Set Kafka log directory property in Windows - windows

When I was running a kafka broker on Windows system, I always got this error:
log4j:ERROR Failed to rename [C:\Users\Administrator\Documents\kafka/logs/server.log] to [C:\Users\Administrator\Documents\kafka/logs/server.log.2017-09-20-09].
You can see there are some "/" and "\". So I believe the problem is caused by the log4j directory setting. Is there anyone met similar problem, may I ask how can I solve this problem?
My settings:
zookeeper - > log4j.properties:
# Define some default values that can be overridden by system properties
zookeeper.root.logger=INFO, CONSOLE
zookeeper.console.threshold=INFO
zookeeper.log.dir=.
zookeeper.log.file=zookeeper.log
zookeeper.log.threshold=DEBUG
zookeeper.tracelog.dir=.
zookeeper.tracelog.file=zookeeper_trace.log
#
# ZooKeeper Logging Configuration
#
# Format is "<default threshold> (, <appender>)+
# DEFAULT: console appender only
log4j.rootLogger=${zookeeper.root.logger}
# Example with rolling log file
#log4j.rootLogger=DEBUG, CONSOLE, ROLLINGFILE
# Example with rolling log file and tracing
#log4j.rootLogger=TRACE, CONSOLE, ROLLINGFILE, TRACEFILE
#
# Log INFO level and above messages to the console
#
log4j.appender.CONSOLE=org.apache.log4j.ConsoleAppender
log4j.appender.CONSOLE.Threshold=${zookeeper.console.threshold}
log4j.appender.CONSOLE.layout=org.apache.log4j.PatternLayout
log4j.appender.CONSOLE.layout.ConversionPattern=%d{ISO8601} [myid:%X{myid}] - %-5p [%t:%C{1}#%L] - %m%n
#
# Add ROLLINGFILE to rootLogger to get log file output
# Log DEBUG level and above messages to a log file
log4j.appender.ROLLINGFILE=org.apache.log4j.RollingFileAppender
log4j.appender.ROLLINGFILE.Threshold=${zookeeper.log.threshold}
log4j.appender.ROLLINGFILE.File=${zookeeper.log.dir}/${zookeeper.log.file}
# Max log file size of 10MB
log4j.appender.ROLLINGFILE.MaxFileSize=10MB
# uncomment the next line to limit number of backup files
#log4j.appender.ROLLINGFILE.MaxBackupIndex=10
log4j.appender.ROLLINGFILE.layout=org.apache.log4j.PatternLayout
log4j.appender.ROLLINGFILE.layout.ConversionPattern=%d{ISO8601} [myid:%X{myid}] - %-5p [%t:%C{1}#%L] - %m%n
#
# Add TRACEFILE to rootLogger to get log file output
# Log DEBUG level and above messages to a log file
log4j.appender.TRACEFILE=org.apache.log4j.FileAppender
log4j.appender.TRACEFILE.Threshold=TRACE
log4j.appender.TRACEFILE.File=${zookeeper.tracelog.dir}/${zookeeper.tracelog.file}
log4j.appender.TRACEFILE.layout=org.apache.log4j.PatternLayout
### Notice we are including log4j's NDC here (%x)
log4j.appender.TRACEFILE.layout.ConversionPattern=%d{ISO8601} [myid:%X{myid}] - %-5p [%t:%C{1}#%L][%x] - %m%n
Kafka -> log4j.properties:
log4j.rootLogger=INFO, stdout, kafkaAppender
log4j.appender.stdout=org.apache.log4j.ConsoleAppender
log4j.appender.stdout.layout=org.apache.log4j.PatternLayout
log4j.appender.stdout.layout.ConversionPattern=[%d] %p %m (%c)%n
log4j.appender.kafkaAppender=org.apache.log4j.DailyRollingFileAppender
log4j.appender.kafkaAppender.DatePattern='.'yyyy-MM-dd-HH
log4j.appender.kafkaAppender.File=${kafka.logs.dir}/server.log
log4j.appender.kafkaAppender.layout=org.apache.log4j.PatternLayout
log4j.appender.kafkaAppender.layout.ConversionPattern=[%d] %p %m (%c)%n
log4j.appender.stateChangeAppender=org.apache.log4j.DailyRollingFileAppender
log4j.appender.stateChangeAppender.DatePattern='.'yyyy-MM-dd-HH
log4j.appender.stateChangeAppender.File=${kafka.logs.dir}/state-change.log
log4j.appender.stateChangeAppender.layout=org.apache.log4j.PatternLayout
log4j.appender.stateChangeAppender.layout.ConversionPattern=[%d] %p %m (%c)%n
log4j.appender.requestAppender=org.apache.log4j.DailyRollingFileAppender
log4j.appender.requestAppender.DatePattern='.'yyyy-MM-dd-HH
log4j.appender.requestAppender.File=${kafka.logs.dir}/kafka-request.log
log4j.appender.requestAppender.layout=org.apache.log4j.PatternLayout
log4j.appender.requestAppender.layout.ConversionPattern=[%d] %p %m (%c)%n
log4j.appender.cleanerAppender=org.apache.log4j.DailyRollingFileAppender
log4j.appender.cleanerAppender.DatePattern='.'yyyy-MM-dd-HH
log4j.appender.cleanerAppender.File=${kafka.logs.dir}/log-cleaner.log
log4j.appender.cleanerAppender.layout=org.apache.log4j.PatternLayout
log4j.appender.cleanerAppender.layout.ConversionPattern=[%d] %p %m (%c)%n
log4j.appender.controllerAppender=org.apache.log4j.DailyRollingFileAppender
log4j.appender.controllerAppender.DatePattern='.'yyyy-MM-dd-HH
log4j.appender.controllerAppender.File=${kafka.logs.dir}/controller.log
log4j.appender.controllerAppender.layout=org.apache.log4j.PatternLayout
log4j.appender.controllerAppender.layout.ConversionPattern=[%d] %p %m (%c)%n
log4j.appender.authorizerAppender=org.apache.log4j.DailyRollingFileAppender
log4j.appender.authorizerAppender.DatePattern='.'yyyy-MM-dd-HH
log4j.appender.authorizerAppender.File=${kafka.logs.dir}/kafka-authorizer.log
log4j.appender.authorizerAppender.layout=org.apache.log4j.PatternLayout
log4j.appender.authorizerAppender.layout.ConversionPattern=[%d] %p %m (%c)%n
# Change the two lines below to adjust ZK client logging
log4j.logger.org.I0Itec.zkclient.ZkClient=INFO
log4j.logger.org.apache.zookeeper=INFO
# Change the two lines below to adjust the general broker logging level (output to server.log and stdout)
log4j.logger.kafka=INFO
log4j.logger.org.apache.kafka=INFO
# Change to DEBUG or TRACE to enable request logging
log4j.logger.kafka.request.logger=WARN, requestAppender
log4j.additivity.kafka.request.logger=false
# Uncomment the lines below and change log4j.logger.kafka.network.RequestChannel$ to TRACE for additional output
# related to the handling of requests
#log4j.logger.kafka.network.Processor=TRACE, requestAppender
#log4j.logger.kafka.server.KafkaApis=TRACE, requestAppender
#log4j.additivity.kafka.server.KafkaApis=false
log4j.logger.kafka.network.RequestChannel$=WARN, requestAppender
log4j.additivity.kafka.network.RequestChannel$=false
log4j.logger.kafka.controller=TRACE, controllerAppender
log4j.additivity.kafka.controller=false
log4j.logger.kafka.log.LogCleaner=INFO, cleanerAppender
log4j.additivity.kafka.log.LogCleaner=false
log4j.logger.state.change.logger=TRACE, stateChangeAppender
log4j.additivity.state.change.logger=false
