Specify general settings
editSpecify general settings
editYou can specify settings in the filebeat.yml
config file to control the
general behavior of Filebeat. This includes:
- Global options that control things like publisher behavior and the location of some files.
- General options that are supported by all Elastic Beats.
Global Filebeat configuration options
editThese options are in the filebeat
namespace.
registry_file
editThe name of the registry file. If a relative path is used, it is considered relative to the
data path. See the Directory layout section for details. The default is ${path.data}/registry
.
filebeat.registry_file: registry
It is not possible to use a symlink as registry file.
The registry file is only updated when new events are flushed and not on a predefined period. That means in case there are some states where the TTL expired, these are only removed when new event are processed.
registry_file_permissions
editThe permissions mask to apply on registry file. The default value is 0600. The permissions option must be a valid Unix-style file permissions mask expressed in octal notation. In Go, numbers in octal notation must start with 0.
This option is not supported on Windows.
Examples:
0644: give read and write access to the file owner, and read access to all others. 0600: give read and write access to the file owner, and no access to all others. 0664: give read and write access to the file owner and members of the group associated with the file, as well as read access to all other users.
filebeat.registry_file_permissions: 0600
registry_flush
editThe timeout value that controls when registry entries are written to disk (flushed). When an unwritten update exceeds this value, it triggers a write to disk. When registry_flush is set to 0s, the registry is written to disk after each batch of events has been published successfully. The default value is 0s.
The registry is always updated when Filebeat shuts down normally. After an abnormal shutdown, the registry will not be up-to-date if the registry_flush value is >0s. Filebeat will send published events again (depending on values in the last updated registry file).
Filtering out a huge number of logs can cause many registry updates, slowing down processing. Setting registry_flush to a value >0s reduces write operations, helping Filebeat process more events.
config_dir
edit[6.0.0] Deprecated in 6.0.0. Use Input config instead.
The full path to the directory that contains additional input configuration files.
Each configuration file must end with .yml
. Each config file must also specify the full Filebeat
config hierarchy even though only the inputs
part of each file is processed. All global
options, such as registry_file
, are ignored.
The config_dir
option MUST point to a directory other than the directory where the main Filebeat config file resides.
If the specified path is not absolute, it is considered relative to the configuration path. See the Directory layout section for details.
filebeat.config_dir: path/to/configs
shutdown_timeout
editHow long Filebeat waits on shutdown for the publisher to finish sending events before Filebeat shuts down.
By default, this option is disabled, and Filebeat does not wait for the publisher to finish sending events before shutting down. This means that any events sent to the output, but not acknowledged before Filebeat shuts down, are sent again when you restart Filebeat. For more details about how this works, see How does Filebeat ensure at-least-once delivery?.
You can configure the shutdown_timeout
option to specify the maximum amount
of time that Filebeat waits for the publisher to finish sending events before
shutting down. If all events are acknowledged before shutdown_timeout
is
reached, Filebeat will shut down.
There is no recommended setting for this option because determining the correct
value for shutdown_timeout
depends heavily on the environment in which
Filebeat is running and the current state of the output.
Example configuration:
filebeat.shutdown_timeout: 5s
General configuration options
editThese options are supported by all Elastic Beats. Because they are common options, they are not namespaced.
Here is an example configuration:
name: "my-shipper" tags: ["service-X", "web-tier"]
name
editThe name of the Beat. If this option is empty, the hostname
of the server is
used. The name is included as the beat.name
field in each published transaction. You can
use the name to group all transactions sent by a single Beat.
Example:
name: "my-shipper"
tags
editA list of tags that the Beat includes in the tags
field of each published
transaction. Tags make it easy to group servers by different logical properties.
For example, if you have a cluster of web servers, you can add the "webservers"
tag to the Beat on each server, and then use filters and queries in the Kibana
web interface to get visualisations for the whole group of servers.
Example:
tags: ["my-service", "hardware", "test"]
fields
editOptional fields that you can specify to add additional information to the
output. Fields can be scalar values, arrays, dictionaries, or any nested
combination of these. By default, the fields that you specify here will be
grouped under a fields
sub-dictionary in the output document. To store the
custom fields as top-level fields, set the fields_under_root
option to true.
Example:
fields: {project: "myproject", instance-id: "574734885120952459"}
fields_under_root
editIf this option is set to true, the custom fields are
stored as top-level fields in the output document instead of being grouped under
a fields
sub-dictionary. If the custom field names conflict with other field
names, then the custom fields overwrite the other fields.
Example:
fields_under_root: true fields: instance_id: i-10a64379 region: us-east-1
processors
editA list of processors to apply to the data generated by the beat.
See Filter and enhance the exported data for information about specifying processors in your config.
max_procs
editSets the maximum number of CPUs that can be executing simultaneously. The default is the number of logical CPUs available in the system.