Http_poller input plugin
editHttp_poller input plugin
edit- Plugin version: v5.0.2
- Released on: 2020-08-05
- Changelog
For other versions, see the Versioned plugin docs.
Getting Help
editFor questions about the plugin, open a topic in the Discuss forums. For bugs or feature requests, open an issue in Github. For the list of Elastic supported plugins, please consult the Elastic Support Matrix.
Description
editThis Logstash input plugin allows you to call an HTTP API, decode the output of it into event(s), and send them on their merry way. The idea behind this plugins came from a need to read springboot metrics endpoint, instead of configuring jmx to monitor my java application memory/gc/ etc.
Example
editReads from a list of urls and decodes the body of the response with a codec. The config should look like this:
input { http_poller { urls => { test1 => "http://localhost:9200" test2 => { # Supports all options supported by ruby's Manticore HTTP client method => get user => "AzureDiamond" password => "hunter2" url => "http://localhost:9200/_cluster/health" headers => { Accept => "application/json" } } } request_timeout => 60 # Supports "cron", "every", "at" and "in" schedules by rufus scheduler schedule => { cron => "* * * * * UTC"} codec => "json" # A hash of request metadata info (timing, response headers, etc.) will be sent here metadata_target => "http_poller_metadata" } } output { stdout { codec => rubydebug } }
Using the HTTP poller with custom a custom CA or self signed cert.
If you have a self signed cert you will need to convert your server’s certificate to a valid# .jks
or .p12
file. An easy way to do it is to run the following one-liner, substituting your server’s URL for the placeholder MYURL
and MYPORT
.
openssl s_client -showcerts -connect MYURL:MYPORT </dev/null 2>/dev/null|openssl x509 -outform PEM > downloaded_cert.pem; keytool -import -alias test -file downloaded_cert.pem -keystore downloaded_truststore.jks
The above snippet will create two files downloaded_cert.pem
and downloaded_truststore.jks
. You will be prompted to set a password for the jks
file during this process. To configure logstash use a config like the one that follows.
http_poller { urls => { myurl => "https://myhostname:1234" } truststore => "/path/to/downloaded_truststore.jks" truststore_password => "mypassword" schedule => { cron => "* * * * * UTC"} }
Http_poller Input Configuration Options
editThis plugin supports the following configuration options plus the Common Options described later.
Setting | Input type | Required |
---|---|---|
No |
||
a valid filesystem path |
No |
|
a valid filesystem path |
No |
|
a valid filesystem path |
No |
|
No |
||
No |
||
No |
||
No |
||
a valid filesystem path |
No |
|
No |
||
No |
||
No |
||
No |
||
No |
||
No |
||
<<,>> |
No |
|
No |
||
No |
||
Yes |
||
No |
||
No |
||
a valid filesystem path |
No |
|
No |
||
No |
||
Yes |
||
No |
||
No |
Also see Common Options for a list of options supported by all input plugins.
automatic_retries
edit- Value type is number
-
Default value is
1
How many times should the client retry a failing URL. We highly recommend NOT setting this value
to zero if keepalive is enabled. Some servers incorrectly end keepalives early requiring a retry!
Note: if retry_non_idempotent
is set only GET, HEAD, PUT, DELETE, OPTIONS, and TRACE requests will be retried.
cacert
edit- Value type is path
- There is no default value for this setting.
If you need to use a custom X.509 CA (.pem certs) specify the path to that here
client_cert
edit- Value type is path
- There is no default value for this setting.
If you’d like to use a client certificate (note, most people don’t want this) set the path to the x509 cert here
client_key
edit- Value type is path
- There is no default value for this setting.
If you’re using a client certificate specify the path to the encryption key here
connect_timeout
edit- Value type is number
-
Default value is
10
Timeout (in seconds) to wait for a connection to be established. Default is 10s
cookies
edit- Value type is boolean
-
Default value is
true
Enable cookie support. With this enabled the client will persist cookies across requests as a normal web browser would. Enabled by default
follow_redirects
edit- Value type is boolean
-
Default value is
true
Should redirects be followed? Defaults to true
keepalive
edit- Value type is boolean
-
Default value is
true
Turn this on to enable HTTP keepalive support. We highly recommend setting automatic_retries
to at least
one with this to fix interactions with broken keepalive implementations.
keystore
edit- Value type is path
- There is no default value for this setting.
If you need to use a custom keystore (.jks
) specify that here. This does not work with .pem keys!
keystore_password
edit- Value type is password
- There is no default value for this setting.
Specify the keystore password here. Note, most .jks files created with keytool require a password!
keystore_type
edit- Value type is string
-
Default value is
"JKS"
Specify the keystore type here. One of JKS
or PKCS12
. Default is JKS
metadata_target
edit- Value type is string
-
Default value is
"@metadata"
If you’d like to work with the request/response metadata. Set this value to the name of the field you’d like to store a nested hash of metadata.
password
edit- Value type is password
- There is no default value for this setting.
Password to be used in conjunction with user
for HTTP authentication.
pool_max
edit- Value type is number
-
Default value is
50
Max number of concurrent connections. Defaults to 50
pool_max_per_route
edit- Value type is number
-
Default value is
25
Max number of concurrent connections to a single host. Defaults to 25
proxy
edit- Value type is string
- There is no default value for this setting.