# Change to DEBUG to enable audit log for the authorizer
log4j.logger.kafka.authorizer.logger=WARN, authorizerAppender
log4j.additivity.kafka.authorizer.logger=false
Kafka -> server.properties:
############################# Server Basics #############################
# The id of the broker. This must be set to a unique integer for each broker.
broker.id=0
# Switch to enable topic deletion or not, default value is false
delete.topic.enable=true
############################# Socket Server Settings #############################
# The address the socket server listens on. It will get the value returned from
# java.net.InetAddress.getCanonicalHostName() if not configured.
# FORMAT:
# listeners = listener_name://host_name:port
# EXAMPLE:
# listeners = PLAINTEXT://your.host.name:9092
listeners=PLAINTEXT://:9092
# Hostname and port the broker will advertise to producers and consumers. If not set,
# it uses the value for "listeners" if configured. Otherwise, it will use the value
# returned from java.net.InetAddress.getCanonicalHostName().
#advertised.listeners=PLAINTEXT://your.host.name:9092
# Maps listener names to security protocols, the default is for them to be the same. See the config documentation for more details
#listener.security.protocol.map=PLAINTEXT:PLAINTEXT,SSL:SSL,SASL_PLAINTEXT:SASL_PLAINTEXT,SASL_SSL:SASL_SSL
# The number of threads that the server uses for receiving requests from the network and sending responses to the network
num.network.threads=3
# The number of threads that the server uses for processing requests, which may include disk I/O
num.io.threads=8
# The send buffer (SO_SNDBUF) used by the socket server
socket.send.buffer.bytes=102400
# The receive buffer (SO_RCVBUF) used by the socket server
socket.receive.buffer.bytes=102400
# The maximum size of a request that the socket server will accept (protection against OOM)
socket.request.max.bytes=104857600
############################# Log Basics #############################
# A comma seperated list of directories under which to store log files
log.dirs=.\logs\kafka-logs
# The default number of log partitions per topic. More partitions allow greater
# parallelism for consumption, but this will also result in more files across
# the brokers.
num.partitions=2
# The number of threads per data directory to be used for log recovery at startup and flushing at shutdown.
# This value is recommended to be increased for installations with data dirs located in RAID array.
num.recovery.threads.per.data.dir=1
############################# Internal Topic Settings #############################
# The replication factor for the group metadata internal topics "__consumer_offsets" and "__transaction_state"
# For anything other than development testing, a value greater than 1 is recommended for to ensure availability such as 3.
offsets.topic.replication.factor=1
transaction.state.log.replication.factor=1
transaction.state.log.min.isr=1
############################# Log Flush Policy #############################
# Messages are immediately written to the filesystem but by default we only fsync() to sync
# the OS cache lazily. The following configurations control the flush of data to disk.
# There are a few important trade-offs here:
# 1. Durability: Unflushed data may be lost if you are not using replication.
# 2. Latency: Very large flush intervals may lead to latency spikes when the flush does occur as there will be a lot of data to flush.
# 3. Throughput: The flush is generally the most expensive operation, and a small flush interval may lead to exceessive seeks.
# The settings below allow one to configure the flush policy to flush data after a period of time or
# every N messages (or both). This can be done globally and overridden on a per-topic basis.
# The number of messages to accept before forcing a flush of data to disk
#log.flush.interval.messages=10000
# The maximum amount of time a message can sit in a log before we force a flush
#log.flush.interval.ms=1000
############################# Log Retention Policy #############################
# The following configurations control the disposal of log segments. The policy can
# be set to delete segments after a period of time, or after a given size has accumulated.
# A segment will be deleted whenever *either* of these criteria are met. Deletion always happens
# from the end of the log.
# The minimum age of a log file to be eligible for deletion due to age
log.retention.hours=168
# A size-based retention policy for logs. Segments are pruned from the log as long as the remaining
# segments don't drop below log.retention.bytes. Functions independently of log.retention.hours.
#log.retention.bytes=1073741824
# The maximum size of a log segment file. When this size is reached a new log segment will be created.
log.segment.bytes=1073741824
# The interval at which log segments are checked to see if they can be deleted according
# to the retention policies
log.retention.check.interval.ms=300000
############################# Zookeeper #############################
# Zookeeper connection string (see zookeeper docs for details).
# This is a comma separated host:port pairs, each corresponding to a zk
# server. e.g. "127.0.0.1:3000,127.0.0.1:3001,127.0.0.1:3002".
# You can also append an optional chroot string to the urls to specify the
# root directory for all kafka znodes.
zookeeper.connect=localhost:2181
# Timeout in ms for connecting to zookeeper
zookeeper.connection.timeout.ms=6000
############################# Group Coordinator Settings #############################
# The following configuration specifies the time, in milliseconds, that the GroupCoordinator will delay the initial consumer rebalance.
# The rebalance will be further delayed by the value of group.initial.rebalance.delay.ms as new members join the group, up to a maximum of max.poll.interval.ms.
# The default value for this is 3 seconds.
# We override this to 0 here as it makes for a better out-of-the-box experience for development and testing.
# However, in production environments the default value of 3 seconds is more suitable as this will help to avoid unnecessary, and potentially expensive, rebalances during application startup.
group.initial.rebalance.delay.ms=0
Version:
Windows 10,
Kafka 2.11-0.11.0.0,
Zookeeper 3.4.10

