Configure the Elasticsearch output
editConfigure the Elasticsearch output
editThe Elasticsearch output sends events directly to Elasticsearch by using the Elasticsearch HTTP API.
Compatibility: This output works with all compatible versions of Elasticsearch. See the Elastic Support Matrix.
This example configures an Elasticsearch output called default
in the
elastic-agent.yml
file:
outputs: default: type: elasticsearch hosts: [127.0.0.1:9200] username: elastic password: changeme
This example is similar to the previous one, except that it uses token-based (API key) authentication:
outputs: default: type: elasticsearch hosts: [127.0.0.1:9200] api_key: "my_api_key"
Token-based authentication is required in an Elastic Cloud serverless environment.
Elasticsearch output configuration settings
editThe elasticsearch
output type supports the following settings, grouped by
category. Many of these settings have sensible defaults that allow you to run
Elastic Agent with minimal configuration.
Commonly used settings
editSetting | Description |
---|---|
(boolean) Enables or disables the output. If set to Default: |
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(list) The list of Elasticsearch nodes to connect to. The events are distributed to
these nodes in round robin order. If one node becomes unreachable, the event is
automatically sent to another node. Each Elasticsearch node can be defined as a When a node is defined as an |
|
(string) The name of the protocol Elasticsearch is reachable on. The options are:
|
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(boolean) If set to Default: |
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(string) Additional headers to send to proxies during CONNECT requests. |
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(string) The URL of the proxy to use when connecting to the Elasticsearch servers. The
value may be either a complete URL or a |
Authentication settings
editWhen sending data to a secured cluster through the elasticsearch
output, Elastic Agent can use any of the following authentication methods:
Basic authentication credentials
editoutputs: default: type: elasticsearch hosts: ["https://myEShost:9200"] username: "your-username" password: "your-password"
Token-based (API key) authentication
editoutputs: default: type: elasticsearch hosts: ["https://myEShost:9200"] api_key: "KnR6yE41RrSowb0kQ0HWoA"
Setting | Description |
---|---|
(string) Instead of using a username and password, you can use API keys to
secure communication with Elasticsearch. The value must be the ID of the API key and the
API key joined by a colon: |
Public Key Infrastructure (PKI) certificates
editoutputs: default: type: elasticsearch hosts: ["https://myEShost:9200"] ssl.certificate: "/etc/pki/client/cert.pem" ssl.key: "/etc/pki/client/cert.key"
For a list of available settings, refer to SSL/TLS, specifically the settings under Table 1, “Common configuration options” and Table 2, “Client configuration options”.
Kerberos
editThe following encryption types are supported:
- aes128-cts-hmac-sha1-96
- aes128-cts-hmac-sha256-128
- aes256-cts-hmac-sha1-96
- aes256-cts-hmac-sha384-192
- des3-cbc-sha1-kd
- rc4-hmac
Example output config with Kerberos password-based authentication:
outputs: default: type: elasticsearch hosts: ["http://my-elasticsearch.elastic.co:9200"] kerberos.auth_type: password kerberos.username: "elastic" kerberos.password: "changeme" kerberos.config_path: "/etc/krb5.conf" kerberos.realm: "ELASTIC.CO"
The service principal name for the Elasticsearch instance is constructed from these options. Based on this configuration, the name would be:
HTTP/my-elasticsearch.elastic.co@ELASTIC.CO
Setting | Description |
---|---|
(string) The type of authentication to use with Kerberos KDC:
Default: |
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(string) Path to the |
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(boolean) Enables or disables the Kerberos configuration. Kerberos settings are disabled if either |
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(boolean) If Default: |
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(string) If |
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(string) If |
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(string) Name of the realm where the output resides. |
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(string) Name of the principal used to connect to the output. |
Data parsing, filtering, and manipulation settings
editSettings used to parse, filter, and transform data.
Setting | Description |
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(boolean) Configures escaping of HTML in strings. Set to Default: |
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(string) A format string value that specifies the ingest pipeline to write events to. outputs: default: type: elasticsearchoutput.elasticsearch: hosts: ["http://localhost:9200"] pipeline: my_pipeline_id You can set the ingest pipeline dynamically by using a format string to
access any event field. For example, this configuration uses a custom field,
outputs: default: type: elasticsearch hosts: ["http://localhost:9200"] pipeline: "%{[fields.log_type]}_pipeline" With this configuration, all events with To learn how to add custom fields to events, see the See the |
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An array of pipeline selector rules. Each rule specifies the ingest pipeline
to use for events that match the rule. During publishing, Elastic Agent uses the first
matching rule in the array. Rules can contain conditionals, format string-based
fields, and name mappings. If the Rule settings:
All the conditions supported by processors are also supported here. The following example sends events to a specific pipeline based on whether the
outputs: default: type: elasticsearch hosts: ["http://localhost:9200"] pipelines: - pipeline: "warning_pipeline" when.contains: message: "WARN" - pipeline: "error_pipeline" when.contains: message: "ERR" The following example sets the pipeline by taking the name returned by the
outputs: default: type: elasticsearch hosts: ["http://localhost:9200"] pipelines: - pipeline: "%{[fields.log_type]}" mappings: critical: "sev1_pipeline" normal: "sev2_pipeline" default: "sev3_pipeline" With this configuration, all events with |
HTTP settings
editSettings that modify the HTTP requests sent to Elasticsearch.
Setting | Description |
---|---|
Custom HTTP headers to add to each request created by the Elasticsearch output. Example: outputs: default: type: elasticsearch headers: X-My-Header: Header contents Specify multiple header values for the same header name by separating them with a comma. |
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Dictionary of HTTP parameters to pass within the URL with index operations. |
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(string) An HTTP path prefix that is prepended to the HTTP API calls. This is useful for the cases where Elasticsearch listens behind an HTTP reverse proxy that exports the API under a custom prefix. |
Performance tuning settings
editSettings that may affect performance.
Setting | Description |
---|---|
(string) The number of seconds to wait before trying to reconnect to Elasticsearch
after a network error. After waiting Default: |
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(string) The maximum number of seconds to wait before attempting to connect to Elasticsearch after a network error. Default: |
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(int) The maximum number of events to bulk in a single Elasticsearch bulk API index request. Events can be collected into batches. Elastic Agent will split batches larger than
Specifying a larger batch size can improve performance by lowering the overhead of sending events. However big batch sizes can also increase processing times, which might result in API errors, killed connections, timed-out publishing requests, and, ultimately, lower throughput. Setting Default: |
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(int) The gzip compression level. Set this value to Increasing the compression level reduces network usage but increases CPU usage. Default: |
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(int) The number of times to retry publishing an event after a publishing failure. After the specified number of retries, the events are typically dropped. Set Default: |
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(string) The HTTP request timeout in seconds for the Elasticsearch request. Default: |
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(int) The number of workers per configured host publishing events. This is best used with load balancing mode enabled. Example: If you have two hosts and three workers, in total six workers are started (three for each host). Default: |