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- # If you are running more than one instances of Graylog server you have to select one of these
- # instances as master. The master will perform some periodical tasks that non-masters won't perform.
- is_master = true
- # The auto-generated node ID will be stored in this file and read after restarts. It is a good idea
- # to use an absolute file path here if you are starting Graylog server from init scripts or similar.
- node_id_file = /usr/share/graylog/data/config/node-id
- root_username = admin
- root_timezone = UTC
- bin_dir = /usr/share/graylog/bin
- data_dir = /usr/share/graylog/data
- plugin_dir = /usr/share/graylog/plugin
- # List of Elasticsearch hosts Graylog should connect to.
- # Need to be specified as a comma-separated list of valid URIs for the http ports of your elasticsearch nodes.
- # If one or more of your elasticsearch hosts require authentication, include the credentials in each node URI that
- # requires authentication.
- # Maximum number of retries to connect to elasticsearch on boot for the version probe.
- #
- # Default: 0, retry indefinitely with the given delay until a connection could be established
- elasticsearch_version_probe_attempts = 5
- # Waiting time in between connection attempts for elasticsearch_version_probe_attempts
- #
- # Default: 5s
- elasticsearch_version_probe_delay = 5s
- # Maximum amount of time to wait for successful connection to Elasticsearch HTTP port.
- #
- # Default: 10 Seconds
- elasticsearch_connect_timeout = 10s
- # Maximum amount of time to wait for reading back a response from an Elasticsearch server.
- # (e. g. during search, index creation, or index time-range calculations)
- #
- # Default: 60 seconds
- elasticsearch_socket_timeout = 60s
- # Maximum idle time for an Elasticsearch connection. If this is exceeded, this connection will
- # be tore down.
- #
- # Default: inf
- #elasticsearch_idle_timeout = -1s
- # Maximum number of total connections to Elasticsearch.
- #
- # Default: 200
- #elasticsearch_max_total_connections = 200
- # Maximum number of total connections per Elasticsearch route (normally this means per
- # elasticsearch server).
- #
- # Default: 20
- #elasticsearch_max_total_connections_per_route = 20
- # Maximum number of times Graylog will retry failed requests to Elasticsearch.
- #
- # Default: 2
- #elasticsearch_max_retries = 2
- # Enable automatic Elasticsearch node discovery through Nodes Info,
- # see https://www.elastic.co/guide/en/elasticsearch/reference/5.4/cluster-nodes-info.html
- #
- # WARNING: Automatic node discovery does not work if Elasticsearch requires authentication, e. g. with Shield.
- #
- # Default: false
- #elasticsearch_discovery_enabled = true
- # Filter for including/excluding Elasticsearch nodes in discovery according to their custom attributes,
- # see https://www.elastic.co/guide/en/elasticsearch/reference/5.4/cluster.html#cluster-nodes
- #
- # Default: empty
- #elasticsearch_discovery_filter = rack:42
- # Frequency of the Elasticsearch node discovery.
- #
- # Default: 30s
- # elasticsearch_discovery_frequency = 30s
- # Set the default scheme when connecting to Elasticsearch discovered nodes
- #
- # Default: http (available options: http, https)
- #elasticsearch_discovery_default_scheme = http
- # Enable payload compression for Elasticsearch requests.
- #
- # Default: false
- #elasticsearch_compression_enabled = true
- # Enable use of "Expect: 100-continue" Header for Elasticsearch index requests.
- # If this is disabled, Graylog cannot properly handle HTTP 413 Request Entity Too Large errors.
- #
- # Default: true
- #elasticsearch_use_expect_continue = true
- # Graylog will use multiple indices to store documents in. You can configured the strategy it uses to determine
- # when to rotate the currently active write index.
- # It supports multiple rotation strategies:
- # - "count" of messages per index, use elasticsearch_max_docs_per_index below to configure
- # - "size" per index, use elasticsearch_max_size_per_index below to configure
- # valid values are "count", "size" and "time", default is "count"
- #
- # ATTENTION: These settings have been moved to the database in 2.0. When you upgrade, make sure to set these
- # to your previous 1.x settings so they will be migrated to the database!
- # This configuration setting is only used on the first start of Graylog. After that,
- # index related settings can be changed in the Graylog web interface on the 'System / Indices' page.
- # Also see https://docs.graylog.org/docs/index-model#index-set-configuration
- rotation_strategy = count
- # (Approximate) maximum number of documents in an Elasticsearch index before a new index
- # is being created, also see no_retention and elasticsearch_max_number_of_indices.
- # Configure this if you used 'rotation_strategy = count' above.
