also, dig into mmnormalize (liblognorm), it's a very efficient parse engine for extracting values out of logs. The Dyn_stats() feature in rsyslog ends up being a rather powerful tool for summarizing things (SEC is more powerful, but you can do a lot with just dyn_stats() )

David Lang

On Fri, 9 Jul 2021, Jim Van Meggelen via rsyslog wrote:

Date: Fri, 9 Jul 2021 07:42:28 -0500 (CDT)
From: Jim Van Meggelen via rsyslog <[email protected]>
To: rsyslog-users <[email protected]>
Cc: Jim Van Meggelen <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [rsyslog] using Kibana / OpenSearch Dashboards to analyze logs
    during development

Daniel,

I'm pretty sure you and I have had at least one yap at some conference or 
another. Could be I just attended a talk of yours.

I saw your name here and thought "I'm pretty sure I've met him somewhere", and 
that was somewhat of a pleasant shock, because I've been digging into rsyslog for some 
stuff I've been thinking about, and it's in a similar vein to what you're talking about 
here (feeling multi-line data into analytics to help make some sense of it), and frankly 
it's nice to hear someone else in the same line of work is thinking similar things with 
respect to these log files (which are chock full of detailed data).

I don't know if what we're after is in fact the same (most folks seem to use 
logging for error handling, whereas I'm thinking more about gleaning business 
analytics from the data).

It feels like there's gold in all those log files. It'd be interesting to see 
how it could be mined.

Regards,

Jim



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