Filebeat command reference
Stack
Filebeat provides a command-line interface for starting Filebeat and performing common tasks, like testing configuration files and loading dashboards.
The command-line also supports global flags for controlling global behaviors.
Use sudo to run the following commands if:
- the config file is owned by
root, or - Filebeat is configured to capture data that requires
rootaccess
Some of the features described here require an Elastic license. For more information, see https://www.elastic.co/subscriptions and License Management.
| Commands | |
|---|---|
export |
Exports the configuration, index template, ILM policy, or a dashboard to stdout. |
help |
Shows help for any command. |
keystore |
Manages the secrets keystore. |
modules |
Manages configured modules. |
run |
Runs Filebeat. This command is used by default if you start Filebeat without specifying a command. |
setup |
Sets up the initial environment, including the index template, ILM policy and write alias, Kibana dashboards (when available), and machine learning jobs (when available). |
test |
Tests the configuration. |
version |
Shows information about the current version. |
Also see Global flags.
Exports the configuration, index template, ILM policy, or a dashboard to stdout. You can use this command to quickly view your configuration, see the contents of the index template and the ILM policy, or export a dashboard from Kibana.
SYNOPSIS
filebeat export SUBCOMMAND [FLAGS]
SUBCOMMANDS
config- Exports the current configuration to stdout. If you use the
-cflag, this command exports the configuration that’s defined in the specified file. dashboard-
Exports a dashboard. You can use this option to store a dashboard on disk in a module and load it automatically. For example, to export the dashboard to a JSON file, run:
filebeat export dashboard --id="DASHBOARD_ID" > dashboard.jsonTo find the
DASHBOARD_ID, look at the URL for the dashboard in Kibana. By default,export dashboardwrites the dashboard to stdout. The example shows how to write the dashboard to a JSON file so that you can import it later. The JSON file will contain the dashboard with all visualizations and searches. You must load the index pattern separately for Filebeat.To load the dashboard, copy the generated
dashboard.jsonfile into thekibana/6/dashboarddirectory of Filebeat, and runfilebeat setup --dashboardsto import the dashboard.If Kibana is not running on
localhost:5061, you must also adjust the Filebeat configuration undersetup.kibana. template- Exports the index template to stdout. You can specify the
--es.versionflag to further define what gets exported. Furthermore you can export the template to a file instead ofstdoutby defining a directory via--dir.
ilm-policy- Exports the index lifecycle management policy to stdout. You can specify the
--es.versionand a--dirto which the policy should be exported as a file rather than exporting tostdout.
FLAGS
--es.version VERSION- When used with
template, exports an index template that is compatible with the specified version. When used withilm-policy, exports the ILM policy if the specified ES version is enabled for ILM. -h, --help- Shows help for the
exportcommand. --dir DIRNAME- Define a directory to which the template, pipelines, and ILM policy should be exported to as files instead of printing them to
stdout. --id DASHBOARD_ID- When used with
dashboard, specifies the dashboard ID.
Also see Global flags.
EXAMPLES
filebeat export config
filebeat export template --es.version 9.2.0
filebeat export dashboard --id="a7b35890-8baa-11e8-9676-ef67484126fb" > dashboard.json
Shows help for any command. If no command is specified, shows help for the run command.
SYNOPSIS
filebeat help COMMAND_NAME [FLAGS]
COMMAND_NAME- Specifies the name of the command to show help for.
FLAGS
-h, --help- Shows help for the
helpcommand.
Also see Global flags.
EXAMPLE
filebeat help export
Manages the secrets keystore.
SYNOPSIS
filebeat keystore SUBCOMMAND [FLAGS]
SUBCOMMANDS
add KEY- Adds the specified key to the keystore. Use the
--forceflag to overwrite an existing key. Use the--stdinflag to pass the value throughstdin. create- Creates a keystore to hold secrets. Use the
--forceflag to overwrite the existing keystore. list- Lists the keys in the keystore.
remove KEY- Removes the specified key from the keystore.
FLAGS
--force- Valid with the
addandcreatesubcommands. When used withadd, overwrites the specified key. When used withcreate, overwrites the keystore. --stdin- When used with
add, uses the stdin as the source of the key’s value. -h, --help- Shows help for the
keystorecommand.
Also see Global flags.
EXAMPLES
filebeat keystore create
filebeat keystore add ES_PWD
filebeat keystore remove ES_PWD
filebeat keystore list
See Secrets keystore for more examples.
Manages configured modules. You can use this command to enable and disable specific module configurations defined in the modules.d directory. The changes you make with this command are persisted and used for subsequent runs of Filebeat.
To see which modules are enabled and disabled, run the list subcommand.
SYNOPSIS
filebeat modules SUBCOMMAND [FLAGS]
SUBCOMMANDS
disable MODULE_LIST- Disables the modules specified in the space-separated list.
enable MODULE_LIST- Enables the modules specified in the space-separated list.
list- Lists the modules that are currently enabled and disabled.
FLAGS
-h, --help- Shows help for the
modulescommand.
Also see Global flags.
EXAMPLES
filebeat modules list
filebeat modules enable apache2 auditd mysql
Runs Filebeat. This command is used by default if you start Filebeat without specifying a command.
SYNOPSIS
filebeat run [FLAGS]
Or:
filebeat [FLAGS]
FLAGS
-N, --N- Disables publishing for testing purposes. This option disables all outputs except the File output.
--cpuprofile FILE- Writes CPU profile data to the specified file. This option is useful for troubleshooting Filebeat.
-h, --help- Shows help for the
runcommand. --httpprof [HOST]:PORT- Starts an http server for profiling. This option is useful for troubleshooting and profiling Filebeat.
