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Watching event data
editWatching event data
editIf you are indexing event data, such as log messages, network traffic, or a web feed, you can create a watch to email notifications when certain events occur. For example, if you index a feed of RSVPs for meetup events happening around the world, you can create a watch that alerts you to interesting events.
To index the meetup data, you can use Logstash to ingest live data from the Meetup.com streaming API, http://stream.meetup.com/2/rsvps
.
To ingest this data with Logstash:
- Download Logstash and unpack the archive file.
-
Create a Logstash configuration file that uses the Logstash standard input and the Logstash standard output and save it in
logstash-{version}
directory aslivestream.conf
: -
To start indexing the meetup data, pipe the RSVP stream into Logstash and specify your
livestream.conf
configuration file.curl http://stream.meetup.com/2/rsvps | bin/logstash -f livestream.conf
Now that you’re indexing the meetup RSVPs, you can set up a watch that lets you know about events you might be interested in. For example, let’s create a watch that runs every hour, looks for events that talk about about Open Source, and sends an email with information about the events.
To set up the watch:
-
Specify how often you want to run the watch by adding a schedule trigger to the watch:
{ "trigger": { "schedule": { "interval": "1h" } },
-
Load data into the watch payload by creating an input that searches the meetup data for events that have Open Source as a topic. You can use aggregations to group the data by city, consolidate references to the same events, and sort the events by date.
"input": { "search": { "request": { "indices": [ "<logstash-{now-1h}>", "<logstash-{now}>" ], "body": { "size": 0, "query": { "bool": { "filter": [ { "range": { "@timestamp": { "gte": "now-3h" } } }, { "match": { "group.group_topics.topic_name": "Open Source" } } ] } }, "aggs": { "group_by_city": { "terms": { "field": "group.group_city.raw", "size": 5 }, "aggs": { "group_by_event": { "terms": { "field": "event.event_url.raw", "size": 5 }, "aggs": { "get_latest": { "terms": { "field": "@timestamp", "size": 1, "order": { "_key": "desc" } }, "aggs": { "group_by_event_name": { "terms": { "field": "event.event_name.raw" } } } } } } } } } } } } },
Elasticsearch Date math is used to select the Logstash indices that contain the meetup data. The second pattern is needed in case the previous hour crosses days.
Find all of the RSVPs with
Open Source
as a topic.Group the RSVPs by city.
Consolidate multiple RSVPs for the same event.
Sort the events so the latest events are listed first.
Group the events by name.
-
To determine whether or not there are any Open Source events, add a compare condition that checks the watch payload to see if there were any search hits.
"compare" : { "ctx.payload.hits.total.value" : { "gt" : 0 }}
-
To send an email when Open Source events are found, add an email action:
"actions": { "email_me": { "throttle_period": "10m", "email": { "from": "<from:email address>", "to": "<to:email address>", "subject": "Open Source Events", "body": { "html": "Found events matching Open Source: <ul>{{#ctx.payload.aggregations.group_by_city.buckets}}< li>{{key}} ({{doc_count}})<ul>{{#group_by_event.buckets}} <li><a href=\"{{key}}\">{{get_latest.buckets.0.group_by_event_name.buckets.0.key}}</a> ({{doc_count}})</li>{{/group_by_event.buckets}}</ul></li> {{/ctx.payload.aggregations.group_by_city.buckets}}</ul>" } } } }
To enable Watcher to send emails, you must configure an email account in elasticsearch.yml
. For more information, see Configuring email accounts.
The complete watch looks like this:
PUT _watcher/watch/meetup { "trigger": { "schedule": { "interval": "1h" } }, "input": { "search": { "request": { "indices": [ "<logstash-{now-1h}>", "<logstash-{now}>" ], "body": { "size": 0, "query": { "bool": { "filter": [ { "range": { "@timestamp": { "gte": "now-3h" } } }, { "match": { "group.group_topics.topic_name": "Open Source" } } ] } }, "aggs": { "group_by_city": { "terms": { "field": "group.group_city.raw", "size": 5 }, "aggs": { "group_by_event": { "terms": { "field": "event.event_url.raw", "size": 5 }, "aggs": { "get_latest": { "terms": { "field": "@timestamp", "size": 1, "order": { "_key": "desc" } }, "aggs": { "group_by_event_name": { "terms": { "field": "event.event_name.raw" } } } } } } } } } } } } }, "condition": { "compare": { "ctx.payload.hits.total.value": { "gt": 0 } } }, "actions": { "email_me": { "throttle_period": "10m", "email": { "from": "username@example.org", "to": "recipient@example.org", "subject": "Open Source events", "body": { "html": "Found events matching Open Source: <ul>{{#ctx.payload.aggregations.group_by_city.buckets}}<li>{{key}} ({{doc_count}})<ul>{{#group_by_event.buckets}}<li><a href=\"{{key}}\">{{get_latest.buckets.0.group_by_event_name.buckets.0.key}}</a> ({{doc_count}})</li>{{/group_by_event.buckets}}</ul></li>{{/ctx.payload.aggregations.group_by_city.buckets}}</ul>" } } } } }
The email body can include Mustache templates to reference data in the watch payload. By default,it will be sanitized to block dangerous content. |
|
Replace the |
|
Replace the |
Now that you’ve created your watch, you can use the
_execute
API to run it without waiting for the schedule to trigger execution:
POST _watcher/watch/meetup/_execute