try to change log.dirs=.\logs\kafka-logs to use forward slash (log.dirs=./logs/kafka-logs).
Seems Kafka does't like backslash at config files

I think deletion of topic fails due to Java's File.rename function. It works differently in some cases in Windows environment (for example if file is in use). Kafka developers already changed this function to Utils.atomicMoveWithFallback (see this issue for details), but seems it was not included into Kafka 2.11-0.11.0. So you need to work with Kafka version that has this fix. Hope this will help you.

Related

Kibana Filebeat Index Pattern is not working

Kibana is trying to use filebeat for dashboard but it doesn't work. Can I fix this error? I added the error and filebeat.yml content. How to fix this? I can't see an error in filebeat.yml? I've done the necessary configurations, but I can't run. Filebeat- * command does not work when creating index pattern in kibana
filebeat version 1.3.1 (amd64)
dev#dev-Machine:~$ service filebeat status
filebeat.service - filebeat
Loaded: loaded (/lib/systemd/system/filebeat.service; enabled; vendor preset: enable
Active: failed (Result: start-limit-hit) since Fri 2018-11-23 02:34:06 +03; 7h ago
Docs: https://www.elastic.co/guide/en/beats/filebeat/current/index.html
Process: 822 ExecStart=/usr/bin/filebeat -c /etc/filebeat/filebeat.yml (code=exited,
Main PID: 822 (code=exited, status=1/FAILURE)
Nov 23 02:34:06 dev-Machine systemd[1]: filebeat.service: Unit entered failed state.
Nov 23 02:34:06 dev-Machine systemd[1]: filebeat.service: Failed with result 'exit-cod
Nov 23 02:34:06 dev-Machine systemd[1]: filebeat.service: Service hold-off time over,
Nov 23 02:34:06 dev-Machine systemd[1]: Stopped filebeat.
Nov 23 02:34:06 dev-Machine systemd[1]: filebeat.service: Start request repeated too q
Nov 23 02:34:06 dev-Machine systemd[1]: Failed to start filebeat.
Nov 23 02:34:06 dev-Machine systemd[1]: filebeat.service: Unit entered failed state.
Nov 23 02:34:06 dev-Machine systemd[1]: filebeat.service: Failed with result 'start-li
lines 1-15/15 (END)
filebeat.yml
################### Filebeat Configuration Example #########################
############################# Filebeat ######################################
filebeat:
# List of prospectors to fetch data.
prospectors:
# Each - is a prospector. Below are the prospector specific configurations
-
# Paths that should be crawled and fetched. Glob based paths.
# To fetch all ".log" files from a specific level of subdirectories
# /var/log/*/*.log can be used.
# For each file found under this path, a harvester is started.
# Make sure not file is defined twice as this can lead to unexpected behaviour.
paths:
- /var/log/*.log
#- c:\programdata\elasticsearch\logs\*
# Type of the files. Based on this the way the file is read is decided.
# The different types cannot be mixed in one prospector
#
# Possible options are:
# * log: Reads every line of the log file (default)
# * stdin: Reads the standard in
input_type: log
# exclude_lines. By default, no lines are dropped.
# exclude_lines: ["^DBG"]
# Include lines. A list of regular expressions to match. It exports the lines that are
# matching any regular expression from the list. The include_lines is called before
# exclude_lines. By default, all the lines are exported.
# include_lines: ["^ERR", "^WARN"]
# Exclude files. A list of regular expressions to match. Filebeat drops the files that
# are matching any regular expression from the list. By default, no files are dropped.
# exclude_files: [".gz$"]
# Optional additional fields. These field can be freely picked
# to add additional information to the crawled log files for filtering
#fields:
# level: debug
# review: 1
# fields.
#fields_under_root: false
# Time strings like 2h (2 hours), 5m (5 minutes) can be used.
#ignore_older: 0
# Close older closes the file handler for which were not modified
# for longer then close_older
# Time strings like 2h (2 hours), 5m (5 minutes) can be used.
#close_older: 1h
# Type to be published in the 'type' field. For Elasticsearch output,
# the type defines the document type these entries should be stored
# in. Default: log
#document_type: log
# to 0s, it is done as often as possible. Default: 10s
#scan_frequency: 10s
# Defines the buffer size every harvester uses when fetching the file
#harvester_buffer_size: 16384
# Maximum number of bytes a single log event can have
# All bytes after max_bytes are discarded and not sent. The default is 10MB.
# This is especially useful for multiline log messages which can get large.
#max_bytes: 10485760
# Mutiline can be used for log messages spanning multiple lines. This is common
# for Java Stack Traces or C-Line Continuation
#multiline:
# The regexp Pattern that has to be matched. The example pattern matches all lines starting with [
#pattern: ^\[
# Defines if the pattern set under pattern should be negated or not. Default is false.
#negate: false
# Default is 500
#max_lines: 500
# Default is 5s.
#timeout: 5s
#tail_files: false
# Every time a new line appears, backoff is reset to the initial value.
#backoff: 1s
# file after having backed off multiple times, it takes a maximum of 10s to read the new line
#max_backoff: 10s
# The backoff factor defines how fast the algorithm backs off. The bigger the backoff factor,
# the faster the max_backoff value is reached. If this value is set to 1, no backoff will happen.
# The backoff value will be multiplied each time with the backoff_factor until max_backoff is reached
#backoff_factor: 2
# This option closes a file, as soon as the file name changes.
# This config option is recommended on windows only. Filebeat keeps the files it's reading open. This can cause
# issues when the file is removed, as the file will not be fully removed until also Filebeat closes
# the reading. Filebeat closes the file handler after ignore_older. During this time no new file with the
# same name can be created. Turning this feature on the other hand can lead to loss of data
# on rotate files. It can happen that after file rotation the beginning of the new
# file is skipped, as the reading starts at the end. We recommend to leave this option on false
# but lower the ignore_older value to release files faster.
#force_close_files: false
# Additional prospector
#-
# Configuration to use stdin input
#input_type: stdin
# General filebeat configuration options
#
# Event count spool threshold - forces network flush if exceeded
#spool_size: 2048
# Enable async publisher pipeline in filebeat (Experimental!)
#publish_async: false
# Defines how often the spooler is flushed. After idle_timeout the spooler is
# Flush even though spool_size is not reached.
#idle_timeout: 5s
# Name of the registry file. Per default it is put in the current working
# directory. In case the working directory is changed after when running
# filebeat again, indexing starts from the beginning again.
registry_file: /var/lib/filebeat/registry
# Full Path to directory with additional prospector configuration files. Each file must end with .yml
# These config files must have the full filebeat config part inside, but only
# the prospector part is processed. All global options like spool_size are ignored.
# The config_dir MUST point to a different directory then where the main filebeat config file is in.
#config_dir:
###############################################################################
############################# Libbeat Config ##################################
# Base config file used by all other beats for using libbeat features
############################# Output ##########################################
# Configure what outputs to use when sending the data collected by the beat.
# Multiple outputs may be used.
output:
### Elasticsearch as output
# elasticsearch:
# Array of hosts to connect to.
# Scheme and port can be left out and will be set to the default (http and 9200)
# In case you specify and additional path, the scheme is required: http://localhost:9200/path
# IPv6 addresses should always be defined as: https://[2001:db8::1]:9200
# hosts: ["localhost:9200"]
# Optional protocol and basic auth credentials.
#protocol: "https"
