Autodiscover

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When you run applications on containers, they become moving targets to the monitoring system. Autodiscover allows you to track them and adapt settings as changes happen. By defining configuration templates, the autodiscover subsystem can monitor services as they start running.

You define autodiscover settings in the heartbeat.autodiscover section of the heartbeat.yml config file. To enable autodiscover, you specify a list of providers.

Providers

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Autodiscover providers work by watching for events on the system and translating those events into internal autodiscover events with a common format. When you configure the provider, you can optionally use fields from the autodiscover event to set conditions that, when met, launch specific configurations.

On start, Heartbeat will scan existing containers and launch the proper configs for them. Then it will watch for new start/stop events. This ensures you don’t need to worry about state, but only define your desired configs.

Docker
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The Docker autodiscover provider watches for Docker containers to start and stop.

It has the following settings:

host
(Optional) Docker socket (UNIX or TCP socket). It uses unix:///var/run/docker.sock by default.
ssl
(Optional) SSL configuration to use when connecting to the Docker socket.
cleanup_timeout
(Optional) Specify the time of inactivity before stopping the running configuration for a container, disabled by default.
labels.dedot
(Optional) Default to be false. If set to true, replace dots in labels with _.

These are the fields available within config templating. The docker.* fields will be available on each emitted event. event:

  • host
  • port
  • docker.container.id
  • docker.container.image
  • docker.container.name
  • docker.container.labels

For example:

{
  "host": "10.4.15.9",
  "port": 6379,
  "docker": {
    "container": {
      "id": "382184ecdb385cfd5d1f1a65f78911054c8511ae009635300ac28b4fc357ce51"
      "name": "redis",
      "image": "redis:3.2.11",
      "labels": {
        "io.kubernetes.pod.namespace": "default"
        ...
      }
    }
  }
}

You can define a set of configuration templates to be applied when the condition matches an event. Templates define a condition to match on autodiscover events, together with the list of configurations to launch when this condition happens.

Conditions match events from the provider. Providers use the same format for Conditions that processors use.

Configuration templates can contain variables from the autodiscover event. They can be accessed under the data namespace. For example, with the example event, "${data.port}" resolves to 6379.

Heartbeat supports templates for modules:

heartbeat.autodiscover:
  providers:
    - type: docker
      templates:
        - condition:
            contains:
              docker.container.image: redis
          config:
            - type: tcp
              hosts: ["${data.host}:${data.port}"]
              schedule: "@every 1s"
              timeout: 1s

This configuration launches a redis monitor for all containers running an image with redis in the name.

Kubernetes
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The Kubernetes autodiscover provider watches for Kubernetes nodes, pods, services to start, update, and stop.

The kubernetes autodiscover provider has the following configuration settings:

node
(Optional) Specify the node to scope heartbeat to in case it cannot be accurately detected, as when running heartbeat in host network mode.
namespace
(Optional) Select the namespace from which to collect the metadata. If it is not set, the processor collects metadata from all namespaces. It is unset by default. The namespace configuration only applies to kubernetes resources that are namespace scoped.
cleanup_timeout
(Optional) Specify the time of inactivity before stopping the running configuration for a container, disabled by default.
kube_config
(Optional) Use given config file as configuration for Kubernetes client. If kube_config is not set, KUBECONFIG environment variable will be checked and if not present it will fall back to InCluster.
kube_client_options
(Optional) Additional options can be configured for Kubernetes client. Currently client QPS and burst are supported, if not set Kubernetes client’s default QPS and burst will be used. Example:
      kube_client_options:
        qps: 5
        burst: 10
resource
(Optional) Select the resource to do discovery on. Currently supported Kubernetes resources are pod, service and node. If not configured resource defaults to pod.
scope
(Optional) Specify at what level autodiscover needs to be done at. scope can either take node or cluster as values. node scope allows discovery of resources in the specified node. cluster scope allows cluster wide discovery. Only pod and node resources can be discovered at node scope.
add_resource_metadata

