Webhooks and Elasticsearch Integration

Powerful performance with an easy integration, powered by Telegraf, the open source data connector built by InfluxData.

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This is not the recommended configuration for real-time query at scale. For query and compression optimization, high-speed ingest, and high availability, you may want to consider Webhooks and InfluxDB.

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Powerful Performance, Limitless Scale

Collect, organize, and act on massive volumes of high-velocity data. Any data is more valuable when you think of it as time series data. with InfluxDB, the #1 time series platform built to scale with Telegraf.

See Ways to Get Started

Input and output integration overview

The Webhooks plugin allows Telegraf to receive and process HTTP requests from various external services via webhooks. This plugin enables users to collect real-time metrics and events and integrate them into their monitoring solutions.

The Telegraf Elasticsearch Plugin seamlessly sends metrics to an Elasticsearch server. The plugin handles template creation and dynamic index management, and supports various Elasticsearch-specific features to ensure data is formatted correctly for storage and retrieval.

Integration details

Webhooks

This Telegraf plugin is designed to act as a webhook listener by starting an HTTP server that registers multiple webhook endpoints. It provides a way to collect events from various services by capturing HTTP requests sent to defined paths. Each service can be configured with its specific authentication details and request handling options. The plugin stands out by allowing integration with any Telegraf output plugin, making it versatile for event-driven architectures. By enabling efficient reception of events, it opens possibilities for real-time monitoring and response systems, essential for modern applications that need instantaneous event handling and processing.

Elasticsearch

This plugin writes metrics to Elasticsearch, a distributed, RESTful search and analytics engine capable of storing large amounts of data in near real-time. It is designed to handle Elasticsearch versions 5.x through 7.x and utilizes its dynamic template features to manage data type mapping properly. The plugin supports advanced features such as template management, dynamic index naming, and integration with OpenSearch. It also allows configurations for authentication and health monitoring of the Elasticsearch nodes.

Configuration

Webhooks

[[inputs.webhooks]]
  ## Address and port to host Webhook listener on
  service_address = ":1619"

  ## Maximum duration before timing out read of the request
  # read_timeout = "10s"
  ## Maximum duration before timing out write of the response
  # write_timeout = "10s"

  [inputs.webhooks.filestack]
    path = "/filestack"

    ## HTTP basic auth
    #username = ""
    #password = ""

  [inputs.webhooks.github]
    path = "/github"
    # secret = ""

    ## HTTP basic auth
    #username = ""
    #password = ""

  [inputs.webhooks.mandrill]
    path = "/mandrill"

    ## HTTP basic auth
    #username = ""
    #password = ""

  [inputs.webhooks.rollbar]
    path = "/rollbar"

    ## HTTP basic auth
    #username = ""
    #password = ""

  [inputs.webhooks.papertrail]
    path = "/papertrail"

    ## HTTP basic auth
    #username = ""
    #password = ""

  [inputs.webhooks.particle]
    path = "/particle"

    ## HTTP basic auth
    #username = ""
    #password = ""

  [inputs.webhooks.artifactory]
    path = "/artifactory"

Elasticsearch


[[outputs.elasticsearch]]
  ## The full HTTP endpoint URL for your Elasticsearch instance
  ## Multiple urls can be specified as part of the same cluster,
  ## this means that only ONE of the urls will be written to each interval
  urls = [ "http://node1.es.example.com:9200" ] # required.
  ## Elasticsearch client timeout, defaults to "5s" if not set.
  timeout = "5s"
  ## Set to true to ask Elasticsearch a list of all cluster nodes,
  ## thus it is not necessary to list all nodes in the urls config option
  enable_sniffer = false
  ## Set to true to enable gzip compression
  enable_gzip = false
  ## Set the interval to check if the Elasticsearch nodes are available
  ## Setting to "0s" will disable the health check (not recommended in production)
  health_check_interval = "10s"
  ## Set the timeout for periodic health checks.
  # health_check_timeout = "1s"
  ## HTTP basic authentication details.
  ## HTTP basic authentication details
  # username = "telegraf"
  # password = "mypassword"
  ## HTTP bearer token authentication details
  # auth_bearer_token = "eyJhbGciOiJIUzI1NiIsInR5cCI6IkpXVCJ9"

  ## Index Config
  ## The target index for metrics (Elasticsearch will create if it not exists).
  ## You can use the date specifiers below to create indexes per time frame.
  ## The metric timestamp will be used to decide the destination index name
  # %Y - year (2016)
  # %y - last two digits of year (00..99)
  # %m - month (01..12)
  # %d - day of month (e.g., 01)
  # %H - hour (00..23)
  # %V - week of the year (ISO week) (01..53)
  ## Additionally, you can specify a tag name using the notation {{tag_name}}
  ## which will be used as part of the index name. If the tag does not exist,
  ## the default tag value will be used.
  # index_name = "telegraf-{{host}}-%Y.%m.%d"
  # default_tag_value = "none"
  index_name = "telegraf-%Y.%m.%d" # required.

