exec
Last updated
Last updated
The in_exec
Input plugin executes external programs to receive or pull event logs. It will then read TSV (tab-separated values), JSON or MessagePack from the standard output of the program.
You can run a program periodically or permanently. To run periodically, please use the run_interval
parameter.
It is included in Fluentd's core.
Refer to the Configuration File article for the basic structure and syntax of the configuration file.
See Common Parameters.
@type
The value must be exec
.
command
The command (program) to execute.
tag
The tag of the output events.
run_interval
The interval time between periodic program runs. If not specified, command script runs only once.
read_block_size
The default block size to read if parser requires partial read.
connect_mode
Control target IO:
read
: Read logs from stdio
read_with_stderr
: Read logs from stdio and stderr.
read_with_stderr
is mainly for debug.
<parse>
sectionRefer these for more details about parse
section:
@type
Overwrites the default value in this plugin.
time_type
Overwrites the default value in this plugin.
time_key
Overwrites the default value in this plugin.
estimate_current_event
Overwrites the default value in this plugin.
<extract>
SectionSee Extract section configurations.
time_type
Overwrites the default value in this plugin.
Here is a simple example to fetch load average stats on Linux systems. This configuration instructs Fluentd to read /proc/loadavg
once per minute and emit the file content as events.
This configuration emits events like this one:
If you already have a script that runs periodically (say, via cron
) that you wish to store the output to multiple backend systems (HDFS, AWS, Elasticsearch, etc.), in_exec
is a great choice.
The only requirement for the script is that it outputs TSV, JSON or MessagePack.
For example, this script scrapes the front page of Hacker News and scrapes information about each post:
Suppose that script is called hn.rb
. Then, you can run it every 5 minutes with the following configuration:
And if you run Fluentd with it, you will see the following output (if you are impatient, CTRL+C
to flush the stdout buffer):
Of course, you can use Fluentd's many output plugins to store the data into various backend systems like Elasticsearch, HDFS, MongoDB, AWS, etc.
If this article is incorrect or outdated, or omits critical information, please let us know.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.
type
default
version
string
required parameter
0.14.0
type
default
version
string
required if extract
/tag_key
is not specified
0.14.0
type
default
version
time
nil
0.14.0
type
default
version
size
10240
0.14.9
type
default
available values
version
enum
read
read
/read_with_stderr
1.11.3
required
multi
version
false
false
0.14.9
type
default
version
string
tsv
0.14.9
type
default
version
string
float
0.14.9
type
default
version
string
nil
0.14.9
type
default
version
bool
false
0.14.9
required
multi
version
false
false
0.14.9
type
default
version
string
float
0.14.9