TL;DR: a sane, no-brainer K8S+Helm distribution of Fluentd with batteries included, config validation, no needs to restart, with sensible defaults and best practices built-in. Use Kubernetes labels to filter/route logs!
kube-fluentd-operator configures Fluentd in a Kubernetes environment. It compiles a Fluentd configuration from configmaps (one per namespace) - similar to how an Ingress controller would compile nginx configuration from several Ingress resources. This way only one instance of Fluentd can handle all log shipping while the cluster admin need NOT coordinate with namespace admins.
Cluster administrators set up Fluentd once only and namespace owners can configure log routing as they wish. kube-fluentd-operator will re-configure Fluentd accordingly and make sure logs originating from a namespace will not be accessible by other tenants/namespaces.
kube-fluentd-operator also extends the Fluentd configuration language making it possible to refer to pods based on their labels and the container. This enables for very fined-grained targeting of log streams for the purpose of pre-processing before shipping.
Finally, it is possible to ingest logs from a file on the container filesystem. While this is not recommended, there are still legacy or misconfigured apps that insist on logging to the local filesystem.
The easiest way to get started is using the Helm chart. Official images are not published yet, so you need to pass the image.repository and image.tag manually:
git clone [email protected]:vmware/kube-fluentd-operator.git
helm install --name kfo ./kube-fluentd-operator/log-router \
--set rbac.create=true \
--set image.tag=v1.7.0 \
--set image.repository=jvassev/kube-fluentd-operator
Alternatively, deploy the Helm chart from a Github release:
CHART_URL='https://github.com/vmware/kube-fluentd-operator/releases/download/v1.7.0/log-router-0.2.5.tgz'
helm install --name kfo ${CHART_URL} \
--set rbac.create=true \
--set image.tag=v1.7.0 \
--set image.repository=jvassev/kube-fluentd-operator
Then create a namespace demo
and a configmap describing where all logs from demo
should go to. The configmap must contain an entry called "fluent.conf". Finally, point the kube-fluentd-operator to this configmap using annotations.
kubectl create ns demo
cat > fluent.conf << EOF
<match **>
@type null
</match>
EOF
# Create the configmap with a single entry "fluent.conf"
kubectl create configmap fluentd-config --namespace demo --from-file=fluent.conf=fluent.conf
# The following step is optional: the fluentd-config is the default configmap name.
# kubectl annotate demo logging.csp.vmware.com/fluentd-configmap=fluentd-config
In a minute, this configuration would be translated to something like this:
<match demo.**>
@type null
</match>
Even though the tag **
was used in the <match>
directive, the kube-fluentd-operator correctly expands this to demo.**
. Indeed, if another tag which does not start with demo.
was used, it would have failed validation. Namespace admins can safely assume that they has a dedicated Fluentd for themselves.
All configuration errors are stored in the annotation logging.csp.vmware.com/fluentd-status
. Try replacing **
with an invalid tag like 'hello-world'. After a minute, verify that the error message looks like this:
# extract just the value of logging.csp.vmware.com/fluentd-status
kubectl get ns demo -o jsonpath='{.metadata.annotations.logging\.csp\.vmware\.com/fluentd-status}'
bad tag for <match>: hello-world. Tag must start with **, $thins or demo
When the configuration is made valid again the fluentd-status
is set to "".
To see kube-fluentd-operator in action you need a cloud log collector like logz.io, loggly, papertrail or ELK accessible from the K8S cluster. A simple loggly configuration looks like this (replace TOKEN with your customer token):
<match **>
@type loggly
loggly_url https://logs-01.loggly.com/inputs/TOKEN/tag/fluentd
</match>
Get the code using go get
:
go get -u github.com/vmware/kube-fluentd-operator/config-reloader
cd $GOPATH/src/github.com/vmware/kube-fluentd-operator
# build a base-image
cd base-image && make
# build helm chart
cd log-router && make
# build the daemon
cd config-reloader
# get vendor/ deps, you need to have "dep" tool installed
make dep
make install
# run with mock data (loaded from the examples/ folder)
make run-local-fs
# inspect what is generated from the above command
ls -l tmp/
log-router
: Builds the Helm chartbase-image
: Builds a Fluentd 1.x image with a curated list of pluginsconfig-reloader
: Builds the daemon that generates fluentd configuration files
This is where interesting work happens. The dependency graph shows the high-level package interaction and general dataflow.
