ingest.asciidoc 24 KB

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  1. [[ingest]]
  2. = Ingest pipelines
  3. Ingest pipelines let you perform common transformations on your data before
  4. indexing. For example, you can use pipelines to remove fields, extract values
  5. from text, and enrich your data.
  6. A pipeline consists of a series of configurable tasks called
  7. <<processors,processors>>. Each processor runs sequentially, making specific
  8. changes to incoming documents. After the processors have run, {es} adds the
  9. transformed documents to your data stream or index.
  10. image::images/ingest/ingest-process.svg[Ingest pipeline diagram,align="center"]
  11. You can create and manage ingest pipelines using {kib}'s **Ingest Node
  12. Pipelines** feature or the <<ingest-apis,ingest APIs>>. {es} stores pipelines in
  13. the <<cluster-state,cluster state>>.
  14. [discrete]
  15. [[ingest-prerequisites]]
  16. === Prerequisites
  17. * Nodes with the <<node-ingest-node,`ingest`>> node role handle pipeline
  18. processing. To use ingest pipelines, your cluster must have at least one node
  19. with the `ingest` role. For heavy ingest loads, we recommend creating
  20. <<node-ingest-node,dedicated ingest nodes>>.
  21. * If the {es} security features are enabled, you must have the `manage_pipeline`
  22. <<privileges-list-cluster,cluster privilege>> to manage ingest pipelines. To use
  23. {kib}'s **Ingest Node Pipelines** feature, you also need the
  24. `cluster:monitor/nodes/info` cluster privileges.
  25. * Pipelines including the `enrich` processor require additional setup. See
  26. <<ingest-enriching-data>>.
  27. [discrete]
  28. [[create-manage-ingest-pipelines]]
  29. === Create and manage pipelines
  30. In {kib}, open the main menu and click **Stack Management** > **Ingest Node
  31. Pipelines**. From the list view, you can:
  32. * View a list of your pipelines and drill down into details
  33. * Edit or clone existing pipelines
  34. * Delete pipelines
  35. To create a new pipeline, click **Create pipeline**. For an example tutorial,
  36. see <<common-log-format-example>>.
  37. [role="screenshot"]
  38. image::images/ingest/ingest-pipeline-list.png[Kibana's Ingest Node Pipelines list view,align="center"]
  39. You can also use the <<ingest-apis,ingest APIs>> to create and manage pipelines.
  40. The following <<put-pipeline-api,create pipeline API>> request creates
  41. a pipeline containing two <<set-processor,`set`>> processors followed by a
  42. <<lowercase-processor,`lowercase`>> processor. The processors run sequentially
  43. in the order specified.
  44. [source,console]
  45. ----
  46. PUT _ingest/pipeline/my-pipeline
  47. {
  48. "description": "My optional pipeline description",
  49. "processors": [
  50. {
  51. "set": {
  52. "description": "My optional processor description",
  53. "field": "my-long-field",
  54. "value": 10
  55. }
  56. },
  57. {
  58. "set": {
  59. "description": "Set 'my-boolean-field' to true",
  60. "field": "my-boolean-field",
  61. "value": true
  62. }
  63. },
  64. {
  65. "lowercase": {
  66. "field": "my-keyword-field"
  67. }
  68. }
  69. ]
  70. }
  71. ----
  72. // TESTSETUP
  73. [discrete]
  74. [[manage-pipeline-versions]]
  75. === Manage pipeline versions
  76. When you create or update a pipeline, you can specify an optional `version`
  77. integer. {es} doesn't use this `version` number internally, but you can use it
  78. to track changes to a pipeline.
  79. [source,console]
  80. ----
  81. PUT _ingest/pipeline/my-pipeline-id
  82. {
  83. "version": 1,
  84. "processors": [ ... ]
  85. }
  86. ----
  87. // TEST[s/\.\.\./{"lowercase": {"field":"my-keyword-field"}}/]
  88. To unset the `version` number using the API, replace or update the pipeline
  89. without specifying the `version` parameter.
  90. [discrete]
  91. [[test-pipeline]]
  92. === Test a pipeline
  93. Before using a pipeline in production, we recommend you test it using sample
  94. documents. When creating or editing a pipeline in {kib}, click **Add
  95. documents**. In the **Documents** tab, provide sample documents and click **Run
  96. the pipeline**.