(Optional) Specify filters and configration for the extra metadata, that will be added to the event. Configuration parameters:

  • node or namespace: Specify labels and annotations filters for the extra metadata coming from node and namespace. By default all labels are included while annotations are not. To change default behaviour include_labels, exclude_labels and include_annotations can be defined. Those settings are useful when storing labels and annotations that require special handling to avoid overloading the storage output. Note: wildcards are not supported for those settings. The enrichment of node or namespace metadata can be individually disabled by setting enabled: false.
  • deployment: If resource is pod and it is created from a deployment, by default the deployment name is added, this can be disabled by setting deployment: false.
  • cronjob: If resource is pod and it is created from a cronjob, by default the cronjob name is added, this can be disabled by setting cronjob: false.

    Example:

      add_resource_metadata:
        namespace:
          include_labels: ["namespacelabel1"]
        node:
          include_labels: ["nodelabel2"]
          include_annotations: ["nodeannotation1"]
        deployment: false
        cronjob: false
unique
(Optional) Defaults to false. Marking an autodiscover provider as unique results into making the provider to enable the provided templates only when it will gain the leader lease. This setting can only be combined with cluster scope. When unique is enabled enabled, resource and add_resource_metadata settings are not taken into account.
leader_lease
(Optional) Defaults to heartbeat-cluster-leader. This will be name of the lock lease. One can monitor the status of the lease with kubectl describe lease beats-cluster-leader. Different Beats that refer to the same leader lease will be competitors in holding the lease and only one will be elected as leader each time.

The configuration of templates and conditions is similar to that of the Docker provider. Configuration templates can contain variables from the autodiscover event. They can be accessed under data namespace.

These are the fields available within config templating. The kubernetes.* fields will be available on each emitted event.

Generic fields:
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  • host
  • port (if exposed)
  • kubernetes.labels
  • kubernetes.annotations
Pod specific:
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  • kubernetes.container.id
  • kubernetes.container.image
  • kubernetes.container.name
  • kubernetes.namespace
  • kubernetes.node.name
  • kubernetes.pod.name
  • kubernetes.pod.uid
Node specific:
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  • kubernetes.node.name
  • kubernetes.node.uid
Service specific:
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  • kubernetes.namespace
  • kubernetes.service.name
  • kubernetes.service.uid
  • kubernetes.annotations

If the include_annotations config is added to the provider config, then the list of annotations present in the config are added to the event.

If the include_labels config is added to the provider config, then the list of labels present in the config will be added to the event.

If the exclude_labels config is added to the provider config, then the list of labels present in the config will be excluded from the event.

if the labels.dedot config is set to be true in the provider config, then . in labels will be replaced with _. By default it is true.

if the annotations.dedot config is set to be true in the provider config, then . in annotations will be replaced with _. By default it is true.

For example:

{
  "host": "172.17.0.21",
  "port": 9090,
  "kubernetes": {
    "container": {
      "id": "bb3a50625c01b16a88aa224779c39262a9ad14264c3034669a50cd9a90af1527",
      "image": "prom/prometheus",
      "name": "prometheus"
    },
    "labels": {
      "project": "prometheus",
      ...
    },
    "namespace": "default",
    "node": {
      "name": "minikube"
    },
    "pod": {
      "name": "prometheus-2657348378-k1pnh"
    }
  },
}

Heartbeat supports templates for modules:

heartbeat.autodiscover:
  providers:
    - type: kubernetes
      include_annotations: ["prometheus.io.scrape"]
      templates:
        - condition:
            contains:
              kubernetes.annotations.prometheus.io/scrape: "true"
          config:
            - type: http
              hosts: ["${data.host}:${data.port}"]
              schedule: "@every 1s"
              timeout: 1s

This configuration launches an http module for all containers of pods annotated with prometheus.io/scrape=true.

Amazon ELBs
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Note: This provider is experimental

The Amazon ELB autodiscover provider discovers ELBs and their listeners. This is useful when you don’t want to connect directly to a service, but rather to the ELB fronting a pool of services.

