packetbeat.reference.yml

编辑

以下参考文件随您的 Packetbeat 安装包提供。它显示了所有未弃用的 Packetbeat 选项。您可以从此文件中复制配置并粘贴到 packetbeat.yml 文件中以进行自定义。

参考文件与 packetbeat.yml 文件位于同一目录中。要找到该文件,请参阅目录布局

为方便起见,此处包含该文件的内容。

###################### Packetbeat Configuration Example #######################

# This file is a full configuration example documenting all non-deprecated
# options in comments. For a shorter configuration example, that contains only
# the most common options, please see packetbeat.yml in the same directory.
#
# You can find the full configuration reference here:
# https://elastic.ac.cn/guide/en/beats/packetbeat/index.html

# =============================== Network device ===============================

# Select the network interface to sniff the data. You can use the "any"
# keyword to sniff on all connected interfaces. On all platforms, you
# can use "default_route", "default_route_ipv4" or "default_route_ipv6"
# to sniff on the device carrying the default route.
packetbeat.interfaces.device: any

# The network CIDR blocks are considered "internal" networks for
# the purpose of network perimeter boundary classification. The valid
# values for internal_networks are the same as those that can be used
# with processor network conditions.
#
# For a list of available values see:
# https://elastic.ac.cn/guide/en/beats/packetbeat/current/defining-processors.html#condition-network
packetbeat.interfaces.internal_networks:
  - private

# Packetbeat supports three sniffer types:
# * pcap, which uses the libpcap library and works on most platforms, but it's
# not the fastest option.
# * af_packet, which uses memory-mapped sniffing. This option is faster than
# libpcap and doesn't require a kernel module, but it's Linux-specific.
#packetbeat.interfaces.type: pcap

# The maximum size of the packets to capture. The default is 65535, which is
# large enough for almost all networks and interface types. If you sniff on a
# physical network interface, the optimal setting is the MTU size. On virtual
# interfaces, however, it's safer to accept the default value.
#packetbeat.interfaces.snaplen: 65535

# The maximum size of the shared memory buffer to use between the kernel and
# user space. A bigger buffer usually results in lower CPU usage but consumes
# more memory. This setting is only available for the af_packet sniffer type.
# The default is 30 MB.
#packetbeat.interfaces.buffer_size_mb: 30

# Set the polling frequency for interface metrics. This currently only applies
# to the "afpacket" interface type.
# The default is 5s (seconds).
#packetbeat.interfaces.metrics_interval: 5s

# To scale processing across multiple Packetbeat processes, a fanout group
# identifier can be specified. When `fanout_group` is used the Linux kernel splits
# packets across Packetbeat instances in the same group by using a flow hash. It
# computes the flow hash modulo with the number of Packetbeat processes in order
# to consistently route flows to the same Packetbeat instance.
#
# The value must be between 0 and 65535. By default, no value is set.
#
# This is only available on Linux and requires using `type: af_packet`. Each process
# must be running in the same network namespace. All processes must use the same
# interface settings. You must take responsibility for running multiple instances
# of Packetbeat.
#packetbeat.interfaces.fanout_group: ~

# Packetbeat automatically generates a BPF for capturing only the traffic on
# ports where it expects to find known protocols. Use this setting to tell
# Packetbeat to generate a BPF filter that accepts VLAN tags.
#packetbeat.interfaces.with_vlans: true

# Use this setting to override the automatically generated BPF filter.
#packetbeat.interfaces.bpf_filter:

# With `auto_promisc_mode` Packetbeat puts the interface in promiscuous mode automatically on startup.
# This option does not work with `any` interface device.
# The default option is false and requires manual set-up of promiscuous mode.
# Warning: under some circumstances (e.g., beat crash) promiscuous mode
# can stay enabled even after beat is shut down.
#packetbeat.interfaces.auto_promisc_mode: true

# By default Ingest pipelines are not updated if a pipeline with the same ID
# already exists. If this option is enabled Packetbeat overwrites pipelines
# every time a new Elasticsearch connection is established.
#packetbeat.overwrite_pipelines: false

# =================================== Flows ====================================

packetbeat.flows:
  # Enable Network flows. Default: true
  #enabled: true

  # Set network flow timeout. Flow is killed if no packet is received before being
  # timed out.
  timeout: 30s

  # Configure reporting period. If set to -1s, only killed flows will be reported
  period: 10s

  # Set to true to publish fields with null values in events.
  #keep_null: false

  # Overrides where flow events are indexed.
  #index: my-custom-flow-index

# =========================== Transaction protocols ============================

packetbeat.protocols:
- type: icmp
  # Enable ICMPv4 and ICMPv6 monitoring. The default is true.
  #enabled: true

  # Set to true to publish fields with null values in events.
  #keep_null: false

  # Overrides where this protocol's events are indexed.
  #index: my-custom-icmp-index

- type: amqp
  # Enable AMQP monitoring. Default: true
  #enabled: true

  # Configure the ports where to listen for AMQP traffic. You can disable
  # the AMQP protocol by commenting out the list of ports.
  ports: [5672]
  # Truncate messages that are published and avoid huge messages being
  # indexed.
  # Default: 1000
  #max_body_length: 1000

  # Hide the header fields in header frames.
  # Default: false
  #parse_headers: false

  # Hide the additional arguments of method frames.
  # Default: false
  #parse_arguments: false

  # Hide all methods relative to connection negotiation between the server and
  # client.
  # Default: true
  #hide_connection_information: true