--memprofile FILE- Writes memory profile data to the specified output file. This option is useful for troubleshooting Filebeat.
--modules MODULE_LIST-
Specifies a comma-separated list of modules to run. For example:
filebeat run --modules nginx,mysql,systemRather than specifying the list of modules every time you run Filebeat, you can use the
modulescommand to enable and disable specific modules. Then when you run Filebeat, it will run any modules that are enabled. --once-
When the
--onceflag is used, Filebeat starts all configured harvesters and inputs, and runs each input until the harvesters are closed. If you set the--onceflag, you should also setclose_eofso the harvester is closed when the end of the file is reached. By default harvesters are closed afterclose_inactiveis reached.The
--onceoption is not currently supported with thefilestreaminput type. --system.hostfs MOUNT_POINT- Specifies the mount point of the host’s filesystem for use in monitoring a host. This flag is depricated, and an alternate hostfs should be specified via the
hostfsmodule config value.
Also see Global flags.
EXAMPLE
filebeat run -e
Or:
filebeat -e
Sets up the initial environment, including the index template, ILM policy and write alias, Kibana dashboards (when available), and machine learning jobs (when available)
- The index template ensures that fields are mapped correctly in Elasticsearch. If index lifecycle management is enabled it also ensures that the defined ILM policy and write alias are connected to the indices matching the index template. The ILM policy takes care of the lifecycle of an index, when to do a rollover, when to move an index from the hot phase to the next phase, etc.
- The Kibana dashboards make it easier for you to visualize Filebeat data in Kibana.
- The machine learning jobs contain the configuration information and metadata necessary to analyze data for anomalies.
This command sets up the environment without actually running Filebeat and ingesting data. Specify optional flags to set up a subset of assets.
SYNOPSIS
filebeat setup [FLAGS]
FLAGS
--dashboards- Sets up the Kibana dashboards (when available). This option loads the dashboards from the Filebeat package. For more options, such as loading customized dashboards, see Importing Existing Beat Dashboards.
-h, --help- Shows help for the
setupcommand. --modules MODULE_LIST- Specifies a comma-separated list of modules. Use this flag to avoid errors when there are no modules defined in the
filebeat.ymlfile. --pipelines- Sets up ingest pipelines for configured filesets. Filebeat looks for enabled modules in the
filebeat.ymlfile. If you used themodulescommand to enable modules in themodules.ddirectory, also specify the--modulesflag. --enable-all-filesets- Enables all modules and filesets. This is useful with
--pipelinesif you want to load all ingest pipelines. Without this option you would have to list every module with themodulescommand and enable every fileset within the module with a-Moption, to load all of the ingest pipelines. --force-enable-module-filesets- Enables all filesets in the enabled modules. This is useful with
--pipelinesif you want to load ingest pipelines. Without this option you enable every fileset within the module with a-Moption, to load the ingest pipelines. --index-management- Sets up components related to Elasticsearch index management including template, ILM policy, and write alias (if supported and configured).
Also see Global flags.
EXAMPLES
filebeat setup --dashboards
filebeat setup --pipelines
filebeat setup --pipelines --modules system,nginx,mysql
filebeat setup --index-management
- If you used the
modulescommand to enable modules in themodules.ddirectory, also specify the--modulesflag to indicate which modules to load pipelines for.
Tests the configuration.
SYNOPSIS
filebeat test SUBCOMMAND [FLAGS]
SUBCOMMANDS
config- Tests the configuration settings.
output- Tests that Filebeat can connect to the output by using the current settings.
FLAGS
-h, --help- Shows help for the
testcommand.
Also see Global flags.
EXAMPLE
filebeat test config
Shows information about the current version.
SYNOPSIS
filebeat version [FLAGS]
FLAGS
-h, --help- Shows help for the
versioncommand.
Also see Global flags.
EXAMPLE
filebeat version
These global flags are available whenever you run Filebeat.
-E, --E "SETTING_NAME=VALUE"-
Overrides a specific configuration setting. You can specify multiple overrides. For example:
filebeat -E "name=mybeat" -E "output.elasticsearch.hosts=['http://myhost:9200']"This setting is applied to the currently running Filebeat process. The Filebeat configuration file is not changed.
-M, --M "VAR_NAME=VALUE"-
Overrides the default configuration for a Filebeat module. You can specify multiple variable overrides. For example:
filebeat --modules=nginx -M "nginx.access.var.paths=['/var/log/nginx/access.log*']" -M "nginx.access.var.pipeline=no_plugins" -c, --c FILE- Specifies the configuration file to use for Filebeat. The file you specify here is relative to
path.config. If the-cflag is not specified, the default config file,filebeat.yml, is used. -d, --d SELECTORS- Enables debugging for the specified selectors. For the selectors, you can specify a comma-separated list of components, or you can use
-d "*"to enable debugging for all components. For example,-d "publisher"displays all the publisher-related messages. -e, --e- Logs to stderr and disables syslog/file output.
--environment- For logging purposes, specifies the environment that Filebeat is running in. This setting is used to select a default log output when no log output is configured. Supported values are:
systemd,container,macos_service, andwindows_service. Ifsystemdorcontaineris specified, Filebeat will log to stdout and stderr by default. --path.config- Sets the path for configuration files. See the Directory layout section for details.
--path.data- Sets the path for data files. See the Directory layout section for details.
--path.home- Sets the path for miscellaneous files. See the Directory layout section for details.
--path.logs- Sets the path for log files. See the Directory layout section for details.
--strict.perms- Sets strict permission checking on configuration files. The default is
--strict.perms=true. See Config file ownership and permissions for more information. -v, --v-
Logs INFO-level messages.