  97. [role="screenshot"]
  98. image::images/ingest/test-a-pipeline.png[Test a pipeline in Kibana,align="center"]
  99. You can also test pipelines using the <<simulate-pipeline-api,simulate pipeline
  100. API>>. You can specify a configured pipeline in the request path. For example,
  101. the following request tests `my-pipeline`.
  102. [source,console]
  103. ----
  104. POST _ingest/pipeline/my-pipeline/_simulate
  105. {
  106. "docs": [
  107. {
  108. "_source": {
  109. "my-keyword-field": "FOO"
  110. }
  111. },
  112. {
  113. "_source": {
  114. "my-keyword-field": "BAR"
  115. }
  116. }
  117. ]
  118. }
  119. ----
  120. Alternatively, you can specify a pipeline and its processors in the request
  121. body.
  122. [source,console]
  123. ----
  124. POST _ingest/pipeline/_simulate
  125. {
  126. "pipeline": {
  127. "processors": [
  128. {
  129. "lowercase": {
  130. "field": "my-keyword-field"
  131. }
  132. }
  133. ]
  134. },
  135. "docs": [
  136. {
  137. "_source": {
  138. "my-keyword-field": "FOO"
  139. }
  140. },
  141. {
  142. "_source": {
  143. "my-keyword-field": "BAR"
  144. }
  145. }
  146. ]
  147. }
  148. ----
  149. The API returns transformed documents:
  150. [source,console-result]
  151. ----
  152. {
  153. "docs": [
  154. {
  155. "doc": {
  156. "_index": "_index",
  157. "_id": "_id",
  158. "_source": {
  159. "my-keyword-field": "foo"
  160. },
  161. "_ingest": {
  162. "timestamp": "2099-03-07T11:04:03.000Z"
  163. }
  164. }
  165. },
  166. {
  167. "doc": {
  168. "_index": "_index",
  169. "_id": "_id",
  170. "_source": {
  171. "my-keyword-field": "bar"
  172. },
  173. "_ingest": {
  174. "timestamp": "2099-03-07T11:04:04.000Z"
  175. }
  176. }
  177. }
  178. ]
  179. }
  180. ----
  181. // TESTRESPONSE[s/"2099-03-07T11:04:03.000Z"/$body.docs.0.doc._ingest.timestamp/]
  182. // TESTRESPONSE[s/"2099-03-07T11:04:04.000Z"/$body.docs.1.doc._ingest.timestamp/]
  183. [discrete]
  184. [[add-pipeline-to-indexing-request]]
  185. === Add a pipeline to an indexing request
  186. Use the `pipeline` query parameter to apply a pipeline to documents in
  187. <<docs-index_,individual>> or <<docs-bulk,bulk>> indexing requests.
  188. [source,console]
  189. ----
  190. POST my-data-stream/_doc?pipeline=my-pipeline
  191. {
  192. "@timestamp": "2099-03-07T11:04:05.000Z",
  193. "my-keyword-field": "foo"
  194. }
  195. PUT my-data-stream/_bulk?pipeline=my-pipeline
  196. { "create":{ } }
  197. { "@timestamp": "2099-03-07T11:04:06.000Z", "my-keyword-field": "foo" }
  198. { "create":{ } }
  199. { "@timestamp": "2099-03-07T11:04:07.000Z", "my-keyword-field": "bar" }
  200. ----
  201. // TEST[setup:my_data_stream]
  202. // TEST[teardown:data_stream_cleanup]
  203. You can also use the `pipeline` parameter with the <<docs-update-by-query,update
  204. by query>> or <<docs-reindex,reindex>> APIs.
  205. [source,console]
  206. ----
  207. POST my-data-stream/_update_by_query?pipeline=my-pipeline
  208. POST _reindex
  209. {
  210. "source": {
  211. "index": "my-data-stream"
  212. },
  213. "dest": {
  214. "index": "my-new-data-stream",
  215. "op_type": "create",
  216. "pipeline": "my-pipeline"
  217. }
  218. }
  219. ----
  220. // TEST[setup:my_data_stream]
  221. // TEST[teardown:data_stream_cleanup]
  222. [discrete]
  223. [[set-default-pipeline]]
  224. === Set a default pipeline
  225. Use the <<index-default-pipeline,`index.default_pipeline`>> index setting to set
  226. a default pipeline. {es} applies this pipeline if no `pipeline` parameter
  227. is specified.