  # If this option is enabled, the raw message of the request (`request` field)
  # is sent to Elasticsearch. The default is false.
  #send_request: false

  # If this option is enabled, the raw message of the response (`response`
  # field) is sent to Elasticsearch. The default is false.
  #send_response: false

  # Set to true to publish fields with null values in events.
  #keep_null: false

  # Transaction timeout. Expired transactions will no longer be correlated to
  # incoming responses, but sent to Elasticsearch immediately.
  #transaction_timeout: 10s

  # Overrides where this protocol's events are indexed.
  #index: my-custom-amqp-index

- type: cassandra
  #Cassandra port for traffic monitoring.
  ports: [9042]

  # If this option is enabled, the raw message of the request (`cassandra_request` field)
  # is included in published events. The default is true.
  #send_request: true

  # If this option is enabled, the raw message of the response (`cassandra_request.request_headers` field)
  # is included in published events. The default is true. enable `send_request` first before enabling this option.
  #send_request_header: true

  # If this option is enabled, the raw message of the response (`cassandra_response` field)
  # is included in published events. The default is true.
  #send_response: true

  # If this option is enabled, the raw message of the response (`cassandra_response.response_headers` field)
  # is included in published events. The default is true. enable `send_response` first before enabling this option.
  #send_response_header: true

  # Set to true to publish fields with null values in events.
  #keep_null: false

  # Configures the default compression algorithm being used to uncompress compressed frames by name. Currently only `snappy` is can be configured.
  # By default no compressor is configured.
  #compressor: "snappy"

  # This option indicates which Operator/Operators will be ignored.
  #ignored_ops: ["SUPPORTED","OPTIONS"]

  # Overrides where this protocol's events are indexed.
  #index: my-custom-cassandra-index

- type: dhcpv4
  # Configure the DHCP for IPv4 ports.
  ports: [67, 68]

  # Set to true to publish fields with null values in events.
  #keep_null: false

- type: dns
  # Enable DNS monitoring. Default: true
  #enabled: true

  # Configure the ports where to listen for DNS traffic. You can disable
  # the DNS protocol by commenting out the list of ports.
  ports: [53]

  # include_authorities controls whether or not the dns.authorities field
  # (authority resource records) is added to messages.
  # Default: false
  include_authorities: true
  # include_additionals controls whether or not the dns.additionals field
  # (additional resource records) is added to messages.
  # Default: false
  include_additionals: true

  # send_request and send_response control whether or not the stringified DNS
  # request and response message are added to the result.
  # Nearly all data about the request/response is available in the dns.*
  # fields, but this can be useful if you need visibility specifically
  # into the request or the response.
  # Default: false
  # send_request:  true
  # send_response: true

  # Set to true to publish fields with null values in events.
  #keep_null: false

  # Transaction timeout. Expired transactions will no longer be correlated to
  # incoming responses, but sent to Elasticsearch immediately.
  #transaction_timeout: 10s

  # Overrides where this protocol's events are indexed.
  #index: my-custom-dhcpv4-index

- type: http
  # Enable HTTP monitoring. Default: true
  #enabled: true

  # Configure the ports where to listen for HTTP traffic. You can disable
  # the HTTP protocol by commenting out the list of ports.
  ports: [80, 8080, 8000, 5000, 8002]

  # Uncomment the following to hide certain parameters in the URL or forms attached
  # to HTTP requests. The names of the parameters are case-insensitive.
  # The value of the parameters will be replaced with the 'xxxxx' string.
  # This is generally useful for avoiding storing user passwords or other
  # sensitive information.
  # Only query parameters and top level form parameters are replaced.
  # hide_keywords: ['pass', 'password', 'passwd']

  # A list of header names to capture and send to Elasticsearch. These headers
  # are placed under the `headers` dictionary in the resulting JSON.
  #send_headers: false

  # Instead of sending a white list of headers to Elasticsearch, you can send
  # all headers by setting this option to true. The default is false.
  #send_all_headers: false

  # A list of headers to redact if present in the HTTP request. This will keep
  # the header field present, but will redact it's value to show the headers
  # presence.
  #redact_headers: []

  # The list of content types for which Packetbeat includes the full HTTP
  # payload. If the request's or response's Content-Type matches any on this
  # list, the full body will be included under the request or response field.
  #include_body_for: []

  # The list of content types for which Packetbeat includes the full HTTP
  # request payload.
  #include_request_body_for: []

  # The list of content types for which Packetbeat includes the full HTTP
  # response payload.
  #include_response_body_for: []

  # Whether the body of a request must be decoded when a content-encoding
  # or transfer-encoding has been applied.
  #decode_body: true

  # If the Cookie or Set-Cookie headers are sent, this option controls whether
  # they are split into individual values.
  #split_cookie: false

  # The header field to extract the real IP from. This setting is useful when
  # you want to capture traffic behind a reverse proxy, but you want to get the
  # geo-location information.
  #real_ip_header:

  # If this option is enabled, the raw message of the request (`request` field)
  # is sent to Elasticsearch. The default is false.
  #send_request: false

  # If this option is enabled, the raw message of the response (`response`
  # field) is sent to Elasticsearch. The default is false.
  #send_response: false

  # Set to true to publish fields with null values in events.
  #keep_null: false

  # Transaction timeout. Expired transactions will no longer be correlated to
  # incoming responses, but sent to Elasticsearch immediately.
  #transaction_timeout: 10s

