The changes are based on SEO report and supposed to improve
ranking and indexation by search engines by using prompt and unique titles
and by updating unreachable links.
It also updates links to have a simplified form and replaces relative links with absolute links
according to https://docs.victoriametrics.com/#documentation
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Co-authored-by: Roman Khavronenko <roman@victoriametrics.com>
(cherry picked from commit 2e16732fdb
)
9.0 KiB
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VictoriaLogs can accept logs in Syslog formats at the specified TCP and UDP addresses
via -syslog.listenAddr.tcp
and -syslog.listenAddr.udp
command-line flags. The following syslog formats are supported:
- RFC3164 aka
<PRI>MMM DD hh:mm:ss HOSTNAME APP-NAME[PROCID]: MESSAGE
- RFC5424 aka
<PRI>1 TIMESTAMP HOSTNAME APP-NAME PROCID MSGID [STRUCTURED-DATA] MESSAGE
For example, the following command starts VictoriaLogs, which accepts logs in Syslog format at TCP port 514 on all the network interfaces:
./victoria-logs -syslog.listenAddr.tcp=:514
It may be needed to run VictoriaLogs under root
user or to set CAP_NET_BIND_SERVICE
option if syslog messages must be accepted at TCP port below 1024.
The following command starts VictoriaLogs, which accepts logs in Syslog format at TCP and UDP ports 514:
./victoria-logs -syslog.listenAddr.tcp=:514 -syslog.listenAddr.udp=:514
VictoriaLogs can accept logs from the following syslog collectors:
- Rsyslog. See these docs.
- Syslog-ng. See these docs.
Multiple logs in Syslog format can be ingested via a single TCP connection or via a single UDP packet - just put every log on a separate line
and delimit them with \n
char.
VictoriaLogs automatically extracts the following log fields from the received Syslog lines:
_time
- log timestamp. See also log timestamps_msg
- theMESSAGE
field from the supported syslog formats abovehostname
,app_name
andproc_id
- stream fields for unique identification over every log streampriority
,facility
andseverity
- these fields are extracted from<PRI>
fieldformat
- this field is set to eitherrfc3164
orrfc5424
depending on the format of the parsed syslog linemsg_id
-MSGID
field from log line inRFC5424
format.
The [STRUCTURED-DATA]
is parsed into fields with the SD-ID.param1
, SD-ID.param2
, ..., SD-ID.paramN
names and the corresponding values
according to the specification.
By default local timezone is used when parsing timestamps in rfc3164
lines. This can be changed to any desired timezone via -syslog.timezone
command-line flag.
See the list of supported timezone identifiers. For example, the following command starts VictoriaLogs,
which parses syslog timestamps in rfc3164
using Europe/Berlin
timezone:
./victoria-logs -syslog.listenAddr.tcp=:514 -syslog.timezone='Europe/Berlin'
The ingested logs can be queried via logs querying API. For example, the following command returns ingested logs for the last 5 minutes by using time filter:
curl http://localhost:9428/select/logsql/query -d 'query=_time:5m'
See also:
- Log timestamps
- Security
- Compression
- Multitenancy
- Data ingestion troubleshooting.
- How to query VictoriaLogs.
Log timestamps
By default VictoriaLogs uses the timestamp from the parsed Syslog message as _time
field.
Sometimes the ingested Syslog messages may contain incorrect timestamps (for example, timestamps with incorrect timezone). In this case VictoriaLogs can be configured
for using the log ingestion timestamp as _time
field. This can be done by specifying
-syslog.useLocalTimestamp.tcp
command-line flag for the corresponding -syslog.listenAddr.tcp
address:
./victoria-logs -syslog.listenAddr.tcp=:514 -syslog.useLocalTimestamp.tcp
In this case the original timestamp from the Syslog message is stored in timestamp
log field.
The -syslog.useLocalTimestamp.udp
command-line flag can be used for instructing VictoriaLogs to use local timestamps for the ingested logs
via the corresponding -syslog.listenAddr.udp
address:
./victoria-logs -syslog.listenAddr.udp=:514 -syslog.useLocalTimestamp.udp
Security
By default VictoriaLogs accepts plaintext data at -syslog.listenAddr.tcp
address. Run VictoriaLogs with -syslog.tls
command-line flag
in order to accept TLS-encrypted logs at -syslog.listenAddr.tcp
address. The -syslog.tlsCertFile
and -syslog.tlsKeyFile
command-line flags
must be set to paths to TLS certificate file and TLS key file if -syslog.tls
is set. For example, the following command
starts VictoriaLogs, which accepts TLS-encrypted syslog messages at TCP port 6514:
./victoria-logs -syslog.listenAddr.tcp=:6514 -syslog.tls -syslog.tlsCertFile=/path/to/tls/cert -syslog.tlsKeyFile=/path/to/tls/key
Compression
By default VictoriaLogs accepts uncompressed log messages in Syslog format at -syslog.listenAddr.tcp
and -syslog.listenAddr.udp
addresses.
It is possible configuring VictoriaLogs to accept compressed log messages via -syslog.compressMethod.tcp
and -syslog.compressMethod.udp
command-line flags.
The following compression methods are supported:
none
- no compressiongzip
- gzip compressiondeflate
- deflate compression
For example, the following command starts VictoriaLogs, which accepts gzip-compressed syslog messages at TCP port 514:
./victoria-logs -syslog.listenAddr.tcp=:514 -syslog.compressMethod.tcp=gzip
Multitenancy
By default, the ingested logs are stored in the (AccountID=0, ProjectID=0)
tenant.
If you need storing logs in other tenant, then specify the needed tenant via -syslog.tenantID.tcp
or -syslog.tenantID.udp
command-line flags
depending on whether TCP or UDP ports are listened for syslog messages.
For example, the following command starts VictoriaLogs, which writes syslog messages received at TCP port 514, to (AccountID=12, ProjectID=34)
tenant:
./victoria-logs -syslog.listenAddr.tcp=:514 -syslog.tenantID.tcp=12:34
Multiple configs
VictoriaLogs can accept syslog messages via multiple TCP and UDP ports with individual configurations for log timestamps, compression, security
and multitenancy. Specify multiple command-line flags for this. For example, the following command starts VictoriaLogs,
which accepts gzip-compressed syslog messages via TCP port 514 at localhost interface and stores them to tenant 123:0
,
plus it accepts TLS-encrypted syslog messages via TCP port 6514 and stores them to tenant 567:0
:
./victoria-logs \
-syslog.listenAddr.tcp=localhost:514 -syslog.tenantID.tcp=123:0 -syslog.compressMethod.tcp=gzip -syslog.tls=false -syslog.tlsKeyFile='' -syslog.tlsCertFile='' \
-syslog.listenAddr.tcp=:6514 -syslog.tenantID.tcp=567:0 -syslog.compressMethod.tcp=none -syslog.tls=true -syslog.tlsKeyFile=/path/to/tls/key -syslog.tlsCertFile=/path/to/tls/cert
Rsyslog
- Run VictoriaLogs with
-syslog.listenAddr.tcp=:29514
command-line flag. - Put the following line to rsyslog config (this config is usually located at
/etc/rsyslog.conf
):
Where*.* @@victoria-logs-server:29514
victoria-logs-server
is the hostname where VictoriaLogs runs. See these docs for more details.
Syslog-ng
- Run VictoriaLogs with
-syslog.listenAddr.tcp=:29514
command-line flag. - Put the following line to syslog-ng config:
Wheredestination d_remote { tcp("victoria-logs-server" port(29514)); };
victoria-logs-server
is the hostname where VictoriaLogs runs. See these docs for details.