WARNING: Version 6.0 of Heartbeat has passed its EOL date.
This documentation is no longer being maintained and may be removed. If you are running this version, we strongly advise you to upgrade. For the latest information, see the current release documentation.
heartbeat.reference.yml
editheartbeat.reference.yml
editThe following reference file is available with your Heartbeat installation. It
shows all non-deprecated Heartbeat options. You can copy from this file and paste
configurations into the heartbeat.yml
file to customize it.
For rpm and deb, you’ll find the reference configuration file at /etc/heartbeat/heartbeat.reference.yml
. Under
Docker, it’s located at /usr/share/heartbeat/heartbeat.reference.yml
. For mac and win,
look in the archive that you just extracted.
The contents of the file are included here for your convenience.
################### Heartbeat Configuration Example ######################### # This file is a full configuration example documenting all non-deprecated # options in comments. For a shorter configuration example, that contains # only some common options, please see heartbeat.yml in the same directory. # # You can find the full configuration reference here: # https://www.elastic.co/guide/en/beats/heartbeat/index.html ############################# Heartbeat ###################################### # Configure monitors heartbeat.monitors: - type: icmp # monitor type `icmp` (requires root) uses ICMP Echo Request to ping # configured hosts # Monitor name used for job name and document type. #name: icmp # Enable/Disable monitor #enabled: true # Configure task schedule using cron-like syntax schedule: '*/5 * * * * * *' # exactly every 5 seconds like 10:00:00, 10:00:05, ... # List of hosts to ping hosts: ["localhost"] # Configure IP protocol types to ping on if hostnames are configured. # Ping all resolvable IPs if `mode` is `all`, or only one IP if `mode` is `any`. ipv4: true ipv6: true mode: any # Configure file json file to be watched for changes to the monitor: #watch.poll_file: # Path to check for updates. #path: # Interval between file file changed checks. #interval: 5s # Total running time per ping test. timeout: 16s # Waiting duration until another ICMP Echo Request is emitted. wait: 1s # The tags of the monitors 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"] # Optional fields that you can specify to add additional information to the # monitor output. Fields can be scalar values, arrays, dictionaries, or any nested # combination of these. #fields: # env: staging # If 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. Default is false. #fields_under_root: false - type: tcp # monitor type `tcp`. Connect via TCP and optionally verify endpoint # by sending/receiving a custom payload # Monitor name used for job name and document type #name: tcp # Enable/Disable monitor #enabled: true # Configure task schedule schedule: '@every 5s' # every 5 seconds from start of beat # configure hosts to ping. # Entries can be: # - plain host name or IP like `localhost`: # Requires ports configs to be checked. If ssl is configured, # a SSL/TLS based connection will be established. Otherwise plain tcp connection # will be established # - hostname + port like `localhost:12345`: # Connect to port on given host. If ssl is configured, # a SSL/TLS based connection will be established. Otherwise plain tcp connection # will be established # - full url syntax. `scheme://<host>:[port]`. The `<scheme>` can be one of # `tcp`, `plain`, `ssl` and `tls`. If `tcp`, `plain` is configured, a plain # tcp connection will be established, even if ssl is configured. # Using `tls`/`ssl`, an SSL connection is established. If no ssl is configured, # system defaults will be used (not supported on windows). # If `port` is missing in url, the ports setting is required. hosts: ["localhost:9200"] # Configure IP protocol types to ping on if hostnames are configured. # Ping all resolvable IPs if `mode` is `all`, or only one IP if `mode` is `any`. ipv4: true ipv6: true mode: any # Configure file json file to be watched for changes to the monitor: #watch.poll_file: # Path to check for updates. #path: # Interval between file file changed checks. #interval: 5s # List of ports to ping if host does not contain a port number # ports: [80, 9200, 5044] # Total test connection and data exchange timeout #timeout: 16s # Optional payload string to send to remote and expected answer. If none is # configured, the endpoint is expected to be up if connection attempt was # successful. If only `send_string` is configured, any response will be # accepted as ok. If only `receive_string` is configured, no payload will be # send, but client expects to receive expected payload on connect. #check: #send: '' #receive: '' # SOCKS5 proxy url # proxy_url: '' # Resolve hostnames locally instead on SOCKS5 server: #proxy_use_local_resolver: false # TLS/SSL connection settings: #ssl: # Certificate Authorities #certificate_authorities: [''] # Required TLS protocols #supported_protocols: ["TLSv1.0", "TLSv1.1", "TLSv1.2"] - type: http # monitor type `http`. Connect via HTTP an optionally verify response # Monitor name used for job name and document type #name: http # Enable/Disable monitor #enabled: true # Configure task schedule schedule: '@every 5s' # every 5 seconds from start of beat # Configure URLs to ping urls: ["http://localhost:9200"] # Configure IP protocol types to ping on if hostnames are configured. # Ping all resolvable IPs if `mode` is `all`, or only one IP if `mode` is `any`. ipv4: true ipv6: true mode: any # Configure file json file to be watched for changes to the monitor: #watch.poll_file: # Path to check for updates. #path: # Interval between file file changed checks. #interval: 5s # Optional HTTP proxy url. If not set HTTP_PROXY environment variable will be used. #proxy_url: '' # Total test connection and data exchange timeout #timeout: 16s # Optional Authentication Credentials #username: '' #password: '' # TLS/SSL connection settings for use with HTTPS endpoint. If not configured # system defaults will be used. #ssl: # Certificate Authorities #certificate_authorities: [''] # Required TLS protocols #supported_protocols: ["TLSv1.0", "TLSv1.1", "TLSv1.2"] # Request settings: #check.request: # Configure HTTP method to use. Only 'HEAD', 'GET' and 'POST' methods are allowed. #method: "GET" # Dictionary of additional HTTP headers to send: #headers: # Optional request body content #body: # Expected response settings #check.response: # Expected status code. If not configured or set to 0 any status code not # being 404 is accepted. #status: 0 # Required response headers. #headers: # Required response contents. #body: heartbeat.scheduler: # Limit number of concurrent tasks executed by heartbeat. The task limit if # disabled if set to 0. The default is 0. #limit: 0 # Set the scheduler it's timezone #location: '' #================================ General ====================================== # 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"] # Optional 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. #fields: # env: staging # If 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. Default is false. #fields_under_root: false # Internal queue configuration for buffering events to be published. #queue: # Queue type by name (default 'mem') # The memory queue will present all available events (up to the outputs # bulk_max_size) to the output, the moment the output is ready to server # another batch of events. #mem: # Max number of events the queue can buffer. #events: 4096 # Hints the minimum number of events stored in the queue, # before providing a batch of events to the outputs. # A value of 0 (the default) ensures events are immediately available # to be sent to the outputs. #flush.min_events: 2048 # Maximum duration after which events are available to the outputs, # if the number of events stored in the queue is < min_flush_events. #flush.timeout: 1s # Sets the maximum number of CPUs that can be executing simultaneously. The # default is the number of logical CPUs available in the system. #max_procs: #================================ Processors =================================== # Processors are used to reduce the number of fields in the exported event or to # enhance the event with external metadata. This section defines a list of # processors that are applied one by one and the first one receives the initial # event: # # event -> filter1 -> event1 -> filter2 ->event2 ... # # The supported processors are drop_fields, drop_event, include_fields, and # add_cloud_metadata. # # For example, you can use the following processors to keep the fields that # contain CPU load percentages, but remove the fields that contain CPU ticks # values: # #processors: #- include_fields: # fields: ["cpu"] #- drop_fields: # fields: ["cpu.user", "cpu.system"] # # The following example drops the events that have the HTTP response code 200: # #processors: #- drop_event: # when: # equals: # http.code: 200 # # The following example enriches each event with metadata from the cloud # provider about the host machine. It works on EC2, GCE, DigitalOcean, # Tencent Cloud, and Alibaba