  # Maximum message size. If an HTTP message is larger than this, it will
  # be trimmed to this size. Default is 10 MB.
  #max_message_size: 10485760

  # Overrides where this protocol's events are indexed.
  #index: my-custom-http-index

- type: memcache
  # Enable memcache monitoring. Default: true
  #enabled: true

  # Configure the ports where to listen for memcache traffic. You can disable
  # the Memcache protocol by commenting out the list of ports.
  ports: [11211]

  # Uncomment the parseunknown option to force the memcache text protocol parser
  # to accept unknown commands.
  # Note: All unknown commands MUST not contain any data parts!
  # Default: false
  # parseunknown: true

  # Update the maxvalue option to store the values - base64 encoded - in the
  # json output.
  # possible values:
  #    maxvalue: -1  # store all values (text based protocol multi-get)
  #    maxvalue: 0   # store no values at all
  #    maxvalue: N   # store up to N values
  # Default: 0
  # maxvalues: -1

  # Use maxbytespervalue to limit the number of bytes to be copied per value element.
  # Note: Values will be base64 encoded, so actual size in json document
  #       will be 4 times maxbytespervalue.
  # Default: unlimited
  # maxbytespervalue: 100

  # UDP transaction timeout in milliseconds.
  # Note: Quiet messages in UDP binary protocol will get response only in error case.
  #       The memcached analyzer will wait for udptransactiontimeout milliseconds
  #       before publishing quiet messages. Non quiet messages or quiet requests with
  #       error response will not have to wait for the timeout.
  # Default: 200
  # udptransactiontimeout: 1000

  # If this option is enabled, the raw message of the request (`request` field)
  # is sent to Elasticsearch. The default is false.
  #send_request: false

  # If this option is enabled, the raw message of the response (`response`
  # field) is sent to Elasticsearch. The default is false.
  #send_response: false

  # Set to true to publish fields with null values in events.
  #keep_null: false

  # Transaction timeout. Expired transactions will no longer be correlated to
  # incoming responses, but sent to Elasticsearch immediately.
  #transaction_timeout: 10s

  # Overrides where this protocol's events are indexed.
  #index: my-custom-memcache-index

- type: mysql
  # Enable mysql monitoring. Default: true
  #enabled: true

  # Configure the ports where to listen for MySQL traffic. You can disable
  # the MySQL protocol by commenting out the list of ports.
  ports: [3306,3307]

  # If this option is enabled, the raw message of the request (`request` field)
  # is sent to Elasticsearch. The default is false.
  #send_request: false

  # If this option is enabled, the raw message of the response (`response`
  # field) is sent to Elasticsearch. The default is false.
  #send_response: false

  # Set to true to publish fields with null values in events.
  #keep_null: false

  # Transaction timeout. Expired transactions will no longer be correlated to
  # incoming responses, but sent to Elasticsearch immediately.
  #transaction_timeout: 10s

  # Overrides where this protocol's events are indexed.
  #index: my-custom-mysql-index

- type: pgsql
  # Enable pgsql monitoring. Default: true
  #enabled: true

  # Configure the ports where to listen for Pgsql traffic. You can disable
  # the Pgsql protocol by commenting out the list of ports.
  ports: [5432]

  # If this option is enabled, the raw message of the request (`request` field)
  # is sent to Elasticsearch. The default is false.
  #send_request: false

  # If this option is enabled, the raw message of the response (`response`
  # field) is sent to Elasticsearch. The default is false.
  #send_response: false

  # Set to true to publish fields with null values in events.
  #keep_null: false

  # Transaction timeout. Expired transactions will no longer be correlated to
  # incoming responses, but sent to Elasticsearch immediately.
  #transaction_timeout: 10s

  # Overrides where this protocol's events are indexed.
  #index: my-custom-pgsql-index

- type: redis
  # Enable redis monitoring. Default: true
  #enabled: true

  # Configure the ports where to listen for Redis traffic. You can disable
  # the Redis protocol by commenting out the list of ports.
  ports: [6379]

  # If this option is enabled, the raw message of the request (`request` field)
  # is sent to Elasticsearch. The default is false.
  #send_request: false

  # If this option is enabled, the raw message of the response (`response`
  # field) is sent to Elasticsearch. The default is false.
  #send_response: false

  # Set to true to publish fields with null values in events.
  #keep_null: false

  # Transaction timeout. Expired transactions will no longer be correlated to
  # incoming responses, but sent to Elasticsearch immediately.
  #transaction_timeout: 10s

  # Max size for per-session message queue. This places a limit on the memory
  # that can be used to buffer requests and responses for correlation.
  #queue_max_bytes: 1048576

  # Max number of messages for per-session message queue. This limits the number
  # of requests or responses that can be buffered for correlation. Set a value
  # large enough to allow for pipelining.
  #queue_max_messages: 20000

  # Overrides where this protocol's events are indexed.
  #index: my-custom-redis-index

- type: thrift
  # Enable thrift monitoring. Default: true
  #enabled: true

  # Configure the ports where to listen for Thrift-RPC traffic. You can disable
  # the Thrift-RPC protocol by commenting out the list of ports.
  ports: [9090]

  # The Thrift transport type. Currently this option accepts the values socket
  # for TSocket, which is the default Thrift transport, and framed for the
  # TFramed Thrift transport. The default is socket.
  #transport_type: socket

