TCP & TLS

The tcp output plugin allows to send records to a remote TCP server. The payload can be formatted in different ways as required.

Configuration Parameters

TLS Configuration Parameters

The following parameters are available to configure a secure channel connection through TLS:

Command Line

JSON format

$ bin/calyptia-fluent-bit -i cpu -o tcp://127.0.0.1:5170 -p format=json_lines -v

We have specified to gather CPU usage metrics and send them in JSON lines mode to a remote end-point using netcat service.

Run the following in a separate terminal, netcat will start listening for messages on TCP port 5170. After it connects to Calyptia Core Agent ou should see the output as above in JSON format:

$ nc -l 5170
{"date":1644834856.905985,"cpu_p":1.1875,"user_p":0.5625,"system_p":0.625,"cpu0.p_cpu":0.0,"cpu0.p_user":0.0,"cpu0.p_system":0.0,"cpu1.p_cpu":1.0,"cpu1.p_user":1.0,"cpu1.p_system":0.0,"cpu2.p_cpu":4.0,"cpu2.p_user":2.0,"cpu2.p_system":2.0,"cpu3.p_cpu":1.0,"cpu3.p_user":0.0,"cpu3.p_system":1.0,"cpu4.p_cpu":1.0,"cpu4.p_user":0.0,"cpu4.p_system":1.0,"cpu5.p_cpu":1.0,"cpu5.p_user":1.0,"cpu5.p_system":0.0,"cpu6.p_cpu":0.0,"cpu6.p_user":0.0,"cpu6.p_system":0.0,"cpu7.p_cpu":3.0,"cpu7.p_user":1.0,"cpu7.p_system":2.0,"cpu8.p_cpu":0.0,"cpu8.p_user":0.0,"cpu8.p_system":0.0,"cpu9.p_cpu":1.0,"cpu9.p_user":0.0,"cpu9.p_system":1.0,"cpu10.p_cpu":1.0,"cpu10.p_user":0.0,"cpu10.p_system":1.0,"cpu11.p_cpu":0.0,"cpu11.p_user":0.0,"cpu11.p_system":0.0,"cpu12.p_cpu":0.0,"cpu12.p_user":0.0,"cpu12.p_system":0.0,"cpu13.p_cpu":3.0,"cpu13.p_user":2.0,"cpu13.p_system":1.0,"cpu14.p_cpu":1.0,"cpu14.p_user":1.0,"cpu14.p_system":0.0,"cpu15.p_cpu":0.0,"cpu15.p_user":0.0,"cpu15.p_system":0.0}

Msgpack format

Repeat the JSON approach but using the msgpack output format.

$ bin/calyptia-fluent-bit -i cpu -o tcp://127.0.0.1:5170 -p format=msgpack -v

We could send this to stdout but as it is a serialized format you would end up with strange output. This should really be handled by a msgpack receiver to unpack as per the details in the developer documentation here. As an example we use the Python msgpack library to deal with it:

#Python3
import socket
import msgpack

unpacker = msgpack.Unpacker(use_list=False, raw=False)
s = socket.socket(socket.AF_INET, socket.SOCK_STREAM)
s.setsockopt(socket.SOL_SOCKET, socket.SO_REUSEADDR, 1)
s.bind(("127.0.0.1", 5170))
s.listen(1)
connection, address = s.accept()

while True:
    data = connection.recv(1024)
    if not data:
        break
    unpacker.feed(data)
    for unpacked in unpacker:
        print(unpacked)
$ pip install msgpack
$ python3 test.py
(ExtType(code=0, data=b'b\n5\xc65\x05\x14\xac'), {'cpu_p': 0.1875, 'user_p': 0.125, 'system_p': 0.0625, 'cpu0.p_cpu': 0.0, 'cpu0.p_user': 0.0, 'cpu0.p_system': 0.0, 'cpu1.p_cpu': 0.0, 'cpu1.p_user': 0.0, 'cpu1.p_system': 0.0, 'cpu2.p_cpu': 1.0, 'cpu2.p_user': 0.0, 'cpu2.p_system': 1.0, 'cpu3.p_cpu': 0.0, 'cpu3.p_user': 0.0, 'cpu3.p_system': 0.0, 'cpu4.p_cpu': 0.0, 'cpu4.p_user': 0.0, 'cpu4.p_system': 0.0, 'cpu5.p_cpu': 0.0, 'cpu5.p_user': 0.0, 'cpu5.p_system': 0.0, 'cpu6.p_cpu': 0.0, 'cpu6.p_user': 0.0, 'cpu6.p_system': 0.0, 'cpu7.p_cpu': 0.0, 'cpu7.p_user': 0.0, 'cpu7.p_system': 0.0, 'cpu8.p_cpu': 0.0, 'cpu8.p_user': 0.0, 'cpu8.p_system': 0.0, 'cpu9.p_cpu': 1.0, 'cpu9.p_user': 1.0, 'cpu9.p_system': 0.0, 'cpu10.p_cpu': 0.0, 'cpu10.p_user': 0.0, 'cpu10.p_system': 0.0, 'cpu11.p_cpu': 0.0, 'cpu11.p_user': 0.0, 'cpu11.p_system': 0.0, 'cpu12.p_cpu': 0.0, 'cpu12.p_user': 0.0, 'cpu12.p_system': 0.0, 'cpu13.p_cpu': 0.0, 'cpu13.p_user': 0.0, 'cpu13.p_system': 0.0, 'cpu14.p_cpu': 0.0, 'cpu14.p_user': 0.0, 'cpu14.p_system': 0.0, 'cpu15.p_cpu': 0.0, 'cpu15.p_user': 0.0, 'cpu15.p_system': 0.0})

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