#username: "test"
#password: "test"
# Number of workers per Elasticsearch host.
#worker: 1
# Optional index name. The default is "filebeat" and generates
# [filebeat-]YYYY.MM.DD keys.
#index: "filebeat"
# A template is used to set the mapping in Elasticsearch
# By default template loading is disabled and no template is loaded.
# These settings can be adjusted to load your own template or overwrite existing ones
#template:
# Template name. By default the template name is filebeat.
#name: "filebeat"
# Path to template file
#path: "filebeat.template.json"
# Overwrite existing template
#overwrite: false
# Optional HTTP Path
#path: "/elasticsearch"
# Proxy server url
#proxy_url: http://proxy:3128
# The number of times a particular Elasticsearch index operation is attempted. If
# the indexing operation doesn't succeed after this many retries, the events are
# dropped. The default is 3.
#max_retries: 3
# The maximum number of events to bulk in a single Elasticsearch bulk API index request.
# The default is 50.
#bulk_max_size: 50
# Configure http request timeout before failing an request to Elasticsearch.
#timeout: 90
# The number of seconds to wait for new events between two bulk API index requests.
# If `bulk_max_size` is reached before this interval expires, addition bulk index
# requests are made.
#flush_interval: 1
# Boolean that sets if the topology is kept in Elasticsearch. The default is
# false. This option makes sense only for Packetbeat.
#save_topology: false
# The time to live in seconds for the topology information that is stored in
# Elasticsearch. The default is 15 seconds.
#topology_expire: 15
# tls configuration. By default is off.
#tls:
# List of root certificates for HTTPS server verifications
#certificate_authorities: ["/etc/pki/root/ca.pem"]
# Certificate for TLS client authentication
#certificate: "/etc/pki/client/cert.pem"
# Client Certificate Key
#certificate_key: "/etc/pki/client/cert.key"
# Controls whether the client verifies server certificates and host name.
# If insecure is set to true, all server host names and certificates will be
# accepted. In this mode TLS based connections are susceptible to
# man-in-the-middle attacks. Use only for testing.
#insecure: true
# Configure cipher suites to be used for TLS connections
#cipher_suites: []
# Configure curve types for ECDHE based cipher suites
#curve_types: []
# Configure minimum TLS version allowed for connection to logstash
#min_version: 1.0
# Configure maximum TLS version allowed for connection to logstash
#max_version: 1.2
### Logstash as output
logstash:
# The Logstash hosts
hosts: ["localhost:5044"]
# Number of workers per Logstash host.
#worker: 1
# The maximum number of events to bulk into a single batch window. The
# default is 2048.
#bulk_max_size: 2048
# Set gzip compression level.
#compression_level: 3
# Optional load balance the events between the Logstash hosts
#loadbalance: true
# Optional index name. The default index name depends on the each beat.
# For Packetbeat, the default is set to packetbeat, for Topbeat
# top topbeat and for Filebeat to filebeat.
#index: filebeat
# Optional TLS. By default is off.
#tls:
# List of root certificates for HTTPS server verifications
#certificate_authorities: ["/etc/pki/root/ca.pem"]
# Certificate for TLS client authentication
#certificate: "/etc/pki/client/cert.pem"
# Client Certificate Key
#certificate_key: "/etc/pki/client/cert.key"
# Controls whether the client verifies server certificates and host name.
# If insecure is set to true, all server host names and certificates will be
# accepted. In this mode TLS based connections are susceptible to
# man-in-the-middle attacks. Use only for testing.
#insecure: true
# Configure cipher suites to be used for TLS connections
#cipher_suites: []
# Configure curve types for ECDHE based cipher suites
#curve_types: []
### File as output
#file:
# Path to the directory where to save the generated files. The option is mandatory.
#path: "/tmp/filebeat"
# Name of the generated files. The default is `filebeat` and it generates files: `filebeat`, `filebeat.1`, `filebeat.2`, etc.
#filename: filebeat
# Maximum size in kilobytes of each file. When this size is reached, the files are
# rotated. The default value is 10 MB.
#rotate_every_kb: 10000
# Maximum number of files under path. When this number of files is reached, the
# oldest file is deleted and the rest are shifted from last to first. The default
# is 7 files.
#number_of_files: 7
### Console output
# console:
# Pretty print json event
#pretty: false
############################# Shipper #########################################
shipper:
# The name of the shipper that publishes the network data. It can be used to group
# all the transactions sent by a single shipper in the web interface.
# If this options is not defined, the hostname is used.
#name:
# The tags of the shipper are included in their own field with each
# transaction published. Tags make it easy to group servers by different
# logical properties.
#tags: ["service-X", "web-tier"]
# Uncomment the following if you want to ignore transactions created
# by the server on which the shipper is installed. This option is useful
# to remove duplicates if shippers are installed on multiple servers.
#ignore_outgoing: true
# How often (in seconds) shippers are publishing their IPs to the topology map.
# The default is 10 seconds.
#refresh_topology_freq: 10
# Expiration time (in seconds) of the IPs published by a shipper to the topology map.
# All the IPs will be deleted afterwards. Note, that the value must be higher than
# refresh_topology_freq. The default is 15 seconds.
#topology_expire: 15
# Internal queue size for single events in processing pipeline
#queue_size: 1000
# Configure local GeoIP database support.
# If no paths are not configured geoip is disabled.
#geoip:
#paths:
# - "/usr/share/GeoIP/GeoLiteCity.dat"
# - "/usr/local/var/GeoIP/GeoLiteCity.dat"
############################# Logging #########################################
# There are three options for the log ouput: syslog, file, stderr.
# Under Windos systems, the log files are per default sent to the file output,
# under all other system per default to syslog.
logging:
# Send all logging output to syslog. On Windows default is false, otherwise
# default is true.
#to_syslog: true
# Write all logging output to files. Beats automatically rotate files if rotateeverybytes
# limit is reached.
#to_files: false
# To enable logging to files, to_files option has to be set to true
files:
# The directory where the log files will written to.
#path: /var/log/mybeat
# The name of the files where the logs are written to.
#name: mybeat
# Configure log file size limit. If limit is reached, log file will be
# automatically rotated
rotateeverybytes: 10485760 # = 10MB
# Number of rotated log files to keep. Oldest files will be deleted first.
#keepfiles: 7
# Enable debug output for selected components. To enable all selectors use ["*"]
# Other available selectors are beat, publish, service
# Multiple selectors can be chained.
#selectors: [ ]
# Sets log level. The default log level is error.
# Available log levels are: critical, error, warning, info, debug
#level: error
First of all, I guess you're using filebeat 1.x (which is a very old version of filebeat).
Cleaning your configuration file, it seems that you have a wrongly formatted configuration file.
Your current configuration:
filebeat:
prospectors:
paths:
- /var/log/*.log
input_type: log
registry_file: /var/lib/filebeat/registry
output:
logstash:
hosts: ["localhost:5044"]
shipper:
logging:
files:
I can see that you have wrong identation and a missing prospector start dash "-".
I tested this configuration with filebeat-1.3.1-x86_64 and it works.
Can you please try to update your configuration file to:
filebeat:
prospectors:
-
input_type: log
paths:
- /var/log/*.log
registry_file: /var/lib/filebeat/registry
output:
logstash:
hosts:
- "localhost:5044"