  # The Thrift protocol type. Currently the only accepted value is binary for
  # the TBinary protocol, which is the default Thrift protocol.
  #protocol_type: binary

  # The Thrift interface description language (IDL) files for the service that
  # Packetbeat is monitoring.  Providing the IDL enables Packetbeat to include
  # parameter and exception names.
  #idl_files: []

  # The maximum length for strings in parameters or return values. If a string
  # is longer than this value, the string is automatically truncated to this
  # length.
  #string_max_size: 200

  # The maximum number of elements in a Thrift list, set, map, or structure.
  #collection_max_size: 15

  # If this option is set to false, Packetbeat decodes the method name from the
  # reply and simply skips the rest of the response message.
  #capture_reply: true

  # If this option is set to true, Packetbeat replaces all strings found in
  # method parameters, return codes, or exception structures with the "*"
  # string.
  #obfuscate_strings: false

  # The maximum number of fields that a structure can have before Packetbeat
  # ignores the whole transaction.
  #drop_after_n_struct_fields: 500

  # If this option is enabled, the raw message of the request (`request` field)
  # is sent to Elasticsearch. The default is false.
  #send_request: false

  # If this option is enabled, the raw message of the response (`response`
  # field) is sent to Elasticsearch. The default is false.
  #send_response: false

  # Set to true to publish fields with null values in events.
  #keep_null: false

  # Transaction timeout. Expired transactions will no longer be correlated to
  # incoming responses, but sent to Elasticsearch immediately.
  #transaction_timeout: 10s

  # Overrides where this protocol's events are indexed.
  #index: my-custom-thrift-index

- type: mongodb
  # Enable mongodb monitoring. Default: true
  #enabled: true

  # Configure the ports where to listen for MongoDB traffic. You can disable
  # the MongoDB protocol by commenting out the list of ports.
  ports: [27017]


  # The maximum number of documents from the response to index in the `response`
  # field. The default is 10.
  #max_docs: 10

  # The maximum number of characters in a single document indexed in the
  # `response` field. The default is 5000. You can set this to 0 to index an
  # unlimited number of characters per document.
  #max_doc_length: 5000

  # If this option is enabled, the raw message of the request (`request` field)
  # is sent to Elasticsearch. The default is false.
  #send_request: false

  # If this option is enabled, the raw message of the response (`response`
  # field) is sent to Elasticsearch. The default is false.
  #send_response: false

  # Set to true to publish fields with null values in events.
  #keep_null: false

  # Transaction timeout. Expired transactions will no longer be correlated to
  # incoming responses, but sent to Elasticsearch immediately.
  #transaction_timeout: 10s

  # Overrides where this protocol's events are indexed.
  #index: my-custom-mongodb-index

- type: nfs
  # Enable NFS monitoring. Default: true
  #enabled: true

  # Configure the ports where to listen for NFS traffic. You can disable
  # the NFS protocol by commenting out the list of ports.
  ports: [2049]

  # If this option is enabled, the raw message of the request (`request` field)
  # is sent to Elasticsearch. The default is false.
  #send_request: false

  # If this option is enabled, the raw message of the response (`response`
  # field) is sent to Elasticsearch. The default is false.
  #send_response: false

  # Set to true to publish fields with null values in events.
  #keep_null: false

  # Transaction timeout. Expired transactions will no longer be correlated to
  # incoming responses, but sent to Elasticsearch immediately.
  #transaction_timeout: 10s

  # Overrides where this protocol's events are indexed.
  #index: my-custom-nfs-index

- type: tls
  # Enable TLS monitoring. Default: true
  #enabled: true

  # Configure the ports where to listen for TLS traffic. You can disable
  # the TLS protocol by commenting out the list of ports.
  ports:
    - 443   # HTTPS
    - 993   # IMAPS
    - 995   # POP3S
    - 5223  # XMPP over SSL
    - 8443
    - 8883  # Secure MQTT
    - 9243  # Elasticsearch

  # List of hash algorithms to use to calculate certificates' fingerprints.
  # Valid values are `sha1`, `sha256` and `md5`.
  #fingerprints: [sha1]

  # If this option is enabled, the client and server certificates and
  # certificate chains are sent to Elasticsearch. The default is true.
  #send_certificates: true

  # If this option is enabled, the raw certificates will be stored
  # in PEM format under the `raw` key. The default is false.
  #include_raw_certificates: false

  # Set to true to publish fields with null values in events.
  #keep_null: false

  # Overrides where this protocol's events are indexed.
  #index: my-custom-tls-index

- type: sip
  # Configure the ports where to listen for SIP traffic. You can disable the SIP protocol by commenting out the list of ports.
  ports: [5060]

  # Parse the authorization headers
  parse_authorization: true

  # Parse body contents (only when body is SDP)
  parse_body: true

  # Preserve original contents in event.original
  keep_original: true

  # You can monitor tcp SIP traffic by setting the transport_protocol option
  # to tcp, it defaults to udp.
  #transport_protocol: tcp

  # Overrides where this protocol's events are indexed.
  #index: my-custom-sip-index

# ============================ Monitored processes =============================

# Packetbeat can enrich events with information about the process associated
# the socket that sent or received the packet if Packetbeat is monitoring
# traffic from the host machine. By default process enrichment is disabled.
# This feature works on Linux and Windows.
packetbeat.procs.enabled: false

