I'd like to parse ingress nginx logs using fluentd in Kubernetes. That was quite easy in Logstash, but I'm confused regarding fluentd syntax.
Right now I have the following rules:
<source>
type tail
path /var/log/containers/*.log
pos_file /var/log/es-containers.log.pos
time_format %Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%S.%NZ
tag kubernetes.*
format json
read_from_head true
keep_time_key true
</source>
<filter kubernetes.**>
type kubernetes_metadata
</filter>
And as a result I get this log but it is unparsed:
127.0.0.1 - [127.0.0.1] - user [27/Sep/2016:18:35:23 +0000] "POST /elasticsearch/_msearch?timeout=0&ignore_unavailable=true&preference=1475000747571 HTTP/2.0" 200 37593 "http://localhost/app/kibana" "Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux x86_64) AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) Centos Chromium/52.0.2743.116 Chrome/52.0.2743.116 Safari/537.36" 951 0.408 10.64.92.20:5601 37377 0.407 200
I'd like to apply filter rules to be able to search by IP address, HTTP method, etc in Kibana. How can I implement that?
Pipelines are quite different in logstash and fluentd. And it took some time to build working Kubernetes -> Fluentd -> Elasticsearch -> Kibana solution.
Short answer to my question is to install fluent-plugin-parser plugin (I wonder why it doesn't ship within standard package) and put this rule after kubernetes_metadata filter:
<filter kubernetes.var.log.containers.nginx-ingress-controller-**.log>
type parser
format /^(?<host>[^ ]*) (?<domain>[^ ]*) \[(?<x_forwarded_for>[^\]]*)\] (?<server_port>[^ ]*) (?<user>[^ ]*) \[(?<time>[^\]]*)\] "(?<method>\S+[^\"])(?: +(?<path>[^\"]*?)(?: +\S*)?)?" (?<code>[^ ]*) (?<size>[^ ]*)(?: "(?<referer>[^\"]*)" "(?<agent>[^\"]*)")? (?<request_length>[^ ]*) (?<request_time>[^ ]*) (?:\[(?<proxy_upstream_name>[^\]]*)\] )?(?<upstream_addr>[^ ]*) (?<upstream_response_length>[^ ]*) (?<upstream_response_time>[^ ]*) (?<upstream_status>[^ ]*)$/
time_format %d/%b/%Y:%H:%M:%S %z
key_name log
types server_port:integer,code:integer,size:integer,request_length:integer,request_time:float,upstream_response_length:integer,upstream_response_time:float,upstream_status:integer
reserve_data yes
</filter>
Long answer with lots of examples is here: https://github.com/kayrus/elk-kubernetes/