Skip to main content

Elasticsearch Log handler for the logging library

Project description

===============

LoggingEsHandler.py

===============

| |license| |versions| |status| |downloads|

| |ci_status| |codecov| |gitter|

Note: Maintainers needed : Those that committed in the past code to this repo or are presenting new PRs and have experience and interest on helping to maintain repos & python libraries (code quality, testing, integration, etc). If you are intereted on getting our PR's through and helping others to contribute to the library, please get in touch.

Python Elasticsearch Log handler


This library provides an Elasticsearch logging appender compatible with the

python standard logging <https://docs.python.org/2/library/logging.html>_ library.

The code source is in github at `https://github.com/cmanaha/python-elasticsearch-logger

https://github.com/cmanaha/python-elasticsearch-logger`_

Installation

============

Install using pip::

pip install LoggingEsHandler

Requirements Python 2

=====================

This library requires the following dependencies

  • elasticsearch

  • requests

  • enum

Requirements Python 3

=====================

This library requires the following dependencies

  • elasticsearch

  • requests

Additional requirements for Kerberos support

============================================

Additionally, the package support optionally kerberos authentication by adding the following dependecy

  • requests-kerberos

Additional requirements for AWS IAM user authentication (request signing)

=========================================================================

Additionally, the package support optionally AWS IAM user authentication by adding the following dependecy

  • requests-aws4auth

Using the handler in your program

==================================

To initialise and create the handler, just add the handler to your logger as follow ::

from cmreslogging.handlers import LoggingEsHandler

handler = LoggingEsHandler(hosts=[{'host': 'localhost', 'port': 9200}],

                           auth_type=LoggingEsHandler.AuthType.NO_AUTH,

                           es_index_name="my_python_index")

log = logging.getLogger("PythonTest")

log.setLevel(logging.INFO)

log.addHandler(handler)

You can add fields upon initialisation, providing more data of the execution context ::

from cmreslogging.handlers import LoggingEsHandler

handler = LoggingEsHandler(hosts=[{'host': 'localhost', 'port': 9200}],

                           auth_type=LoggingEsHandler.AuthType.NO_AUTH,

                           es_index_name="my_python_index",

                           es_additional_fields={'App': 'MyAppName', 'Environment': 'Dev'})

log = logging.getLogger("PythonTest")

log.setLevel(logging.INFO)

log.addHandler(handler)

This additional fields will be applied to all logging fields and recorded in elasticsearch

To log, use the regular commands from the logging library ::

log.info("This is an info statement that will be logged into elasticsearch")

Your code can also dump additional extra fields on a per log basis that can be used to instrument

operations. For example, when reading information from a database you could do something like::

start_time = time.time()

database_operation()

db_delta = time.time() - start_time

log.debug("DB operation took %.3f seconds" % db_delta, extra={'db_execution_time': db_delta})

The code above executes the DB operation, measures the time it took and logs an entry that contains

in the message the time the operation took as string and for convenience, it creates another field

called db_execution_time with a float that can be used to plot the time this operations are taking using

Kibana on top of elasticsearch

Initialisation parameters

=========================

The constructors takes the following parameters:

  • hosts: The list of hosts that elasticsearch clients will connect, multiple hosts are allowed, for example ::

    [{'host':'host1','port':9200}, {'host':'host2','port':9200}]

  • auth_type: The authentication currently support LoggingEsHandler.AuthType = NO_AUTH, BASIC_AUTH, KERBEROS_AUTH

  • auth_details: When LoggingEsHandler.AuthType.BASIC_AUTH is used this argument must contain a tuple of string with the user and password that will be used to authenticate against the Elasticsearch servers, for example ('User','Password')

  • aws_access_key: When LoggingEsHandler.AuthType.AWS_SIGNED_AUTH is used this argument must contain the AWS key id of the the AWS IAM user

  • aws_secret_key: When LoggingEsHandler.AuthType.AWS_SIGNED_AUTH is used this argument must contain the AWS secret key of the the AWS IAM user

  • aws_region: When LoggingEsHandler.AuthType.AWS_SIGNED_AUTH is used this argument must contain the AWS region of the the AWS Elasticsearch servers, for example 'us-east'

  • use_ssl: A boolean that defines if the communications should use SSL encrypted communication

  • verify_ssl: A boolean that defines if the SSL certificates are validated or not

  • buffer_size: An int, Once this size is reached on the internal buffer results are flushed into ES

  • flush_frequency_in_sec: A float representing how often and when the buffer will be flushed

  • es_index_name: A string with the prefix of the elasticsearch index that will be created. Note a date with

    YYYY.MM.dd, python_logger used by default

  • index_name_frequency: The frequency to use as part of the index naming. Currently supports

    LoggingEsHandler.IndexNameFrequency.DAILY, LoggingEsHandler.IndexNameFrequency.WEEKLY,

    LoggingEsHandler.IndexNameFrequency.MONTHLY, LoggingEsHandler.IndexNameFrequency.YEARLY by default the daily rotation

    is used

  • es_doc_type: A string with the name of the document type that will be used python_log used by default