This provider will yield one config block per ELB Listener. So, if you have one ELB exposing both ports 80 and 443, it will generate two configs, one for each port. Keep in mind that the beat will de-duplicate configs. So, if the generated configs are the same only one will actually run.

This provider will load AWS credentials using the standard AWS environment variables and shared credentials files see Best Practices for Managing AWS Access Keys for more information. If you do not wish to use these, you may explicitly set the access_key_id and secret_access_key variables.

These are the available fields during within config templating. The aws.elb.* fields will be available on each emitted event.

  • host
  • port
  • cloud.availability_zone
  • cloud.provider
  • cloud.region
  • aws.elb.listener_arn
  • aws.elb.load_balancer_arn
  • aws.elb.protocol
  • aws.elb.type
  • aws.elb.scheme
  • aws.elb.availability_zones
  • aws.elb.created
  • aws.elb.state.code
  • aws.elb.state.reason
  • aws.elb.ip_address_type
  • aws.elb.security_groups
  • aws.elb.vpc_id
  • aws.elb.ssl_policy

Heartbeat supports templates for modules:

heartbeat.autodiscover:
  providers:
  - type: aws_elb
    period: 1m
    regions: ["us-east-1", "us-east-2"]
    access_key_id: my-access-key
    secret_access_key: my-secret-access-key
    templates:
    - condition:
        equals.port: 8080
      config:
      - type: tcp
        hosts: ["${data.host}:${data.port}"]
        schedule: "@every 5s"
        timeout: 1s

This configuration launches a tcp monitor for all ELBs that have a declared port.

This autodiscover provider takes our standard AWS credentials options.

AWS Credentials Configuration

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To configure AWS credentials, either put the credentials into the Heartbeat configuration, or use a shared credentials file, as shown in the following examples.

Configuration parameters

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  • access_key_id: first part of access key.
  • secret_access_key: second part of access key.
  • session_token: required when using temporary security credentials.
  • credential_profile_name: profile name in shared credentials file.
  • shared_credential_file: directory of the shared credentials file.
  • role_arn: AWS IAM Role to assume.
  • endpoint: URL of the entry point for an AWS web service. Most AWS services offer a regional endpoint that can be used to make requests. The general syntax of a regional endpoint is protocol://service-code.region-code.endpoint-code. Some services, such as IAM, do not support regions. The endpoints for these services do not include a region. In aws module, endpoint config is to set the endpoint-code part, such as amazonaws.com, amazonaws.com.cn, c2s.ic.gov, sc2s.sgov.gov.
  • proxy_url: URL of the proxy to use to connect to AWS web services. The syntax is http(s)://<IP/Hostname>:<port>
  • fips_enabled: Enabling this option changes the service names from s3 to s3-fips for connecting to the correct service endpoint. For example: s3-fips.us-gov-east-1.amazonaws.com. All services used by Beats are FIPS compatible except for tagging but only certain regions are FIPS compatible. See https://aws.amazon.com/compliance/fips/ or the appropriate service page, https://docs.aws.amazon.com/general/latest/gr/aws-service-information.html, for a full list of FIPS endpoints and regions.
  • ssl: This specifies SSL/TLS configuration. If the ssl section is missing, the host’s CAs are used for HTTPS connections. See SSL for more information.
  • default_region: Default region to query if no other region is set.

Supported Formats

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The examples in this section refer to Metricbeat, but the credential options for authentication with AWS are the same no matter which Beat is being used.

  • Use access_key_id, secret_access_key, and/or session_token

Users can either put the credentials into the Metricbeat module configuration or use environment variable AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID, AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY and/or AWS_SESSION_TOKEN instead.

