Set up Fluent Bit as a DaemonSet to send logs to CloudWatch Logs - Amazon CloudWatch

Set up Fluent Bit as a DaemonSet to send logs to CloudWatch Logs

The following sections help you deploy Fluent Bit to send logs from containers to CloudWatch Logs.

Differences if you're already using Fluentd

If you are already using Fluentd to send logs from containers to CloudWatch Logs, read this section to see the differences between Fluentd and Fluent Bit. If you are not already using Fluentd with Container Insights, you can skip to Setting up Fluent Bit.

We provide two default configurations for Fluent Bit:

  • Fluent Bit optimized configuration β€” A configuration aligned with Fluent Bit best practices.

  • Fluentd-compatible configuration β€” A configuration that is aligned with Fluentd behavior as much as possible.

The following list explains the differences between Fluentd and each Fluent Bit configuration in detail.

  • Differences in log stream names β€” If you use the Fluent Bit optimized configuration, the log stream names will be different.

    Under /aws/containerinsights/Cluster_Name/application

    • Fluent Bit optimized configuration sends logs to kubernetes-nodeName-application.var.log.containers.kubernetes-podName_kubernetes-namespace_kubernetes-container-name-kubernetes-containerID

    • Fluentd sends logs to kubernetes-podName_kubernetes-namespace_kubernetes-containerName_kubernetes-containerID

    Under /aws/containerinsights/Cluster_Name/host

    • Fluent Bit optimized configuration sends logs to kubernetes-nodeName.host-log-file

    • Fluentd sends logs to host-log-file-Kubernetes-NodePrivateIp

    Under /aws/containerinsights/Cluster_Name/dataplane

    • Fluent Bit optimized configuration sends logs to kubernetes-nodeName.dataplaneServiceLog

    • Fluentd sends logs to dataplaneServiceLog-Kubernetes-nodeName

  • The kube-proxy and aws-node log files that Container Insights writes are in different locations. In Fluentd configuration, they are in /aws/containerinsights/Cluster_Name/application. In the Fluent Bit optimized configuration, they are in /aws/containerinsights/Cluster_Name/dataplane.

  • Most metadata such as pod_name and namespace_name are the same in Fluent Bit and Fluentd, but the following are different.

    • The Fluent Bit optimized configuration uses docker_id and Fluentd use Docker.container_id.

    • Both Fluent Bit configurations do not use the following metadata. They are present only in Fluentd: container_image_id, master_url, namespace_id, and namespace_labels.

Setting up Fluent Bit

To set up Fluent Bit to collect logs from your containers, you can follow the steps in Quick Start setup for Container Insights on Amazon EKS and Kubernetes or you can follow the steps in this section.

With either method, the IAM role that is attached to the cluster nodes must have sufficient permissions. For more information about the permissions required to run an Amazon EKS cluster, see Amazon EKS IAM Policies, Roles, and Permissions in the Amazon EKS User Guide.

In the following steps, you set up Fluent Bit as a daemonSet to send logs to CloudWatch Logs. When you complete this step, Fluent Bit creates the following log groups if they don't already exist.

Important

If you already have FluentD configured in Container Insights and the FluentD DaemonSet is not running as expected (this can happen if you use the containerd runtime), you must uninstall it before installing Fluent Bit to prevent Fluent Bit from processing the FluentD error log messages. Otherwise, you must uninstall FluentD immediately after you have successfully installed Fluent Bit. Uninstalling Fluentd after installing Fluent Bit ensures ontinuity in logging during this migration process. Only one of Fluent Bit or FluentD is needed to send logs to CloudWatch Logs.

Log group name Log source

/aws/containerinsights/Cluster_Name/application

All log files in /var/log/containers

/aws/containerinsights/Cluster_Name/host

Logs from /var/log/dmesg, /var/log/secure, and /var/log/messages

/aws/containerinsights/Cluster_Name/dataplane

The logs in /var/log/journal for kubelet.service, kubeproxy.service, and docker.service.

