Variables and conditions in input configurations
editVariables and conditions in input configurations
editWhen running Elastic Agent in some environments, you might not know all the input configuration details up front. To solve this problem, the input configuration accepts variables and conditions that get evaluated at runtime using information from the running environment. Similar to autodiscovery, these capabilities allow you to apply configurations dynamically.
Let’s consider a unique agent policy that is deployed on two machines: a Linux
machine named "linux-app" and a Windows machine named "winapp". Notice that
the configuration has some variable references: ${host.name} and
${host.platform}:
inputs:
- id: unique-logfile-id
type: logfile
streams:
- paths: /var/log/${host.name}/another.log
condition: ${host.platform} == "linux"
- path: c:/service/app.log
condition: ${host.platform} == "windows"
At runtime, Elastic Agent resolves variables and evaluates the conditions based on values provided by the environment, generating two possible input configurations.
On the Windows machine:
inputs:
- id: unique-logfile-id
type: logfile
streams:
- path: c:/service/app.log
On the Linux machine:
inputs:
- id: unique-logfile-id
type: logfile
streams:
- paths: /var/log/linux-app/another.log
Using variable substitution along with conditions allows you to create concise, but flexible input configurations that adapt to their deployed environment.
Variable substitution
editThe syntax for variable substitution is ${var}, where var is the name of a
variable defined by a provider. A provider defines key/value pairs that are
used for variable substitution and conditions.
Elastic Agent supports a variety of providers, such as host and local, that
supply variables to Elastic Agent. For example, earlier you saw ${host.name} used to
resolve the path to the host’s log file based on the {host.platform} value. Both of these values
were provided by the host provider.
All providers are enabled by default when Elastic Agent starts. If a provider cannot be configured, its variables are ignored.
Refer to Providers for more detail.
The following agent policy uses a custom key named foo to resolve a value
defined by a local provider:
inputs:
- id: unique-logfile-id
type: logfile
streams:
- paths: /var/log/${foo}/another.log
providers:
local:
vars:
foo: bar
The policy generated by this configuration looks like this:
inputs:
- id: unique-logfile-id
type: logfile
streams:
- paths: /var/log/bar/another.log
When an input uses a variable substitution that is not present in the current key/value mappings being evaluated, the input is removed in the result.
For example, this agent policy uses an unknown key:
inputs:
- id: logfile-foo
type: logfile
path: "/var/log/foo"
- id: logfile-unknown
type: logfile
path: "${ unknown.key }"
The policy generated by this configuration looks like this:
inputs:
- id: logfile-foo
type: logfile
path: "/var/log/foo"
Alternative variables and constants
editVariable substitution can also define alternative variables or a constant.
To define a constant, use either ' or ". When a constant is reached during
variable evaluation, any remaining variables are ignored, so a constant should
be the last entry in the substitution.
To define alternatives, use | followed by the next variable or constant.
The power comes from allowing the input to define the preference order of the
substitution by chaining multiple variables together.
For example, the following agent policy chains together multiple variables to
set the log path based on information provided by the running container
environment. The constant /var/log/other is used to end of the path, which is
common to both providers:
inputs:
- id: logfile-foo
type: logfile
path: "/var/log/foo"
- id: logfile-container
type: logfile
path: "${docker.paths.log|kubernetes.container.paths.log|'/var/log/other'}"
Conditions
editA condition is a boolean expression that you can specify in your agent policy to control whether a configuration is applied to the running Elastic Agent. You can set a condition on inputs, streams, or even processors.
In this example, the input is applied if the host platform is Linux:
inputs:
- id: unique-logfile-id
type: logfile
streams:
- paths:
- /var/log/syslog
condition: ${host.platform} == 'linux'
In this example, the stream is applied if the host platform is not Windows:
inputs:
- id: unique-system-metrics-id
type: system/metrics
streams:
- metricset: load
data_stream.dataset: system.cpu
condition: ${host.platform} != 'windows'
In this example, the processor is applied if the host platform is not Windows:
inputs:
- id: unique-system-metrics-id
type: system/metrics
streams:
- metricset: load
data_stream.dataset: system.cpu
processors:
- add_fields:
fields:
platform: ${host.platform}
to: host
condition: ${host.platform} != 'windows'
Condition syntax
editThe conditions supported by Elastic Agent are based on EQL's boolean syntax, but add support for variables from providers and functions to manipulate the values.
Supported operators:
-
Full PEMDAS math support for
+ - * / %. -
Relational operators
< <= >= > == != -
Logical operators
andandor
Functions:
Types:
-
Booleans
trueandfalse
Condition examples
editRun only when a specific label is included.
arrayContains(${docker.labels}, 'monitor')
Skip on Linux platform or macOS.
