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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  • Configuration Parameters
  • TLS Configuration Parameters
  • Command Line

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  1. Data Pipeline
  2. Outputs

TCP & TLS

The tcp output plugin allows to send records to a remote TCP server. The payload can be formatted in different ways as required.

Configuration Parameters

Key

Description

default

Host

Target host where Fluent-Bit or Fluentd are listening for Forward messages.

127.0.0.1

Port

TCP Port of the target service.

5170

Format

Specify the data format to be printed. Supported formats are msgpack json, json_lines and json_stream.

msgpack

json_date_key

Specify the name of the date field in output

date

json_date_format

Specify the format of the date. Supported formats are double , iso8601 (eg: 2018-05-30T09:39:52.000681Z) and epoch.

double

TLS Configuration Parameters

The following parameters are available to configure a secure channel connection through TLS:

Key

Description

Default

tls

Enable or disable TLS support

Off

tls.verify

Force certificate validation

On

tls.debug

Set TLS debug verbosity level. It accept the following values: 0 (No debug), 1 (Error), 2 (State change), 3 (Informational) and 4 Verbose

1

tls.ca_file

Absolute path to CA certificate file

tls.crt_file

Absolute path to Certificate file.

tls.key_file

Absolute path to private Key file.

tls.key_passwd

Optional password for tls.key_file file.

Command Line

$ bin/fluent-bit -i cpu -o tcp://127.0.0.1:5170 -p format=json_lines -v

Start the TCP listener

Run the following in a separate terminal, netcat will start listening for messages on TCP port 5170

$ nc -l 5170

Start Fluent Bit

$ bin/fluent-bit -i cpu -o stdout -p format=msgpack -v
Fluent Bit v1.x.x
* Copyright (C) 2019-2020 The Fluent Bit Authors
* Copyright (C) 2015-2018 Treasure Data
* Fluent Bit is a CNCF sub-project under the umbrella of Fluentd
* https://fluentbit.io

[2016/10/07 21:52:01] [ info] [engine] started
[0] cpu.0: [1475898721, {"cpu_p"=>0.500000, "user_p"=>0.250000, "system_p"=>0.250000, "cpu0.p_cpu"=>0.000000, "cpu0.p_user"=>0.000000, "cpu0.p_system"=>0.000000, "cpu1.p_cpu"=>0.000000, "cpu1.p_user"=>0.000000, "cpu1.p_system"=>0.000000, "cpu2.p_cpu"=>0.000000, "cpu2.p_user"=>0.000000, "cpu2.p_system"=>0.000000, "cpu3.p_cpu"=>1.000000, "cpu3.p_user"=>0.000000, "cpu3.p_system"=>1.000000}]
[1] cpu.0: [1475898722, {"cpu_p"=>0.250000, "user_p"=>0.250000, "system_p"=>0.000000, "cpu0.p_cpu"=>0.000000, "cpu0.p_user"=>0.000000, "cpu0.p_system"=>0.000000, "cpu1.p_cpu"=>1.000000, "cpu1.p_user"=>1.000000, "cpu1.p_system"=>0.000000, "cpu2.p_cpu"=>0.000000, "cpu2.p_user"=>0.000000, "cpu2.p_system"=>0.000000, "cpu3.p_cpu"=>0.000000, "cpu3.p_user"=>0.000000, "cpu3.p_system"=>0.000000}]
[2] cpu.0: [1475898723, {"cpu_p"=>0.750000, "user_p"=>0.250000, "system_p"=>0.500000, "cpu0.p_cpu"=>2.000000, "cpu0.p_user"=>1.000000, "cpu0.p_system"=>1.000000, "cpu1.p_cpu"=>0.000000, "cpu1.p_user"=>0.000000, "cpu1.p_system"=>0.000000, "cpu2.p_cpu"=>1.000000, "cpu2.p_user"=>0.000000, "cpu2.p_system"=>1.000000, "cpu3.p_cpu"=>0.000000, "cpu3.p_user"=>0.000000, "cpu3.p_system"=>0.000000}]
[3] cpu.0: [1475898724, {"cpu_p"=>1.000000, "user_p"=>0.750000, "system_p"=>0.250000, "cpu0.p_cpu"=>1.000000, "cpu0.p_user"=>1.000000, "cpu0.p_system"=>0.000000, "cpu1.p_cpu"=>2.000000, "cpu1.p_user"=>1.000000, "cpu1.p_system"=>1.000000, "cpu2.p_cpu"=>1.000000, "cpu2.p_user"=>1.000000, "cpu2.p_system"=>0.000000, "cpu3.p_cpu"=>1.000000, "cpu3.p_user"=>1.000000, "cpu3.p_system"=>0.000000}]

No more, no less, it just works.

Last updated 5 years ago

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We have specified to gather usage metrics and send them in JSON lines mode to a remote end-point using netcat service, e.g:

CPU