  • es_additional_fields: A dictionary with all the additional fields that you would like to add to the logs

Django Integration

==================

It is also very easy to integrate the handler to Django <https://www.djangoproject.com/>_ And what is even

better, at DEBUG level django logs information such as how long it takes for DB connections to return so

they can be plotted on Kibana, or the SQL statements that Django executed. ::

from cmreslogging.handlers import LoggingEsHandler

LOGGING = {

    'version': 1,

    'disable_existing_loggers': False,

    'handlers': {

        'file': {

            'level': 'DEBUG',

            'class': 'logging.handlers.RotatingFileHandler',

            'filename': './debug.log',

            'maxBytes': 102400,

            'backupCount': 5,

        },

        'elasticsearch': {

            'level': 'DEBUG',

            'class': 'cmreslogging.handlers.LoggingEsHandler',

            'hosts': [{'host': 'localhost', 'port': 9200}],

            'es_index_name': 'my_python_app',

            'es_additional_fields': {'App': 'Test', 'Environment': 'Dev'},

            'auth_type': LoggingEsHandler.AuthType.NO_AUTH,

            'use_ssl': False,

        },

    },

    'loggers': {

        'django': {

            'handlers': ['file','elasticsearch'],

            'level': 'DEBUG',

            'propagate': True,

        },

    },

}

There is more information about how Django logging works in the

Django documentation <https://docs.djangoproject.com/en/1.9/topics/logging//>_

Building the sources & Testing


To create the package follow the standard python setup.py to compile.

To test, just execute the python tests within the test folder

Why using an appender rather than logstash or beats


In some cases is quite useful to provide all the information available within the LogRecords as it contains

things such as exception information, the method, file, log line where the log was generated.

If you are interested on understanding more about the differences between the agent vs handler

approach, I'd suggest reading this conversation thread <https://github.com/cmanaha/python-elasticsearch-logger/issues/44/>_

The same functionality can be implemented in many other different ways. For example, consider the integration

using SysLogHandler <https://docs.python.org/3/library/logging.handlers.html#sysloghandler>_ and

logstash syslog plugin <https://www.elastic.co/guide/en/logstash/current/plugins-inputs-syslog.html>_.

Contributing back


Feel free to use this as is or even better, feel free to fork and send your pull requests over.

.. |downloads| image:: https://img.shields.io/pypi/dd/LoggingEsHandler.svg

:target: https://pypi.python.org/pypi/LoggingEsHandler

:alt: Daily PyPI downloads

.. |versions| image:: https://img.shields.io/pypi/pyversions/LoggingEsHandler.svg

:target: https://pypi.python.org/pypi/LoggingEsHandler

:alt: Python versions supported

.. |status| image:: https://img.shields.io/pypi/status/LoggingEsHandler.svg

:target: https://pypi.python.org/pypi/LoggingEsHandler

:alt: Package stability

.. |license| image:: https://img.shields.io/pypi/l/LoggingEsHandler.svg

:target: https://pypi.python.org/pypi/LoggingEsHandler

:alt: License

.. |ci_status| image:: https://travis-ci.org/cmanaha/python-elasticsearch-logger.svg?branch=master

:target: https://travis-ci.org/cmanaha/python-elasticsearch-logger

:alt: Continuous Integration Status

.. |codecov| image:: https://codecov.io/github/cmanaha/python-elasticsearch-logger/coverage.svg?branch=master

:target: http://codecov.io/github/cmanaha/python-elasticsearch-logger?branch=master

:alt: Coverage!

.. |gitter| image:: https://badges.gitter.im/Join%20Chat.svg

:target: https://gitter.im/cmanaha/python-elasticsearch-logger?utm_source=badge&utm_medium=badge&utm_campaign=pr-badge

:alt: gitter

Project details


Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

LoggingEsHandler-1.0.4.tar.gz (12.6 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

If you're not sure about the file name format, learn more about wheel file names.

LoggingEsHandler-1.0.4-py3-none-any.whl (12.5 kB view details)

Uploaded Python 3

File details

Details for the file LoggingEsHandler-1.0.4.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: LoggingEsHandler-1.0.4.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 12.6 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: twine/5.0.0 CPython/3.11.8

File hashes

Hashes for LoggingEsHandler-1.0.4.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 af47365cbbf78eb13fef32888d228a9dd79ff5a99e1024f2d0105506a7513912
MD5 dc4995e0c036b9f9648696b2b52b6707
BLAKE2b-256 8a4e824e7b870f2c9cef0c9dc893bf1819de1ac257744d51043be01e18354258

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file LoggingEsHandler-1.0.4-py3-none-any.whl.

File metadata

File hashes

Hashes for LoggingEsHandler-1.0.4-py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 2ca8f8b538fad217dd8b93a91d66cf5110f938f3ef9187b401db16d5f9fc91d3
MD5 c4b7a038837c3fb12e5a6b8aa9488939
BLAKE2b-256 069ece5386a459d9d6ae2b55213ae293737613da6577555656208c333e9c747f

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Monitoring Depot Continuous Integration Fastly CDN Google Download Analytics Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Error logging StatusPage Status page