Hi Ankur, Please find the configuration file in the attachment .
Thanks, Ankit Mittal -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "graylog2" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to graylog2+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com. For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.
# If you are running more than one instances of graylog2-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 graylog2-server from init scripts or similar. node_id_file = /etc/graylog2-server-node-id # You MUST set a secret to secure/pepper the stored user passwords here. Use at least 64 characters. # Generate one by using for example: pwgen -s 96 password_secret = mynewpasswordsecret # the default root user is named 'admin' # root_username = admin # You MUST specify a hash password for the root user (which you only need to initially set up the # system and in case you lose connectivity to your authentication backend) # This password cannot be changed using the API or via the web interface. If you need to change it, # modify it in this file. # Create one by using for example: echo -n yourpassword | shasum -a 256 # and put the resulting hash value into the following line root_password_sha2 = PWYQZ10oEleOpSbmJ6DQrwYCqQFLRx94g8SK1TGicpbtvXyocGNxQ3YYM5k30dpaPkWerEnUsFfxLtgVWkBS1Vu3wmdDOxkD # Set plugin directory here (relative or absolute) plugin_dir = plugin # REST API listen URI. Must be reachable by other graylog2-server nodes if you run a cluster. rest_listen_uri = http://192.168.2.254:12900/ # REST API transport address. Defaults to the value of rest_listen_uri. Exception: If rest_listen_uri # is set to a wildcard IP address (0.0.0.0) the first non-loopback IPv4 system address is used. # This will be promoted in the cluster discovery APIs and other nodes may try to connect on this # address. (see rest_listen_uri) #rest_transport_uri = # Enable CORS headers for REST api. This is necessary for JS-clients accessing the server directly. # If these are disabled, modern browsers will not be able to retrieve resources from the server. # This is disabled by default. Uncomment the next line to enable it. rest_enable_cors = true # Enable GZIP support for REST api. This compresses API responses and therefore helps to reduce # overall round trip times. This is disabled by default. Uncomment the next line to enable it. rest_enable_gzip = true # Embedded elasticsearch configuration file # pay attention to the working directory of the server, maybe use an absolute path here elasticsearch_config_file = /etc/graylog2-elasticsearch.yml elasticsearch_max_docs_per_index = 20000000 # How many indices do you want to keep? # elasticsearch_max_number_of_indices*elasticsearch_max_docs_per_index=total number of messages in your setup elasticsearch_max_number_of_indices = 10 # 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. retention_strategy = delete # How many ElasticSearch shards and replicas should be used per index? Note that this only applies to newly created indices. elasticsearch_shards = 4 elasticsearch_replicas = 1 elasticsearch_index_prefix = graylog2.1 # Do you want to allow searches with leading wildcards? This can be extremely resource hungry and should only # be enabled with care. See also: http://support.torch.sh/help/kb/graylog2-web-interface/the-search-bar-explained 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 = true # settings to be passed to elasticsearch's client (overriding those in the provided elasticsearch_config_file) # all these # this must be the same as for your elasticsearch cluster #elasticsearch_cluster_name = graylog2 # you could also leave this out, but makes it easier to identify the graylog2 client instance #elasticsearch_node_name = graylog2-server # we don't want the graylog2 server to store any data, or be master node #elasticsearch_node_master = false #elasticsearch_node_data = false # use a different port if you run multiple elasticsearch nodes on one machine #elasticsearch_transport_tcp_port = 9350 # we don't need to run the embedded HTTP server here #elasticsearch_http_enabled = false #elasticsearch_discovery_zen_ping_multicast_enabled = false #elasticsearch_discovery_zen_ping_unicast_hosts = 192.168.1.203:9300 # the following settings allow to change the bind addresses for the elasticsearch client in graylog2 # these settings are empty by default, letting elasticsearch choose automatically, # override them here or in the 'elasticsearch_config_file' if you need to bind to a special address # refer to http://www.elasticsearch.org/guide/en/elasticsearch/reference/0.90/modules-network.html for special values here # elasticsearch_network_host = # elasticsearch_network_bind_host = # elasticsearch_network_publish_host = # 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: http://www.elasticsearch.org/guide/reference/index-modules/analysis/ # Note that this setting only takes effect on newly created indices. elasticsearch_analyzer = standard # 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 = 25 # 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 # The number of parallel running processors. # Raise this number if your buffers are filling up. processbuffer_processors = 5 outputbuffer_processors = 3 # 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. # Start server with --statistics flag to see buffer utilization. # Must be a power of 2. (512, 1024, 2048, ...) ring_size = 1024 # EXPERIMENTAL: Dead Letters # Every failed indexing attempt is logged by default and made visible in the web-interface. You can enable # the experimental dead letters feature to write every message that was not successfully indexed into the # MongoDB "dead_letters" collection to make sure that you never lose a message. The actual writing of dead # letter should work fine already but it is not heavily tested yet and will get more features in future # releases. dead_letters_enabled = false # 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 Configuration mongodb_useauth = false #mongodb_user = grayloguser #mongodb_password = 123 mongodb_host = 127.0.0.1 #mongodb_replica_set = localhost:27017,localhost:27018,localhost:27019 mongodb_database = graylog2 mongodb_port = 27017 # Raise this according to the maximum connections your MongoDB server can handle if you encounter MongoDB connection problems. mongodb_max_connections = 100 # 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.org/java/current/com/mongodb/MongoOptions.html#threadsAllowedToBlockForConnectionMultiplier mongodb_threads_allowed_to_block_multiplier = 5 # Drools Rule File (Use to rewrite incoming log messages) # See: http://support.torch.sh/help/kb/graylog2-server/custom-message-rewritingprocessing # rules_file = /etc/graylog2.drl # Email transport transport_email_enabled = false transport_email_hostname = mail.example.com transport_email_port = 587 transport_email_use_auth = true transport_email_use_tls = true transport_email_use_ssl = true transport_email_auth_username = y...@example.com transport_email_auth_password = secret transport_email_subject_prefix = [graylog2] transport_email_from_email = grayl...@example.com # Specify and uncomment this if you want to include links to the stream in your stream alert mails. # This should define the fully qualified base url to your web interface exactly the same way as it is accessed by your users. # #transport_email_web_interface_url # HTTP proxy for outgoing HTTP calls #http_proxy_uri = # The below line is used to disable version check by internet ( defalut it is enable ) versionchecks = false
elasticsearch.yml
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graylog2-elasticsearch.yml
Description: Binary data