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Run small ELK stack locally within a Docker environment

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Local ELK

Run small ELK stack locally within a Docker environment.

Largely based on docker-elk but without the xpack configuration, as such this is:

FOR LOCAL USE ONLY

Why?

An ELK stack provides a simple way to analyse application logs. We do this in PROD.

In PROD, we typically use the kinesis logback appender to ship logs to ELK.

Locally, we typically write logs to disk. Whilst we can tail these to see them, it isn't very easy. This becomes more obvious when we start to log with markers.

Markers add structure to logs and allow us to group logs together. For example, in a REST API, if we log the method as a marker we can easily search for DELETE requests.

Usage

  • ./script/setup
  • ./script/start
  • Open https://logs.local.dev-gutools.co.uk in the browser to access Kibana
  • Ship logs from your application

Shipping logs from your application

local-elk provides two ways to ingest logs:

  • on TCP port 5000
  • on a kinesis stream (running in localstack) called local-elk-logging-kinesis-stream

TCP

local-elk accepts tcp input on port 5000 in the JSON codec format. We can use the LogstashTcpSocketAppender to ship logs to it from our application.

TIP: You'll likely want to have a guard to only use the LogstashTcpSocketAppender when in DEV and when you know local-elk is running.

Examples assume you are using the Play! framework in Scala.

Via logback.xml

Add an appender to your logback configuration file:

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<configuration>
  <appender name="LOGSTASH" class="net.logstash.logback.appender.LogstashTcpSocketAppender">
    <destination>127.0.0.1:5000</destination>
    <encoder class="net.logstash.logback.encoder.LogstashEncoder"/>
  </appender>
        
  <root level="INFO">
    <appender-ref ref="LOGSTASH"/>
  </root>
</configuration>

More information here.

Via application code

While shipping logs via the logback configuration is fine, we may want to augment logs with more information prior to writing them. For example, in PROD we'd add the Stage, Stack and App tags.

Within Play! logging is usually setup in the ApplicationLoader.

To ship logs to local-elk we need to add a LogstashTcpSocketAppender to the Logger:

// In AppLoader.scala
import play.api.ApplicationLoader.Context
import play.api.{Application, ApplicationLoader}

class AppLoader extends ApplicationLoader {
  final override def load(context: Context): Application = {
    LogConfig.initLocalLogShipping
  }
}

// In LogConfig.scala
import ch.qos.logback.classic.{LoggerContext, Logger => LogbackLogger}
import net.logstash.logback.appender.LogstashTcpSocketAppender
import net.logstash.logback.encoder.LogstashEncoder
import org.slf4j.{LoggerFactory, Logger => SLFLogger}
import java.net.InetSocketAddress
import play.api.libs.json._
import scala.util.Try

object LogConfig {
  private val rootLogger: LogbackLogger = LoggerFactory.getLogger(SLFLogger.ROOT_LOGGER_NAME).asInstanceOf[LogbackLogger]
  private val BUFFER_SIZE = 1000

  private def createCustomFields(): String = {
    Json.toJson(Map(
        "stack" -> "local-elk",
        "stage" -> "DEV",
        "app"     -> "demo"
    )).toString()
  }

  private def createLogstashAppender(context: LoggerContext): LogstashTcpSocketAppender = {
    val customFields = createCustomFields()
    
    val appender = new LogstashTcpSocketAppender()

    appender.setContext(context)
    appender.addDestinations(new InetSocketAddress("localhost", 5000))
    appender.setWriteBufferSize(BUFFER_SIZE)
        
    val encoder = new LogstashEncoder()
    encoder.setCustomFields(customFields)
    encoder.start()

    appender.setEncoder(encoder)
    appender.start()

    appender
  }

  def initLocalLogShipping: Unit = {
    Try {
      rootLogger.info("Configuring local logstash log shipping")
      val appender = createLogstashAppender(rootLogger.getLoggerContext)
      rootLogger.addAppender(appender)
      rootLogger.info("Local logstash log shipping configured")
    } recover {
      case e => rootLogger.error("LogConfig Failed!", e)
    }
  }
}

Kinesis

You can configure your application to write to the kinesis stream local-elk-logging-kinesis-stream. As this is running in localstack, you'll also need to set a custom endpoint to http://localhost:4566.

val endpoint = new EndpointConfiguration("http://localhost:4566", "eu-west-1")
val client = AmazonKinesisClientBuilder.standard().withEndpointConfiguration(endpoint).build()

Alternatives

We could use the File input plugin to ship logs from disk.

However, this has a couple of problems:

  • The files need to be mounted into the Logstash container of local-elk. This doesn't scale well and isn't very generic.
  • The log files on disk need to be in the net.logstash.logback.encoder.LogstashEncoder encoder to create JSON data. This is less human readable, in the event that reading these files becomes necessary.

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