Configuring Logstashedit

To configure Logstash, you create a config file that specifies which plugins you want to use and settings for each plugin. You can reference event fields in a configuration and use conditionals to process events when they meet certain criteria. When you run logstash, you use the -f to specify your config file.

Let’s step through creating a simple config file and using it to run Logstash. Create a file named "logstash-simple.conf" and save it in the same directory as Logstash.

input { stdin { } }
output {
  elasticsearch { hosts => ["localhost:9200"] }
  stdout { codec => rubydebug }
}

Then, run logstash and specify the configuration file with the -f flag.

bin/logstash -f logstash-simple.conf

Et voilà! Logstash reads the specified configuration file and outputs to both Elasticsearch and stdout. Note that if you see a message in stdout that reads "Elasticsearch Unreachable" that you will need to make sure Elasticsearch is installed and up and reachable on port 9200. Before we move on to some more complex examples, let’s take a closer look at what’s in a config file.