuration files will use an indentation of four spaces

These settings can be overridden by adding the appropriate keys to your pillar data, for example:

logstash:
    pkg: logstash-altversion
    svc: logstash-alterversion
    pkgstate: installed # instead of latest
    indent: 2