How to configure docker-compose for storing data of Elastic search out-side of docker container?

1: Docker-compose.yml
elk:
image: elasticsearch:latest
ports:
- " 127.0.0.1:9200:9200"
- "9300:9300"
volumes:
- ./Elasticsearch/data:/var/lib/elasticsearch
- ./Elasticsearch/config/elasticsearch.yml:/etc/elasticsearch/config/elasticsearch.yml
tty : true
Redis:
image: redis:latest
ports:
- "6379:6379"
volumes:
- /Redis/redis.conf:/var/lib/redis
restart: always
2: elasticsearch.yml
##################### Elasticsearch Configuration Example #####################
# This file contains an overview of various configuration settings,
# targeted at operations staff. Application developers should
# consult the guide at <http://elasticsearch.org/guide>.
#
# The installation procedure is covered at
# <http://elasticsearch.org/guide/en/elasticsearch/reference/current/setup.html>.
#
# Elasticsearch comes with reasonable defaults for most settings,
# so you can try it out without bothering with configuration.
#
# Most of the time, these defaults are just fine for running a production
# cluster. If you're fine-tuning your cluster, or wondering about the
# effect of certain configuration option, please _do ask_ on the
# mailing list or IRC channel [http://elasticsearch.org/community].
# Any element in the configuration can be replaced with environment variables
# by placing them in ${...} notation. For example:
#
#node.rack: ${RACK_ENV_VAR}
# For information on supported formats and syntax for the config file, see
# <http://elasticsearch.org/guide/en/elasticsearch/reference/current/setup-configuration.html>
################################### Cluster ###################################
# Cluster name identifies your cluster for auto-discovery. If you're running
# multiple clusters on the same network, make sure you're using unique names.
#
cluster.name: test_cluster
#################################### Node #####################################
# Node names are generated dynamically on startup, so you're relieved
# from configuring them manually. You can tie this node to a specific name:
#
node.name: "pun-essrv01_Logstash"
# Every node can be configured to allow or deny being eligible as the master,
# and to allow or deny to store the data.
#
# Allow this node to be eligible as a master node (enabled by default):
#
#node.master: true
#
# Allow this node to store data (enabled by default):
#
#node.data: true
# You can exploit these settings to design advanced cluster topologies.
#
# 1. You want this node to never become a master node, only to hold data.
# This will be the "workhorse" of your cluster.
#
#node.master: false
#node.data: true
#
# 2. You want this node to only serve as a master: to not store any data and
# to have free resources. This will be the "coordinator" of your cluster.
#
#node.master: true
#node.data: false
#
# 3. You want this node to be neither master nor data node, but
# to act as a "search load balancer" (fetching data from nodes,
# aggregating results, etc.)
#
#node.master: false
#node.data: false
# Use the Cluster Health API [http://localhost:9200/_cluster/health], the
# Node Info API [http://localhost:9200/_nodes] or GUI tools
# such as <http://www.elasticsearch.org/overview/marvel/>,
# <http://github.com/karmi/elasticsearch-paramedic>,
# <http://github.com/lukas-vlcek/bigdesk> and
# <http://mobz.github.com/elasticsearch-head> to inspect the cluster state.
# A node can have generic attributes associated with it, which can later be used
# for customized shard allocation filtering, or allocation awareness. An attribute
# is a simple key value pair, similar to node.key: value, here is an example:
#
#node.rack: rack314
# By default, multiple nodes are allowed to start from the same installation location
# to disable it, set the following:
#node.max_local_storage_nodes: 1
#################################### Index ####################################
# You can set a number of options (such as shard/replica options, mapping
# or analyzer definitions, translog settings, ...) for indices globally,
# in this file.
#
# Note, that it makes more sense to configure index settings specifically for
# a certain index, either when creating it or by using the index templates API.
#
# See <http://elasticsearch.org/guide/en/elasticsearch/reference/current/index-modules.html> and
# <http://elasticsearch.org/guide/en/elasticsearch/reference/current/indices-create-index.html>
# for more information.
# Set the number of shards (splits) of an index (5 by default):
#
#index.number_of_shards: 5
# Set the number of replicas (additional copies) of an index (1 by default):
#
#index.number_of_replicas: 1
# Note, that for development on a local machine, with small indices, it usually
# makes sense to "disable" the distributed features:
#
#index.number_of_shards: 1
#index.number_of_replicas: 0
# These settings directly affect the performance of index and search operations
# in your cluster. Assuming you have enough machines to hold shards and
# replicas, the rule of thumb is:
#
# 1. Having more *shards* enhances the _indexing_ performance and allows to
# _distribute_ a big index across machines.
# 2. Having more *replicas* enhances the _search_ performance and improves the
# cluster _availability_.
#
# The "number_of_shards" is a one-time setting for an index.
#
# The "number_of_replicas" can be increased or decreased anytime,
# by using the Index Update Settings API.
#
# Elasticsearch takes care about load balancing, relocating, gathering the
# results from nodes, etc. Experiment with different settings to fine-tune
# your setup.
# Use the Index Status API (<http://localhost:9200/A/_status>) to inspect
# the index status.
#################################### Paths ####################################
# Path to directory containing configuration (this file and logging.yml):
#
#path.conf: /path/to/conf
# Path to directory where to store index data allocated for this node.
#
path.data: /usr/ELK_Docker_Dir/Elasticsearch/data
#
# Can optionally include more than one location, causing data to be striped across
# the locations (a la RAID 0) on a file level, favouring locations with most free
# space on creation. For example:
#
#path.data: /path/to/data1,/path/to/data2
# Path to temporary files:
#
#path.work: /path/to/work
# Path to log files:
#
#path.logs: /path/to/logs
# Path to where plugins are installed:
#
#path.plugins: /path/to/plugins
#################################### Plugin ###################################
# If a plugin listed here is not installed for current node, the node will not start.
#
#plugin.mandatory: mapper-attachments,lang-groovy
################################### Memory ####################################
# Elasticsearch performs poorly when JVM starts swapping: you should ensure that
# it _never_ swaps.
#
# Set this property to true to lock the memory:
#
#bootstrap.mlockall: true
# Make sure that the ES_MIN_MEM and ES_MAX_MEM environment variables are set
# to the same value, and that the machine has enough memory to allocate
# for Elasticsearch, leaving enough memory for the operating system itself.
#
# You should also make sure that the Elasticsearch process is allowed to lock
# the memory, eg. by using `ulimit -l unlimited`.
############################## Network And HTTP ###############################
# Elasticsearch, by default, binds itself to the 0.0.0.0 address, and listens
# on port [9200-9300] for HTTP traffic and on port [9300-9400] for node-to-node
# communication. (the range means that if the port is busy, it will automatically
# try the next port).
# Set the bind address specifically (IPv4 or IPv6):
#
#network.bind_host: 192.168.0.1
# Set the address other nodes will use to communicate with this node. If not
# set, it is automatically derived. It must point to an actual IP address.
#
#network.publish_host: 192.168.0.1
# Set both 'bind_host' and 'publish_host':
#
#network.host: 192.168.0.1
# Set a custom port for the node to node communication (9300 by default):
#
#transport.tcp.port: 9300
# Enable compression for all communication between nodes (disabled by default):
#
#transport.tcp.compress: true
# Set a custom port to listen for HTTP traffic:
#
#http.port: 9200
# Set a custom allowed content length:
#
#http.max_content_length: 100mb
# Disable HTTP completely:
#
#http.enabled: false
http.cors.allow-origin: http://127.0.0.1
http.cors.enabled: true
################################### Gateway ###################################
# The gateway allows for persisting the cluster state between full cluster
# restarts. Every change to the state (such as adding an index) will be stored
# in the gateway, and when the cluster starts up for the first time,
# it will read its state from the gateway.
# There are several types of gateway implementations. For more information, see
# <http://elasticsearch.org/guide/en/elasticsearch/reference/current/modules-gateway.html>.
# The default gateway type is the "local" gateway (recommended):
#
#gateway.type: local
# Settings below control how and when to start the initial recovery process on
# a full cluster restart (to reuse as much local data as possible when using shared
# gateway).
# Allow recovery process after N nodes in a cluster are up:
#
#gateway.recover_after_nodes: 1
# Set the timeout to initiate the recovery process, once the N nodes
# from previous setting are up (accepts time value):
#
#gateway.recover_after_time: 5m
# Set how many nodes are expected in this cluster. Once these N nodes
# are up (and recover_after_nodes is met), begin recovery process immediately
# (without waiting for recover_after_time to expire):
#
#gateway.expected_nodes: 2
############################# Recovery Throttling #############################
# These settings allow to control the process of shards allocation between
# nodes during initial recovery, replica allocation, rebalancing,
# or when adding and removing nodes.
# Set the number of concurrent recoveries happening on a node:
#
# 1. During the initial recovery
#
#cluster.routing.allocation.node_initial_primaries_recoveries: 4
#
# 2. During adding/removing nodes, rebalancing, etc
#
#cluster.routing.allocation.node_concurrent_recoveries: 2
# Set to throttle throughput when recovering (eg. 100mb, by default 20mb):
#
#indices.recovery.max_bytes_per_sec: 20mb
# Set to limit the number of open concurrent streams when
# recovering a shard from a peer:
#
#indices.recovery.concurrent_streams: 5
################################## Discovery ##################################
# Discovery infrastructure ensures nodes can be found within a cluster
# and master node is elected. Multicast discovery is the default.
# Set to ensure a node sees N other master eligible nodes to be considered
# operational within the cluster. This should be set to a quorum/majority of
# the master-eligible nodes in the cluster.
#
#discovery.zen.minimum_master_nodes: 1
# Set the time to wait for ping responses from other nodes when discovering.
# Set this option to a higher value on a slow or congested network
# to minimize discovery failures:
#
#discovery.zen.ping.timeout: 3s
# For more information, see
# <http://elasticsearch.org/guide/en/elasticsearch/reference/current/modules-discovery-zen.html>
# Unicast discovery allows to explicitly control which nodes will be used
# to discover the cluster. It can be used when multicast is not present,
# or to restrict the cluster communication-wise.
#
# 1. Disable multicast discovery (enabled by default):
#
#discovery.zen.ping.multicast.enabled: false
#
# 2. Configure an initial list of master nodes in the cluster
# to perform discovery when new nodes (master or data) are started:
#
#discovery.zen.ping.unicast.hosts: ["host1", "host2:port"]
# EC2 discovery allows to use AWS EC2 API in order to perform discovery.
#
# You have to install the cloud-aws plugin for enabling the EC2 discovery.
#
# For more information, see
# <http://elasticsearch.org/guide/en/elasticsearch/reference/current/modules-discovery-ec2.html>
#
# See <http://elasticsearch.org/tutorials/elasticsearch-on-ec2/>
# for a step-by-step tutorial.
# GCE discovery allows to use Google Compute Engine API in order to perform discovery.
#
# You have to install the cloud-gce plugin for enabling the GCE discovery.
#
# For more information, see <https://github.com/elasticsearch/elasticsearch-cloud-gce>.
# Azure discovery allows to use Azure API in order to perform discovery.
#
# You have to install the cloud-azure plugin for enabling the Azure discovery.
#
# For more information, see <https://github.com/elasticsearch/elasticsearch-cloud-azure>.
################################## Slow Log ##################################
# Shard level query and fetch threshold logging.
#index.search.slowlog.threshold.query.warn: 10s
#index.search.slowlog.threshold.query.info: 5s
#index.search.slowlog.threshold.query.debug: 2s
#index.search.slowlog.threshold.query.trace: 500ms
#index.search.slowlog.threshold.fetch.warn: 1s
#index.search.slowlog.threshold.fetch.info: 800ms
#index.search.slowlog.threshold.fetch.debug: 500ms
#index.search.slowlog.threshold.fetch.trace: 200ms
#index.indexing.slowlog.threshold.index.warn: 10s
#index.indexing.slowlog.threshold.index.info: 5s
#index.indexing.slowlog.threshold.index.debug: 2s
#index.indexing.slowlog.threshold.index.trace: 500ms
################################## GC Logging ################################
#monitor.jvm.gc.young.warn: 1000ms
#monitor.jvm.gc.young.info: 700ms
#monitor.jvm.gc.young.debug: 400ms
#monitor.jvm.gc.old.warn: 10s
#monitor.jvm.gc.old.info: 5s
#monitor.jvm.gc.old.debug: 2s
################################## Security ################################
# Uncomment if you want to enable JSONP as a valid return transport on the
# http server. With this enabled, it may pose a security risk, so disabling
# it unless you need it is recommended (it is disabled by default).
#
#http.jsonp.enable: true
so as per this configuration data will be stored in this path /Elasticsearch/data
but I checked in /Elasticsearch/data directory there are no /node or /0 directory is created.
So How to store Data out-side elasticsearch-docker-container ?

