Fluent Bit: Official Manual
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1.4
1.4
  • Fluent Bit v1.4 Documentation
  • About
    • What is Fluent Bit ?
    • A Brief History of Fluent Bit
    • Fluentd & Fluent Bit
    • License
  • Concepts
    • Key Concepts
    • Buffering
    • Data Pipeline
      • Input
      • Parser
      • Filter
      • Buffer
      • Router
      • Output
  • Installation
    • Upgrade Notes
    • Supported Platforms
    • Requirements
    • Sources
      • Download Source Code
      • Build and Install
      • Build with Static Configuration
    • Linux Packages
      • Amazon Linux
      • Redhat / CentOS
      • Debian
      • Ubuntu
      • Raspbian / Raspberry Pi
    • Docker
    • Amazon
      • Containers on AWS
      • Amazon EC2
    • Kubernetes
    • Yocto / Embedded Linux
    • Windows
  • Administration
    • Configuring Fluent Bit
      • Format and Schema
      • Configuration File
      • Variables
      • Commands
      • Upstream Servers
      • Unit Sizes
    • Security
    • Buffering & Storage
    • Backpressure
    • Scheduling and Retries
    • Memory Management
    • Monitoring
    • Dump Internals / Signal
  • Data Pipeline
    • Inputs
      • Collectd
      • CPU Metrics
      • Disk I/O Metrics
      • Dummy
      • Exec
      • Forward
      • Head
      • Health
      • Kernel Logs
      • Memory Metrics
      • MQTT
      • Network I/O Metrics
      • Process
      • Random
      • Serial Interface
      • Standard Input
      • Syslog
      • Systemd
      • Tail
      • TCP
      • Thermal
      • Windows Event Log
    • Parsers
      • JSON
      • Regular Expression
      • LTSV
      • Logfmt
      • Decoders
    • Filters
      • AWS Metadata
      • Grep
      • Kubernetes
      • Lua
      • Parser
      • Record Modifier
      • Rewrite Tag
      • Standard Output
      • Throttle
      • Nest
      • Modify
    • Outputs
      • Azure
      • BigQuery
      • Counter
      • Datadog
      • Elasticsearch
      • File
      • FlowCounter
      • Forward
      • GELF
      • HTTP
      • InfluxDB
      • Kafka
      • Kafka REST Proxy
      • NATS
      • NULL
      • PostgreSQL
      • Stackdriver
      • Standard Output
      • Splunk
      • TCP & TLS
      • Treasure Data
  • Stream Processing
    • Introduction to Stream Processing
    • Overview
    • Changelog
    • Getting Started
      • Fluent Bit + SQL
      • Check Keys and NULL values
      • Hands On! 101
  • Fluent Bit for Developers
    • C Library API
    • Ingest Records Manually
    • Golang Output Plugins
    • Developer guide for beginners on contributing to Fluent Bit
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On this page
  • Server GPG key
  • Update your sources lists
  • Update your repositories database
  • Install TD-Agent Bit

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  1. Installation
  2. Linux Packages

Raspbian / Raspberry Pi

Last updated 5 years ago

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Fluent Bit is distributed as td-agent-bit package and is available for the Raspberry, specifically for distribution, the following versions are supported:

  • Raspbian Buster (10)

  • Raspbian Stretch (9)

  • Raspbian Jessie (8)

Server GPG key

The first step is to add our server GPG key to your keyring, on that way you can get our signed packages:

$ wget -qO - https://packages.fluentbit.io/fluentbit.key | sudo apt-key add -

Update your sources lists

On Debian and derivated systems such as Raspbian, you need to add our APT server entry to your sources lists, please add the following content at bottom of your /etc/apt/sources.list file:

Raspbian 10 (Buster)

deb https://packages.fluentbit.io/raspbian/buster buster main

Raspbian 9 (Stretch)

deb https://packages.fluentbit.io/raspbian/stretch stretch main

Raspbian 8 (Jessie)

deb https://packages.fluentbit.io/raspbian/jessie jessie main

Update your repositories database

Now let your system update the apt database:

$ sudo apt-get update

Install TD-Agent Bit

Using the following apt-get command you are able now to install the latest td-agent-bit:

$ sudo apt-get install td-agent-bit

Now the following step is to instruct systemd to enable the service:

$ sudo service td-agent-bit start

If you do a status check, you should see a similar output like this:

sudo service td-agent-bit status
● td-agent-bit.service - TD Agent Bit
   Loaded: loaded (/lib/systemd/system/td-agent-bit.service; disabled; vendor preset: enabled)
   Active: active (running) since mié 2016-07-06 16:58:25 CST; 2h 45min ago
 Main PID: 6739 (td-agent-bit)
    Tasks: 1
   Memory: 656.0K
      CPU: 1.393s
   CGroup: /system.slice/td-agent-bit.service
           └─6739 /opt/td-agent-bit/bin/td-agent-bit -c /etc/td-agent-bit/td-agent-bit.conf
...

The default configuration of td-agent-bit is collecting metrics of CPU usage and sending the records to the standard output, you can see the outgoing data in your /var/log/syslog file.

Raspbian