  ## Optional Index Config
  ## Set to true if Telegraf should use the "create" OpType while indexing
  # use_optype_create = false

  ## Optional TLS Config
  # tls_ca = "/etc/telegraf/ca.pem"
  # tls_cert = "/etc/telegraf/cert.pem"
  # tls_key = "/etc/telegraf/key.pem"
  ## Use TLS but skip chain & host verification
  # insecure_skip_verify = false

  ## Template Config
  ## Set to true if you want telegraf to manage its index template.
  ## If enabled it will create a recommended index template for telegraf indexes
  manage_template = true
  ## The template name used for telegraf indexes
  template_name = "telegraf"
  ## Set to true if you want telegraf to overwrite an existing template
  overwrite_template = false
  ## If set to true a unique ID hash will be sent as sha256(concat(timestamp,measurement,series-hash)) string
  ## it will enable data resend and update metric points avoiding duplicated metrics with different id's
  force_document_id = false

  ## Specifies the handling of NaN and Inf values.
  ## This option can have the following values:
  ##    none    -- do not modify field-values (default); will produce an error if NaNs or infs are encountered
  ##    drop    -- drop fields containing NaNs or infs
  ##    replace -- replace with the value in "float_replacement_value" (default: 0.0)
  ##               NaNs and inf will be replaced with the given number, -inf with the negative of that number
  # float_handling = "none"
  # float_replacement_value = 0.0

  ## Pipeline Config
  ## To use a ingest pipeline, set this to the name of the pipeline you want to use.
  # use_pipeline = "my_pipeline"
  ## Additionally, you can specify a tag name using the notation {{tag_name}}
  ## which will be used as part of the pipeline name. If the tag does not exist,
  ## the default pipeline will be used as the pipeline. If no default pipeline is set,
  ## no pipeline is used for the metric.
  # use_pipeline = "{{es_pipeline}}"
  # default_pipeline = "my_pipeline"
  #
  # Custom HTTP headers
  # To pass custom HTTP headers please define it in a given below section
  # [outputs.elasticsearch.headers]
  #    "X-Custom-Header" = "custom-value"

  ## Template Index Settings
  ## Overrides the template settings.index section with any provided options.
  ## Defaults provided here in the config
  # template_index_settings = {
  #   refresh_interval = "10s",
  #   mapping.total_fields.limit = 5000,
  #   auto_expand_replicas = "0-1",
  #   codec = "best_compression"
  # }

Input and output integration examples

Webhooks

  1. Real-time Notifications from Github: Integrate the Webhooks Input Plugin with Github to receive real-time notifications for events such as pull requests, commits, and issues. This allows development teams to instantly monitor crucial changes and updates in their repositories, improving collaboration and response times.

  2. Automated Alerting with Rollbar: Use this plugin to listen for errors reported from Rollbar, enabling teams to react swiftly to bugs and issues in production. By forwarding these alerts into a centralized monitoring system, teams can prioritize their responses based on severity and prevent escalated downtime.

  3. Performance Monitoring from Filestack: Capture events from Filestack to track file uploads, transformations, and errors. This setup helps businesses understand user interactions with file management processes, optimize workflow, and ensure high availability of file services.

  4. Centralized Logging with Papertrail: Tie in all logs sent to Papertrail through webhooks, allowing you to consolidate your logging strategy. With real-time log forwarding, teams can analyze trends and anomalies efficiently, ensuring they maintain visibility over critical operations.

Elasticsearch

  1. Time-based Indexing: Use this plugin to store metrics in Elasticsearch to index each metric based on the time collected. For example, CPU metrics can be stored in a daily index namedtelegraf-2023.01.01, allowing easy time-based queries and retention policies.

  2. Dynamic Templates Management: Utilize the template management feature to automatically create a custom template tailored to your metrics. This allows you to define how different fields are indexed and analyzed without manually configuring Elasticsearch, ensuring an optimal data structure for querying.

  3. OpenSearch Compatibility: If you are using AWS OpenSearch, you can configure this plugin to work seamlessly by activating compatibility mode, ensuring your existing Elasticsearch clients remain functional and compatible with newer cluster setups.

Feedback

Thank you for being part of our community! If you have any general feedback or found any bugs on these pages, we welcome and encourage your input. Please submit your feedback in the InfluxDB community Slack.

Powerful Performance, Limitless Scale

Collect, organize, and act on massive volumes of high-velocity data. Any data is more valuable when you think of it as time series data. with InfluxDB, the #1 time series platform built to scale with Telegraf.

See Ways to Get Started

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