Rsyslog filtering

How can i forward different app/service log messages from one server to a central rsyslog server ? for clarification :
server1:swift(all in one)
server2:Rsyslog
swift log location :/var/log/swift/all/log(server1)
sshd log location:/var/log/secure(server1)
i want to store swift and sshd log in server2 in different location,the issue is server2 is taking logs in different location but both location is storing log from both all.log and secure !! how can i filter this ?
this is server1(swift) rsyslog.conf
#### MODULES ####
# The imjournal module bellow is now used as a message source instead of imuxsock.
$ModLoad imuxsock # provides support for local system logging (e.g. via logger command)
$ModLoad imjournal # provides access to the systemd journal
#$ModLoad imklog # reads kernel messages (the same are read from journald)
#$ModLoad immark # provides --MARK-- message capability
# Provides UDP syslog reception
#$ModLoad imudp
#$UDPServerRun 514
# Provides TCP syslog reception
#$ModLoad imtcp
#$InputTCPServerRun 514
#swift log forward to remote rsyslog server
$ModLoad imfile
$InputFileName /var/log/swift/all.log
$InputFileTag swift-log
$InputFileStateFile swift-log
$InputFileSeverity info
$InputFileFacility local7
$InputRunFileMonitor
local7.* #rsyslog.labtest.com
#sshd log forward to remote rsyslog server
$ModLoad imfile
$InputFileName /var/log/secure
$InputFileTag sshd
$InputFileStateFile var-log-secure
$InputFileSeverity info
$InputFileFacility local7
$InputRunFileMonitor
# Send over TCP
# local7.* ##rsyslog.labtest.com
# # Send over UDP
local7.* #rsyslog.labtest.com
#### GLOBAL DIRECTIVES ####
# Where to place auxiliary files
$WorkDirectory /var/lib/rsyslog
# Use default timestamp format
$ActionFileDefaultTemplate RSYSLOG_TraditionalFileFormat
# File syncing capability is disabled by default. This feature is usually not required,
# not useful and an extreme performance hit
#$ActionFileEnableSync on
# Include all config files in /etc/rsyslog.d/
$IncludeConfig /etc/rsyslog.d/*.conf
# Turn off message reception via local log socket;
# local messages are retrieved through imjournal now.
$OmitLocalLogging on
# File to store the position in the journal
$IMJournalStateFile imjournal.state
#### RULES ####
# Log all kernel messages to the console.
# Logging much else clutters up the screen.
#kern.* /dev/console
# Log anything (except mail) of level info or higher.
# Don't log private authentication messages!
*.info;mail.none;authpriv.none;cron.none /var/log/messages
# The authpriv file has restricted access.
authpriv.* /var/log/secure
# Log all the mail messages in one place.
mail.* -/var/log/maillog
38,1 56%
}
and this is server2(rsyslog) rsyslog.conf
# rsyslog configuration file
# For more information see /usr/share/doc/rsyslog-*/rsyslog_conf.html
# If you experience problems, see http://www.rsyslog.com/doc/troubleshoot.html
#### MODULES ####
# The imjournal module bellow is now used as a message source instead of imuxsock.
$ModLoad imuxsock # provides support for local system logging (e.g. via logger command)
$ModLoad imjournal # provides access to the systemd journal
#$ModLoad imklog # reads kernel messages (the same are read from journald)
#$ModLoad immark # provides --MARK-- message capability
# Provides UDP syslog reception
$ModLoad imudp
$UDPServerRun 514
# Provides TCP syslog reception
$ModLoad imtcp
$InputTCPServerRun 514
#### GLOBAL DIRECTIVES ####
# Where to place auxiliary files
$WorkDirectory /var/lib/rsyslog
# Use default timestamp format
$ActionFileDefaultTemplate RSYSLOG_TraditionalFileFormat
# File syncing capability is disabled by default. This feature is usually not required,
# not useful and an extreme performance hit
#$ActionFileEnableSync on
# Include all config files in /etc/rsyslog.d/
$IncludeConfig /etc/rsyslog.d/*.conf
# Turn off message reception via local log socket;
# local messages are retrieved through imjournal now.
$OmitLocalLogging on
# File to store the position in the journal
$IMJournalStateFile imjournal.state
#### RULES ####
#:fromhost, isequal, "swift.labtest.com" /var/log/swift.log
#:fromhost, isequal, "swift.labtest.com" ~
# Log all kernel messages to the console.
# Logging much else clutters up the screen.
#kern.* /dev/console
# Log anything (except mail) of level info or higher.
# Don't log private authentication messages!
*.info;mail.none;authpriv.none;cron.none /var/log/messages
# The authpriv file has restricted access.
authpriv.* /var/log/secure
# Log all the mail messages in one place.
mail.* -/var/log/maillog
# Log cron stuff
cron.* /var/log/cron
# Everybody gets emergency messages
*.emerg :omusrmsg:*
# Save news errors of level crit and higher in a special file.
uucp,news.crit /var/log/spooler
# Save boot messages also to boot.log
local7.* /var/log/boot.log
# ### begin forwarding rule ###
# The statement between the begin ... end define a SINGLE forwarding
# rule. They belong together, do NOT split them. If you create multiple
# forwarding rules, duplicate the whole block!
# Remote Logging (we use TCP for reliable delivery)
#
# An on-disk queue is created for this action. If the remote host is
# down, messages are spooled to disk and sent when it is up again.
#$ActionQueueFileName fwdRule1 # unique name prefix for spool files
#$ActionQueueMaxDiskSpace 1g # 1gb space limit (use as much as possible)
#$ActionQueueSaveOnShutdown on # save messages to disk on shutdown
#$ActionQueueType LinkedList # run asynchronously
#$ActionResumeRetryCount -1 # infinite retries if host is down
# remote host is: name/ip:port, e.g. 192.168.0.1:514, port optional
#*.* ##remote-host:514
# ### end of the forwarding rule ###
#
#
$template Swift, "/var/log/swift/swift.log"
local7.* -?Swift
$template sshd, "/var/log/sshd/sshd.log"
local7.* -?sshd
As you read messages from files via imfile, you assign tags (swift-log and sshd respectively). You can use those tags on the receiving server for filtering. Something like:
if $syslogtag == "sshd" then {
action(type="omfile" file="/var/log/secure"
} else if $syslogtag == "swift-log" then {
action(type="omfile" file="/var/log/swift
}
Alternatively, you can also change the imfile configuration to assign different facilities to the tailed files (say local6 and local7). Then you could use the BSD-style config to do filtering like:
local6.* /var/log/secure # assuming local6 is assigned to sshd logs
local7.* /var/log/swift # and local7 for swift logs
You can find a list of properties you can use here: http://www.rsyslog.com/doc/master/configuration/properties.html
And information about using conditionals and other tricks here: http://www.rsyslog.com/doc/master/rainerscript/index.html
Though for some things you may need to upgrade to a recent version of rsyslog (e.g. 8.13 is the latest now but many distros still come with 5.x). You can find packages for the popular distros here: http://www.rsyslog.com/downloads/download-other/

Centos 7 rsyslog not logging remote messages

I've setup a remote rsyslog server for testing but I can't seem to get it to log from a remote system. I have an app on my desktop (windows) called "Syslog Test Message Utility 1.0" which sends test syslog messages on UDP 514. I see the message appear on my Centos box on port 514 (using Wireshark interface) but no corresponding line appears in /var/log/messages as I would expect.
I've verified that the logging does work (e.g.. logger test) but just not from the remote system. Here is my etc/rsyslog.conf file..
# rsyslog configuration file
# For more information see /usr/share/doc/rsyslog-*/rsyslog_conf.html
# If you experience problems, see http://www.rsyslog.com/doc/troubleshoot.html
#### MODULES ####
# The imjournal module bellow is now used as a message source instead of imuxsock.
$ModLoad imuxsock # provides support for local system logging (e.g. via logger command)
$ModLoad imjournal # provides access to the systemd journal
$ModLoad imklog # reads kernel messages (the same are read from journald)
$ModLoad immark # provides --MARK-- message capability
# Provides UDP syslog reception
$ModLoad imudp
$UDPServerRun 514
# Provides TCP syslog reception
$ModLoad imtcp
$InputTCPServerRun 514
#### GLOBAL DIRECTIVES ####
# Where to place auxiliary files
$WorkDirectory /var/lib/rsyslog
# Use default timestamp format
$ActionFileDefaultTemplate RSYSLOG_TraditionalFileFormat
# File syncing capability is disabled by default. This feature is usually not required,
# not useful and an extreme performance hit
#$ActionFileEnableSync on
# Include all config files in /etc/rsyslog.d/
$IncludeConfig /etc/rsyslog.d/*.conf
# Turn off message reception via local log socket;
# local messages are retrieved through imjournal now.
#$OmitLocalLogging on
# File to store the position in the journal
$IMJournalStateFile imjournal.state
#### RULES ####
# Log all kernel messages to the console.
# Logging much else clutters up the screen.
kern.* /dev/console
# Log anything (except mail) of level info or higher.
# Don't log private authentication messages!
*.info;mail.none;authpriv.none;cron.none /var/log/messages
# The authpriv file has restricted access.
authpriv.* /var/log/secure
# Log all the mail messages in one place.
mail.* -/var/log/maillog
# Log cron stuff
cron.* /var/log/cron
# Everybody gets emergency messages
*.emerg :omusrmsg:*
# Save news errors of level crit and higher in a special file.
uucp,news.crit /var/log/spooler
# Save boot messages also to boot.log
local7.* /var/log/boot.log
# ### begin forwarding rule ###
# The statement between the begin ... end define a SINGLE forwarding
# rule. They belong together, do NOT split them. If you create multiple
# forwarding rules, duplicate the whole block!
# Remote Logging (we use TCP for reliable delivery)
#
# An on-disk queue is created for this action. If the remote host is
# down, messages are spooled to disk and sent when it is up again.
#$ActionQueueFileName fwdRule1 # unique name prefix for spool files
#$ActionQueueMaxDiskSpace 1g # 1gb space limit (use as much as possible)
#$ActionQueueSaveOnShutdown on # save messages to disk on shutdown
#$ActionQueueType LinkedList # run asynchronously
#$ActionResumeRetryCount -1 # infinite retries if host is down
# remote host is: name/ip:port, e.g. 192.168.0.1:514, port optional
# ### end of the forwarding rule ###
and I've verified that the host is listening on port 514 as expected
tcp 0 0 0.0.0.0:514 0.0.0.0:* LISTEN 15273/rsyslogd
tcp6 0 0 :::514 :::* LISTEN 15273/rsyslogd
udp 0 0 0.0.0.0:514 0.0.0.0:* 15273/rsyslogd
udp6 0 0 :::514 :::* 15273/rsyslogd
I'm just not even sure what to look for next.. I can't seem to figure out why my message coming from my Syslog app isn't creating a log entry in my messages file.
It turns out that CentOS 7 (and I'm assuming RHEL 7) have a firewall other than iptables called firewalld. After disabling this firewall in my dev environment I was able to successfully syslog to 514.
systemctl disable firewalld
systemctl stop firewalld
systemctl status firewalld
Disabling the firewall is admittedly overkill, as I'm sure you can create a rule for 514, but since my server is in a lab...it was acceptable in my case.