# If you want to ignore transactions created by the server on which the shipper
# is installed you can enable this option. This option is useful to remove
# duplicates if shippers are installed on multiple servers. Default value is
# false.
packetbeat.ignore_outgoing: false

# ================================== General ===================================

# The name of the shipper that publishes the network data. It can be used to group
# all the transactions sent by a single shipper in the web interface.
# If this option is not defined, the hostname is used.
#name:

# The tags of the shipper are included in their field with each
# transaction published. Tags make it easy to group servers by different
# logical properties.
#tags: ["service-X", "web-tier"]

# Optional fields that you can specify to add additional information to the
# output. Fields can be scalar values, arrays, dictionaries, or any nested
# combination of these.
#fields:
#  env: staging

# If this option is set to true, the custom fields are stored as top-level
# fields in the output document instead of being grouped under a field
# sub-dictionary. Default is false.
#fields_under_root: false

# Configure the precision of all timestamps in Packetbeat.
# Available options: millisecond, microsecond, nanosecond
#timestamp.precision: millisecond

# Internal queue configuration for buffering events to be published.
# Queue settings may be overridden by performance presets in the
# Elasticsearch output. To configure them manually use "preset: custom".
#queue:
  # Queue type by name (default 'mem')
  # The memory queue will present all available events (up to the outputs
  # bulk_max_size) to the output, the moment the output is ready to serve
  # another batch of events.
  #mem:
    # Max number of events the queue can buffer.
    #events: 3200

    # Hints the minimum number of events stored in the queue,
    # before providing a batch of events to the outputs.
    # The default value is set to 2048.
    # A value of 0 ensures events are immediately available
    # to be sent to the outputs.
    #flush.min_events: 1600

    # Maximum duration after which events are available to the outputs,
    # if the number of events stored in the queue is < `flush.min_events`.
    #flush.timeout: 10s

  # The disk queue stores incoming events on disk until the output is
  # ready for them. This allows a higher event limit than the memory-only
  # queue and lets pending events persist through a restart.
  #disk:
    # The directory path to store the queue's data.
    #path: "${path.data}/diskqueue"

    # The maximum space the queue should occupy on disk. Depending on
    # input settings, events that exceed this limit are delayed or discarded.
    #max_size: 10GB

    # The maximum size of a single queue data file. Data in the queue is
    # stored in smaller segments that are deleted after all their events
    # have been processed.
    #segment_size: 1GB

    # The number of events to read from disk to memory while waiting for
    # the output to request them.
    #read_ahead: 512

    # The number of events to accept from inputs while waiting for them
    # to be written to disk. If event data arrives faster than it
    # can be written to disk, this setting prevents it from overflowing
    # main memory.
    #write_ahead: 2048

    # The duration to wait before retrying when the queue encounters a disk
    # write error.
    #retry_interval: 1s

    # The maximum length of time to wait before retrying on a disk write
    # error. If the queue encounters repeated errors, it will double the
    # length of its retry interval each time, up to this maximum.
    #max_retry_interval: 30s

# Sets the maximum number of CPUs that can be executed simultaneously. The
# default is the number of logical CPUs available in the system.
#max_procs:

# ================================= Processors =================================

# Processors are used to reduce the number of fields in the exported event or to
# enhance the event with external metadata. This section defines a list of
# processors that are applied one by one and the first one receives the initial
# event:
#
#   event -> filter1 -> event1 -> filter2 ->event2 ...
#
# The supported processors are drop_fields, drop_event, include_fields,
# decode_json_fields, and add_cloud_metadata.
#
# For example, you can use the following processors to keep the fields that
# contain CPU load percentages, but remove the fields that contain CPU ticks
# values:
#
#processors:
#  - include_fields:
#      fields: ["cpu"]
#  - drop_fields:
#      fields: ["cpu.user", "cpu.system"]
#
# The following example drops the events that have the HTTP response code 200:
#
#processors:
#  - drop_event:
#      when:
#        equals:
#          http.code: 200
#
# The following example renames the field a to b:
#
#processors:
#  - rename:
#      fields:
#        - from: "a"
#          to: "b"
#
# The following example tokenizes the string into fields:
#
#processors:
#  - dissect:
#      tokenizer: "%{key1} - %{key2}"
#      field: "message"
#      target_prefix: "dissect"
#
# The following example enriches each event with metadata from the cloud
# provider about the host machine. It works on EC2, GCE, DigitalOcean,
# Tencent Cloud, and Alibaba Cloud.
#
#processors:
#  - add_cloud_metadata: ~
#
# The following example enriches each event with the machine's local time zone
# offset from UTC.
#
#processors:
#  - add_locale:
#      format: offset
#
# The following example enriches each event with docker metadata, it matches
# given fields to an existing container id and adds info from that container:
#
#processors:
#  - add_docker_metadata:
#      host: "unix:///var/run/docker.sock"
#      match_fields: ["system.process.cgroup.id"]
#      match_pids: ["process.pid", "process.parent.pid"]
#      match_source: true
#      match_source_index: 4
#      match_short_id: false
#      cleanup_timeout: 60
#      labels.dedot: false
#      # To connect to Docker over TLS you must specify a client and CA certificate.
#      #ssl:
#      #  certificate_authority: "/etc/pki/root/ca.pem"
#      #  certificate:           "/etc/pki/client/cert.pem"
#      #  key:                   "/etc/pki/client/cert.key"
#
# The following example enriches each event with docker metadata, it matches
# container id from log path available in `source` field (by default it expects
# it to be /var/lib/docker/containers/*/*.log).
#
#processors:
#  - add_docker_metadata: ~
#
# The following example enriches each event with host metadata.
#
#processors:
#  - add_host_metadata: ~
#
# The following example enriches each event with process metadata using
# process IDs included in the event.
#
#processors:
#  - add_process_metadata:
#      match_pids: ["system.process.ppid"]
#      target: system.process.parent
#
# The following example decodes fields containing JSON strings
# and replaces the strings with valid JSON objects.
#
#processors:
#  - decode_json_fields:
#      fields: ["field1", "field2", ...]
#      process_array: false
#      max_depth: 1
#      target: ""
#      overwrite_keys: false
#
#processors:
#  - decompress_gzip_field:
#      from: "field1"
#      to: "field2"
#      ignore_missing: false
#      fail_on_error: true
#
# The following example copies the value of the message to message_copied
#
#processors:
#  - copy_fields:
#      fields:
#        - from: message
#          to: message_copied
#      fail_on_error: true
#      ignore_missing: false
#
# The following example truncates the value of the message to 1024 bytes
#
#processors:
#  - truncate_fields:
#      fields:
#        - message
#      max_bytes: 1024
#      fail_on_error: false
#      ignore_missing: true
#
# The following example preserves the raw message under event.original
#
#processors:
#  - copy_fields:
#      fields:
#        - from: message
#          to: event.original
#      fail_on_error: false
#      ignore_missing: true
#  - truncate_fields:
#      fields:
#        - event.original
#      max_bytes: 1024
#      fail_on_error: false
#      ignore_missing: true
#
# The following example URL-decodes the value of field1 to field2
#
#processors:
#  - urldecode:
#      fields:
#        - from: "field1"
#          to: "field2"
#      ignore_missing: false
#      fail_on_error: true