To install Fluent Bit to send logs from containers to CloudWatch Logs
  1. If you don't already have a namespace called amazon-cloudwatch, create one by entering the following command:

    kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/aws-samples/amazon-cloudwatch-container-insights/latest/k8s-deployment-manifest-templates/deployment-mode/daemonset/container-insights-monitoring/cloudwatch-namespace.yaml
  2. Run the following command to create a ConfigMap named cluster-info with the cluster name and the Region to send logs to. Replace cluster-name and cluster-region with your cluster's name and Region.

    ClusterName=cluster-name RegionName=cluster-region FluentBitHttpPort='2020' FluentBitReadFromHead='Off' [[ ${FluentBitReadFromHead} = 'On' ]] && FluentBitReadFromTail='Off'|| FluentBitReadFromTail='On' [[ -z ${FluentBitHttpPort} ]] && FluentBitHttpServer='Off' || FluentBitHttpServer='On' kubectl create configmap fluent-bit-cluster-info \ --from-literal=cluster.name=${ClusterName} \ --from-literal=http.server=${FluentBitHttpServer} \ --from-literal=http.port=${FluentBitHttpPort} \ --from-literal=read.head=${FluentBitReadFromHead} \ --from-literal=read.tail=${FluentBitReadFromTail} \ --from-literal=logs.region=${RegionName} -n amazon-cloudwatch

    In this command, the FluentBitHttpServer for monitoring plugin metrics is on by default. To turn it off, change the third line in the command to FluentBitHttpPort='' (empty string) in the command.

    Also by default, Fluent Bit reads log files from the tail, and will capture only new logs after it is deployed. If you want the opposite, set FluentBitReadFromHead='On' and it will collect all logs in the file system.

  3. Download and deploy the Fluent Bit daemonset to the cluster by running one of the following commands.

    • If you want the Fluent Bit optimized configuration for Linux computers, run this command.

      kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/aws-samples/amazon-cloudwatch-container-insights/latest/k8s-deployment-manifest-templates/deployment-mode/daemonset/container-insights-monitoring/fluent-bit/fluent-bit.yaml
    • If you want the Fluent Bit optimized configuration for Windows computers, run this command.

      kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/aws-samples/amazon-cloudwatch-container-insights/latest/k8s-deployment-manifest-templates/deployment-mode/daemonset/container-insights-monitoring/fluent-bit/fluent-bit-windows.yaml
    • If you are using Linux computers and want the Fluent Bit configuration that is more similar to Fluentd, run this command.

      kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/aws-samples/amazon-cloudwatch-container-insights/latest/k8s-deployment-manifest-templates/deployment-mode/daemonset/container-insights-monitoring/fluent-bit/fluent-bit-compatible.yaml
    Important

    The Fluent Bit daemonset configuration by default sets the log level to INFO, which can result in higher CloudWatch Logs ingestion costs. If you want to reduce log ingestion volume and costs, you can change the log level to ERROR.

    For more information about how to reduce the log volume, see (Optional) Reducing the log volume from Fluent Bit

  4. Validate the deployment by entering the following command. Each node should have one pod named fluent-bit-*.

    kubectl get pods -n amazon-cloudwatch

The above steps create the following resources in the cluster:

  • A service account named Fluent-Bit in the amazon-cloudwatch namespace. This service account is used to run the Fluent Bit daemonSet. For more information, see Managing Service Accounts in the Kubernetes Reference.

  • A cluster role named Fluent-Bit-role in the amazon-cloudwatch namespace. This cluster role grants get, list, and watch permissions on pod logs to the Fluent-Bit service account. For more information, see API Overview in the Kubernetes Reference.

  • A ConfigMap named Fluent-Bit-config in the amazon-cloudwatch namespace. This ConfigMap contains the configuration to be used by Fluent Bit. For more information, see Configure a Pod to Use a ConfigMap in the Kubernetes Tasks documentation.

If you want to verify your Fluent Bit setup, follow these steps.

Verify the Fluent Bit setup
  1. Open the CloudWatch console at https://console.aws.amazon.com/cloudwatch/.

  2. In the navigation pane, choose Log groups.

  3. Make sure that you're in the Region where you deployed Fluent Bit.

  4. Check the list of log groups in the Region. You should see the following:

    • /aws/containerinsights/Cluster_Name/application

    • /aws/containerinsights/Cluster_Name/host

    • /aws/containerinsights/Cluster_Name/dataplane

  5. Navigate to one of these log groups and check the Last Event Time for the log streams. If it is recent relative to when you deployed Fluent Bit, the setup is verified.