config
: handles startup configuration, reading and validationdatasource
: fetches Pods, Namespaces, ConfigMaps from Kubernetesfluentd
: parses Fluentd config files into an object graphprocessors
: walks this object graph doing validations and modifications. All features are implemented as chainedProcessor
subtypesgenerator
: serializes the processed object graph to the filesystem for Fluentd to readcontroller
: orchestrates the high-leveldatasource
->processor
->generator
pipeline.
It works be rewriting the user-provided configuration. This is possible because kube-fluentd-operator knows about the kubernetes cluster, the current namespace and
also has some sensible defaults built in. To get a quick idea what happens behind the scenes consider this configuration deployed in a namespace called monitoring
:
<filter $labels(server=apache)>
@type parse
format apache2
</filter>
<filter $labels(app=django)>
@type detect_exceptions
language python
</filter>
<match **>
@type es
</match>
It gets processed into the following configuration which is then fed to Fluentd:
<filter kube.monitoring.*.*>
@type record_transformer
enable_ruby true
<record>
kubernetes_pod_label_values ${record["kubernetes"]["labels"]["app"]&.gsub(/[.-]/, '_') || '_'}.${record["kubernetes"]["labels"]["server"]&.gsub(/[.-]/, '_') || '_'}
</record>
</filter>
<match kube.monitoring.*.*>
@type rewrite_tag_filter
<rule>
key kubernetes_pod_label_values
pattern ^(.+)$
tag ${tag}._labels.$1
</rule>
</match>
<filter kube.monitoring.*.*.**>
@type record_transformer
remove_keys kubernetes_pod_label_values
</filter>
<filter kube.monitoring.*.*._labels.*.apache _proc.kube.monitoring.*.*._labels.*.apache>
@type parse
format apache2
</filter>
<match kube.monitoring.*.*._labels.django.*>
@type rewrite_tag_filter
<rule>
invert true
key _dummy
pattern /ZZ/
tag 3bfd045d94ce15036a8e3ff77fcb470e0e02ebee._proc.${tag}
</rule>
</match>
<match 3bfd045d94ce15036a8e3ff77fcb470e0e02ebee._proc.kube.monitoring.*.*._labels.django.*>
@type detect_exceptions
remove_tag_prefix 3bfd045d94ce15036a8e3ff77fcb470e0e02ebee
stream container_info
</match>
<match kube.monitoring.*.*._labels.*.* _proc.kube.monitoring.*.*._labels.*.*>
@type es
</match>
To give the illusion that every namespace runs a dedicated Fluentd the user-provided configuration is post-processed. In general, expressions starting with $
are macros that are expanded. These two directives are equivalent: <match **>
, <match $thisns>
. Almost always, using the **
is the preferred way to match logs: this way you can reuse the same configuration for multiple namespaces.
The kube-system
is treated differently. Its configuration is not processed further as it is assumed only the cluster admin can manipulate resources in this namespace. If you don't plan to use any of the advanced features described bellow, you can just route all logs from all namespaces using this snippet at the kube-system
level:
<match **>
@type ...
# destination configuration omitted
</match>
**
in this context is not processed and it means literally everything.
Fluentd assumes it is running in a distro with systemd and generates logs with these Fluentd tags:
systemd.{unit}
: the journal of a systemd unit, for examplesystemd.docker.service
docker
: all docker logs, not containers. If systemd is used, the docker logs are insystemd.docker.service
k8s.{component}
: logs from a K8S component, for examplek8s.kube-apiserver
kube.{namespace}.{pod_name}.{container_name}
: a log originating from (namespace, pod, container)
As kube-system
is processed first, a match-all directive would consume all logs and any other namespace configuration will become irrelevant (unless <copy>
is used).
A recommended configuration for the kube-system
namespace is this one - it captures all but the user namespaces' logs:
<match systemd.** kube.kube-system.** k8s.** docker>
# all k8s-internal and OS-level logs
# destination config omitted...
</match>
A very useful feature is the <filter>
and the $labels
macro to define parsing at the namespace level. For example, the config-reloader container uses the logfmt
format. This makes it easy to use structured logging and ingest json data into a remote log ingestion service.