ConnectTransportException in Elastic Search

I am new to Elastic Search and just configured it on my Ubuntu 12.04 . Now whenever I start elastic search it starts normally but after 5 to 8 seconds it throws the following exception.
I have not changed anything in configuration files but yet they are as follows:
logging.yml:
# you can override this using by setting a system property, for example -Des.logger.level=DEBUG
es.logger.level: INFO
rootLogger: ${es.logger.level}, console, file
logger:
# log action execution errors for easier debugging
action: DEBUG
# reduce the logging for aws, too much is logged under the default INFO
com.amazonaws: WARN
# gateway
#gateway: DEBUG
#index.gateway: DEBUG
# peer shard recovery
#indices.recovery: DEBUG
# discovery
#discovery: TRACE
index.search.slowlog: TRACE, index_search_slow_log_file
index.indexing.slowlog: TRACE, index_indexing_slow_log_file
additivity:
index.search.slowlog: false
index.indexing.slowlog: false
appender:
console:
type: console
layout:
type: consolePattern
conversionPattern: "[%d{ISO8601}][%-5p][%-25c] %m%n"
file:
type: dailyRollingFile
file: ${path.logs}/${cluster.name}.log
datePattern: "'.'yyyy-MM-dd"
layout:
type: pattern
conversionPattern: "[%d{ISO8601}][%-5p][%-25c] %m%n"
index_search_slow_log_file:
type: dailyRollingFile
file: ${path.logs}/${cluster.name}_index_search_slowlog.log
datePattern: "'.'yyyy-MM-dd"
layout:
type: pattern
conversionPattern: "[%d{ISO8601}][%-5p][%-25c] %m%n"
index_indexing_slow_log_file:
type: dailyRollingFile
file: ${path.logs}/${cluster.name}_index_indexing_slowlog.log
datePattern: "'.'yyyy-MM-dd"
layout:
type: pattern
conversionPattern: "[%d{ISO8601}][%-5p][%-25c] %m%n"
elasticsearch.yml:
##################### Elasticsearch Configuration Example #####################
# This file contains an overview of various configuration settings,
# targeted at operations staff. Application developers should
# consult the guide at <http://elasticsearch.org/guide>.
#
# The installation procedure is covered at
# <http://elasticsearch.org/guide/en/elasticsearch/reference/current/setup.html>.
#
# Elasticsearch comes with reasonable defaults for most settings,
# so you can try it out without bothering with configuration.
#
# Most of the time, these defaults are just fine for running a production
# cluster. If you're fine-tuning your cluster, or wondering about the
# effect of certain configuration option, please _do ask_ on the
# mailing list or IRC channel [http://elasticsearch.org/community].
# Any element in the configuration can be replaced with environment variables
# by placing them in ${...} notation. For example:
#
#node.rack: ${RACK_ENV_VAR}
# For information on supported formats and syntax for the config file, see
# <http://elasticsearch.org/guide/en/elasticsearch/reference/current/setup-configuration.html>
################################### Cluster ###################################
# Cluster name identifies your cluster for auto-discovery. If you're running
# multiple clusters on the same network, make sure you're using unique names.
#
cluster.name: jamil_search_cluster
#################################### Node #####################################
# Node names are generated dynamically on startup, so you're relieved
# from configuring them manually. You can tie this node to a specific name:
#
#node.name: "Franz Kafka"
# Every node can be configured to allow or deny being eligible as the master,
# and to allow or deny to store the data.
#
# Allow this node to be eligible as a master node (enabled by default):
#
#node.master: true
#
# Allow this node to store data (enabled by default):
#
#node.data: true
# You can exploit these settings to design advanced cluster topologies.
#
# 1. You want this node to never become a master node, only to hold data.
# This will be the "workhorse" of your cluster.
#
#node.master: false
#node.data: true
#
# 2. You want this node to only serve as a master: to not store any data and
# to have free resources. This will be the "coordinator" of your cluster.
#
#node.master: true
#node.data: false
#
# 3. You want this node to be neither master nor data node, but
# to act as a "search load balancer" (fetching data from nodes,
# aggregating results, etc.)
#
#node.master: false
#node.data: false
# Use the Cluster Health API [http://localhost:9200/_cluster/health], the
# Node Info API [http://localhost:9200/_nodes] or GUI tools
# such as <http://www.elasticsearch.org/overview/marvel/>,
# <http://github.com/karmi/elasticsearch-paramedic>,
# <http://github.com/lukas-vlcek/bigdesk> and
# <http://mobz.github.com/elasticsearch-head> to inspect the cluster state.
# A node can have generic attributes associated with it, which can later be used
# for customized shard allocation filtering, or allocation awareness. An attribute
# is a simple key value pair, similar to node.key: value, here is an example:
#
#node.rack: rack314
# By default, multiple nodes are allowed to start from the same installation location
# to disable it, set the following:
#node.max_local_storage_nodes: 1
#################################### Index ####################################
# You can set a number of options (such as shard/replica options, mapping
# or analyzer definitions, translog settings, ...) for indices globally,
# in this file.
#
# Note, that it makes more sense to configure index settings specifically for
# a certain index, either when creating it or by using the index templates API.
#
# See <http://elasticsearch.org/guide/en/elasticsearch/reference/current/index-modules.html> and
# <http://elasticsearch.org/guide/en/elasticsearch/reference/current/indices-create-index.html>
# for more information.
# Set the number of shards (splits) of an index (5 by default):
#
#index.number_of_shards: 5
# Set the number of replicas (additional copies) of an index (1 by default):
#
#index.number_of_replicas: 1
# Note, that for development on a local machine, with small indices, it usually
# makes sense to "disable" the distributed features:
#
#index.number_of_shards: 1
#index.number_of_replicas: 0
# These settings directly affect the performance of index and search operations
# in your cluster. Assuming you have enough machines to hold shards and
# replicas, the rule of thumb is:
#
# 1. Having more *shards* enhances the _indexing_ performance and allows to
# _distribute_ a big index across machines.
# 2. Having more *replicas* enhances the _search_ performance and improves the
# cluster _availability_.
#
# The "number_of_shards" is a one-time setting for an index.
#
# The "number_of_replicas" can be increased or decreased anytime,
# by using the Index Update Settings API.
#
# Elasticsearch takes care about load balancing, relocating, gathering the
# results from nodes, etc. Experiment with different settings to fine-tune
# your setup.
# Use the Index Status API (<http://localhost:9200/A/_status>) to inspect
# the index status.
#################################### Paths ####################################
# Path to directory containing configuration (this file and logging.yml):
#
#path.conf: /path/to/conf
# Path to directory where to store index data allocated for this node.
#
#path.data: /path/to/data
#
# Can optionally include more than one location, causing data to be striped across
# the locations (a la RAID 0) on a file level, favouring locations with most free
# space on creation. For example:
#
#path.data: /path/to/data1,/path/to/data2
# Path to temporary files:
#
#path.work: /path/to/work
# Path to log files:
#
#path.logs: /path/to/logs
# Path to where plugins are installed:
#
#path.plugins: /path/to/plugins
#################################### Plugin ###################################
# If a plugin listed here is not installed for current node, the node will not start.
#
#plugin.mandatory: mapper-attachments,lang-groovy
################################### Memory ####################################
