Fluentd
rook
Fluentd | rook | |
---|---|---|
25 | 51 | |
12,558 | 11,931 | |
0.5% | 0.6% | |
8.1 | 9.9 | |
3 days ago | 8 days ago | |
Ruby | Go | |
Apache License 2.0 | Apache License 2.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
Fluentd
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Embracing Kubernetes: The Future of Containerized Applications
Get Started with Fluentd
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Kubernetes Architecture
Currently, there is no cluster-wide logging. Fluentd can be used to have a unified logging layer for the cluster.
- Fluentd – open-source data collection and unified logging layer
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making job execution log searchable
Fluentd hasn't been touched for 8 years? Looking at the repo it looks like it's alive and well. https://github.com/fluent/fluentd
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Top 11 Splunk Alternatives that you may consider in 2023
Fluentd is an open-source log management and data collection tool. Just like Logstash, Fluentd uses a pipeline-based architecture. This allows it to collect data from various sources and network traffic and forward it to various destinations.
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7 Open-Source Log Management Tools that you may consider in 2023
Fluentd is a powerful log management tool that offers organizations the flexibility and scalability required to handle large volumes of log data from a variety of sources and transport it to various destinations. Utilizing a flexible and modular architecture, Fluentd allows users to easily add new input and output plugins to integrate with a wide range of systems and applications. It supports a wide range of data sources and destinations, including databases, message queues, and data stores.
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Substation: Data Pipeline and Transformation Toolkit Written in Go
Substation is an affordable alternative to products like Cribl (~10x cost savings) and is easier to manage than similar open-source projects such as Logstash and fluentd. It's been used in production by the security team at Brex for 2+ years and is ready for any scale, even beyond 100,000 events per second!
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Simple way to centralize my server logs?
There are probably too many to chose from. Logstash, Promtail, Vector, Filebeat, FluentD, Logagent and probably many more
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The Everything Guide to Data Collection in DevSecOps
To alleviate some of the pain, it’s a good idea to use industry standards and tooling like OpenTelemetry (https://opentelemetry.io). For data collection specific to logs, open-source tools like LogStash and Fluentd are also popular.
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Top 20 Observability Tools Every Startup Should Know About in 2022
Created and maintained by the creators of fluentd, fluentbit is a lightweight, fast, and scalable logging and metrics processor and forwarder. Built specifically for the cloud and containerized environments, it allows users to collect data from any source, enrich it with filters and forward it to the tool of their choice.
rook
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Ceph: A Journey to 1 TiB/s
I have some experience with Ceph, both for work, and with homelab-y stuff.
First, bear in mind that Ceph is a distributed storage system - so the idea is that you will have multiple nodes.
For learning, you can definitely virtualise it all on a single box - but you'll have a better time with discrete physical machines.
Also, Ceph does prefer physical access to disks (similar to ZFS).
And you do need decent networking connectivity - I think that's the main thing people think of, when they think of high hardware requirements for Ceph. Ideally 10Gbe at the minimum - although more if you want higher performance - there can be a lot of network traffic, particularly with things like backfill. (25Gbps if you can find that gear cheap for homelab - 50Gbps is a technological dead-end. 100Gbps works well).
But honestly, for a homelab, a cheap mini PC or NUC with 10Gbe will work fine, and you should get acceptable performance, and it'll be good for learning.
You can install Ceph directly on bare-metal, or if you want to do the homelab k8s route, you can use Rook (https://rook.io/).
Hope this helps, and good luck! Let me know if you have any other questions.
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Running stateful workloads on Kubernetes with Rook Ceph
Another option is to leverage a Kubernetes-native distributed storage solution such as Rook Ceph as the storage backend for stateful components running on Kubernetes. This has the benefit of simplifying application configuration while addressing business requirements for data backup and recovery such as the ability to take volume snapshots at a regular interval and perform application-level data recovery in case of a disaster.
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People who run Nextcloud in Docker: Where do you store your data/files? In a Docker volume, or on a remote server/NAS?
This is beyond your question but might help someone else: I switch from docker-compose to kubernetes for my home lab a while ago. The storage solution I've settled on is Rook. It was a bit of up-front work learning how to get it up but now that it's done my storage is automatically managed by Ceph. I can swap out drives and Ceph basically takes care of everything itself.
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Rook/Ceph with VM nodes on research cluster?
The stumbling point I am at is I want to use rook.io(Ceph) as my storage solution for the cluster. The Ceph prerequisites are one of the following:
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Asking for recommendation on remote Kubernetes storage for a small cluster and databases
Have you looked at Rook?
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Want advice on planned evolution: k3os/Longhorn --> Talos/Ceph, plus Consul and Vault
I've briefly run ceph in an external mode, you can actually use a rook deployment to manage it (sort of). Here is the documentation for doing that. For me it didn't pass my testing phase because I need better networking equipment before I can try that.
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ATARI is still alive: Atari Partition of Fear
This article explains the data corruption issue happened in Rook in 2021. The root cause lies in an unexpected place and can also occurs in all Ceph environment. It's interesting that Rook had started to encounter this problem recently even though this problem has existed for a long time. It's due to a series of coincidences. I wrote this article because the word "Atari" used in a non-historical context in 2021.
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How to Deploy and Scale Strapi on a Kubernetes Cluster 2/2
Rook (this is a nice article for Rook NFS)
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Running on-premise k8s with a small team: possible or potential nightmare?
Storage: Favor any distributed storage you know to start with for Persistent Volumes: Ceph maybe via rook.io, Longhorn if you go rancher etc
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My completely automated Homelab featuring Kubernetes
I've dealt with a lot of issues that are very close to just unplugging a node. Unfortunately on node lost, my stateful workloads using rook-ceph block storage won't migrate over to another node automatically due to an issue with rook. Stateless apps (ingress nginx, etc..) not using rook-ceph block failover to another node just fine. I've kind of accepted this for now and I know Longhorn has a feature that makes this work but I find rook-ceph to be more stable for my workloads.
What are some alternatives?
vector - A high-performance observability data pipeline.
longhorn - Cloud-Native distributed storage built on and for Kubernetes
zipkin - Zipkin is a distributed tracing system
ceph-csi - CSI driver for Ceph
Flume - Mirror of Apache Flume
velero - Backup and migrate Kubernetes applications and their persistent volumes
Lograge - An attempt to tame Rails' default policy to log everything.
Nginx Proxy Manager - Docker container for managing Nginx proxy hosts with a simple, powerful interface
Semantic Logger - Semantic Logger is a feature rich logging framework, and replacement for existing Ruby & Rails loggers.
Ceph - Ceph is a distributed object, block, and file storage platform
heka - DEPRECATED: Data collection and processing made easy.
hub-feedback - Feedback and bug reports for the Docker Hub