<filter $labels(app=log-router, _container=reloader)>
@type parse
format logfmt
reserve_data true
</filter>
<match **>
@type loggly
# destination config omitted
</match>
The above config will pipe all logs from the pods labelled with app=log-router
through a logfmt parser before sending them to loggly. Again, this configuration is valid in any namespace. If the namespace doesn't contain any log-router
components then the <filter>
directive is never activated. The _container
is sort of a "meta" label and it allows for targeting the log stream of a specific container in a multi-container pod.
All plugins that change the fluentd tag are disabled for security reasons. Otherwise a rogue configuration may divert other namespace's logs to itself by prepending its name to the tag.
The only allowed <source>
directive is of type mounted-file
. It is used to ingest a log file from a container on an emptyDir
-mounted volume:
<source>
@type mounted-file
path /var/log/welcome.log
labels app=grafana, _container=test-container
<parse>
@type none
</parse>
</source>
The labels
parameter is similar to the $labels
macro and helps the daemon locate all pods that might log to the given file path. The <parse>
directive is optional and if omitted the default @type none
will be used. If you know the format of the log file you can explicitly specify it, for example @type apache2
or @type json
.
The above configuration would translate at runtime to something similar to this:
<source>
@type tail
path /var/lib/kubelet/pods/723dd34a-4ac0-11e8-8a81-0a930dd884b0/volumes/kubernetes.io~empty-dir/logs/welcome.log
pos_file /var/log/kfotail-7020a0b821b0d230d89283ba47d9088d9b58f97d.pos
read_from_head true
tag kube.kfo-test.welcome-logger.test-container
<parse>
@type none
</parse>
</source>
Most log streams are line-oriented. However, stacktraces always span multiple lines. kube-fluentd-operator integrates stacktrace processing using the fluent-plugin-detect-exceptions. If a Java-based pod produces stacktraces in the logs, then the stacktraces can be collapsed in a single log event like this:
<filter $labels(app=jpetstore)>
@type detect_exceptions
# you can skip language in which case all possible languages will be tried: go, java, python, ruby, etc...
language java
</filter>
# The rest of the configuration stays the same even though quite a lot of tag rewriting takes place
<match **>
@type es
</match>
Notice how filter
is used instead of match
as described influent-plugin-detect-exceptions. Internally, this filter is translated into several match
directives so that the end user doesn't need to bother with rewriting the Fluentd tag.
Also, users don't need to bother with setting the correct stream
parameter. kube-fluentd-operator generates one internally based on the container id and the stream.
Sometimes you only have a few valid options for log sinks: a dedicated S3 bucket, the ELK stack you manage, etc. The only flexibility you're after is letting namespace owners filter and parse their logs. In such cases you can abstract over an output plugin configuration - basically reducing it to a simple name which can be referenced from any namespace. For example, let's assume you have an S3 bucket for a "test" environement and you use loggly for a "staging" environment. The first thing you do is define these two output at the kube-system
level:
kube-system.conf:
<plugin test>
@type s3
aws_key_id YOUR_AWS_KEY_ID
aws_sec_key YOUR_AWS_SECRET_KEY
s3_bucket YOUR_S3_BUCKET_NAME
s3_region AWS_REGION
</plugin>
<plugin staging>
@type loggly
loggly_url https://logs-01.loggly.com/inputs/TOKEN/tag/fluentd
</plugin>
A namespace can refer to the staging
and test
plugins oblivious to the fact where exactly the logs end up:
acme-test.conf
<match **>
@type test
</match>
acme-staging.conf
<match **>
@type staging
</match>
kube-fluentd-operator will insert the content of the plugin
directive in the match
directive. From then on, regular validation and postprocessing takes place.
By default, you can consume logs only from your namespaces. Often it is useful for multiple namespaces (tenants) to get access to the logs streams of a shared resource (pod, namespace). kube-fluentd-operator makes it possible using two constructs: the source namespace expresses its intent to share logs with a destination namespace and the destination namespace expresses its desire to consume logs from a source. As a result logs are streamed only when both sides agree.