    There might be a slight delay in creating the /dataplane log group. This is normal as these log groups only get created when Fluent Bit starts sending logs for that log group.

Multi-line log support

For information on how to use Fluent Bit with multi-line logs, see the following sections of the Fluent Bit documentation:

(Optional) Reducing the log volume from Fluent Bit

By default, we send Fluent Bit application logs and Kubernetes metadata to CloudWatch. If you want to reduce the volume of data being sent to CloudWatch, you can stop one or both of these data sources from being sent to CloudWatch. If you have followed the steps on this page to set up Fluent Bit, download the Kubernetes manifest YAML file from the kubectl apply command that you previously ran and modify it with your changes, which you can then re-apply to your cluster. Alternatively, if you are using the Amazon CloudWatch Observability EKS add-on or Helm chart, see (Optional) Additional configuration for information about managing the Fluent Bit configuration by using the add-on’s advanced config or the Helm chart.

To stop Fluent Bit application logs, remove the following section from the Fluent Bit configuration file.

[INPUT] Name tail Tag application.* Path /var/log/containers/fluent-bit* Parser docker DB /fluent-bit/state/flb_log.db Mem_Buf_Limit 5MB Skip_Long_Lines On Refresh_Interval 10

To remove Kubernetes metadata from being appended to log events that are sent to CloudWatch, add the following filters to the application-log.conf section in the Fluent Bit configuration. Replace <Metadata_1> and the similar fields with with the actual metadata identifiers.

application-log.conf: | [FILTER] Name nest Match application.* Operation lift Nested_under kubernetes Add_prefix Kube. [FILTER] Name modify Match application.* Remove Kube.<Metadata_1> Remove Kube.<Metadata_2> Remove Kube.<Metadata_3> [FILTER] Name nest Match application.* Operation nest Wildcard Kube.* Nested_under kubernetes Remove_prefix Kube.

Troubleshooting

If you don't see these log groups and are looking in the correct Region, check the logs for the Fluent Bit daemonSet pods to look for the error.

Run the following command and make sure that the status is Running.

kubectl get pods -n amazon-cloudwatch

If the logs have errors related to IAM permissions, check the IAM role that is attached to the cluster nodes. For more information about the permissions required to run an Amazon EKS cluster, see Amazon EKS IAM Policies, Roles, and Permissions in the Amazon EKS User Guide.

If the pod status is CreateContainerConfigError, get the exact error by running the following command.

kubectl describe pod pod_name -n amazon-cloudwatch

Dashboard

You can create a dashboard to monitor metrics of each running plugin. You can see data for input and output bytes and for record processing rates as well as output errors and retry/failed rates. To view these metrics, you will need to install the CloudWatch agent with Prometheus metrics collection for Amazon EKS and Kubernetes clusters. For more information about how to set up the dashboard, see Install the CloudWatch agent with Prometheus metrics collection on Amazon EKS and Kubernetes clusters.

Note

Before you can set up this dashboard, you must set up Container Insights for Prometheus metrics. For more information, see Container Insights Prometheus metrics monitoring.

To create a dashboard for the Fluent Bit Prometheus metrics
  1. Create environment variables, replacing the values on the right in the following lines to match your deployment.

    DASHBOARD_NAME=your_cw_dashboard_name REGION_NAME=your_metric_region_such_as_us-west-1 CLUSTER_NAME=your_kubernetes_cluster_name
  2. Create the dashboard by running the following command.

    curl https://raw.githubusercontent.com/aws-samples/amazon-cloudwatch-container-insights/latest/k8s-deployment-manifest-templates/deployment-mode/service/cwagent-prometheus/sample_cloudwatch_dashboards/fluent-bit/cw_dashboard_fluent_bit.json \ | sed "s/{{YOUR_AWS_REGION}}/${REGION_NAME}/g" \ | sed "s/{{YOUR_CLUSTER_NAME}}/${CLUSTER_NAME}/g" \ | xargs -0 aws cloudwatch put-dashboard --dashboard-name ${DASHBOARD_NAME} --dashboard-body