nixpkgs/nixos/tests/elk.nix
Bas van Dijk 2444eab485 ELK: update kibana and the elastic beats to 5.4 (#26252)
* Add kibana5 and logstash5
* Upgrade the elastic beats to 5.4
* Make sure all elastic products use the same version
  (see elk5Version)
* Add a test for the ELK stack
2017-06-13 22:36:08 +02:00

96 lines
3.6 KiB
Nix

# Test the ELK stack: Elasticsearch, Logstash and Kibana.
import ./make-test.nix ({ pkgs, ...} :
let
esUrl = "http://localhost:9200";
in {
name = "ELK";
meta = with pkgs.stdenv.lib.maintainers; {
maintainers = [ eelco chaoflow offline basvandijk ];
};
nodes = {
one =
{ config, pkgs, ... }: {
# Not giving the machine at least 2060MB results in elasticsearch failing with the following error:
#
# OpenJDK 64-Bit Server VM warning:
# INFO: os::commit_memory(0x0000000085330000, 2060255232, 0)
# failed; error='Cannot allocate memory' (errno=12)
#
# There is insufficient memory for the Java Runtime Environment to continue.
# Native memory allocation (mmap) failed to map 2060255232 bytes for committing reserved memory.
#
# When setting this to 2500 I got "Kernel panic - not syncing: Out of
# memory: compulsory panic_on_oom is enabled" so lets give it even a
# bit more room:
virtualisation.memorySize = 3000;
# For querying JSON objects returned from elasticsearch and kibana.
environment.systemPackages = [ pkgs.jq ];
services = {
logstash = {
enable = true;
package = pkgs.logstash5;
inputConfig = ''
exec { command => "echo -n flowers" interval => 1 type => "test" }
exec { command => "echo -n dragons" interval => 1 type => "test" }
'';
filterConfig = ''
if [message] =~ /dragons/ {
drop {}
}
'';
outputConfig = ''
file {
path => "/tmp/logstash.out"
codec => line { format => "%{message}" }
}
elasticsearch {
hosts => [ "${esUrl}" ]
}
'';
};
elasticsearch = {
enable = true;
package = pkgs.elasticsearch5;
};
kibana = {
enable = true;
package = pkgs.kibana5;
elasticsearch.url = esUrl;
};
};
};
};
testScript = ''
startAll;
$one->waitForUnit("elasticsearch.service");
# Continue as long as the status is not "red". The status is probably
# "yellow" instead of "green" because we are using a single elasticsearch
# node which elasticsearch considers risky.
#
# TODO: extend this test with multiple elasticsearch nodes and see if the status turns "green".
$one->waitUntilSucceeds("curl --silent --show-error '${esUrl}/_cluster/health' | jq .status | grep -v red");
# Perform some simple logstash tests.
$one->waitForUnit("logstash.service");
$one->waitUntilSucceeds("cat /tmp/logstash.out | grep flowers");
$one->waitUntilSucceeds("cat /tmp/logstash.out | grep -v dragons");
# See if kibana is healthy.
$one->waitForUnit("kibana.service");
$one->waitUntilSucceeds("curl --silent --show-error 'http://localhost:5601/api/status' | jq .status.overall.state | grep green");
# See if logstash messages arive in elasticsearch.
$one->waitUntilSucceeds("curl --silent --show-error '${esUrl}/_search' -H 'Content-Type: application/json' -d '{\"query\" : { \"match\" : { \"message\" : \"flowers\"}}}' | jq .hits.total | grep -v 0");
$one->waitUntilSucceeds("curl --silent --show-error '${esUrl}/_search' -H 'Content-Type: application/json' -d '{\"query\" : { \"match\" : { \"message\" : \"dragons\"}}}' | jq .hits.total | grep 0");
'';
})