gelf

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  • Version: 3.0.2
  • Released on: July 14, 2016
  • Changelog

Getting Help

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For questions about the plugin, open a topic in the Discuss forums. For bugs or feature requests, open an issue in Github. For the list of Elastic supported plugins, please consult the Elastic Support Matrix.

Description

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This input will read GELF messages as events over the network, making it a good choice if you already use Graylog2 today.

The main use case for this input is to leverage existing GELF logging libraries such as the GELF log4j appender. A library used by this plugin has a bug which prevents it parsing uncompressed data. If you use the log4j appender you need to configure it like this to force gzip even for small messages:

<Socket name="logstash" protocol="udp" host="logstash.example.com" port="5001">
   <GelfLayout compressionType="GZIP" compressionThreshold="1" />
</Socket>

 

Synopsis

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This plugin supports the following configuration options:

Required configuration options:

gelf {
}

Available configuration options:

Details

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add_field

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  • Value type is hash
  • Default value is {}

Add a field to an event

codec

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  • Value type is codec
  • Default value is "plain"

The codec used for input data. Input codecs are a convenient method for decoding your data before it enters the input, without needing a separate filter in your Logstash pipeline.

enable_metric

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  • Value type is boolean
  • Default value is true

Disable or enable metric logging for this specific plugin instance by default we record all the metrics we can, but you can disable metrics collection for a specific plugin.

host

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  • Value type is string
  • Default value is "0.0.0.0"

The IP address or hostname to listen on.

  • Value type is string
  • There is no default value for this setting.

Add a unique ID to the plugin configuration. If no ID is specified, Logstash will generate one. It is strongly recommended to set this ID in your configuration. This is particularly useful when you have two or more plugins of the same type, for example, if you have 2 grok filters. Adding a named ID in this case will help in monitoring Logstash when using the monitoring APIs.

output {
 stdout {
   id => "my_plugin_id"
 }
}

port

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  • Value type is number
  • Default value is 12201

The port to listen on. Remember that ports less than 1024 (privileged ports) may require root to use.

remap

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  • Value type is boolean
  • Default value is true

Whether or not to remap the GELF message fields to Logstash event fields or leave them intact.

Remapping converts the following GELF fields to Logstash equivalents:

  • full\_message becomes event["message"].
  • if there is no full\_message, short\_message becomes event["message"].

strip_leading_underscore

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  • Value type is boolean
  • Default value is true

Whether or not to remove the leading \_ in GELF fields or leave them in place. (Logstash < 1.2 did not remove them by default.). Note that GELF version 1.1 format now requires all non-standard fields to be added as an "additional" field, beginning with an underscore.

e.g. \_foo becomes foo

tags

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  • Value type is array
  • There is no default value for this setting.

Add any number of arbitrary tags to your event.

This can help with processing later.

type

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  • Value type is string
  • There is no default value for this setting.

This is the base class for Logstash inputs. Add a type field to all events handled by this input.

Types are used mainly for filter activation.

The type is stored as part of the event itself, so you can also use the type to search for it in Kibana.

If you try to set a type on an event that already has one (for example when you send an event from a shipper to an indexer) then a new input will not override the existing type. A type set at the shipper stays with that event for its life even when sent to another Logstash server.