- Packetbeat Reference: other versions:
- Overview
- Getting started with Packetbeat
- Setting up and running Packetbeat
- Upgrading Packetbeat
- Configuring Packetbeat
- Set traffic capturing options
- Set up flows to monitor network traffic
- Specify which transaction protocols to monitor
- Specify which processes to monitor
- Specify general settings
- Configure the internal queue
- Configure the output
- Configure index lifecycle management
- Specify SSL settings
- Filter and enhance the exported data
- Define processors
- Add cloud metadata
- Add fields
- Add labels
- Add the local time zone
- Add tags
- Decode JSON fields
- Decode Base64 fields
- Decompress gzip fields
- Community ID Network Flow Hash
- Convert
- Drop events
- Drop fields from events
- Extract array
- Keep fields from events
- Registered Domain
- Rename fields from events
- Add Kubernetes metadata
- Add Docker metadata
- Add Host metadata
- Add Observer metadata
- Dissect strings
- DNS Reverse Lookup
- Add process metadata
- Parse data by using ingest node
- Enrich events with geoIP information
- Configure project paths
- Configure the Kibana endpoint
- Load the Kibana dashboards
- Load the Elasticsearch index template
- Configure logging
- Use environment variables in the configuration
- YAML tips and gotchas
- HTTP Endpoint
- packetbeat.reference.yml
- Exported fields
- AMQP fields
- Beat fields
- Cassandra fields
- Cloud provider metadata fields
- Common fields
- DHCPv4 fields
- DNS fields
- Docker fields
- ECS fields
- Flow Event fields
- Host fields
- HTTP fields
- ICMP fields
- Jolokia Discovery autodiscover provider fields
- Kubernetes fields
- Memcache fields
- MongoDb fields
- MySQL fields
- NFS fields
- PostgreSQL fields
- Process fields
- Raw fields
- Redis fields
- Thrift-RPC fields
- TLS fields
- Transaction Event fields
- Measurements (Transactions) fields
- Monitoring Packetbeat
- Securing Packetbeat
- Visualizing Packetbeat data in Kibana
- Troubleshooting
- Get help
- Debug
- Record a trace
- Common problems
- Dashboard in Kibana is breaking up data fields incorrectly
- Packetbeat doesn’t see any packets when using mirror ports
- Packetbeat can’t capture traffic from Windows loopback interface
- Packetbeat is missing long running transactions
- Packetbeat isn’t capturing MySQL performance data
- Packetbeat uses too much bandwidth
- Error loading config file
- Found unexpected or unknown characters
- Logstash connection doesn’t work
- @metadata is missing in Logstash
- Not sure whether to use Logstash or Beats
- SSL client fails to connect to Logstash
- Monitoring UI shows fewer Beats than expected
- Fields show up as nested JSON in Kibana
- Contributing to Beats
Add Kubernetes metadata
editAdd Kubernetes metadata
editThe add_kubernetes_metadata
processor annotates each event with relevant
metadata based on which Kubernetes pod the event originated from. Each event is
annotated with:
- Pod Name
- Pod UID
- Namespace
- Labels
The add_kubernetes_metadata
processor has two basic building blocks which are:
- Indexers
- Matchers
Indexers take in a pod’s metadata and builds indices based on the pod metadata.
For example, the ip_port
indexer can take a Kubernetes pod and index the pod
metadata based on all pod_ip:container_port
combinations.
Matchers are used to construct lookup keys for querying indices. For example,
when the fields
matcher takes ["metricset.host"]
as a lookup field, it would
construct a lookup key with the value of the field metricset.host
.
Each Beat can define its own default indexers and matchers which are enabled by
default. For example, FileBeat enables the container
indexer, which indexes
pod metadata based on all container IDs, and a logs_path
matcher, which takes
the log.file.path
field, extracts the container ID, and uses it to retrieve
metadata.
The configuration below enables the processor when packetbeat is run as a pod in Kubernetes.
processors: - add_kubernetes_metadata:
The configuration below enables the processor on a Beat running as a process on the Kubernetes node.
processors: - add_kubernetes_metadata: host: <hostname> kube_config: ${HOME}/.kube/config
The configuration below has the default indexers and matchers disabled and enables ones that the user is interested in.
processors: - add_kubernetes_metadata: host: <hostname> kube_config: ~/.kube/config default_indexers.enabled: false default_matchers.enabled: false indexers: - ip_port: matchers: - fields: lookup_fields: ["metricset.host"]
The add_kubernetes_metadata
processor has the following configuration settings:
-
host
- (Optional) Identify the node where packetbeat is running in case it cannot be accurately detected, as when running packetbeat 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.
-
kube_config
- (Optional) Use given config file as configuration for Kubernetes client.
-
default_indexers.enabled
- (Optional) Enable/Disable default pod indexers, in case you want to specify your own.
-
default_matchers.enabled
- (Optional) Enable/Disable default pod matchers, in case you want to specify your own.