- #
- # ATTENTION: These settings have been moved to the database in 2.0. When you upgrade, make sure to set these
- # to your previous 1.x settings so they will be migrated to the database!
- # This configuration setting is only used on the first start of Graylog. After that,
- # index related settings can be changed in the Graylog web interface on the 'System / Indices' page.
- # Also see https://docs.graylog.org/docs/index-model#index-set-configuration
- elasticsearch_max_docs_per_index = 20000000
- # (Approximate) maximum size in bytes per Elasticsearch index on disk before a new index is being created, also see
- # no_retention and elasticsearch_max_number_of_indices. Default is 1GB.
- # Configure this if you used 'rotation_strategy = size' above.
- #
- # ATTENTION: These settings have been moved to the database in 2.0. When you upgrade, make sure to set these
- # to your previous 1.x settings so they will be migrated to the database!
- # This configuration setting is only used on the first start of Graylog. After that,
- # index related settings can be changed in the Graylog web interface on the 'System / Indices' page.
- # Also see https://docs.graylog.org/docs/index-model#index-set-configuration
- #elasticsearch_max_size_per_index = 1073741824
- # (Approximate) maximum time before a new Elasticsearch index is being created, also see
- # no_retention and elasticsearch_max_number_of_indices. Default is 1 day.
- # Configure this if you used 'rotation_strategy = time' above.
- # Please note that this rotation period does not look at the time specified in the received messages, but is
- # using the real clock value to decide when to rotate the index!
- # Specify the time using a duration and a suffix indicating which unit you want:
- # 1w = 1 week
- # 1d = 1 day
- # 12h = 12 hours
- # Permitted suffixes are: d for day, h for hour, m for minute, s for second.
- #
- # ATTENTION: These settings have been moved to the database in 2.0. When you upgrade, make sure to set these
- # to your previous 1.x settings so they will be migrated to the database!
- # This configuration setting is only used on the first start of Graylog. After that,
- # index related settings can be changed in the Graylog web interface on the 'System / Indices' page.
- # Also see https://docs.graylog.org/docs/index-model#index-set-configuration
- #elasticsearch_max_time_per_index = 1d
- # Disable checking the version of Elasticsearch for being compatible with this Graylog release.
- # WARNING: Using Graylog with unsupported and untested versions of Elasticsearch may lead to data loss!
- #elasticsearch_disable_version_check = true
- # Disable message retention on this node, i. e. disable Elasticsearch index rotation.
- #no_retention = false
- # How many indices do you want to keep?
- #
- # ATTENTION: These settings have been moved to the database in 2.0. When you upgrade, make sure to set these
- # to your previous 1.x settings so they will be migrated to the database!
- # This configuration setting is only used on the first start of Graylog. After that,
- # index related settings can be changed in the Graylog web interface on the 'System / Indices' page.
- # Also see https://docs.graylog.org/docs/index-model#index-set-configuration
- elasticsearch_max_number_of_indices = 20
- # Decide what happens with the oldest indices when the maximum number of indices is reached.
- # The following strategies are availble:
- # - delete # Deletes the index completely (Default)
- # - close # Closes the index and hides it from the system. Can be re-opened later.
- #
- # ATTENTION: These settings have been moved to the database in 2.0. When you upgrade, make sure to set these
- # to your previous 1.x settings so they will be migrated to the database!
- # This configuration setting is only used on the first start of Graylog. After that,
- # index related settings can be changed in the Graylog web interface on the 'System / Indices' page.
- # Also see https://docs.graylog.org/docs/index-model#index-set-configuration
- retention_strategy = delete
- # How many Elasticsearch shards and replicas should be used per index? Note that this only applies to newly created indices.
- # ATTENTION: These settings have been moved to the database in Graylog 2.2.0. When you upgrade, make sure to set these
- # to your previous settings so they will be migrated to the database!
- # This configuration setting is only used on the first start of Graylog. After that,
- # index related settings can be changed in the Graylog web interface on the 'System / Indices' page.
- # Also see https://docs.graylog.org/docs/index-model#index-set-configuration
- elasticsearch_shards = 4
- elasticsearch_replicas = 0
- # Prefix for all Elasticsearch indices and index aliases managed by Graylog.
- #
- # ATTENTION: These settings have been moved to the database in Graylog 2.2.0. When you upgrade, make sure to set these
- # to your previous settings so they will be migrated to the database!
- # This configuration setting is only used on the first start of Graylog. After that,
- # index related settings can be changed in the Graylog web interface on the 'System / Indices' page.
