python: Write custom Python destinations
The Python destination allows you to write your own destination in Python. You can import external Python modules to process the messages, and send them to other services or servers. Since many services have a Python library, the Python destination makes integrating AxoSyslog very easy and quick.
The following points apply to using Python blocks in AxoSyslog in general:
-
Python parsers and template functions are available in AxoSyslog version 3.10 and later.
Python destinations and sources are available in AxoSyslog version 3.18 and later.
-
Supported Python versions: 2.7 and 3.4+ (if you are using pre-built binaries, check the dependencies of the package to find out which Python version it was compiled with).
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The Python block must be a top-level block in the AxoSyslog configuration file.
-
If you store the Python code in a separate Python file and only include it in the AxoSyslog configuration file, make sure that the PYTHONPATH environment variable includes the path to the Python file, and export the PYTHON_PATH environment variable. For example, if you start AxoSyslog manually from a terminal and you store your Python files in the
/opt/syslog-ng/etc
directory, use the following command:export PYTHONPATH=/opt/syslog-ng/etc
.In production, when AxoSyslog starts on boot, you must configure your startup script to include the Python path. The exact method depends on your operating system. For recent Red Hat Enterprise Linux, Fedora, and CentOS distributions that use systemd, the
systemctl
command sources the/etc/sysconfig/syslog-ng
file before starting AxoSyslog. (On openSUSE and SLES,/etc/sysconfig/syslog
file.) Append the following line to the end of this file:PYTHONPATH="<path-to-your-python-file>"
, for example,PYTHONPATH="/opt/syslog-ng/etc"
. -
The Python object is initiated every time when AxoSyslog is started or reloaded.
Warning If you reload AxoSyslog, existing Python objects are destroyed, therefore the context and state information of Python blocks is lost. Log rotation and updating the configuration of AxoSyslog typically involves a reload. -
The Python block can contain multiple Python functions.
-
Using Python code in AxoSyslog can significantly decrease the performance of AxoSyslog, especially if the Python code is slow. In general, the features of AxoSyslog are implemented in C, and are faster than implementations of the same or similar features in Python.
-
Validate and lint the Python code before using it. The AxoSyslog application does not do any of this.
-
Python error messages are available in the
internal()
source of AxoSyslog. -
You can access the name-value pairs of AxoSyslog directly through a message object or a dictionary.
-
To help debugging and troubleshooting your Python code, you can send log messages to the
internal()
source of AxoSyslog. For details, see Logging from your Python code.
Starting with 3.26, AxoSyslog assigns a persist name to Python sources and destinations. The persist name is generated from the class name. If you want to use the same Python class multiple times in your AxoSyslog configuration, add a unique persist-name()
to each source or destination, otherwise AxoSyslog will not start. For example:
log {
source { python(class(PyNetworkSource) options("port" "8080") persist-name("<unique-string>); };
source { python(class(PyNetworkSource) options("port" "8081")); };
};
Alternatively, you can include the following line in the Python package: @staticmethod generate_persist_name
. For example:
from syslogng import LogSource
class PyNetworSource(LogSource):
@staticmethod
def generate_persist_name(options):
return options["port"]
def run(self):
pass
def request_exit(self):
pass
Declaration:
Python destinations consist of two parts. The first is a AxoSyslog destination object that you define in your AxoSyslog configuration and use in the log path. This object references a Python class, which is the second part of the Python destination. The Python class processes the log messages it receives, and can do virtually anything that you can code in Python. You can either embed the Python class into your AxoSyslog configuration file, or store it in an external Python file.
destination <name_of_the_python_destination>{
python(
class("<name_of_the_python_class_executed_by_the_destination>")
);
};
python {
class <name_of_the_python_class_executed_by_the_destination>(object):
def open(self):
"""Open a connection to the target service
Should return False if opening fails"""
return True
def close(self):
"""Close the connection to the target service"""
pass
def is_opened(self):
"""Check if the connection to the target is able to receive messages"""
return True
def init(self, options):
"""This method is called at initialization time
Should return false if initialization fails"""
return True
def deinit(self):
"""This method is called at deinitialization time"""
pass
def send(self, msg):
"""Send a message to the target service
It should return True to indicate success. False will suspend the
destination for a period specified by the time-reopen() option."""
return True
def flush(self):
"""Flush the queued messages"""
pass
};
Methods of the python() destination
init(self, options) method (optional)
The AxoSyslog application initializes Python objects every time when it is started or reloaded. The init
method is executed as part of the initialization. You can perform any initialization steps that are necessary for your source to work.
When this method returns with False, AxoSyslog does not start. It can be used to check options and return False when they prevent the successful start of the source.
options
: This optional argument contains the contents of the options()
parameter of the AxoSyslog configuration object as a Python dictionary.
is_opened(self) method (optional)
Checks if the connection to the target is able to receive messages, and should return True if it is. For details, see Error handling in the python() destination.
open(self) method (optional)
The open(self)
method opens the resources required for the destination, for example, it initiates a connection to the target service. It is called after init()
when AxoSyslog is started or reloaded. If send()
returns with an error, AxoSyslog calls close()
and open()
before trying to send again.