  228. [discrete]
  229. [[set-final-pipeline]]
  230. === Set a final pipeline
  231. Use the <<index-final-pipeline,`index.final_pipeline`>> index setting to set a
  232. final pipeline. {es} applies this pipeline after the request or default
  233. pipeline, even if neither is specified.
  234. [discrete]
  235. [[pipelines-for-fleet-elastic-agent]]
  236. === Pipelines for {fleet} and {agent}
  237. {fleet-guide}/index.html[{fleet}] automatically adds ingest pipelines for its
  238. integrations. {fleet} applies these pipelines using <<index-templates,index
  239. templates>> that include <<set-default-pipeline,pipeline index settings>>. {es}
  240. matches these templates to your {fleet} data streams based on the
  241. {fleet-guide}/data-streams.html#data-streams-naming-scheme[stream's naming
  242. scheme].
  243. WARNING: Do not change {fleet}'s ingest pipelines or use custom pipelines for
  244. your {fleet} integrations. Doing so can break your {fleet} data streams.
  245. {fleet} doesn't provide an ingest pipeline for the **Custom logs** integration.
  246. You can safely specify a pipeline for this integration in one of two ways: an
  247. <<pipeline-custom-logs-index-template,index template>> or a
  248. <<pipeline-custom-logs-configuration,custom configuration>>.
  249. [[pipeline-custom-logs-index-template]]
  250. **Option 1: Index template**
  251. // tag::create-name-custom-logs-pipeline[]
  252. . <<create-manage-ingest-pipelines,Create>> and <<test-pipeline,test>> your
  253. ingest pipeline. Name your pipeline `logs-<dataset-name>-default`. This makes
  254. tracking the pipeline for your integration easier.
  255. +
  256. --
  257. For example, the following request creates a pipeline for the `my-app` dataset.
  258. The pipeline's name is `logs-my_app-default`.
  259. [source,console]
  260. ----
  261. PUT _ingest/pipeline/logs-my_app-default
  262. {
  263. "description": "Pipeline for `my_app` dataset",
  264. "processors": [ ... ]
  265. }
  266. ----
  267. // TEST[s/\.\.\./{"lowercase": {"field":"my-keyword-field"}}/]
  268. --
  269. // end::create-name-custom-logs-pipeline[]
  270. . Create an <<index-templates,index template>> that includes your pipeline in
  271. the <<index-default-pipeline,`index.default_pipeline`>> or
  272. <<index-final-pipeline,`index.final_pipeline`>> index setting. Ensure the
  273. template is <<create-index-template,data stream enabled>>. The
  274. template's index pattern should match `logs-<dataset-name>-*`.
  275. +
  276. --
  277. You can create this template using {kib}'s <<manage-index-templates,**Index
  278. Management**>> feature or the <<indices-put-template,create index template
  279. API>>.
  280. For example, the following request creates a template matching `logs-my_app-*`.
  281. The template uses a component template that contains the
  282. `index.default_pipeline` index setting.
  283. [source,console]
  284. ----
  285. # Creates a component template for index settings
  286. PUT _component_template/logs-my_app-settings
  287. {
  288. "template": {
  289. "settings": {
  290. "index.default_pipeline": "logs-my_app-default",
  291. "index.lifecycle.name": "logs"
  292. }
  293. }
  294. }
  295. # Creates an index template matching `logs-my_app-*`
  296. PUT _index_template/logs-my_app-template
  297. {
  298. "index_patterns": ["logs-my_app-*"],
  299. "data_stream": { },
  300. "priority": 500,
  301. "composed_of": ["logs-my_app-settings", "logs-my_app-mappings"]
  302. }
  303. ----
  304. // TEST[continued]
  305. // TEST[s/, "logs-my_app-mappings"//]
  306. --
  307. // tag::name-custom-logs-dataset[]
  308. . When adding or editing your **Custom logs** integration in {fleet},
  309. click **Configure integration > Custom log file > Advanced options**.
  310. . In **Dataset name**, specify your dataset's name. {fleet} will add new data
  311. for the integration to the resulting `logs-<dataset-name>-default` data stream.