- # Also see https://docs.graylog.org/docs/index-model#index-set-configuration
- elasticsearch_index_prefix = graylog
- # Name of the Elasticsearch index template used by Graylog to apply the mandatory index mapping.
- # Default: graylog-internal
- #
- # ATTENTION: These settings have been moved to the database in Graylog 2.2.0. When you upgrade, make sure to set these
- # to your previous settings so they will be migrated to the database!
- # This configuration setting is only used on the first start of Graylog. After that,
- # index related settings can be changed in the Graylog web interface on the 'System / Indices' page.
- # Also see https://docs.graylog.org/docs/index-model#index-set-configuration
- #elasticsearch_template_name = graylog-internal
- # Do you want to allow searches with leading wildcards? This can be extremely resource hungry and should only
- # be enabled with care. See also: https://docs.graylog.org/docs/query-language
- allow_leading_wildcard_searches = false
- # Do you want to allow searches to be highlighted? Depending on the size of your messages this can be memory hungry and
- # should only be enabled after making sure your Elasticsearch cluster has enough memory.
- allow_highlighting = false
- # Analyzer (tokenizer) to use for message and full_message field. The "standard" filter usually is a good idea.
- # All supported analyzers are: standard, simple, whitespace, stop, keyword, pattern, language, snowball, custom
- # Elasticsearch documentation: https://www.elastic.co/guide/en/elasticsearch/reference/2.3/analysis.html
- # Note that this setting only takes effect on newly created indices.
- #
- # ATTENTION: These settings have been moved to the database in Graylog 2.2.0. When you upgrade, make sure to set these
- # to your previous settings so they will be migrated to the database!
- # This configuration setting is only used on the first start of Graylog. After that,
- # index related settings can be changed in the Graylog web interface on the 'System / Indices' page.
- # Also see https://docs.graylog.org/docs/index-model#index-set-configuration
- elasticsearch_analyzer = standard
- # Global timeout for index optimization (force merge) requests.
- # Default: 1h
- #elasticsearch_index_optimization_timeout = 1h
- # Maximum number of concurrently running index optimization (force merge) jobs.
- # If you are using lots of different index sets, you might want to increase that number.
- # Default: 20
- #elasticsearch_index_optimization_jobs = 20
- # Mute the logging-output of ES deprecation warnings during REST calls in the ES RestClient
- #elasticsearch_mute_deprecation_warnings = true
- # Time interval for index range information cleanups. This setting defines how often stale index range information
- # is being purged from the database.
- # Default: 1h
- #index_ranges_cleanup_interval = 1h
- # Time interval for the job that runs index field type maintenance tasks like cleaning up stale entries. This doesn't
- # need to run very often.
- # Default: 1h
- #index_field_type_periodical_interval = 1h
- # Batch size for the Elasticsearch output. This is the maximum (!) number of messages the Elasticsearch output
- # module will get at once and write to Elasticsearch in a batch call. If the configured batch size has not been
- # reached within output_flush_interval seconds, everything that is available will be flushed at once. Remember
- # that every outputbuffer processor manages its own batch and performs its own batch write calls.
- # ("outputbuffer_processors" variable)
- output_batch_size = 500
- # Flush interval (in seconds) for the Elasticsearch output. This is the maximum amount of time between two
- # batches of messages written to Elasticsearch. It is only effective at all if your minimum number of messages
- # for this time period is less than output_batch_size * outputbuffer_processors.
- output_flush_interval = 1
- # As stream outputs are loaded only on demand, an output which is failing to initialize will be tried over and
- # over again. To prevent this, the following configuration options define after how many faults an output will
- # not be tried again for an also configurable amount of seconds.
- output_fault_count_threshold = 5
- output_fault_penalty_seconds = 30
- # The number of parallel running processors.
- # Raise this number if your buffers are filling up.
- processbuffer_processors = 5
- outputbuffer_processors = 3
- # The following settings (outputbuffer_processor_*) configure the thread pools backing each output buffer processor.
- # See https://docs.oracle.com/javase/8/docs/api/java/util/concurrent/ThreadPoolExecutor.html for technical details
- # When the number of threads is greater than the core (see outputbuffer_processor_threads_core_pool_size),
- # this is the maximum time in milliseconds that excess idle threads will wait for new tasks before terminating.
- # Default: 5000
- #outputbuffer_processor_keep_alive_time = 5000
- # The number of threads to keep in the pool, even if they are idle, unless allowCoreThreadTimeOut is set
- # Default: 3
- #outputbuffer_processor_threads_core_pool_size = 3
- # The maximum number of threads to allow in the pool
- # Default: 30
- #outputbuffer_processor_threads_max_pool_size = 30
- # UDP receive buffer size for all message inputs (e. g. SyslogUDPInput).
