- Auditbeat Reference: other versions:
- Overview
- Contributing to Beats
- Getting started with Auditbeat
- Breaking changes in 6.2
- Setting up and running Auditbeat
- Configuring Auditbeat
- Specify which modules to run
- Specify general settings
- Reload the configuration dynamically
- Configure the internal queue
- Configure the output
- Specify SSL settings
- Filter and enhance the exported data
- Parse data by using ingest node
- Set up project paths
- Set up the Kibana endpoint
- Load the Kibana dashboards
- Load the Elasticsearch index template
- Configure logging
- Use environment variables in the configuration
- YAML tips and gotchas
- Regular expression support
- auditbeat.reference.yml
- Modules
- Exported fields
- Monitoring Auditbeat
- Securing Auditbeat
- Troubleshooting
WARNING: Version 6.2 of Auditbeat has passed its EOL date.
This documentation is no longer being maintained and may be removed. If you are running this version, we strongly advise you to upgrade. For the latest information, see the current release documentation.
Debug
editDebug
editBy default, Auditbeat sends all its output to syslog. When you run Auditbeat in
the foreground, you can use the -e
command line flag to redirect the output to
standard error instead. For example:
auditbeat -e
The default configuration file is auditbeat.yml (the location of the file varies by
platform). You can use a different configuration file by specifying the -c
flag. For example:
auditbeat -e -c myauditbeatconfig.yml
You can increase the verbosity of debug messages by enabling one or more debug
selectors. For example, to view the published transactions, you can start Auditbeat
with the publish
selector like this:
auditbeat -e -d "publish"
If you want all the debugging output (fair warning, it’s quite a lot), you can
use *
, like this:
auditbeat -e -d "*"