This page will guide you through creating a passive journal centralization setup without the use of encryption.
Once you centralize your infrastructure logs to a server, Netdata will automatically detects all the logs from all servers and organize them in sources. With the setup described in this document, journal files are identified by the IPs of the clients sending the logs. Netdata will automatically do reverse DNS lookups to find the names of the server and name the sources on the dashboard accordingly.
A passive journal server waits for clients to push their metrics to it, so in this setup we will:
systemd-journal-remote
on the server, to listen for incoming connections.systemd-journal-upload
on the clients, to push their logs to the server.⚠️ IMPORTANT
These instructions will copy your logs to a central server, without any encryption or authorization.
DO NOT USE THIS ON NON-TRUSTED NETWORKS.
On the centralization server install systemd-journal-remote
:
# change this according to your distro
sudo apt-get install systemd-journal-remote
Make sure the journal transfer protocol is http
:
sudo cp /lib/systemd/system/systemd-journal-remote.service /etc/systemd/system/
# edit it to make sure it says:
# --listen-http=-3
# not:
# --listen-https=-3
sudo nano /etc/systemd/system/systemd-journal-remote.service
# reload systemd
sudo systemctl daemon-reload
Optionally, if you want to change the port (the default is 19532
), edit systemd-journal-remote.socket
# edit the socket file
sudo systemctl edit systemd-journal-remote.socket
and add the following lines into the instructed place, and choose your desired port; save and exit.
[Socket]
ListenStream=<DESIRED_PORT>
Finally, enable it, so that it will start automatically upon receiving a connection:
# enable systemd-journal-remote
sudo systemctl enable --now systemd-journal-remote.socket
sudo systemctl enable systemd-journal-remote.service
systemd-journal-remote
is now listening for incoming journals from remote hosts.
On the clients, install systemd-journal-remote
(it includes systemd-journal-upload
):
# change this according to your distro
sudo apt-get install systemd-journal-remote
Edit /etc/systemd/journal-upload.conf
and set the IP address and the port of the server, like so:
[Upload]
URL=http://centralization.server.ip:19532
Edit systemd-journal-upload
, and add Restart=always
to make sure the client will keep trying to push logs, even if the server is temporarily not there, like this:
sudo systemctl edit systemd-journal-upload
At the top, add:
[Service]
Restart=always
Enable and start systemd-journal-upload
, like this:
sudo systemctl enable systemd-journal-upload
sudo systemctl start systemd-journal-upload
To verify the central server is receiving logs, run this on the central server:
sudo ls -l /var/log/journal/remote/
You should see new files from the client's IP.
Also, systemctl status systemd-journal-remote
should show something like this:
systemd-journal-remote.service - Journal Remote Sink Service
Loaded: loaded (/etc/systemd/system/systemd-journal-remote.service; indirect; preset: disabled)
Active: active (running) since Sun 2023-10-15 14:29:46 EEST; 2h 24min ago
TriggeredBy: ● systemd-journal-remote.socket
Docs: man:systemd-journal-remote(8)
man:journal-remote.conf(5)
Main PID: 2118153 (systemd-journal)
Status: "Processing requests..."
Tasks: 1 (limit: 154152)
Memory: 2.2M
CPU: 71ms
CGroup: /system.slice/systemd-journal-remote.service
└─2118153 /usr/lib/systemd/systemd-journal-remote --listen-http=-3 --output=/var/log/journal/remote/
Note the status: "Processing requests..."
and the PID under CGroup
.
On the client systemctl status systemd-journal-upload
should show something like this:
● systemd-journal-upload.service - Journal Remote Upload Service
Loaded: loaded (/lib/systemd/system/systemd-journal-upload.service; enabled; vendor preset: disabled)
Drop-In: /etc/systemd/system/systemd-journal-upload.service.d
└─override.conf
Active: active (running) since Sun 2023-10-15 10:39:04 UTC; 3h 17min ago
Docs: man:systemd-journal-upload(8)
Main PID: 4169 (systemd-journal)
Status: "Processing input..."
Tasks: 1 (limit: 13868)
Memory: 3.5M
CPU: 1.081s
CGroup: /system.slice/systemd-journal-upload.service
└─4169 /lib/systemd/systemd-journal-upload --save-state
Note the Status: "Processing input..."
and the PID under CGroup
.