Logstash breaking changes

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This list summarizes the most important breaking changes in Logstash 7.0.1. For the complete list, go to Logstash breaking changes.

Changes in Logstash Core

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These changes can affect any instance of Logstash that uses impacted features. Changes to Logstash Core are plugin agnostic.

Java execution engine enabled by default
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The new Java execution engine is enabled by default. It features faster performance, reduced memory usage, and lower config startup and reload times.

For more information, see the blog post about the initial release of the Java execution engine.

We went to considerable lengths to make this change seamless. Still, it’s a big change. If you notice different behaviors that might be related, please open a GitHub issue to let us know.

Beats conform to the Elastic Common Schema (ECS)
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As of 7.0, Beats fields conform to the Elastic Common Schema (ECS).

If you upgrade Logstash before you upgrade Beats, the payloads continue to use the pre-ECS schema. If you upgrade your Beats before you upgrade Logstash, then you’ll get payloads with the ECS schema in advance of any Logstash upgrade.

If you see mapping conflicts after upgrade, that is an indication that the Beats/ECS change is influencing the data reaching existing indices.

See the Beats Platform Reference for more information on Beats and ECS.

Field Reference parser is more strict
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The Field Reference parser, which is used to interpret references to fields in your pipelines and plugins, was made to be more strict and will now reject inputs that are either ambiguous or illegal. Since 6.4, Logstash has emitted warnings when encountering input that is ambiguous, and allowed an early opt-in of strict-mode parsing either by providing the command-line flag --field-reference-parser STRICT or by adding config.field_reference.parser: STRICT to logstash.yml.

Here’s an example.

Before

logstash-6.7.0 % echo "hello"| bin/logstash -e 'filter { mutate { replace => { "message" => "%{[[]]message]} you" } } }'
[2019-04-05T16:52:18,691][WARN ][org.logstash.FieldReference] Detected ambiguous Field Reference `[[]]message]`, which we expanded to the path `[message]`; in a future release of Logstash, ambiguous Field References will not be expanded.
{
       "message" => "hello you",
      "@version" => "1",
    "@timestamp" => 2019-04-05T15:52:18.546Z,
          "type" => "stdin",
          "host" => "overcraft.lan"
}

After

logstash-7.0.0 % echo "hello"| bin/logstash -e 'filter { mutate { replace => { "message" => "%{[[]]message]} you" } } }'
[2019-04-05T16:48:09,135][FATAL][logstash.runner          ] An unexpected error occurred! {:error=>java.lang.IllegalStateException: org.logstash.FieldReference$IllegalSyntaxException: Invalid FieldReference: `[[]]message]`
[2019-04-05T16:48:09,167][ERROR][org.logstash.Logstash    ] java.lang.IllegalStateException: Logstash stopped processing because of an error: (SystemExit) exit

Changes in Logstash Plugins

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With 7.0.0, we have taken the opportunity to upgrade a number of bundled plugins to their newest major version, absorbing their breaking changes into the Logstash distribution.

While these upgrades included new features and important fixes, only the breaking changes are called out below.

The majority of the changes to plugins are the removal of previously-deprecated and now-obsolete options. Please ensure that your pipeline configurations do not use these removed options before upgrading.

Codec Plugins
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Here are the breaking changes for codec plugins.

CEF Codec

  • Removed obsolete sev option
  • Removed obsolete deprecated_v1_fields option

Netflow Codec

  • Changed decoding of application_id to implement RFC6759; the format changes from a pair of colon-separated ids (e.g. 0:40567) to a variable number of double-dot-separated ids (e.g. 0..12356..40567).
Filter Plugins
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Here are the breaking changes for filter plugins.

Clone Filter

  • Make clones a required option

Geoip Filter

  • Removed obsolete lru_cache_size option

HTTP Filter

  • Removed obsolete ssl_certificate_verify option
Input Plugins
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Here are the breaking changes for input plugins.

Beats Input

  • Removed obsolete congestion_threshold option
  • Removed obsolete target_field_for_codec option
  • Changed default value of add_hostname to false

In Beats 7.0.0, the fields exported by Beats to the Logstash Beats Input conform to the Elastic Common Schema (ECS). Many of the exported fields have been renamed, so you may need to modify your pipeline configurations to access them at their new locations prior to upgrading your Beats. See Beats Breaking changes in 7.0 for the full list of changed names.

HTTP Input

  • Removed obsolete ssl_certificate_verify option

HTTP Poller Input

  • Removed obsolete interval option
  • Removed obsolete ssl_certificate_verify option

Tcp Input

  • Removed obsolete data_timeout option
  • Removed obsolete ssl_cacert option
Output Plugins
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Here are the breaking changes for output plugins.

Elasticsearch Output

  • Elasticsearch Index lifecycle management (ILM) is auto-detected and enabled by default if your Elasticsearch cluster supports it.
  • Remove support for parent/child (still support join data type) since we don’t support multiple document types any more
  • Removed obsolete flush_size option
  • Removed obsolete idle_flush_time option

HTTP Output

  • Removed obsolete ssl_certificate_verify option

Kafka Output

  • Removed obsolete block_on_buffer_full option
  • Removed obsolete ssl option
  • Removed obsolete timeout_ms option

Redis Output

  • Removed obsolete queue option
  • Removed obsolete name option

Sqs Output

  • Removed obsolete batch option
  • Removed obsolete batch_timeout option

Tcp Output

  • Removed obsolete message_format option