If you’d like to use an HTTP proxy . This supports multiple configuration syntaxes:
-
Proxy host in form:
http://proxy.org:1234
-
Proxy host in form:
{host => "proxy.org", port => 80, scheme => 'http', user => 'username@host', password => 'password'}
-
Proxy host in form:
{url => 'http://proxy.org:1234', user => 'username@host', password => 'password'}
request_timeout
edit- Value type is number
-
Default value is
60
Timeout (in seconds) for the entire request.
retry_non_idempotent
edit- Value type is boolean
-
Default value is
false
If automatic_retries
is enabled this will cause non-idempotent HTTP verbs (such as POST) to be retried.
schedule
edit- Value type is hash
- There is no default value for this setting.
Schedule of when to periodically poll from the urls Format: A hash with + key: "cron" | "every" | "in" | "at" + value: string Examples: a) { "every" ⇒ "1h" } b) { "cron" ⇒ "* * * * * UTC" } See: rufus/scheduler for details about different schedule options and value string format
socket_timeout
edit- Value type is number
-
Default value is
10
Timeout (in seconds) to wait for data on the socket. Default is 10s
target
edit- Value type is string
- There is no default value for this setting.
Define the target field for placing the received data. If this setting is omitted, the data will be stored at the root (top level) of the event.
truststore
edit- Value type is path
- There is no default value for this setting.
If you need to use a custom truststore (.jks
) specify that here. This does not work with .pem certs!
truststore_password
edit- Value type is password
- There is no default value for this setting.
Specify the truststore password here. Note, most .jks files created with keytool require a password!
truststore_type
edit- Value type is string
-
Default value is
"JKS"
Specify the truststore type here. One of JKS
or PKCS12
. Default is JKS
urls
edit- This is a required setting.
- Value type is hash
- There is no default value for this setting.
A Hash of urls in this format : "name" => "url"
.
The name and the url will be passed in the outputted event.
The values in urls can be either:
- a string url (which will be issued as an HTTP GET).
-
a sub-hash containing many useful keys provided by the Manticore backend:
- url: the String url
- method: (optional) the HTTP method to use (defaults to GET)
- user: (optional) the HTTP Basic Auth user. The user must be under an auth sub-hash for Manticore, but this plugin also accepts it either way.
- password: (optional) the HTTP Basic Auth password. The password must be under an auth sub-hash for Manticore, but this plugin accepts it either way.
- headers: a hash containing key-value pairs of headers.
- body: a string (supported only on POST and PUT requests)
- possibly other options mentioned in the Manticore docs. Note that Manticore options that are not explicitly documented above are not thoroughly tested and therefore liable to break in unexpected ways if we replace the backend.
Notes:
-
Passwords specified as a part of
urls
are prone to exposure in plugin log output. The plugin does not declare them as passwords, and therefore doesn’t wrap them in leak-reducing wrappers as we do elsewhere. -
We don’t guarantee that boolean-type options like Manticore’s
follow_redirects
are supported correctly. The stringstrue
orfalse
may get passed through, and in ruby any string is "truthy." - Our implementation of this plugin precludes the ability to specify auth[:eager] as anything other than true
user
edit- Value type is string
- There is no default value for this setting.
Username to use with HTTP authentication for ALL requests. Note that you can also set this per-URL.
If you set this you must also set the password
option.
validate_after_inactivity
edit- Value type is number
-
Default value is
200
How long to wait before checking for a stale connection to determine if a keepalive request is needed. Consider setting this value lower than the default, possibly to 0, if you get connection errors regularly.
This client is based on Apache Commons' HTTP implementation. Here’s how the Apache Commons documentation describes this option: "Defines period of inactivity in milliseconds after which persistent connections must be re-validated prior to being leased to the consumer. Non-positive value passed to this method disables connection validation. This check helps detect connections that have become stale (half-closed) while kept inactive in the pool."
Common Options
editThe following configuration options are supported by all input plugins:
Details
edit
codec
edit- Value type is codec
-
Default value is
"json"
The codec used for input data. Input codecs are a convenient method for decoding your data before it enters the input, without needing a separate filter in your Logstash pipeline.
enable_metric
edit- Value type is boolean
-
Default value is
true
Disable or enable metric logging for this specific plugin instance by default we record all the metrics we can, but you can disable metrics collection for a specific plugin.
id
edit- Value type is string
- There is no default value for this setting.
Add a unique ID
to the plugin configuration. If no ID is specified, Logstash will generate one.
It is strongly recommended to set this ID in your configuration. This is particularly useful
when you have two or more plugins of the same type, for example, if you have 2 http_poller inputs.
Adding a named ID in this case will help in monitoring Logstash when using the monitoring APIs.
input { http_poller { id => "my_plugin_id" } }
Variable substitution in the id
field only supports environment variables
and does not support the use of values from the secret store.
tags
edit- Value type is array
- There is no default value for this setting.
Add any number of arbitrary tags to your event.
This can help with processing later.
type
edit- Value type is string
- There is no default value for this setting.
Add a type
field to all events handled by this input.
Types are used mainly for filter activation.
The type is stored as part of the event itself, so you can also use the type to search for it in Kibana.
If you try to set a type on an event that already has one (for example when you send an event from a shipper to an indexer) then a new input will not override the existing type. A type set at the shipper stays with that event for its life even when sent to another Logstash server.