If running on Docker, these environment variables should be added as a part of the docker command. For example, with Metricbeat:

$ docker run -e AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID=abcd -e AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY=abcd -d --name=metricbeat --user=root --volume="$(pwd)/metricbeat.aws.yml:/usr/share/metricbeat/metricbeat.yml:ro" docker.elastic.co/beats/metricbeat:7.11.1 metricbeat -e -E cloud.auth=elastic:1234 -E cloud.id=test-aws:1234

Sample metricbeat.aws.yml looks like:

metricbeat.modules:
- module: aws
  period: 5m
  access_key_id: ${AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID}
  secret_access_key: ${AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY}
  session_token: ${AWS_SESSION_TOKEN}
  metricsets:
    - ec2

Environment variables can also be added through a file. For example:

$ cat env.list
AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID=abcd
AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY=abcd

$ docker run --env-file env.list -d --name=metricbeat --user=root --volume="$(pwd)/metricbeat.aws.yml:/usr/share/metricbeat/metricbeat.yml:ro" docker.elastic.co/beats/metricbeat:7.11.1 metricbeat -e -E cloud.auth=elastic:1234 -E cloud.id=test-aws:1234
  • Use credential_profile_name and/or shared_credential_file

If access_key_id, secret_access_key and role_arn are all not given, then heartbeat will check for credential_profile_name. If you use different credentials for different tools or applications, you can use profiles to configure multiple access keys in the same configuration file. If there is no credential_profile_name given, the default profile will be used.

shared_credential_file is optional to specify the directory of your shared credentials file. If it’s empty, the default directory will be used. In Windows, shared credentials file is at C:\Users\<yourUserName>\.aws\credentials. For Linux, macOS or Unix, the file is located at ~/.aws/credentials. When running as a service, the home path depends on the user that manages the service, so the shared_credential_file parameter can be used to avoid ambiguity. Please see Create Shared Credentials File for more details.

  • Use role_arn

role_arn is used to specify which AWS IAM role to assume for generating temporary credentials. If role_arn is given, heartbeat will check if access keys are given. If not, heartbeat will check for credential profile name. If neither is given, default credential profile will be used. Please make sure credentials are given under either a credential profile or access keys.

If running on Docker, the credential file needs to be provided via a volume mount. For example, with Metricbeat:

docker run -d --name=metricbeat --user=root --volume="$(pwd)/metricbeat.aws.yml:/usr/share/metricbeat/metricbeat.yml:ro" --volume="/Users/foo/.aws/credentials:/usr/share/metricbeat/credentials:ro" docker.elastic.co/beats/metricbeat:7.11.1 metricbeat -e -E cloud.auth=elastic:1234 -E cloud.id=test-aws:1234

Sample metricbeat.aws.yml looks like:

metricbeat.modules:
- module: aws
  period: 5m
  credential_profile_name: elastic-beats
  shared_credential_file: /usr/share/metricbeat/credentials
  metricsets:
    - ec2
heartbeat.autodiscover:
  providers:
  - type: aws_elb
    period: 1m
    regions: ["us-east-1", "us-east-2"]
    access_key_id: '<access_key_id>'
    secret_access_key: '<secret_access_key>'
    session_token: '<session_token>'
    templates:
    - type: tcp
      hosts: ["${data.host}:${data.port}"]
      schedule: "@every 5s"
      timeout: 1s

or

heartbeat.autodiscover:
  providers:
  - type: aws_elb
    period: 1m
    regions: ["us-east-1", "us-east-2"]
    access_key_id: '${AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID:""}'
    secret_access_key: '${AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY:""}'
    session_token: '${AWS_SESSION_TOKEN:""}'
    templates:
    - type: tcp
      hosts: ["${data.host}:${data.port}"]
      schedule: "@every 5s"
      timeout: 1s
  • Use shared AWS credentials file
heartbeat.autodiscover:
  providers:
  - type: aws_elb
    period: 1m
    regions: ["us-east-1", "us-east-2"]
    credential_profile_name: test-hb
    templates:
    - type: tcp
      hosts: ["${data.host}:${data.port}"]
      schedule: "@every 5s"
      timeout: 1s

AWS Credentials Types

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There are two different types of AWS credentials can be used: access keys and temporary security credentials.

