Run the ELK (Elasticseach, Logstash, Kibana) stack with Docker and Docker-compose.
It will give you the ability to quickly test your logstash filters and check how the data can be processed in Kibana.
Based on the official images:
- Install Docker.
- Install Docker-compose.
- Clone this repository
On distributions which have SELinux enabled out-of-the-box you will need to either re-context the files or set SELinux into Permissive mode in order for fig-elk to start properly. For example on Redhat and CentOS, the following will apply the proper context:
.-root@centos ~
-$ chcon -R system_u:object_r:admin_home_t:s0 fig-elk/
Start the ELK stack using docker-compose:
$ docker-compose up
You can also choose to run it in background (detached mode):
$ docker-compose up -d
Now that the stack is running, you'll want to inject logs in it. The shipped logstash configuration allows you to send content via tcp:
$ nc localhost 5000 < /path/to/logfile.log
And then access Kibana UI by hitting http://localhost:5601 with a web browser.
By default, the stack exposes the following ports:
- 5000: Logstash TCP input.
- 9200: Elasticsearch HTTP (with Marvel plugin accessible via http://localhost:9200/_plugin/marvel)
- 5601: Kibana 4 web interface
WARNING: If you're using boot2docker, you must access it via the boot2docker IP address instead of localhost.
WARNING: If you're using Docker Toolbox, you must access it via the docker-machine IP address instead of localhost.
NOTE: Configuration is not dynamically reloaded, you will need to restart the stack after any change in the configuration of a component.
The Kibana default configuration is stored in kibana/config/kibana.yml
.
The logstash configuration is stored in logstash/config/logstash.conf
.
The folder logstash/config
is mapped onto the container /etc/logstash/conf.d
so you
can create more than one file in that folder if you'd like to. However, you must be aware that config files will be read from the directory in alphabetical order.
The Elasticsearch container is using the shipped configuration and it is not exposed by default.
If you want to override the default configuration, create a file elasticsearch/config/elasticsearch.yml
and add your configuration in it.
Then, you'll need to map your configuration file inside the container in the docker-compose.yml
. Update the elasticsearch container declaration to:
elasticsearch:
build: elasticsearch/
ports:
- "9200:9200"
volumes:
- ./elasticsearch/config/elasticsearch.yml:/usr/share/elasticsearch/config/elasticsearch.yml
In order to persist Elasticsearch data, you'll have to mount a volume on your Docker host. Update the elasticsearch container declaration to:
elasticsearch:
build: elasticsearch/
ports:
- "9200:9200"
volumes:
- /path/to/storage:/usr/share/elasticsearch/data
This will store elasticsearch data inside /path/to/storage
.