# =============================== Elastic Cloud ================================

# These settings simplify using Packetbeat with the Elastic Cloud (https://cloud.elastic.co/).

# The cloud.id setting overwrites the `output.elasticsearch.hosts` and
# `setup.kibana.host` options.
# You can find the `cloud.id` in the Elastic Cloud web UI.
#cloud.id:

# The cloud.auth setting overwrites the `output.elasticsearch.username` and
# `output.elasticsearch.password` settings. The format is `<user>:<pass>`.
#cloud.auth:

# ================================== Outputs ===================================

# Configure what output to use when sending the data collected by the beat.

# ---------------------------- Elasticsearch Output ----------------------------
output.elasticsearch:
  # Boolean flag to enable or disable the output module.
  #enabled: true

  # Array of hosts to connect to.
  # Scheme and port can be left out and will be set to the default (http and 9200)
  # In case you specify and additional path, the scheme is required: https://127.0.0.1:9200/path
  # IPv6 addresses should always be defined as: https://[2001:db8::1]:9200
  hosts: ["localhost:9200"]

  # Performance presets configure other output fields to recommended values
  # based on a performance priority.
  # Options are "balanced", "throughput", "scale", "latency" and "custom".
  # Default if unspecified: "custom"
  preset: balanced

  # Set gzip compression level. Set to 0 to disable compression.
  # This field may conflict with performance presets. To set it
  # manually use "preset: custom".
  # The default is 1.
  #compression_level: 1

  # Configure escaping HTML symbols in strings.
  #escape_html: false

  # Protocol - either `http` (default) or `https`.
  #protocol: "https"

  # Authentication credentials - either API key or username/password.
  #api_key: "id:api_key"
  #username: "elastic"
  #password: "changeme"

  # Dictionary of HTTP parameters to pass within the URL with index operations.
  #parameters:
    #param1: value1
    #param2: value2

  # Number of workers per Elasticsearch host.
  # This field may conflict with performance presets. To set it
  # manually use "preset: custom".
  #worker: 1

  # If set to true and multiple hosts are configured, the output plugin load
  # balances published events onto all Elasticsearch hosts. If set to false,
  # the output plugin sends all events to only one host (determined at random)
  # and will switch to another host if the currently selected one becomes
  # unreachable. The default value is true.
  #loadbalance: true

  # Optional data stream or index name. The default is "packetbeat-%{[agent.version]}".
  # In case you modify this pattern you must update setup.template.name and setup.template.pattern accordingly.
  #index: "packetbeat-%{[agent.version]}"

  # Optional ingest pipeline. By default, no pipeline will be used.
  #pipeline: ""

  # Optional HTTP path
  #path: "/elasticsearch"

  # Custom HTTP headers to add to each request
  #headers:
  #  X-My-Header: Contents of the header

  # Proxy server URL
  #proxy_url: http://proxy:3128

  # Whether to disable proxy settings for outgoing connections. If true, this
  # takes precedence over both the proxy_url field and any environment settings
  # (HTTP_PROXY, HTTPS_PROXY). The default is false.
  #proxy_disable: false

  # The number of times a particular Elasticsearch index operation is attempted. If
  # the indexing operation doesn't succeed after this many retries, the events are
  # dropped. The default is 3.
  #max_retries: 3

  # The maximum number of events to bulk in a single Elasticsearch bulk API index request.
  # This field may conflict with performance presets. To set it
  # manually use "preset: custom".
  # The default is 1600.
  #bulk_max_size: 1600