If open()
fails, it should return the False value. In this case, AxoSyslog retries it every time-reopen()
seconds. By default, this is 1 second for Python sources and destinations, the value of time-reopen()
is not inherited from the global option. For details, see Error handling in the python() destination.
send(self, message) method (mandatory)
The send
method sends a message to the target service. It should return True to indicate success, or self.QUEUED
when using batch mode. For other possible return values, see the description of the flush()
method. Note that for batch mode, the flush()
method must be implemented as well.
This is the only mandatory method of the destination.
If a message cannot be delivered after the number of times set in retries()
(by default: 3), AxoSyslog drops the message and continues with the next message. For details, see Error handling in the python() destination.
The method can return True, False, or one of the following constants:
-
self.DROP
: The message is dropped immediately. -
self.ERROR
: Corresponds to boolean False. The message is put back to the queue, and sending the message is attempted (up to the number of theretries()
option). The destination is suspended fortime-reopen()
seconds. -
self.SUCCESS
: Corresponds to boolean True. The message was sent successfully. -
self.QUEUED
: Thesend()
method should return this value when using batch mode, if it has successfully added the message to the batch. Message acknowledgment of batches is controlled by theflush()
method. -
self.NOT_CONNECTED
: The message is put back to the queue, and the destination is suspended. Theopen()
method will be called, and the sending the messages will be continued with the same message/batch. -
self.RETRY
: The message is put back to the queue, and sending the message is attempted (up to the number of theretries()
option). If sending the message has failedretries()
times,self.NOT_CONNECTED
is returned.
flush(self) method (optional)
Send the messages in a batch. You can use this method to implement batch-mode message sending instead of sending messages one-by-one. When using batch mode, the send()
method adds the messages to a batch (for example, a list), and the flush()
method sends the messages as configured in the batch-bytes()
, batch-lines()
, or batch-timeout()
options.
The method can return True, False, or one of the following constants:
-
self.DROP
: The messages cannot be sent and the entire batch is dropped immediately. -
self.ERROR
: Corresponds to boolean False. The message is put back to the queue, and sending the message is attempted (up to the number of theretries()
option). The destination is suspended fortime-reopen()
seconds. -
self.SUCCESS
: Corresponds to boolean True. The message was sent successfully. -
self.NOT_CONNECTED
: The message is put back to the queue, and the destination is suspended. Theopen()
method will be called, and the sending the messages will be continued with the same message/batch. -
self.RETRY
: The message is put back to the queue, and sending the message is attempted (up to the number of theretries()
option). If sending the message has failedretries()
times,self.NOT_CONNECTED
is returned.
close(self) method (optional)
Close the connection to the target service. Usually it is called right before deinit()
when stopping or reloading AxoSyslog. It is also called when send()
fails.
The deinit(self) method (optional)
This method is executed when AxoSyslog is stopped or reloaded. This method does not return a value.
Error handling in the python() destination
The Python destination handles errors as follows.
-
Currently AxoSyslog ignores every error from the
open
method until the first log message arrives to the Python destination. If the fist message has arrived and there was an error in theopen
method, AxoSyslog starts calling theopen
method everytime-reopen()
second, until opening the destination succeeds. -
If the
open
method returns without error, AxoSyslog calls thesend
method to send the first message. -
If the
send
method returns with an error, AxoSyslog calls theis_opened
method.-
If the
is_opened
method returns an error, AxoSyslog starts calling theopen
method everytime-reopen()
second, until opening the destination succeeds. -
Otherwise, AxoSyslog calls the
send
method again.
-
-
If the
send
method has returned with an errorretries()
times and theis_opened
method has not returned any errors, AxoSyslog drops the message and attempts to process the next message.
Example: Write logs into a file
The purpose of this example is only to demonstrate the basics of the Python destination, if you really want to write log messages into text files, use the file destination instead.
The following sample code writes the body of log messages into the /tmp/example.txt
file. Only the send()
method is implemented, meaning that AxoSyslog opens and closes the file for every message.
destination d_python_to_file {
python(
class("TextDestination")
);
};
log {
source(src);
destination(d_python_to_file);
};
python {
class TextDestination(object):
def send(self, msg):
self.outfile = open("/tmp/example.txt", "a")
self.outfile.write("MESSAGE = %s\n" % msg["MESSAGE"])
self.outfile.flush()
self.outfile.close();
return True
};
The following code is similar to the previous example, but it opens and closes the file using the open()
and close()
methods.
destination d_python_to_file {
python(
class("TextDestination")
);
};
log {
source(src);
destination(d_python_to_file);
};
python {
class TextDestination(object):
def open(self):
try:
self.outfile = open("/tmp/example.txt", "a")
return True
except:
return False
def send(self, msg):
self.outfile.write("MESSAGE = %s\n" % msg["MESSAGE"])
self.outfile.flush()
return True
def close(self):
try:
self.outfile.flush()
self.outfile.close();
return True
except:
return False
};
Example: Print logs in batch mode
The following is a simple destination that uses the flush()
method to print the messages in batch mode.
class MyDestination(object):
def init(self, options):
self.bulk = list()
return True
def send(self, msg):
self.bulk.append(msg["MSG"].decode())
return self.QUEUED
def flush(self):
print("flushing: " + ",".join(self.bulk))
self.bulk = list()
return self.SUCCESS
For the list of available optional parameters, see python() destination options.