This fork adds an sql output to beats but is not supposed to be pulled back to the main project because I am not sure if it fits, nobody told me that he would like this feature (https://discuss.elastic.co/t/should-i-create-an-sql-output-for-beats/330563) and I am not exactly sure if the way I implemented it really makes sense (for others). I am processing the data in sql again to fit my needs. If you think I should create a pull request to the main project, create an issue to let me know (maybe create also an issue in the https://github.com/elastic/beats project to check if a pull request would be accepted), then I am going to clean it up and push it to upstream.
The Beats are lightweight data shippers, written in Go, that you install on your servers to capture all sorts of operational data (think of logs, metrics, or network packet data). The Beats send the operational data to Elasticsearch, either directly or via Logstash, so it can be visualized with Kibana.
By "lightweight", we mean that Beats have a small installation footprint, use limited system resources, and have no runtime dependencies.
This repository contains libbeat, our Go framework for creating Beats, and all the officially supported Beats:
Beat | Description |
---|---|
Auditbeat | Collect your Linux audit framework data and monitor the integrity of your files. |
Filebeat | Tails and ships log files |
Functionbeat | Read and ships events from serverless infrastructure. |
Heartbeat | Ping remote services for availability |
Metricbeat | Fetches sets of metrics from the operating system and services |
Packetbeat | Monitors the network and applications by sniffing packets |
Winlogbeat | Fetches and ships Windows Event logs |
Osquerybeat | Runs Osquery and manages interraction with it. |
In addition to the above Beats, which are officially supported by Elastic, the community has created a set of other Beats that make use of libbeat but live outside of this Github repository. We maintain a list of community Beats here.
You can find the documentation and getting started guides for each of the Beats on the elastic.co site:
You can find the documentation and getting started guides for the Elastic Agent on the elastic.co site
If you need help or hit an issue, please start by opening a topic on our discuss forums. Please note that we reserve GitHub tickets for confirmed bugs and enhancement requests.
You can download pre-compiled Beats binaries, as well as packages for the supported platforms, from this page.
We'd love working with you! You can help make the Beats better in many ways: report issues, help us reproduce issues, fix bugs, add functionality, or even create your own Beat.
Please start by reading our CONTRIBUTING file.
See our CONTRIBUTING file for information about setting up your dev environment to build Beats from the source.
For testing purposes, we generate snapshot builds that you can find here. Please be aware that these are built on top of main and are not meant for production.
It is possible to trigger some jobs by putting a comment on a GitHub PR. (This service is only available for users affiliated with Elastic and not for open-source contributors.)
- beats
jenkins run the tests please
orjenkins run tests
or/test
will kick off a default build./test macos
will kick off a default build with also themacos
stages./test <beat-name>
will kick off the default build for the given PR in addition to the<beat-name>
build itself./test <beat-name> for macos
will kick off a default build with also themacos
stage for the<beat-name>
.
- apm-beats-update
/run apm-beats-update
- apm-beats-packaging
/package
or/packaging
will kick of a build to generate the packages for beats.
- apm-beats-tester
/beats-tester
will kick of a build to validate the generated packages.
It's possible to configure the build on a GitHub PR by labelling the PR with the below labels
<beat-name>
to force the following builds to run the stages for the<beat-name>
macOS
to force the following builds to run themacos
stages.