A source namespace can share with another namespace using the @type share
macro:
producer namespace configuration:
<match $labels(msg=nginx-ingress)>
@type copy
<store>
@type share
# share all logs matching the labels with the namespace "consumer"
with_namespace consumer
</store>
</match>
consumer namespace configuration:
# use $from(producer) to get all shared logs from a namespace called "producer"
<label @$from(producer)>
<match **>
# process all shared logs here as usual
</match>
</match>
The consuming namespace can use the usual syntax inside the <label @$from...>
directive. The fluentd tag is being rewritten as if the logs originated from the same namespace.
The producing namespace need to wrap @type share
within a <store>
directive. This is done on purpose as it is very easy to just redirect the logs to the destination namespace and lose them. The @type copy
clones the whole stream.
Often you run mulitple Kubernetes clusters but you need to aggregate all logs to a single destination. To distinguish between different sources, kube-fluentd-operator
can attach arbitrary metadata to every log event.
The metadata is nested under a key chosen with --meta-key
. Using the helm chart, metadata can be enabled like this:
helm instal ... \
--set meta.key=metadata \
--set meta.values.region=us-east-1 \
--set meta.values.env=staging \
--set meta.values.cluster=legacy
Every log event, be it from a pod, mounted-file or a systemd unit, will now carry this metadata:
{
"metadata": {
"region": "us-east-1",
"env": "staging",
"cluster": "legacy",
}
}
All logs originating from a file look exactly as all other Kubernetes logs. However, their stream
field is not set to stdout
but to the path to the source file:
{
"message": "Some message from the welcome-logger pod",
"stream": "/var/log/welcome.log",
"kubernetes": {
"container_name": "test-container",
"host": "ip-11-11-11-11.us-east-2.compute.internal",
"namespace_name": "kfo-test",
"pod_id": "723dd34a-4ac0-11e8-8a81-0a930dd884b0",
"pod_name": "welcome-logger",
"labels": {
"msg": "welcome",
"test-case": "b"
},
"namespace_labels": {}
},
"metadata": {
"region": "us-east-2",
"cluster": "legacy",
"env": "staging"
}
}
kube-fluentd-operator
aims to be easy to use and flexible. It also favors appending logs to multiple destinations using <copy>
and as such comes with many plugins pre-installed:
- fluent-plugin-amqp
- fluent-plugin-concat
- fluent-plugin-detect-exceptions
- fluent-plugin-elasticsearch
- fluent-plugin-grok-parser
- fluent-plugin-google-cloud
- fluent-plugin-kafka
- fluent-plugin-kinesis
- fluent-plugin-kubernetes
- fluent-plugin-kubernetes_metadata_filter
- fluent-plugin-logentries
- fluent-plugin-loggly
- fluent-plugin-logzio
- fluent-plugin-mail
- fluent-plugin-mongo
- fluent-plugin-out-http-ext
- fluent-plugin-papertrail
- fluent-plugin-parser
- fluent-plugin-prometheus
- fluent-plugin-record-modifier
- fluent-plugin-record-reformer
- fluent-plugin-redis
- fluent-plugin-remote_syslog
- fluent-plugin-rewrite-tag-filter
- fluent-plugin-route
- fluent-plugin-s3
- fluent-plugin-scribe
- fluent-plugin-secure-forward
- fluent-plugin-splunkhec
- fluent-plugin-sumologic_output
- fluent-plugin-systemd
When customizing the image be careful not to uninstall plugins that are used internally to implement the macro language.
If you need other destination plugins you are welcome to contribute a patch or just create an issue.
The config-reloader binary is the one that listens to changes in K8S and generates Fluentd files. It runs as a daemonset and is not intended to interact with directly. The synopsis is useful when trying to understand the Helm chart or just hacking.
usage: config-reloader [<flags>]
Regenerates Fluentd configs based Kubernetes namespace annotations against templates, reloading
Fluentd if necessary
Flags:
--help Show context-sensitive help (also try --help-long and
--help-man).
--version Show application version.