  312. +
  313. For example, if your dataset's name was `my_app`, {fleet} adds new data to the
  314. `logs-my_app-default` data stream.
  315. // end::name-custom-logs-dataset[]
  316. +
  317. [role="screenshot"]
  318. image::images/ingest/custom-logs.png[Set up custom log integration in Fleet,align="center"]
  319. . Use the <<indices-rollover-index,rollover API>> to roll over your data stream.
  320. This ensures {es} applies the index template and its pipeline settings to any
  321. new data for the integration.
  322. +
  323. --
  324. ////
  325. [source,console]
  326. ----
  327. PUT _data_stream/logs-my_app-default
  328. ----
  329. // TEST[continued]
  330. ////
  331. [source,console]
  332. ----
  333. POST logs-my_app-default/_rollover/
  334. ----
  335. // TEST[continued]
  336. ////
  337. [source,console]
  338. ----
  339. DELETE _data_stream/*
  340. DELETE _index_template/*
  341. ----
  342. // TEST[continued]
  343. ////
  344. --
  345. [[pipeline-custom-logs-configuration]]
  346. **Option 2: Custom configuration**
  347. include::ingest.asciidoc[tag=create-name-custom-logs-pipeline]
  348. include::ingest.asciidoc[tag=name-custom-logs-dataset]
  349. . In **Custom Configurations**, specify your pipeline in the `pipeline` policy
  350. setting.
  351. +
  352. [role="screenshot"]
  353. image::images/ingest/custom-logs-pipeline.png[Custom pipeline configuration for custom log integration,align="center"]
  354. **{agent} standalone**
  355. If you run {agent} standalone, you can apply pipelines using an
  356. <<index-templates,index template>> that includes the
  357. <<index-default-pipeline,`index.default_pipeline`>> or
  358. <<index-final-pipeline,`index.final_pipeline`>> index setting. Alternatively,
  359. you can specify the `pipeline` policy setting in your `elastic-agent.yml`
  360. configuration. See {fleet-guide}/run-elastic-agent-standalone.html[Run {agent}
  361. standalone].
  362. [discrete]
  363. [[access-source-fields]]
  364. === Access source fields in a processor
  365. Processors have read and write access to an incoming document's source fields.
  366. To access a field key in a processor, use its field name. The following `set`
  367. processor accesses `my-long-field`.
  368. [source,console]
  369. ----
  370. PUT _ingest/pipeline/my-pipeline
  371. {
  372. "processors": [
  373. {
  374. "set": {
  375. "field": "my-long-field",
  376. "value": 10
  377. }
  378. }
  379. ]
  380. }
  381. ----
  382. You can also prepend the `_source` prefix.
  383. [source,console]
  384. ----
  385. PUT _ingest/pipeline/my-pipeline
  386. {
  387. "processors": [
  388. {
  389. "set": {
  390. "field": "_source.my-long-field",
  391. "value": 10
  392. }
  393. }
  394. ]
  395. }
  396. ----
  397. Use dot notation to access object fields.
  398. IMPORTANT: If your document contains flattened objects, use the
  399. <<dot-expand-processor,`dot_expander`>> processor to expand them first. Other
  400. ingest processors cannot access flattened objects.
  401. [source,console]
  402. ----
  403. PUT _ingest/pipeline/my-pipeline
  404. {
  405. "processors": [
  406. {
  407. "dot_expander": {
  408. "description": "Expand 'my-object-field.my-property'",
  409. "field": "my-object-field.my-property"
  410. }
  411. },
  412. {
  413. "set": {
  414. "description": "Set 'my-object-field.my-property' to 10",
  415. "field": "my-object-field.my-property",
  416. "value": 10
  417. }
  418. }
  419. ]
  420. }
  421. ----
  422. [[template-snippets]]
  423. Several processor parameters support https://mustache.github.io[Mustache]
  424. template snippets. To access field values in a template snippet, enclose the
  425. field name in triple curly brackets:`{{{field-name}}}`. You can use template
  426. snippets to dynamically set field names.