# Elasticsearch performs poorly when JVM starts swapping: you should ensure that
# it _never_ swaps.
#
# Set this property to true to lock the memory:
#
#bootstrap.mlockall: true
# Make sure that the ES_MIN_MEM and ES_MAX_MEM environment variables are set
# to the same value, and that the machine has enough memory to allocate
# for Elasticsearch, leaving enough memory for the operating system itself.
#
# You should also make sure that the Elasticsearch process is allowed to lock
# the memory, eg. by using `ulimit -l unlimited`.
############################## Network And HTTP ###############################
# Elasticsearch, by default, binds itself to the 0.0.0.0 address, and listens
# on port [9200-9300] for HTTP traffic and on port [9300-9400] for node-to-node
# communication. (the range means that if the port is busy, it will automatically
# try the next port).
# Set the bind address specifically (IPv4 or IPv6):
#
network.bind_host: localhost
script.disable_dynamic: true
# Set the address other nodes will use to communicate with this node. If not
# set, it is automatically derived. It must point to an actual IP address.
#
#network.publish_host: 192.168.0.1
# Set both 'bind_host' and 'publish_host':
#
#network.host: 192.168.0.1
# Set a custom port for the node to node communication (9300 by default):
#
#transport.tcp.port: 9300
# Enable compression for all communication between nodes (disabled by default):
#
#transport.tcp.compress: true
# Set a custom port to listen for HTTP traffic:
#
#http.port: 9200
# Set a custom allowed content length:
#
#http.max_content_length: 100mb
# Disable HTTP completely:
#
#http.enabled: false
################################### Gateway ###################################
# The gateway allows for persisting the cluster state between full cluster
# restarts. Every change to the state (such as adding an index) will be stored
# in the gateway, and when the cluster starts up for the first time,
# it will read its state from the gateway.
# There are several types of gateway implementations. For more information, see
# <http://elasticsearch.org/guide/en/elasticsearch/reference/current/modules-gateway.html>.
# The default gateway type is the "local" gateway (recommended):
#
#gateway.type: local
# Settings below control how and when to start the initial recovery process on
# a full cluster restart (to reuse as much local data as possible when using shared
# gateway).
# Allow recovery process after N nodes in a cluster are up:
#
#gateway.recover_after_nodes: 1
# Set the timeout to initiate the recovery process, once the N nodes
# from previous setting are up (accepts time value):
#
#gateway.recover_after_time: 5m
# Set how many nodes are expected in this cluster. Once these N nodes
# are up (and recover_after_nodes is met), begin recovery process immediately
# (without waiting for recover_after_time to expire):
#
#gateway.expected_nodes: 2
############################# Recovery Throttling #############################
# These settings allow to control the process of shards allocation between
# nodes during initial recovery, replica allocation, rebalancing,
# or when adding and removing nodes.
# Set the number of concurrent recoveries happening on a node:
#
# 1. During the initial recovery
#
#cluster.routing.allocation.node_initial_primaries_recoveries: 4
#
# 2. During adding/removing nodes, rebalancing, etc
#
#cluster.routing.allocation.node_concurrent_recoveries: 2
# Set to throttle throughput when recovering (eg. 100mb, by default 20mb):
#
#indices.recovery.max_bytes_per_sec: 20mb
# Set to limit the number of open concurrent streams when
# recovering a shard from a peer:
#
#indices.recovery.concurrent_streams: 5
################################## Discovery ##################################
# Discovery infrastructure ensures nodes can be found within a cluster
# and master node is elected. Multicast discovery is the default.
# Set to ensure a node sees N other master eligible nodes to be considered
# operational within the cluster. This should be set to a quorum/majority of
# the master-eligible nodes in the cluster.
#
#discovery.zen.minimum_master_nodes: 1
# Set the time to wait for ping responses from other nodes when discovering.
# Set this option to a higher value on a slow or congested network
# to minimize discovery failures:
#
#discovery.zen.ping.timeout: 3s
# For more information, see
# <http://elasticsearch.org/guide/en/elasticsearch/reference/current/modules-discovery-zen.html>
# Unicast discovery allows to explicitly control which nodes will be used
# to discover the cluster. It can be used when multicast is not present,
# or to restrict the cluster communication-wise.
#
# 1. Disable multicast discovery (enabled by default):
#
#discovery.zen.ping.multicast.enabled: false
#
# 2. Configure an initial list of master nodes in the cluster
# to perform discovery when new nodes (master or data) are started:
#
#discovery.zen.ping.unicast.hosts: ["host1", "host2:port"]
# EC2 discovery allows to use AWS EC2 API in order to perform discovery.
#
# You have to install the cloud-aws plugin for enabling the EC2 discovery.
#
# For more information, see
# <http://elasticsearch.org/guide/en/elasticsearch/reference/current/modules-discovery-ec2.html>
#
# See <http://elasticsearch.org/tutorials/elasticsearch-on-ec2/>
# for a step-by-step tutorial.
# GCE discovery allows to use Google Compute Engine API in order to perform discovery.
#
# You have to install the cloud-gce plugin for enabling the GCE discovery.
#
# For more information, see <https://github.com/elasticsearch/elasticsearch-cloud-gce>.
# Azure discovery allows to use Azure API in order to perform discovery.
#
# You have to install the cloud-azure plugin for enabling the Azure discovery.
#
# For more information, see <https://github.com/elasticsearch/elasticsearch-cloud-azure>.
################################## Slow Log ##################################
# Shard level query and fetch threshold logging.
#index.search.slowlog.threshold.query.warn: 10s
#index.search.slowlog.threshold.query.info: 5s
#index.search.slowlog.threshold.query.debug: 2s
#index.search.slowlog.threshold.query.trace: 500ms
#index.search.slowlog.threshold.fetch.warn: 1s
#index.search.slowlog.threshold.fetch.info: 800ms
#index.search.slowlog.threshold.fetch.debug: 500ms
#index.search.slowlog.threshold.fetch.trace: 200ms
#index.indexing.slowlog.threshold.index.warn: 10s
#index.indexing.slowlog.threshold.index.info: 5s
#index.indexing.slowlog.threshold.index.debug: 2s
#index.indexing.slowlog.threshold.index.trace: 500ms
################################## GC Logging ################################
#monitor.jvm.gc.young.warn: 1000ms
#monitor.jvm.gc.young.info: 700ms
#monitor.jvm.gc.young.debug: 400ms
#monitor.jvm.gc.old.warn: 10s
#monitor.jvm.gc.old.info: 5s
#monitor.jvm.gc.old.debug: 2s
################################## Security ################################
# Uncomment if you want to enable JSONP as a valid return transport on the
# http server. With this enabled, it may pose a security risk, so disabling
# it unless you need it is recommended (it is disabled by default).
#
#http.jsonp.enable: true
Can anyone tell me that what is the root cause of this exception?
Regards
Elasticsearch is relying on port 9301 on 192.168.0.7 interface to send out and receive multicast requests to search and add cluster members. In this case, the requests are being blocked. This is most probably to do with your firewall setup. This is being blocked as it is not on the loopback interface but on your nic interface and the firewall is blocking it. if this is a single dev machine, do this:
In elasticsearch.yml:
discovery.zen.ping.multicast.enabled: false
discovery.zen.ping.unicast.hosts: ["localhost"]
This should sort your problem out.

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