Chapter 14. Log Record Fields
The following fields can be present in log records exported by the logging. Although log records are typically formatted as JSON objects, the same data model can be applied to other encodings.
To search these fields from Elasticsearch and Kibana, use the full dotted field name when searching. For example, with an Elasticsearch /_search URL, to look for a Kubernetes pod name, use /_search/q=kubernetes.pod_name:name-of-my-pod
.
The top level fields may be present in every record.
message
The original log entry text, UTF-8 encoded. This field may be absent or empty if a non-empty structured
field is present. See the description of structured
for more.
Data type | text |
Example value |
|
structured
Original log entry as a structured object. This field may be present if the forwarder was configured to parse structured JSON logs. If the original log entry was a valid structured log, this field will contain an equivalent JSON structure. Otherwise this field will be empty or absent, and the message
field will contain the original log message. The structured
field can have any subfields that are included in the log message, there are no restrictions defined here.
Data type | group |
Example value | map[message:starting fluentd worker pid=21631 ppid=21618 worker=0 pid:21631 ppid:21618 worker:0] |
@timestamp
A UTC value that marks when the log payload was created or, if the creation time is not known, when the log payload was first collected. The “@” prefix denotes a field that is reserved for a particular use. By default, most tools look for “@timestamp” with ElasticSearch.
Data type | date |
Example value |
|
hostname
The name of the host where this log message originated. In a Kubernetes cluster, this is the same as kubernetes.host
.
Data type | keyword |
ipaddr4
The IPv4 address of the source server. Can be an array.
Data type | ip |
ipaddr6
The IPv6 address of the source server, if available. Can be an array.
Data type | ip |
level
The logging level from various sources, including rsyslog(severitytext property)
, a Python logging module, and others.
The following values come from syslog.h
, and are preceded by their numeric equivalents:
-
0
=emerg
, system is unusable. -
1
=alert
, action must be taken immediately. -
2
=crit
, critical conditions. -
3
=err
, error conditions. -
4
=warn
, warning conditions. -
5
=notice
, normal but significant condition. -
6
=info
, informational. -
7
=debug
, debug-level messages.
The two following values are not part of syslog.h
but are widely used:
-
8
=trace
, trace-level messages, which are more verbose thandebug
messages. -
9
=unknown
, when the logging system gets a value it doesn’t recognize.
Map the log levels or priorities of other logging systems to their nearest match in the preceding list. For example, from python logging, you can match CRITICAL
with crit
, ERROR
with err
, and so on.
Data type | keyword |
Example value |
|
pid
The process ID of the logging entity, if available.
Data type | keyword |
service
The name of the service associated with the logging entity, if available. For example, syslog’s APP-NAME
and rsyslog’s programname
properties are mapped to the service field.
Data type | keyword |