  427. [source,console]
  428. ----
  429. PUT _ingest/pipeline/my-pipeline
  430. {
  431. "processors": [
  432. {
  433. "set": {
  434. "description": "Set dynamic '<service>' field to 'code' value",
  435. "field": "{{{service}}}",
  436. "value": "{{{code}}}"
  437. }
  438. }
  439. ]
  440. }
  441. ----
  442. [discrete]
  443. [[access-metadata-fields]]
  444. === Access metadata fields in a processor
  445. Processors can access the following metadata fields by name:
  446. * `_index`
  447. * `_id`
  448. * `_routing`
  449. * `_dynamic_templates`
  450. [source,console]
  451. ----
  452. PUT _ingest/pipeline/my-pipeline
  453. {
  454. "processors": [
  455. {
  456. "set": {
  457. "description": "Set '_routing' to 'geoip.country_iso_code' value",
  458. "field": "_routing",
  459. "value": "{{{geoip.country_iso_code}}}"
  460. }
  461. }
  462. ]
  463. }
  464. ----
  465. Use a Mustache template snippet to access metadata field values. For example,
  466. `{{{_routing}}}` retrieves a document's routing value.
  467. [source,console]
  468. ----
  469. PUT _ingest/pipeline/my-pipeline
  470. {
  471. "processors": [
  472. {
  473. "set": {
  474. "description": "Use geo_point dynamic template for address field",
  475. "field": "_dynamic_templates",
  476. "value": {
  477. "address": "geo_point"
  478. }
  479. }
  480. }
  481. ]
  482. }
  483. ----
  484. The set processor above tells ES to use the dynamic template named `geo_point`
  485. for the field `address` if this field is not defined in the mapping of the index
  486. yet. This processor overrides the dynamic template for the field `address` if
  487. already defined in the bulk request, but has no effect on other dynamic
  488. templates defined in the bulk request.
  489. WARNING: If you <<create-document-ids-automatically,automatically generate>>
  490. document IDs, you cannot use `{{{_id}}}` in a processor. {es} assigns
  491. auto-generated `_id` values after ingest.
  492. [discrete]
  493. [[access-ingest-metadata]]
  494. === Access ingest metadata in a processor
  495. Ingest processors can add and access ingest metadata using the `_ingest` key.
  496. Unlike source and metadata fields, {es} does not index ingest metadata fields by
  497. default. {es} also allows source fields that start with an `_ingest` key. If
  498. your data includes such source fields, use `_source._ingest` to access them.
  499. Pipelines only create the `_ingest.timestamp` ingest metadata field by default.
  500. This field contains a timestamp of when {es} received the document's indexing
  501. request. To index `_ingest.timestamp` or other ingest metadata fields, use the
  502. `set` processor.
  503. [source,console]
  504. ----
  505. PUT _ingest/pipeline/my-pipeline
  506. {
  507. "processors": [
  508. {
  509. "set": {
  510. "description": "Index the ingest timestamp as 'event.ingested'",
  511. "field": "event.ingested",
  512. "value": "{{{_ingest.timestamp}}}"
  513. }
  514. }
  515. ]
  516. }
  517. ----
  518. [discrete]
  519. [[handling-pipeline-failures]]
  520. === Handling pipeline failures
  521. A pipeline's processors run sequentially. By default, pipeline processing stops
  522. when one of these processors fails or encounters an error.
  523. To ignore a processor failure and run the pipeline's remaining processors, set
  524. `ignore_failure` to `true`.
  525. [source,console]
  526. ----
  527. PUT _ingest/pipeline/my-pipeline
  528. {
  529. "processors": [
  530. {
  531. "rename": {
  532. "description": "Rename 'provider' to 'cloud.provider'",
  533. "field": "provider",
  534. "target_field": "cloud.provider",
  535. "ignore_failure": true
  536. }
  537. }
  538. ]
  539. }
  540. ----
  541. Use the `on_failure` parameter to specify a list of processors to run
  542. immediately after a processor failure. If `on_failure` is specified, {es}
  543. afterward runs the pipeline's remaining processors, even if the `on_failure`
  544. configuration is empty.
