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Ansible Role: Logstash

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An Ansible Role that installs Logstash on RedHat/CentOS Debian/Ubuntu.

Note that this role installs a syslog grok pattern by default; if you want to add more filters, please add them inside the /etc/logstash/conf.d/ directory. As an example, you could create a file named 13-myapp.conf with the appropriate grok filter and restart logstash to start using it. Test your grok regex using the Grok Debugger.

Requirements

Though other methods are possible, this role is made to work with Elasticsearch as a backend for storing log messages.

Role Variables

Available variables are listed below, along with default values (see defaults/main.yml):

logstash_version: '7.x'

The major version of Logstash to install.

logstash_package: logstash

The specific package to be installed. You can specify a version of the package using the correct syntax for your platform and package manager by changing the package name.

logstash_listen_port_beats: 5044

The port over which Logstash will listen for beats.

logstash_elasticsearch_hosts:
  - http://localhost:9200

The hosts where Logstash should ship logs to Elasticsearch.

logstash_dir: /usr/share/logstash

The directory inside which Logstash is installed.

logstash_ssl_dir: /etc/pki/logstash
logstash_ssl_certificate_file: logstash-forwarder-example.crt
logstash_ssl_key_file: logstash-forwarder-example.key

Local paths to the SSL certificate and key files, which will be copied into the logstash_ssl_dir.

See Generating a self-signed certificate for information about generating and using self-signed certs with Logstash and Filebeat.

logstash_local_syslog_path: /var/log/syslog
logstash_monitor_local_syslog: true

Whether configuration for local syslog file (defined as logstash_local_syslog_path) should be added to logstash. Set this to false if you are monitoring the local syslog differently, or if you don't care about the local syslog file. Other local logs can be added by your own configuration files placed inside /etc/logstash/conf.d.

logstash_enabled_on_boot: true

Set this to false if you don't want logstash to run on system startup.

logstash_install_plugins:
  - logstash-input-beats
  - logstash-filter-multiline

A list of Logstash plugins that should be installed.

Generating a Self-signed certificate

For utmost security, you should use your own valid certificate and keyfile, and update the logstash_ssl_* variables in your playbook to use your certificate.

To generate a self-signed certificate/key pair, you can use use the command:

$ openssl req -x509 -batch -nodes -days 3650 -newkey rsa:2048 -keyout logstash.key -out logstash.crt -subj '/CN=example.com'

Note that Filebeat and Logstash may not work correctly with self-signed certificates unless you also have the full chain of trust (including the Certificate Authority for your self-signed cert) added on your server. See: elastic/logstash#4926 (comment)

Newer versions of Filebeat and Logstash also require a pkcs8-formatted private key, which can be generated by converting the key generated earlier, e.g.:

openssl pkcs8 -in logstash.key -topk8 -nocrypt -out logstash.p8

Other Notes

If you are seeing high CPU usage from one of the logstash processes, and you're using Logstash along with another application running on port 80 on a platform like Ubuntu with upstart, the logstash-web process may be stuck in a loop trying to start on port 80, failing, and trying to start again, due to the restart flag being present in /etc/init/logstash-web.conf. To avoid this problem, either change that line to add a limit to the respawn statement, or set the logstash-web service to enabled=no in your playbook, e.g.:

- name: Ensure logstash-web process is stopped and disabled.
  service: name=logstash-web state=stopped enabled=no

Example Playbook

- hosts: search

  pre_tasks:
    - name: Use Java 8 on Debian/Ubuntu.
      set_fact:
        java_packages:
          - openjdk-8-jdk
      when: ansible_os_family == 'Debian'

  roles:
    - geerlingguy.java
    - geerlingguy.elasticsearch
    - geerlingguy.logstash

License

MIT / BSD

Author Information

This role was created in 2014 by Jeff Geerling, author of Ansible for DevOps.

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