--master="" The Kubernetes API server to connect to (default: auto-detect)
--kubeconfig="" Retrieve target cluster configuration from a Kubernetes
configuration file (default: auto-detect)
--datasource=default Datasource to use
--fs-dir=FS-DIR If datasource=fs is used, configure the dir hosting the files
--interval=60 Run every x seconds
--allow-file Allow @type file for namespace configuration
--id="default" The id of this deployment. It is used internally so that two
deployments don't overwrite each other's data
--fluentd-rpc-port=24444 RPC port of Fluentd
--log-level="info" Control verbosity of log
--annotation="logging.csp.vmware.com/fluentd-configmap"
Which annotation on the namespace stores the configmap name?
--default-configmap="fluentd-config"
Read the configmap by this name if namespace is not annotated.
Use empty string to suppress the default.
--status-annotation="logging.csp.vmware.com/fluentd-status"
Store configuration errors in this annotation, leave empty to
turn off
--kubelet-root="/var/lib/kubelet/"
Kubelet root dir, configured using --root-dir on the kubelet
service
--namespaces=NAMESPACES ... List of namespaces to process. If empty, processes all namespaces
--templates-dir="/templates" Where to find templates
--output-dir="/fluentd/etc" Where to output config files
--meta-key=META-KEY Attach metadat under this key
--meta-values=META-VALUES Metadata in the k=v,k2=v2 format
--fluentd-binary=FLUENTD-BINARY
Path to fluentd binary used to validate configuration
--prometheus-enabled Prometheus metrics enabled (default: false)
Parameter | Description | Default |
---|---|---|
rbac.create |
Create a serviceaccount+role, use if K8s is using RBAC | false |
serviceAccountName |
Reuse an existing service account | "" |
image.repositiry |
Repository | jvassev/kube-fluentd-operator |
image.tag |
Image tag | latest |
image.pullPolicy |
Pull policy | Always |
image.pullSecret |
Optional pull secret name | "" |
logLevel |
Default log level | info |
kubeletRoot |
The home dir of the kubelet, usually set using --root-dir on the kubelet |
/var/lib/kubelet |
namespaces |
List of namespaces to operate on. Empty means all namespaces | [] |
interval |
How often to check for config changes (seconds) | 45 |
meta.key |
The metadata key (optional) | "" |
meta.values |
Metadata to use for the key | {} |
extraVolumes |
Extra volumes | |
fluentd.extraVolumeMounts |
Mount extra volumes for the fluentd container, required to mount ssl certificates when elasticsearch has tls enabled | |
fluentd.resources |
Resource definitions for the fluentd container | {} |
fluentd.extraEnv |
Extra env vars to pass to the fluentd container | {} |
reloader.extraVolumeMounts |
Mount extra volumes for the reloader container | |
reloader.resources |
Resource definitions for the reloader container | {} |
reloader.extraEnv |
Extra env vars to pass to the reloader container | {} |
tolerations |
Pod tolerations | [] |
updateStrategy |
UpdateStrategy for the daemonset. Leave empty to get the K8S' default (probably the safest choice) | {} |
podAnnotations |
Pod annotations for the daemonset |
Simple, define configuration only for the kube-system namespace:
kube-system.conf:
<match **>
# configure destination here
</match>
Simple, exclude them at the kube-system level:
kube-system.conf:
<match systemd.** docker>
@type null
</match>
<match **>
# all but systemd.** is still around
# configure destination
</match>
It is not possible to handle this globally. Instead, provide this config for the noisy namespace and configure other namespaces at the cost of some code duplication:
noisy-namespace.conf:
<match $labels(app=verbose-logger)>
@type null
</match>
# all other logs are captured here
<match **>
@type ...
</match>
On the bright side, the configuration of noisy-namespace
contains nothing specific to noisy-namespace and the same content can be used for all namespaces whose logs we need collected.
Your cluster is running under RBAC. You need to enable a serviceaccount for the log-router pods. It's easy when using the Helm chart:
helm install ./log-router --set rbac.create=true ...
First you need version 1.1.0 or later. At the namespace level you need to add a source
directive of type mounted-file
:
<source>
@type mounted-file
path /var/log/httpd/access.log
labels app=apache2
<parse>
@type apache2
</parse>
</source>
<match **>
# destination config omitted
</match>
The type mounted-file
is again a macro that is expanded to a tail
plugin. The <parse>
directive is optional and if not set a @type none
will be used instead.