Cloud. # #processors: #- add_cloud_metadata: ~ # # The following example enriches each event with the machine's local time zone # offset from UTC. # #processors: #- add_locale: # format: offset # # The following example enriches each event with docker metadata, it matches # given fields to an existing container id and adds info from that container: # #processors: #- add_docker_metadata: # host: "unix:///var/run/docker.sock" # match_fields: ["system.process.cgroup.id"] # # To connect to Docker over TLS you must specify a client and CA certificate. # #ssl: # # certificate_authority: "/etc/pki/root/ca.pem" # # certificate: "/etc/pki/client/cert.pem" # # key: "/etc/pki/client/cert.key" # # The following example enriches each event with docker metadata, it matches # container id from log path available in `source` field (by default it expects # it to be /var/lib/docker/containers/*/*.log). # #processors: #- add_docker_metadata: ~ #============================= Elastic Cloud ================================== # These settings simplify using heartbeat with the Elastic Cloud (https://cloud.elastic.co/). # The cloud.id setting overwrites the `output.elasticsearch.hosts` and # `setup.kibana.host` options. # You can find the `cloud.id` in the Elastic Cloud web UI. #cloud.id: # The cloud.auth setting overwrites the `output.elasticsearch.username` and # `output.elasticsearch.password` settings. The format is `<user>:<pass>`. #cloud.auth: #================================ Outputs ====================================== # Configure what output to use when sending the data collected by the beat. #-------------------------- Elasticsearch output ------------------------------- output.elasticsearch: # Boolean flag to enable or disable the output module. #enabled: true # 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"] # Set gzip compression level. #compression_level: 0 # Optional protocol and basic auth credentials. #protocol: "https" #username: "elastic" #password: "changeme" # Dictionary of HTTP parameters to pass within the url with index operations. #parameters: #param1: value1 #param2: value2 # Number of workers per Elasticsearch host. #worker: 1 # Optional index name. The default is "heartbeat" plus date # and generates [heartbeat-]YYYY.MM.DD keys. # In case you modify this pattern you must update setup.template.name and setup.template.pattern accordingly. #index: "heartbeat-%{[beat.version]}-%{+yyyy.MM.dd}" # Optional ingest node pipeline. By default no pipeline will be used. #pipeline: "" # Optional HTTP Path #path: "/elasticsearch" # Custom HTTP headers to add to each request #headers: # X-My-Header: Contents of the header # 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 # Use SSL settings for HTTPS. Default is true. #ssl.enabled: true # Configure SSL verification mode. If `none` is configured, all server hosts # and certificates will be accepted. In this mode, SSL based connections are # susceptible to man-in-the-middle attacks. Use only for testing. Default is # `full`. #ssl.verification_mode: full # List of supported/valid TLS versions. By default all TLS versions 1.0 up to # 1.2 are enabled. #ssl.supported_protocols: [TLSv1.0, TLSv1.1, TLSv1.2] # SSL configuration. By default is off. # List of root certificates for HTTPS server verifications #ssl.certificate_authorities: ["/etc/pki/root/ca.pem"] # Certificate for SSL client authentication #ssl.certificate: "/etc/pki/client/cert.pem" # Client Certificate Key #ssl.key: "/etc/pki/client/cert.key" # Optional passphrase for decrypting the Certificate Key. #ssl.key_passphrase: '' # Configure cipher suites to be used for SSL connections #ssl.cipher_suites: [] # Configure curve types for ECDHE based cipher suites #ssl.curve_types: [] #----------------------------- Logstash output --------------------------------- #output.logstash: # Boolean flag to enable or disable the output module. #enabled: true # The Logstash hosts #hosts: ["localhost:5044"] # Number of workers per Logstash host. #worker: 1 # Set gzip compression level. #compression_level: 3 # Optional maximum time to live for a connection to Logstash, after which the # connection will be re-established. A value of `0s` (the default) will # disable this feature. # # Not yet supported for async connections (i.e. with the "pipelining" option set) #ttl: 30s # Optional load balance the events between the Logstash hosts #loadbalance: true # Number of batches to be sent asynchronously to logstash while processing # new batches. #pipelining: 5 # If enabled only a subset of events in a batch of events is transfered per # transaction. The number of events to sent increases up to `bulk_max_size` # if no error is encountered. #slow_start: false # Optional index name. The default index name is set to name of the beat # in all lowercase. #index: 'heartbeat' # SOCKS5 proxy server URL #proxy_url: socks5://user:password@socks5-server:2233 # Resolve names locally when using a proxy server. Defaults to false. #proxy_use_local_resolver: false # Enable SSL support. SSL is automatically enabled, if any SSL setting is set. #ssl.enabled: true # Configure SSL verification mode. If `none` is configured, all server hosts # and certificates will be accepted. In this mode, SSL based connections are # susceptible to man-in-the-middle attacks. Use only for testing. Default is # `full`. #ssl.verification_mode: full # List of supported/valid TLS versions. By default all TLS versions 1.0 up to # 1.2 are enabled. #ssl.supported_protocols: [TLSv1.0, TLSv1.1, TLSv1.2] # Optional SSL configuration options. SSL is off by default. # List of root certificates for HTTPS server verifications #ssl.certificate_authorities: ["/etc/pki/root/ca.pem"] # Certificate for SSL client authentication #ssl.certificate: "/etc/pki/client/cert.pem" # Client Certificate Key #ssl.key: "/etc/pki/client/cert.key" # Optional passphrase for decrypting the Certificate Key. #ssl.key_passphrase: '' # Configure cipher suites to be used for SSL connections #ssl.cipher_suites: [] # Configure curve types for ECDHE based cipher suites #ssl.curve_types: [] #------------------------------- Kafka output ---------------------------------- #output.kafka: # Boolean flag to enable or disable the output module. #enabled: true # The list of Kafka broker addresses from where to fetch the cluster metadata. # The cluster metadata contain the actual Kafka brokers events are published # to. #hosts: ["localhost:9092"] # The Kafka topic used for produced events. The setting can be a format string # using any event field. To set the topic from document type use `%{[type]}`. #topic: beats # The Kafka event key setting. Use format string to create unique event key. # By default no event key will be generated. #key: '' # The Kafka event partitioning strategy. Default hashing strategy is `hash` # using the `output.kafka.key` setting or randomly distributes events if # `output.kafka.key` is not configured. #partition.hash: # If enabled, events will only be published to partitions with reachable # leaders. Default is false. #reachable_only: false # Configure alternative event field names used to compute the hash value. # If empty `output.kafka.key` setting will be used. # Default value is empty list. #hash: [] # Authentication details. Password is required if username is set. #username: '' #password: '' # Kafka version heartbeat is assumed to run against. Defaults to the oldest # supported stable version (currently version 0.8.2.0) #version: 0.8.2 # Metadata update configuration. Metadata do contain leader information # deciding which broker to use when publishing. #metadata: # Max metadata request retry attempts when cluster is in middle of leader # election. Defaults to 3 retries. #retry.max: 3 # Waiting time between retries during leader elections. Default is 250ms. #retry.backoff: 250ms # Refresh metadata interval. Defaults to every 10 minutes. #refresh_frequency: 10m # The number of concurrent load-balanced Kafka output workers. #worker: 1 # The number of times to retry publishing an event after a publishing failure. # After the specified number of retries, the events are typically dropped. # Some Beats, such as Filebeat, ignore the max_retries setting and retry until # all events are published. Set max_retries to a value less than 0 to retry # until all events are published. The default is 3. #max_retries: 3 # The maximum number of events to bulk in a single Kafka request. The default # is 2048. #bulk_max_size: 2048 # The number of seconds to wait for responses from the Kafka brokers before # timing out. The default is 30s. #timeout: 30s # The maximum duration a broker will wait for number of required ACKs. The # default is 10s. #broker_timeout: 10s # The number of messages buffered for each Kafka broker. The default is 256. #channel_buffer_size: 256 # The keep-alive period for an active network connection. If 0s, keep-alives # are disabled. The default is 0 seconds. #keep_alive: 0 # Sets the output compression codec. Must be one of none, snappy and gzip. The # default is gzip. #compression: gzip # The maximum permitted size of JSON-encoded messages. Bigger messages will be # dropped. The default value is 1000000 (bytes). This value should be equal to # or less than the broker's message.max.bytes. #max_message_bytes: 1000000 # The ACK reliability level required from broker. 