  545. [source,console]
  546. ----
  547. PUT _ingest/pipeline/my-pipeline
  548. {
  549. "processors": [
  550. {
  551. "rename": {
  552. "description": "Rename 'provider' to 'cloud.provider'",
  553. "field": "provider",
  554. "target_field": "cloud.provider",
  555. "on_failure": [
  556. {
  557. "set": {
  558. "description": "Set 'error.message'",
  559. "field": "error.message",
  560. "value": "Field 'provider' does not exist. Cannot rename to 'cloud.provider'",
  561. "override": false
  562. }
  563. }
  564. ]
  565. }
  566. }
  567. ]
  568. }
  569. ----
  570. Nest a list of `on_failure` processors for nested error handling.
  571. [source,console]
  572. ----
  573. PUT _ingest/pipeline/my-pipeline
  574. {
  575. "processors": [
  576. {
  577. "rename": {
  578. "description": "Rename 'provider' to 'cloud.provider'",
  579. "field": "provider",
  580. "target_field": "cloud.provider",
  581. "on_failure": [
  582. {
  583. "set": {
  584. "description": "Set 'error.message'",
  585. "field": "error.message",
  586. "value": "Field 'provider' does not exist. Cannot rename to 'cloud.provider'",
  587. "override": false,
  588. "on_failure": [
  589. {
  590. "set": {
  591. "description": "Set 'error.message.multi'",
  592. "field": "error.message.multi",
  593. "value": "Document encountered multiple ingest errors",
  594. "override": true
  595. }
  596. }
  597. ]
  598. }
  599. }
  600. ]
  601. }
  602. }
  603. ]
  604. }
  605. ----
  606. You can also specify `on_failure` for a pipeline. If a processor without an
  607. `on_failure` value fails, {es} uses this pipeline-level parameter as a fallback.
  608. {es} will not attempt to run the pipeline's remaining processors.
  609. [source,console]
  610. ----
  611. PUT _ingest/pipeline/my-pipeline
  612. {
  613. "processors": [ ... ],
  614. "on_failure": [
  615. {
  616. "set": {
  617. "description": "Index document to 'failed-<index>'",
  618. "field": "_index",
  619. "value": "failed-{{{ _index }}}"
  620. }
  621. }
  622. ]
  623. }
  624. ----
  625. // TEST[s/\.\.\./{"lowercase": {"field":"my-keyword-field"}}/]
  626. [discrete]
  627. [[conditionally-run-processor]]
  628. === Conditionally run a processor
  629. Each processor supports an optional `if` condition, written as a
  630. {painless}/painless-guide.html[Painless script]. If provided, the processor only
  631. runs when the `if` condition is `true`.
  632. IMPORTANT: `if` condition scripts run in Painless's
  633. {painless}/painless-ingest-processor-context.html[ingest processor context]. In
  634. `if` conditions, `ctx` values are read-only.
  635. [source,console]
  636. ----
  637. PUT _ingest/pipeline/my-pipeline
  638. {
  639. "processors": [
  640. {
  641. "drop": {
  642. "description": "Drop documents with 'network.name' of 'Guest'",
  643. "if": "ctx?.network?.name == 'Guest'"
  644. }
  645. }
  646. ]
  647. }
  648. ----
  649. If the static `script.painless.regex.enabled` cluster setting is enabled, you
  650. can use regular expressions in your `if` condition scripts. For supported
  651. syntax, see the {painless}/painless-regexes.html[Painless regexes]
  652. documentation.
  653. TIP: If possible, avoid using regular expressions. Expensive regular expressions
  654. can slow indexing speeds.
  655. [source,console]
  656. ----
  657. PUT _ingest/pipeline/my-pipeline
  658. {
  659. "processors": [
  660. {
  661. "set": {
  662. "description": "If 'url.scheme' is 'http', set 'url.insecure' to true",
  663. "if": "ctx.url?.scheme =~ /^http[^s]/",
  664. "field": "url.insecure",
  665. "value": true
  666. }
  667. }
  668. ]
  669. }
  670. ----
  671. You must specify `if` conditions as valid JSON on a single line. However, you
  672. can use the {kibana-ref}/console-kibana.html#configuring-console[{kib}
  673. console]'s triple quote syntax to write and debug larger scripts.
  674. TIP: If possible, avoid using complex or expensive `if` condition scripts.
  675. Expensive condition scripts can slow indexing speeds.
  676. [source,console]
  677. ----
  678. PUT _ingest/pipeline/my-pipeline
  679. {
  680. "processors": [
  681. {
  682. "drop": {
  683. "description": "Drop documents that don't contain 'prod' tag",
  684. "if": """
  685. Collection tags = ctx.tags;
  686. if(tags != null){
  687. for (String tag : tags) {
  688. if (tag.toLowerCase().contains('prod')) {
  689. return false;
  690. }
  691. }
  692. }
  693. return true;
  694. """
  695. }
  696. }
  697. ]
  698. }
  699. ----
  700. You can also specify a <<modules-scripting-stored-scripts,stored script>> as the
  701. `if` condition.
