Email Alerting like Splunk
Splunk is a great tool for searching logs. One of its key features is the ability to grep
logs and send alert emails when certain conditions are met.
In this little HowTo article, we will show you how to build a similar system using Fluentd. More specifically, we will create a system that sends an alert email when it detects a 5xx HTTP status code in an Apache access log.
If you want a more general introduction to use Fluentd as a free alternative to Splunk, see the article "Free Alternative to Splunk Using Fluentd".
Installing the Requisites
Install Fluentd if you haven't yet.
Please install fluent-plugin-grepcounter
by running:
Next, please install fluent-plugin-mail
by running:
Note: If you installed Fluentd using RubyGems, use gem
command instead of td-agent-gem
.
Configuration
Full Configuration Example
Here is the full configuration example (copy and edit as needed):
Save your settings to /etc/td-agent/td-agent.conf
(If you installed Fluentd without td-agent
, save the content as alert-email.conf
instead).
Before proceeding, please confirm:
The SMTP configuration is correct. You need a working mail server
and a proper recipient address to run this example.
The access log file has proper file permission. You need to make
the file readable to the
td-agent
/fluentd
daemon.
How this Configuration Works
The configuration above consists of three main parts:
The first
<source>
block sets thehttpd
log file as an event source for the daemon.The second
<match>
block tells Fluentd to count the number of 5xx responses per time window (3 seconds). If the number exceeds (or is equal to) the given threshold, Fluentd will emit an event with the tagerror_5xx.apache.access
.The third
<match>
block accepts events with the tagerror_5xx.apache.access
, and send an email toalert@example.com
per event.
In this way, fluentd now works as an email alerting system that monitors the web service for you.
Test the Configuration
After saving the configuration, restart the td-agent
process:
If you installed the standalone version of Fluentd, launch the fluentd
process manually:
Then, generate some 5xx errors in the web server. If you do not have a convenient way to accomplish this, appending 5xx lines to the log file manually will produce the same result.
Now you will receive an alert email titled "HTTP SERVER ERROR".
What's next?
Admittedly, this is a contrived example. In reality, you would set the threshold higher. Also, you might be interested in tracking 4xx pages as well. In addition to Apache logs, Fluentd can handle Nginx logs, syslogs, or any single- or multi-lined logs.
You can learn more about Fluentd and its plugins by:
exploring other plugins
asking questions on the mailing list
If this article is incorrect or outdated, or omits critical information, please let us know. Fluentd is an open-source project under Cloud Native Computing Foundation (CNCF). All components are available under the Apache 2 License.
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