In order for this to work the pod must define a mount of type emptyDir
at /var/log/httpd
or any of it parent folders. For example, this pod definition is part of the test suite (it logs to /var/log/hello.log):
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: hello-logger
namespace: kfo-test
labels:
msg: hello
spec:
containers:
- image: ubuntu
name: greeter
command:
- bash
- -c
- while true; do echo `date -R` [INFO] "Random hello number $((var++)) to file"; sleep 2; [[ $(($var % 100)) == 0 ]] && :> /var/log/hello.log ;done > /var/log/hello.log
volumeMounts:
- mountPath: /var/log
name: logs
volumes:
- name: logs
emptyDir: {}
To get the hello.log ingested by Fluetd you need at least this in the configuration for kfo-test
namespace:
<source>
@type mounted-file
# need to specify the path on the container filesystem
path /var/log/hello.log
# only look at pods labeled this way
labels msg=hello
<parse>
@type none
</parse>
</source>
<match $labels(msg=hello)>
# store the hello.log somewhere
@type ...
</match>
demo.conf:
<match **>
@type logzio_buffered
endpoint_url https://listener.logz.io:8071?token=TOKEN&type=log-router
output_include_time true
output_include_tags true
buffer_type file
buffer_path /var/log/kube-system-logz.buf
flush_interval 10s
buffer_chunk_limit 1m
</match>
For details you should consult the plugin documentation.
The built-in remote_syslog
plugin cannot be used as the fluentd tag may be longer than 32 bytes. For this reason there is a truncating_remote_syslog
plugin that shortens the tag to the allowed limit. If you are currently using the remote_syslog
output plugin you only need to change a single line:
<match **>
# instead of "remote_syslog"
@type truncating_remote_syslog
# the usual config for remote_syslog
</match>
To get the general idea how truncation works, consider this table:
Original Tag | Truncated tag |
---|---|
kube.demo.test.test |
demo.test.test |
kube.demo.nginx-65899c769f-5zj6d.nginx |
demo.nginx-65899c769f-5zj*.nginx |
kube.demo.test.nginx11111111._lablels.hello |
demo.test.nginx11111111 |
Humio speaks the elasticsearh protocol so configuration is pretty similar to Elasticsearch. The example bellow is based on https://github.com/humio/kubernetes2humio/blob/master/fluentd/docker-image/fluent.conf.
<match **>
@type elasticsearch
include_tag_key false
host "YOUR_HOST"
path "/api/v1/dataspaces/YOUR_NAMESPACE/ingest/elasticsearch/"
scheme "https"
port "443"
user "YOUR_KEY"
password ""
logstash_format true
reload_connections "true"
logstash_prefix "fluentd:kubernetes2humio"
buffer_chunk_limit 1M
buffer_queue_limit 32
flush_interval 1s
max_retry_wait 30
disable_retry_limit
num_threads 8
</match>
test.conf:
<match **>
@type papertrail
papertrail_host YOUR_HOST.papertrailapp.com
papertrail_port YOUR_PORT
flush_interval 30
</match>
<match ***>
@type elasticsearch
host ...
port ...
index_name ...
# many options available
</match>
For details you should consult the plugin documentation.
The container comes with a file validation command. To use it put all your *.conf file in a directory. Use the namespace name for the filename. Then use this one-liner, bind-mounting the folder and feeding it as a DATASOURCE_DIR
env var:
docker run --entrypoint=/bin/validate-from-dir.sh \
--net=host --rm \
-v /path/to/config-folder:/workspace \
-e DATASOURCE_DIR=/workspace \
jvassev/kube-fluentd-operator:latest
It will run fluentd in dry-run mode and even catch incorrect plug-in usage. This is so common that it' already captured as a script validate-logging-config.sh. The preferred way to use it is to copy it to your project and invoke it like this:
validate-logging-config.sh path/to/folder
All path/to/folder/*.conf
files will be validated. Check stderr and the exit code for errors.