0=no response, 1=wait for # local commit, -1=wait for all replicas to commit. The default is 1. Note: # If set to 0, no ACKs are returned by Kafka. Messages might be lost silently # on error. #required_acks: 1 # The configurable ClientID used for logging, debugging, and auditing # purposes. The default is "beats". #client_id: beats # Enable SSL support. SSL is automatically enabled, if any SSL setting is set. #ssl.enabled: true # Optional SSL configuration options. SSL is off by default. # List of root certificates for HTTPS server verifications #ssl.certificate_authorities: ["/etc/pki/root/ca.pem"] # Configure SSL verification mode. If `none` is configured, all server hosts # and certificates will be accepted. In this mode, SSL based connections are # susceptible to man-in-the-middle attacks. Use only for testing. Default is # `full`. #ssl.verification_mode: full # List of supported/valid TLS versions. By default all TLS versions 1.0 up to # 1.2 are enabled. #ssl.supported_protocols: [TLSv1.0, TLSv1.1, TLSv1.2] # Certificate for SSL client authentication #ssl.certificate: "/etc/pki/client/cert.pem" # Client Certificate Key #ssl.key: "/etc/pki/client/cert.key" # Optional passphrase for decrypting the Certificate Key. #ssl.key_passphrase: '' # Configure cipher suites to be used for SSL connections #ssl.cipher_suites: [] # Configure curve types for ECDHE based cipher suites #ssl.curve_types: [] #------------------------------- Redis output ---------------------------------- #output.redis: # Boolean flag to enable or disable the output module. #enabled: true # The list of Redis servers to connect to. If load balancing is enabled, the # events are distributed to the servers in the list. If one server becomes # unreachable, the events are distributed to the reachable servers only. #hosts: ["localhost:6379"] # The Redis port to use if hosts does not contain a port number. The default # is 6379. #port: 6379 # The name of the Redis list or channel the events are published to. The # default is heartbeat. #key: heartbeat # The password to authenticate with. The default is no authentication. #password: # The Redis database number where the events are published. The default is 0. #db: 0 # The Redis data type to use for publishing events. If the data type is list, # the Redis RPUSH command is used. If the data type is channel, the Redis # PUBLISH command is used. The default value is list. #datatype: list # The number of workers to use for each host configured to publish events to # Redis. Use this setting along with the loadbalance option. For example, if # you have 2 hosts and 3 workers, in total 6 workers are started (3 for each # host). #worker: 1 # If set to true and multiple hosts or workers are configured, the output # plugin load balances published events onto all Redis hosts. If set to false, # the output plugin sends all events to only one host (determined at random) # and will switch to another host if the currently selected one becomes # unreachable. The default value is true. #loadbalance: true # The Redis connection timeout in seconds. The default is 5 seconds. #timeout: 5s # The number of times to retry publishing an event after a publishing failure. # After the specified number of retries, the events are typically dropped. # Some Beats, such as Filebeat, ignore the max_retries setting and retry until # all events are published. Set max_retries to a value less than 0 to retry # until all events are published. The default is 3. #max_retries: 3 # The maximum number of events to bulk in a single Redis request or pipeline. # The default is 2048. #bulk_max_size: 2048 # The URL of the SOCKS5 proxy to use when connecting to the Redis servers. The # value must be a URL with a scheme of socks5://. #proxy_url: # This option determines whether Redis hostnames are resolved locally when # using a proxy. The default value is false, which means that name resolution # occurs on the proxy server. #proxy_use_local_resolver: false # Enable SSL support. SSL is automatically enabled, if any SSL setting is set. #ssl.enabled: true # Configure SSL verification mode. If `none` is configured, all server hosts # and certificates will be accepted. In this mode, SSL based connections are # susceptible to man-in-the-middle attacks. Use only for testing. Default is # `full`. #ssl.verification_mode: full # List of supported/valid TLS versions. By default all TLS versions 1.0 up to # 1.2 are