This package provides a logback appender that writes its log events to Cloudwatch. Before you say it, there seem to be many projects like this out there but I could find none of them that were self-contained and that were published to the central Maven repo.
- Code available from the git repository.
- Maven packages are published via
Enjoy, Gray Watson
<dependencies>
<dependency>
<groupId>com.j256.cloudwatchlogbackappender</groupId>
<artifactId>cloudwatchlogbackappender</artifactId>
<!-- NOTE: change the version to the most recent release version from the repo -->
<version>1.10</version>
</dependency>
</dependencies>
Minimal logback appender configuration:
<appender name="CLOUDWATCH" class="com.j256.cloudwatchlogbackappender.CloudWatchAppender">
<region>us-east-1</region>
<logGroup>your-log-group-name-here</logGroup>
<logStream>your-log-stream-name-here</logStream>
<layout>
<!-- possible layout pattern -->
<pattern>[%thread] %level %logger{20} - %msg%n%xThrowable</pattern>
</layout>
</appender>
You may want to use our Ec2PatternLayout
class which adds support for the ec2 instance-name tag from the tokens
%instance
, %instanceName
, and %in
. It also supports %instanceId
and %iid
for the instance-id as well.
<appender name="CLOUDWATCH" class="com.j256.cloudwatchlogbackappender.CloudWatchAppender">
...
<layout class="com.j256.cloudwatchlogbackappender.Ec2PatternLayout">
<pattern>[%instance] [%thread] %level %logger{20} - %msg%n%xThrowable</pattern>
</layout>
NOTE: If the instance-name is not available then the instance-id will be used for the name instead.
Here is the complete list of the appender properties.
Property | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
region |
string | AWS region needed by CloudWatch API |
logGroup |
string | Log group name |
logStream |
string | Log stream name |
accessKeyId |
string | Default: none, code will use DefaultAWSCredentialsProviderChain AWS API access key ID, see AWS Permissions below |
secretKey |
string | Default: none, code will use DefaultAWSCredentialsProviderChain AWS API secret key, see AWS Permissions below |
maxBatchSize |
int | Default: 128 Maximum number of log events put into CloudWatch in single request. |
maxBatchTimeMillis |
long | Default: 5000 Maximum time in milliseconds to collect log events to submit batch. |
maxQueueWaitTimeMillis |
long | Default: 100 Maximum time in milliseconds to wait if internal queue is full before using the emergency appender (see below). |
initialWaitTimeMillis |
long | Default: 0 Initial wait time before logging messages. Helps if server needs to configure itself initially. |
internalQueueSize |
int | Default: 8192 Size of the internal log event queue. |
createLogDests |
boolean | Default: true Create the CloudWatch log and stream if they don't exist. |
Since this appender is queuing up log events and then writing them remotely, there are a number of situations which might result in log events not getting remoted correctly. To protect against this, you can add in an "emergency" appender to write events to the console or a file by adding the following to your CLOUDWATCH appender stanza:
<appender name="CLOUDWATCH" class="com.j256.cloudwatchlogbackappender.CloudWatchAppender">
...
<appender-ref ref="EMERGENCY_FILE" />
This appender will be used if:
- there was some problem configuring the CloudWatch or other AWS APIs
- the internal queue fills up and messages can't be written remotely fast enough
- there was some problem with the actual put events CloudWatch call – maybe a transient network failure
If no emergency appender is configured and a problem does happen then the log messages will be not be persisted.
You can specify the AWS CloudWatch permissions in a number of ways. If you use the accessKeyId
and secretKey
settings in the logback.xml
file then the appender will use those credentials directly. You can also set the
cloudwatchappender.aws.accessKeyId
and cloudwatchappender.aws.secretKey
Java System properties which will be
used. If neither of those are specified then the appender will use the DefaultAWSCredentialsProviderChain
which
looks for the access and secret keys in:
- Environment Variables:
AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID
andAWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY
orAWS_ACCESS_KEY
andAWS_SECRET_KEY
- Java System Properties:
aws.accessKeyId
andaws.secretKey
- Credential file at the default location (
~/.aws/credentials
) shared by all AWS SDKs and the AWS CLI - Instance profile credentials delivered through the Amazon EC2 metadata service
When making any AWS API calls, we typically create a IAM user with specific permissions so if any API keys are stolen, the hacker only have limited access to our AWS services. To get the appender to be able to publish to CloudWatch, the following IAM policy is required to create the log group and put log events to CloudWatch.
The logs:CreateLogGroup
and logs:CreateLogStream
actions are only required if the appender is creating the
log-group and stream itself (see createLogDests
option above). The ec2:DescribeTags
action is only required
if you want the appender to query for the ec2 instance name it is on – see Ec2PatternLayout
above.
{
"Version": "2012-10-17",
"Statement": [
{
"Effect": "Allow",
"Action": [
"logs:CreateLogGroup",
"logs:CreateLogStream",
"logs:DescribeLogGroups",
"logs:DescribeLogStreams",
"logs:PutLogEvents",
"ec2:DescribeTags"
],
"Resource": [
"*"
]
}
]
}
I couldn't figure out how to restrict to all ec2 instances. If you are only doing log requests then
you should be able to limit it to the resource arn:aws:logs:*:*:*
.
See the ChangeLog.txt file.