Use <label>
as usual, the daemon ensures that label names are unique cluster-wide. For example to route several pods' logs to destination X, and ignore a few others you can use this:
<match $labels(app=foo)>
@type label
@label blackhole
</match>
<match $labels(app=bar)>
@type label
@label blackhole
</match>
<label @blackhole>
<match **>
@type null
</match>
</label>
# at this point, foo and bar's logs are being handled in the @blackhole chain,
# the rest are still available for processing
<match **>
@type ..
</match>
The ingress controller uses a format different than the plain Nginx. You can use this fragment to configure the namespace hosting the ingress-nginx controller:
<filter $labels(app=nginx-ingress, _container=nginx-ingress-controller)>
@type parser
format /(?<remote_addr>[^ ]*) - \[(?<proxy_protocol_addr>[^ ]*)\] - (?<remote_user>[^ ]*) \[(?<time>[^\]]*)\] "(?<method>\S+)(?: +(?<request>[^\"]*) +\S*)?" (?<code>[^ ]*) (?<size>[^ ]*) "(?<referer>[^\"]*)" "(?<agent>[^\"]*)" (?<request_length>[^ ]*) (?<request_time>[^ ]*) \[(?<proxy_upstream_name>[^ ]*)\] (?<upstream_addr>[^ ]*) (?<upstream_response_length>[^ ]*) (?<upstream_response_time>[^ ]*) (?<upstream_status>[^ ]*)/
time_format %d/%b/%Y:%H:%M:%S %z
key_name log
reserve_data true
</filter>
<match **>
# send the parsed access logs here
</match>
The above configuration assumes you're using the Helm charts for Nginx ingress. If not, make sure to the change the app
and _container
labels accordingly. Given the horrendous regex above, you really should be outputting access logs in json format and just specify format json
.
I have my kubectl configured and my configmaps ready. I want to see the generated files before deploying the Helm chart
You need to run make
like this:
make run-once
This will build the code, then config-reloader
will connect to the K8S cluster, fetch the data and generate *.conf files in the ./tmp
directory. If there are errors the namespaces will be annotated.
Use the vmware/kube-fluentd-operator:TAG
as a base and do any modification as usual. If this plugin is not top-secret consider sending us a patch :)
I run two clusters - in us-east-2 and eu-west-2. How to differentiate between them when pushing logs to a single location?
When deploying the daemonset using Helm, make sure to pass some metadata:
For the cluster in USA:
helm instal ... \
--set=meta.key=cluster_info \
--set=meta.values.region=us-east-2
For the cluster in Europe:
helm instal ... \
--set=meta.key=cluster_info \
--set=meta.values.region=eu-west-2
If you are using ELK you can easily get only the logs from Europe using cluster_info.region: +eu-west-2
. In this example the metadata key is cluster_info
but you can use any key you like.
It is possible to reduce configuration burden by using a default configmap name. The default value is fluentd-config
- kube-fluentd-operator will read the configmap by that name if the namespace is not annotated.
If you don't like this default name or happen to use this configmap for other purposes then override the default with --default-configmap=my-default
.
.pos files store the progress of the upload process and .buf are used for local buffering. Colliding .pos/.buf paths can lead to races in Fluentd. As such, kube-fluentd-operator
tries hard to rewrite such path-based parameters in a predictable way. You only need to make sure they are unique for your namespace and config-reloader
will take care to make them unique cluster-wide.
Use --annotation=acme.com/fancy-config
to use acme.com/fancy-config as annotation name. However, you'd also need to customize the Helm chart. Patches are welcome!
Currently space-delimited tags are not supported. For example, instead of <filter a b>
, you need to use <filter a>
and <filter b>
.
This limitation will be addressed in a later version.
- This plugin is used to provide kubernetes metadata https://github.com/fabric8io/fluent-plugin-kubernetes_metadata_filter
- This daemonset definition is used as a template: https://github.com/fluent/fluentd-kubernetes-daemonset/tree/master/docker-image/v0.12/debian-elasticsearch, however
kube-fluentd-operator
uses version 1.x version of fluentd and all the compatible plugin versions. - This Github issue was the inspiration for the project. In particular it borrows the tag rewriting based on Kubernetes metadata to allow easier routing after that.
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