Skip to content

joshuar/puppet-logstash

 
 

Repository files navigation

elastic/logstash

A Puppet module for managing and configuring Logstash.

Build Status

Logstash Versions

This module, "elastic/logstash" supports only Logstash 5.x. For earlier Logstash versions, support is provided by the legacy module, "elasticsearch/logstash".

Requirements

  • Puppet 3.8.6 or better.
  • The stdlib Puppet library.

Optional:

  • The apt (>= 2.0.0) Puppet library when using repo management on Debian/Ubuntu.
  • The zypprepo Puppet library when using repo management on SLES/SuSE

Quick Start

This minimum viable configuration ensures that Logstash is installed, enabled, and running:

include logstash

# You must provide a valid pipeline configuration for the service to start.
logstash::configfile { 'my_ls_config':
  content => template('path/to/config.file'),
}

Package and service options

Choosing a Logstash minor version

class { 'logstash':
  version => '5.0.2',
}

Manual repository management

You may want to manage repositories manually. You can disable automatic repository management like this:

class { 'logstash':
  manage_repo => false,
}

Using an explicit package source

Rather than use your distribution's repository system, you can specify an explicit package to fetch and install.

From an HTTP/HTTPS/FTP URL

class { 'logstash':
  package_url => 'https://artifacts.elastic.co/downloads/logstash/logstash-5.1.1.rpm',
}

From a 'puppet://' URL

class { 'logstash':
  package_url => 'puppet:///modules/my_module/logstash-5.1.1.rpm',
}

From a local file on the agent

class { 'logstash':
  package_url => 'file:///tmp/logstash-5.1.1.rpm',
}

Allow automatic point-release upgrades

class { 'logstash':
  auto_upgrade => true,
}

Do not run as a service

class { 'logstash':
  status => 'disabled',
}

Disable automatic restarts

Under normal circumstances, changing a configuration will trigger a restart of the service. This behaviour can be disabled:

class { 'logstash':
  restart_on_change => false,
}

Disable and remove Logstash

class { 'logstash':
  ensure => 'absent',
}

Logstash config files

Settings

Logstash uses several files to define settings for the service and associated Java runtime. The settings files can be configured with class parameters.

logstash.yml with flat keys

class { 'logstash':
  settings => {
    'pipeline.batch.size'  => 25,
    'pipeline.batch.delay' => 5,
  }
}

logstash.yml with nested keys

class { 'logstash':
  settings => {
    'pipeline' => {
      'batch' => {
        'size' => 25,
        'delay => 5,
      }
    }
  }
}

jvm.options

class { 'logstash':
  jvm_options => [
    '-Xms1g',
    '-Xmx1g',
  ]
}

startup.options

class { 'logstash':
  startup_options => {
    'LS_NICE' => '10',
  }
}

Pipeline Configuration

Pipeline configuration files can be declared with the logstash::configfile type.

logstash::configfile { 'inputs':
  content => template('path/to/input.conf.erb'),
}

or

logstash::configfile { 'filters':
  source => 'puppet:///path/to/filter.conf',
}

For simple cases, it's possible to provide your Logstash config as an inline string:

logstash::configfile { 'basic_ls_config':
  content => 'input { heartbeat {} } output { null {} }',
}

If you want to use hiera to specify your configs, include the following create_resources call in your node manifest or in manifests/site.pp:

$logstash_configs = hiera('logstash_configs', {})
create_resources('logstash::configfile', $logstash_configs)

...and then include the following config within the corresponding hiera file:

"logstash_configs": {
  "config-name": {
    "template": "logstash/config.file.erb",
  }
}

Patterns

Many plugins (notably Grok) use patterns. While many are included in Logstash already, additional site-specific patterns can be managed as well.

logstash::patternfile { 'extra_patterns':
  source => 'puppet:///path/to/extra_pattern',
}

By default the resulting filename of the pattern will match that of the source. This can be over-ridden:

logstash::patternfile { 'extra_patterns_firewall':
  source   => 'puppet:///path/to/extra_patterns_firewall_v1',
  filename => 'extra_patterns_firewall',
}

IMPORTANT NOTE: Using logstash::patternfile places new patterns in the correct directory, however, it does NOT cause the path to be included automatically for filters (example: grok filter). You will still need to include this path (by default, /etc/logstash/patterns/) explicitly in your configurations.

Example: If using 'grok' in one of your configurations, you must include the pattern path in each filter like this:

# Note: this example is Logstash configuration, not a Puppet resource.
# Logstash and Puppet look very similar!
grok {
  patterns_dir => "/etc/logstash/patterns/"
  ...
}

Plugin management

Installing by name (from RubyGems.org)

logstash::plugin { 'logstash-input-beats': }

Installing from a local Gem

logstash::plugin { 'logstash-input-custom':
  source => '/tmp/logstash-input-custom-0.1.0.gem',
}

Installing from a 'puppet://' URL

logstash::plugin { 'logstash-filter-custom':
  source => 'puppet:///modules/my_ls_module/logstash-filter-custom-0.1.0.gem',
}

Installing from an 'http(s)://' URL

logstash::plugin { 'x-pack':
  source => 'https://artifacts.elastic.co/downloads/packs/x-pack/x-pack-5.3.0.zip',
}

Support

Need help? Join us in #logstash on Freenode IRC or on the https://discuss.elastic.co/c/logstash discussion forum.

About

Puppet module to manage logstash

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Puppet 47.3%
  • Ruby 45.1%
  • HTML 3.2%
  • Shell 2.5%
  • Makefile 1.9%