- #udp_recvbuffer_sizes = 1048576
- # Wait strategy describing how buffer processors wait on a cursor sequence. (default: sleeping)
- # Possible types:
- # - yielding
- # Compromise between performance and CPU usage.
- # - sleeping
- # Compromise between performance and CPU usage. Latency spikes can occur after quiet periods.
- # - blocking
- # High throughput, low latency, higher CPU usage.
- # - busy_spinning
- # Avoids syscalls which could introduce latency jitter. Best when threads can be bound to specific CPU cores.
- processor_wait_strategy = blocking
- # Size of internal ring buffers. Raise this if raising outputbuffer_processors does not help anymore.
- # For optimum performance your LogMessage objects in the ring buffer should fit in your CPU L3 cache.
- # Must be a power of 2. (512, 1024, 2048, ...)
- ring_size = 65536
- inputbuffer_ring_size = 65536
- inputbuffer_processors = 2
- inputbuffer_wait_strategy = blocking
- # Enable the message journal.
- message_journal_enabled = true
- # The directory which will be used to store the message journal. The directory must be exclusively used by Graylog and
- # must not contain any other files than the ones created by Graylog itself.
- #
- # ATTENTION:
- # If you create a seperate partition for the journal files and use a file system creating directories like 'lost+found'
- # in the root directory, you need to create a sub directory for your journal.
- # Otherwise Graylog will log an error message that the journal is corrupt and Graylog will not start.
- message_journal_dir = data/journal
- # Journal hold messages before they could be written to Elasticsearch.
- # For a maximum of 12 hours or 5 GB whichever happens first.
- # During normal operation the journal will be smaller.
- #message_journal_max_age = 12h
- #message_journal_max_size = 5gb
- #message_journal_flush_age = 1m
- #message_journal_flush_interval = 1000000
- #message_journal_segment_age = 1h
- #message_journal_segment_size = 100mb
- # Number of threads used exclusively for dispatching internal events. Default is 2.
- #async_eventbus_processors = 2
- # How many seconds to wait between marking node as DEAD for possible load balancers and starting the actual
- # shutdown process. Set to 0 if you have no status checking load balancers in front.
- lb_recognition_period_seconds = 3
- # MongoDB connection string
- # See https://docs.mongodb.com/manual/reference/connection-string/ for details
- #mongodb_uri = mongodb://localhost/graylog
- mongodb_uri = mongodb://mongodb/graylog
- # Authenticate against the MongoDB server
- # '+'-signs in the username or password need to be replaced by '%2B'
- #mongodb_uri = mongodb://grayloguser:secret@localhost:27017/graylog
- # Use a replica set instead of a single host
- #mongodb_uri = mongodb://grayloguser:secret@localhost:27017,localhost:27018,localhost:27019/graylog?replicaSet=rs01
- # DNS Seedlist https://docs.mongodb.com/manual/reference/connection-string/#dns-seedlist-connection-format
- #mongodb_uri = mongodb+srv://server.example.org/graylog
- # Increase this value according to the maximum connections your MongoDB server can handle from a single client
- # if you encounter MongoDB connection problems.
- mongodb_max_connections = 1000
- # Number of threads allowed to be blocked by MongoDB connections multiplier. Default: 5
- # If mongodb_max_connections is 100, and mongodb_threads_allowed_to_block_multiplier is 5,
- # then 500 threads can block. More than that and an exception will be thrown.
- # http://api.mongodb.com/java/current/com/mongodb/MongoOptions.html#threadsAllowedToBlockForConnectionMultiplier
- mongodb_threads_allowed_to_block_multiplier = 5
- # For some cluster-related REST requests, the node must query all other nodes in the cluster. This is the maximum number
- # of threads available for this. Increase it, if '/cluster/*' requests take long to complete.
- # Should be http_thread_pool_size * average_cluster_size if you have a high number of concurrent users.
- proxied_requests_thread_pool_size = 32
- # The allowed TLS protocols for system wide TLS enabled servers. (e.g. message inputs, http interface)
- # Setting this to an empty value, leaves it up to system libraries and the used JDK to chose a default.
- # Default: TLSv1.2,TLSv1.3 (might be automatically adjusted to protocols supported by the JDK)
- enabled_tls_protocols= TLSv1.2,TLSv1.3
- # Enable Prometheus exporter HTTP server.
- # Default: false
- prometheus_exporter_enabled = true
- # IP address and port for the Prometheus exporter HTTP server.
- # Default: 127.0.0.1:9833
- prometheus_exporter_bind_address = 127.0.0.1:9833
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