  # The number of seconds to wait before trying to reconnect to Elasticsearch
  # after a network error. After waiting backoff.init seconds, the Beat
  # tries to reconnect. If the attempt fails, the backoff timer is increased
  # exponentially up to backoff.max. After a successful connection, the backoff
  # timer is reset. The default is 1s.
  #backoff.init: 1s

  # The maximum number of seconds to wait before attempting to connect to
  # Elasticsearch after a network error. The default is 60s.
  #backoff.max: 60s

  # The maximum amount of time an idle connection will remain idle
  # before closing itself.  Zero means use the default of 60s. The
  # format is a Go language duration (example 60s is 60 seconds).
  # This field may conflict with performance presets. To set it
  # manually use "preset: custom".
  # The default is 3s.
  # idle_connection_timeout: 3s

  # Configure HTTP request timeout before failing a request to Elasticsearch.
  #timeout: 90

  # Prevents packetbeat from connecting to older Elasticsearch versions when set to `false`
  #allow_older_versions: true

  # Use SSL settings for HTTPS.
  #ssl.enabled: true

  # Controls the verification of certificates. Valid values are:
  # * full, which verifies that the provided certificate is signed by a trusted
  # authority (CA) and also verifies that the server's hostname (or IP address)
  # matches the names identified within the certificate.
  # * strict, which verifies that the provided certificate is signed by a trusted
  # authority (CA) and also verifies that the server's hostname (or IP address)
  # matches the names identified within the certificate. If the Subject Alternative
  # Name is empty, it returns an error.
  # * certificate, which verifies that the provided certificate is signed by a
  # trusted authority (CA), but does not perform any hostname verification.
  #  * none, which performs no verification of the server's certificate. This
  # mode disables many of the security benefits of SSL/TLS and should only be used
  # after very careful consideration. It is primarily intended as a temporary
  # diagnostic mechanism when attempting to resolve TLS errors; its use in
  # production environments is strongly discouraged.
  # The default value is full.
  #ssl.verification_mode: full

  # List of supported/valid TLS versions. By default all TLS versions from 1.1
  # up to 1.3 are enabled.
  #ssl.supported_protocols: [TLSv1.1, TLSv1.2, TLSv1.3]

  # List of root certificates for HTTPS server verifications
  #ssl.certificate_authorities: ["/etc/pki/root/ca.pem"]

  # Certificate for SSL client authentication
  #ssl.certificate: "/etc/pki/client/cert.pem"

  # Client certificate key
  #ssl.key: "/etc/pki/client/cert.key"

  # Optional passphrase for decrypting the certificate key.
  #ssl.key_passphrase: ''

  # Configure cipher suites to be used for SSL connections
  #ssl.cipher_suites: []

  # Configure curve types for ECDHE-based cipher suites
  #ssl.curve_types: []

  # Configure what types of renegotiation are supported. Valid options are
  # never, once, and freely. Default is never.
  #ssl.renegotiation: never

  # Configure a pin that can be used to do extra validation of the verified certificate chain,
  # this allow you to ensure that a specific certificate is used to validate the chain of trust.
  #
  # The pin is a base64 encoded string of the SHA-256 fingerprint.
  #ssl.ca_sha256: ""

  # A root CA HEX encoded fingerprint. During the SSL handshake if the
  # fingerprint matches the root CA certificate, it will be added to
  # the provided list of root CAs (`certificate_authorities`), if the
  # list is empty or not defined, the matching certificate will be the
  # only one in the list. Then the normal SSL validation happens.
  #ssl.ca_trusted_fingerprint: ""


  # Enables restarting packetbeat if any file listed by `key`,
  # `certificate`, or `certificate_authorities` is modified.
  # This feature IS NOT supported on Windows.
  #ssl.restart_on_cert_change.enabled: false

  # Period to scan for changes on CA certificate files
  #ssl.restart_on_cert_change.period: 1m

  # Enable Kerberos support. Kerberos is automatically enabled if any Kerberos setting is set.
  #kerberos.enabled: true

  # Authentication type to use with Kerberos. Available options: keytab, password.
  #kerberos.auth_type: password

  # Path to the keytab file. It is used when auth_type is set to keytab.
  #kerberos.keytab: /etc/elastic.keytab

  # Path to the Kerberos configuration.
  #kerberos.config_path: /etc/krb5.conf

  # Name of the Kerberos user.
  #kerberos.username: elastic

  # Password of the Kerberos user. It is used when auth_type is set to password.
  #kerberos.password: changeme

  # Kerberos realm.
  #kerberos.realm: ELASTIC


# ------------------------------ Logstash Output -------------------------------
#output.logstash:
  # Boolean flag to enable or disable the output module.
  #enabled: true

  # The Logstash hosts
  #hosts: ["localhost:5044"]

  # Number of workers per Logstash host.
  #worker: 1

  # Set gzip compression level.
  #compression_level: 3

  # Configure escaping HTML symbols in strings.
  #escape_html: false

  # Optional maximum time to live for a connection to Logstash, after which the
  # connection will be re-established.  A value of `0s` (the default) will
  # disable this feature.
  #
  # Not yet supported for async connections (i.e. with the "pipelining" option set)
  #ttl: 30s

  # Optionally load-balance events between Logstash hosts. Default is false.
  #loadbalance: false

  # Number of batches to be sent asynchronously to Logstash while processing
  # new batches.
  #pipelining: 2

  # If enabled only a subset of events in a batch of events is transferred per
  # transaction.  The number of events to be sent increases up to `bulk_max_size`
  # if no error is encountered.
  #slow_start: false