  • Access keys

AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID and AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY are the two parts of access keys. They are long-term credentials for an IAM user or the AWS account root user. Please see AWS Access Keys and Secret Access Keys for more details.

  • IAM role ARN

An IAM role is an IAM identity that you can create in your account that has specific permissions that determine what the identity can and cannot do in AWS. A role does not have standard long-term credentials such as a password or access keys associated with it. Instead, when you assume a role, it provides you with temporary security credentials for your role session. IAM role Amazon Resource Name (ARN) can be used to specify which AWS IAM role to assume to generate temporary credentials. Please see AssumeRole API documentation for more details.

Here are the steps to set up IAM role using AWS CLI for Metricbeat. Please replace 123456789012 with your own account ID.

Step 1. Create example-policy.json file to include all permissions:

{
    "Version": "2012-10-17",
    "Statement": [
        {
            "Sid": "VisualEditor0",
            "Effect": "Allow",
            "Action": [
                "s3:GetObject",
                "sqs:ReceiveMessage"
            ],
            "Resource": "*"
        },
        {
            "Sid": "VisualEditor1",
            "Effect": "Allow",
            "Action": "sqs:ChangeMessageVisibility",
            "Resource": "arn:aws:sqs:us-east-1:123456789012:test-fb-ks"
        },
        {
            "Sid": "VisualEditor2",
            "Effect": "Allow",
            "Action": "sqs:DeleteMessage",
            "Resource": "arn:aws:sqs:us-east-1:123456789012:test-fb-ks"
        },
        {
            "Sid": "VisualEditor3",
            "Effect": "Allow",
            "Action": [
                "sts:AssumeRole",
                "sqs:ListQueues",
                "tag:GetResources",
                "ec2:DescribeInstances",
                "cloudwatch:GetMetricData",
                "ec2:DescribeRegions",
                "iam:ListAccountAliases",
                "sts:GetCallerIdentity",
                "cloudwatch:ListMetrics"
            ],
            "Resource": "*"
        }
    ]
}

Step 2. Create IAM policy using the aws iam create-policy command:

$ aws iam create-policy --policy-name example-policy --policy-document file://example-policy.json

Step 3. Create the JSON file example-role-trust-policy.json that defines the trust relationship of the IAM role

{
    "Version": "2012-10-17",
    "Statement": {
        "Effect": "Allow",
        "Principal": { "AWS": "arn:aws:iam::123456789012:root" },
        "Action": "sts:AssumeRole"
    }
}

Step 4. Create the IAM role and attach the policy:

$ aws iam create-role --role-name example-role --assume-role-policy-document file://example-role-trust-policy.json
$ aws iam attach-role-policy --role-name example-role --policy-arn "arn:aws:iam::123456789012:policy/example-policy"

After these steps are done, IAM role ARN can be used for authentication in Metricbeat aws module.

  • Temporary security credentials

Temporary security credentials has a limited lifetime and consists of an access key ID, a secret access key, and a security token which typically returned from GetSessionToken. MFA-enabled IAM users would need to submit an MFA code while calling GetSessionToken. Please see Temporary Security Credentials for more details. sts get-session-token AWS CLI can be used to generate temporary credentials. For example. with MFA-enabled:

aws> sts get-session-token --serial-number arn:aws:iam::1234:mfa/your-email@example.com --token-code 456789 --duration-seconds 129600

Because temporary security credentials are short term, after they expire, the user needs to generate new ones and modify the aws.yml config file with the new credentials. Unless live reloading feature is enabled for Metricbeat, the user needs to manually restart Metricbeat after updating the config file in order to continue collecting Cloudwatch metrics. This will cause data loss if the config file is not updated with new credentials before the old ones expire. For Metricbeat, we recommend users to use access keys in config file to enable aws module making AWS api calls without have to generate new temporary credentials and update the config frequently.

IAM policy is an entity that defines permissions to an object within your AWS environment. Specific permissions needs to be added into the IAM user’s policy to authorize Metricbeat to collect AWS monitoring metrics. Please see documentation under each metricset for required permissions.