enabled. #ssl.supported_protocols: [TLSv1.0, TLSv1.1, TLSv1.2] # Optional SSL configuration options. SSL is off by default. # List of root certificates for HTTPS server verifications #ssl.certificate_authorities: ["/etc/pki/root/ca.pem"] # Certificate for SSL client authentication #ssl.certificate: "/etc/pki/client/cert.pem" # Client Certificate Key #ssl.key: "/etc/pki/client/cert.key" # Optional passphrase for decrypting the Certificate Key. #ssl.key_passphrase: '' # Configure cipher suites to be used for SSL connections #ssl.cipher_suites: [] # Configure curve types for ECDHE based cipher suites #ssl.curve_types: [] #------------------------------- File output ----------------------------------- #output.file: # Boolean flag to enable or disable the output module. #enabled: true # Path to the directory where to save the generated files. The option is # mandatory. #path: "/tmp/heartbeat" # Name of the generated files. The default is `heartbeat` and it generates # files: `heartbeat`, `heartbeat.1`, `heartbeat.2`, etc. #filename: heartbeat # Maximum size in kilobytes of each file. When this size is reached, and on # every heartbeat restart, the files are rotated. The default value is 10240 # kB. #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 --------------------------------- #output.console: # Boolean flag to enable or disable the output module. #enabled: true # Pretty print json event #pretty: false #================================= Paths ====================================== # The home path for the heartbeat installation. This is the default base path # for all other path settings and for miscellaneous files that come with the # distribution (for example, the sample dashboards). # If not set by a CLI flag or in the configuration file, the default for the # home path is the location of the binary. #path.home: # The configuration path for the heartbeat installation. This is the default # base path for configuration files, including the main YAML configuration file # and the Elasticsearch template file. If not set by a CLI flag or in the # configuration file, the default for the configuration path is the home path. #path.config: ${path.home} # The data path for the heartbeat installation. This is the default base path # for all the files in which heartbeat needs to store its data. If not set by a # CLI flag or in the configuration file, the default for the data path is a data # subdirectory inside the home path. #path.data: ${path.home}/data # The logs path for a heartbeat installation. This is the default location for # the Beat's log files. If not set by a CLI flag or in the configuration file, # the default for the logs path is a logs subdirectory inside the home path. #path.logs: ${path.home}/logs #============================== Dashboards ===================================== # These settings control loading the sample dashboards to the Kibana index. Loading # the dashboards is disabled by default and can be enabled either by setting the # options here, or by using the `-setup` CLI flag or the `setup` command. #setup.dashboards.enabled: false # The directory from where to read the dashboards. The default is the `kibana` # folder in the home path. #setup.dashboards.directory: ${path.home}/kibana # The URL from where to download the dashboards archive. It is used instead of # the directory if it has a value. #setup.dashboards.url: # The file archive (zip file) from where to read the dashboards. It is used instead # of the directory when it has a value. #setup.dashboards.file: # In case the archive contains the dashboards from multiple Beats, this lets you # select which one to load. You can load all the dashboards in the archive by # setting this to the empty string. #setup.dashboards.beat: heartbeat # The name of the Kibana index to use for setting the configuration. Default is ".kibana" #setup.dashboards.kibana_index: .kibana # The Elasticsearch index name. This overwrites the index name defined in the # dashboards and index pattern. Example: testbeat-* #setup.dashboards.index: #============================== Template ===================================== # A template is used to set the mapping in Elasticsearch # By default template loading is enabled and the template is loaded. # These settings can be adjusted to load your own template or overwrite existing ones. # Set to false to disable template loading. #setup.template.enabled: true # Template name. By default the template name is "heartbeat-%{[beat.version]}" # The template name and pattern has to be set in case the elasticsearch index pattern is