${host.platform} != "linux" and ${host.platform} != "darwin"
Run only for specific labels.
arrayContains(${docker.labels}, 'monitor') or arrayContains(${docker.label}, 'production')
Function reference
editThe condition syntax supports the following functions.
add
editadd(Number, Number) Number
Usage:
add(1, 2) == 3
add(5, ${foo}) >= 5
arrayContains
editarrayContains(Array, String) Boolean
Usage:
arrayContains(${docker.labels}, 'monitor')
concat
editconcat(String, String) String
Parameters are coerced into strings before the concatenation.
Usage:
concat("foo", "bar") == "foobar"
concat(${var1}, ${var2}) != "foobar"
divide
editdivide(Number, Number) Number
Usage:
divide(25, 5) > 0
divide(${var1}, ${var2}) > 7
endsWith
editendsWith(String, String) Boolean
Usage:
endsWith("hello world", "hello") == true
endsWith(${var1}, "hello") != true
hasKey
edithasKey(Dictionary, String) Boolean
Usage:
hasKey(${host}, "platform")
indexOf
editindexOf(String, String, Number?) Number
Returns -1 if the string is not found.
Usage:
indexOf("hello", "llo") == 2
indexOf(${var1}, "hello") >= 0
length
editlength(Array|Dictionary|string)
Usage:
length("foobar") > 2
length(${docker.labels}) > 0
length(${host}) > 2
match
editmatch(String, Regexp) boolean
Regexp supports Go’s regular expression syntax. Conditions that use
regular expressions are more expensive to run. If speed is critical, consider
using endWiths or startsWith.
Usage:
match("hello world", "^hello") == true
match(${var1}, "world$") == true
modulo
editmodulo(number, number) Number
Usage:
modulo(25, 5) > 0
modulo(${var1}, ${var2}) == 0
multiply
editmultiply(Number, Number) Number
Usage:
multiply(5, 5) == 25
multiple(${var1}, ${var2}) > x
number
editnumber(String) Integer
Usage:
number("42") == 42
number(${var1}) == 42
startsWith
editstartsWith(String, String) Boolean
Usage:
startsWith("hello world", "hello") == true
startsWith(${var1}, "hello") != true
string
editstring(Number) String
Usage:
string(42) == "42"
string(${var1}) == "42"
stringContains
editstringContains(String, String) Boolean
Usage:
stringContains("hello world", "hello") == true
stringContains(${var1}, "hello") != true
subtract
editsubtract(Number, Number) Number
Usage:
subtract(5, 1) == 4
subtract(${foo}, 2) != 2
Debugging
editTo debug configurations that include variable substitution and conditions, use
the inspect command. This command shows the configuration that’s generated
after variables are replaced and conditions are applied.
First run the Elastic Agent. For this example, we’ll use the following agent policy:
outputs:
default:
type: elasticsearch
hosts: [127.0.0.1:9200]
username: elastic
password: changeme
providers:
local_dynamic:
items:
- vars:
key: value1
processors:
- add_fields:
fields:
custom: match1
target: dynamic
- vars:
key: value2
processors:
- add_fields:
fields:
custom: match2
target: dynamic
- vars:
key: value3
processors:
- add_fields:
fields:
custom: match3
target: dynamic
inputs:
- id: unique-logfile-id
type: logfile
enabled: true
streams:
- paths:
- /var/log/${local_dynamic.key}
Then run elastic-agent inspect --variables to see the generated configuration. For
example:
$ ./elastic-agent inspect --variables
inputs:
- enabled: true
id: unique-logfile-id-local_dynamic-0
original_id: unique-logfile-id
processors:
- add_fields:
fields:
custom: match1
target: dynamic
streams:
- paths:
- /var/log/value1
type: logfile
- enabled: true
id: unique-logfile-id-local_dynamic-1
original_id: unique-logfile-id
processors:
- add_fields:
fields:
custom: match2
target: dynamic
streams:
- paths:
- /var/log/value2
type: logfile
- enabled: true
id: unique-logfile-id-local_dynamic-2
original_id: unique-logfile-id
processors:
- add_fields:
fields:
custom: match3
target: dynamic
streams:
- paths:
- /var/log/value3
type: logfile
outputs:
default:
hosts:
- 127.0.0.1:9200
password: changeme
type: elasticsearch
username: elastic
providers:
local_dynamic:
items:
- processors:
- add_fields:
fields:
custom: match1
target: dynamic
vars:
key: value1
- processors:
- add_fields:
fields:
custom: match2
target: dynamic
vars:
key: value2
- processors:
- add_fields:
fields:
custom: match3
target: dynamic
vars:
key: value3
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