  702. [source,console]
  703. ----
  704. PUT _scripts/my-stored-script
  705. {
  706. "script": {
  707. "lang": "painless",
  708. "source": """
  709. Collection tags = ctx.tags;
  710. if(tags != null){
  711. for (String tag : tags) {
  712. if (tag.toLowerCase().contains('prod')) {
  713. return false;
  714. }
  715. }
  716. }
  717. return true;
  718. """
  719. }
  720. }
  721. PUT _ingest/pipeline/my-pipeline
  722. {
  723. "processors": [
  724. {
  725. "drop": {
  726. "description": "If 'url.scheme' is 'http', set 'url.insecure' to true",
  727. "if": { "id": "my-stored-script" }
  728. }
  729. }
  730. ]
  731. }
  732. ----
  733. Incoming documents often contain object fields. If a processor script attempts
  734. to access a field whose parent object does not exist, {es} returns a
  735. `NullPointerException`. To avoid these exceptions, use
  736. {painless}/painless-operators-reference.html#null-safe-operator[null safe
  737. operators], such as `?.`, and write your scripts to be null safe.
  738. For example, `ctx.network?.name.equalsIgnoreCase('Guest')` is not null safe.
  739. `ctx.network?.name` can return null. Rewrite the script as
  740. `'Guest'.equalsIgnoreCase(ctx.network?.name)`, which is null safe because
  741. `Guest` is always non-null.
  742. If you can't rewrite a script to be null safe, include an explicit null check.
  743. [source,console]
  744. ----
  745. PUT _ingest/pipeline/my-pipeline
  746. {
  747. "processors": [
  748. {
  749. "drop": {
  750. "description": "Drop documents that contain 'network.name' of 'Guest'",
  751. "if": "ctx.network?.name != null && ctx.network.name.contains('Guest')"
  752. }
  753. }
  754. ]
  755. }
  756. ----
  757. [discrete]
  758. [[conditionally-apply-pipelines]]
  759. === Conditionally apply pipelines
  760. Combine an `if` condition with the <<pipeline-processor,`pipeline`>> processor
  761. to apply other pipelines to documents based on your criteria. You can use this
  762. pipeline as the <<set-default-pipeline,default pipeline>> in an
  763. <<index-templates,index template>> used to configure multiple data streams or
  764. indices.
  765. [source,console]
  766. ----
  767. PUT _ingest/pipeline/one-pipeline-to-rule-them-all
  768. {
  769. "processors": [
  770. {
  771. "pipeline": {
  772. "description": "If 'service.name' is 'apache_httpd', use 'httpd_pipeline'",
  773. "if": "ctx.service?.name == 'apache_httpd'",
  774. "name": "httpd_pipeline"
  775. }
  776. },
  777. {
  778. "pipeline": {
  779. "description": "If 'service.name' is 'syslog', use 'syslog_pipeline'",
  780. "if": "ctx.service?.name == 'syslog'",
  781. "name": "syslog_pipeline"
  782. }
  783. },
  784. {
  785. "fail": {
  786. "description": "If 'service.name' is not 'apache_httpd' or 'syslog', return a failure message",
  787. "if": "ctx.service?.name != 'apache_httpd' && ctx.service?.name != 'syslog'",
  788. "message": "This pipeline requires service.name to be either `syslog` or `apache_httpd`"
  789. }
  790. }
  791. ]
  792. }
  793. ----
  794. [discrete]
  795. [[get-pipeline-usage-stats]]
  796. === Get pipeline usage statistics
  797. Use the <<cluster-nodes-stats,node stats>> API to get global and per-pipeline
  798. ingest statistics. Use these stats to determine which pipelines run most
  799. frequently or spend the most time processing.
  800. [source,console]
  801. ----
  802. GET _nodes/stats/ingest?filter_path=nodes.*.ingest
  803. ----
  804. include::ingest/common-log-format-example.asciidoc[]
  805. include::ingest/enrich.asciidoc[]
  806. include::ingest/processors.asciidoc[]