modified. #setup.template.name: "heartbeat-%{[beat.version]}" # Template patttern. By default the template pattern is "-%{[beat.version]}-*" to apply to the default index settings. # The first part is the version of the beat and then -* is used to match all daily indicies. # The template name and pattern has to be set in case the elasticsearch index pattern is modified. #setup.template.pattern: "heartbeat-%{[beat.version]}-*" # Path to fields.yml file to generate the template #setup.template.fields: "${path.config}/fields.yml" # Overwrite existing template #setup.template.overwrite: false # Elasticsearch template settings setup.template.settings: # A dictionary of settings to place into the settings.index dictionary # of the Elasticsearch template. For more details, please check # https://www.elastic.co/guide/en/elasticsearch/reference/current/mapping.html #index: #number_of_shards: 1 #codec: best_compression # A dictionary of settings for the _source field. For more details, please check # https://www.elastic.co/guide/en/elasticsearch/reference/current/mapping-source-field.html #_source: #enabled: false #============================== Kibana ===================================== # Starting with Beats version 6.0.0, the dashboards are loaded via the Kibana API. # This requires a Kibana endpoint configuration. setup.kibana: # Kibana Host # Scheme and port can be left out and will be set to the default (http and 5601) # In case you specify and additional path, the scheme is required: http://localhost:5601/path # IPv6 addresses should always be defined as: https://[2001:db8::1]:5601 #host: "localhost:5601" # Optional protocol and basic auth crendentials. #protocol: "https" #username: "elastic" #password: "changeme" # Optional HTTP Path #path: "" # Use SSL settings for HTTPS. Default is true. #ssl.enabled: true # Configure SSL verification mode. If `none` is configured, all server hosts # and certificates will be accepted. In this mode, SSL based connections are # susceptible to man-in-the-middle attacks. Use only for testing. Default is # `full`. #ssl.verification_mode: full # List of supported/valid TLS versions. By default all TLS versions 1.0 up to # 1.2 are enabled. #ssl.supported_protocols: [TLSv1.0, TLSv1.1, TLSv1.2] # SSL configuration. By default is off. # List of root certificates for HTTPS server verifications #ssl.certificate_authorities: ["/etc/pki/root/ca.pem"] # Certificate for SSL client authentication #ssl.certificate: "/etc/pki/client/cert.pem" # Client Certificate Key #ssl.key: "/etc/pki/client/cert.key" # Optional passphrase for decrypting the Certificate Key. #ssl.key_passphrase: '' # Configure cipher suites to be used for SSL connections #ssl.cipher_suites: [] # Configure curve types for ECDHE based cipher suites #ssl.curve_types: [] #================================ Logging ====================================== # There are three options for the log output: syslog, file, stderr. # Under Windows systems, the log files are per default sent to the file output, # under all other system per default to syslog. # Sets log level. The default log level is info. # Available log levels are: critical, error, warning, info, debug #logging.level: info # Enable debug output for selected components. To enable all selectors use ["*"] # Other available selectors are "beat", "publish", "service" # Multiple selectors can be chained. #logging.selectors: [ ] # Send all logging output to syslog. The default is false. #logging.to_syslog: true # If enabled, heartbeat periodically logs its internal metrics that have changed # in the last period. For each metric that changed, the delta from the value at # the beginning of the period is logged. Also, the total values for # all non-zero internal metrics are logged on shutdown. The default is true. #logging.metrics.enabled: true # The period after which to log the internal metrics. The default is 30s. #logging.metrics.period: 30s # Logging to rotating files files. Set logging.to_files to false to disable logging to # files. logging.to_files: true logging.files: # Configure the path where the logs are written. The default is the logs directory # under the home path (the binary location). #path: /var/log/heartbeat # The name of the files where the logs are written to. #name: heartbeat # 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 # The permissions mask to apply when rotating log files. The default value is 0600. # Must be a valid Unix-style file permissions mask expressed in octal notation. #permissions: 0600 # Set to true to log messages in json format. #logging.json: false