  # The number of seconds to wait before trying to reconnect to Logstash
  # after a network error. After waiting backoff.init seconds, the Beat
  # tries to reconnect. If the attempt fails, the backoff timer is increased
  # exponentially up to backoff.max. After a successful connection, the backoff
  # timer is reset. The default is 1s.
  #backoff.init: 1s

  # The maximum number of seconds to wait before attempting to connect to
  # Logstash after a network error. The default is 60s.
  #backoff.max: 60s

  # Optional index name. The default index name is set to packetbeat
  # in all lowercase.
  #index: 'packetbeat'

  # SOCKS5 proxy server URL
  #proxy_url: socks5://user:password@socks5-server:2233

  # Resolve names locally when using a proxy server. Defaults to false.
  #proxy_use_local_resolver: false

  # Use SSL settings for HTTPS.
  #ssl.enabled: true

  # Controls the verification of certificates. Valid values are:
  # * full, which verifies that the provided certificate is signed by a trusted
  # authority (CA) and also verifies that the server's hostname (or IP address)
  # matches the names identified within the certificate.
  # * strict, which verifies that the provided certificate is signed by a trusted
  # authority (CA) and also verifies that the server's hostname (or IP address)
  # matches the names identified within the certificate. If the Subject Alternative
  # Name is empty, it returns an error.
  # * certificate, which verifies that the provided certificate is signed by a
  # trusted authority (CA), but does not perform any hostname verification.
  #  * none, which performs no verification of the server's certificate. This
  # mode disables many of the security benefits of SSL/TLS and should only be used
  # after very careful consideration. It is primarily intended as a temporary
  # diagnostic mechanism when attempting to resolve TLS errors; its use in
  # production environments is strongly discouraged.
  # The default value is full.
  #ssl.verification_mode: full

  # List of supported/valid TLS versions. By default all TLS versions from 1.1
  # up to 1.3 are enabled.
  #ssl.supported_protocols: [TLSv1.1, TLSv1.2, TLSv1.3]

  # List of root certificates for HTTPS server verifications
  #ssl.certificate_authorities: ["/etc/pki/root/ca.pem"]

  # Certificate for SSL client authentication
  #ssl.certificate: "/etc/pki/client/cert.pem"

  # Client certificate key
  #ssl.key: "/etc/pki/client/cert.key"

  # Optional passphrase for decrypting the certificate key.
  #ssl.key_passphrase: ''

  # Configure cipher suites to be used for SSL connections
  #ssl.cipher_suites: []

  # Configure curve types for ECDHE-based cipher suites
  #ssl.curve_types: []

  # Configure what types of renegotiation are supported. Valid options are
  # never, once, and freely. Default is never.
  #ssl.renegotiation: never

  # Configure a pin that can be used to do extra validation of the verified certificate chain,
  # this allow you to ensure that a specific certificate is used to validate the chain of trust.
  #
  # The pin is a base64 encoded string of the SHA-256 fingerprint.
  #ssl.ca_sha256: ""

  # A root CA HEX encoded fingerprint. During the SSL handshake if the
  # fingerprint matches the root CA certificate, it will be added to
  # the provided list of root CAs (`certificate_authorities`), if the
  # list is empty or not defined, the matching certificate will be the
  # only one in the list. Then the normal SSL validation happens.
  #ssl.ca_trusted_fingerprint: ""

  # Enables restarting packetbeat if any file listed by `key`,
  # `certificate`, or `certificate_authorities` is modified.
  # This feature IS NOT supported on Windows.
  #ssl.restart_on_cert_change.enabled: false

  # Period to scan for changes on CA certificate files
  #ssl.restart_on_cert_change.period: 1m

  # The number of times to retry publishing an event after a publishing failure.
  # After the specified number of retries, the events are typically dropped.
  # Some Beats, such as Filebeat and Winlogbeat, ignore the max_retries setting
  # and retry until all events are published.  Set max_retries to a value less
  # than 0 to retry until all events are published. The default is 3.
  #max_retries: 3

  # The maximum number of events to bulk in a single Logstash request. The
  # default is 2048.
  #bulk_max_size: 2048

  # The number of seconds to wait for responses from the Logstash server before
  # timing out. The default is 30s.
  #timeout: 30s

# -------------------------------- Kafka Output --------------------------------
#output.kafka:
  # Boolean flag to enable or disable the output module.
  #enabled: true

  # The list of Kafka broker addresses from which to fetch the cluster metadata.
  # The cluster metadata contain the actual Kafka brokers events are published
  # to.
  #hosts: ["localhost:9092"]

  # The Kafka topic used for produced events. The setting can be a format string
  # using any event field. To set the topic from document type use `%{[type]}`.
  #topic: beats

  # The Kafka event key setting. Use format string to create a unique event key.
  # By default no event key will be generated.
  #key: ''

  # The Kafka event partitioning strategy. Default hashing strategy is `hash`
  # using the `output.kafka.key` setting or randomly distributes events if
  # `output.kafka.key` is not configured.
  #partition.hash:
    # If enabled, events will only be published to partitions with reachable
    # leaders. Default is false.
    #reachable_only: false

    # Configure alternative event field names used to compute the hash value.
    # If empty `output.kafka.key` setting will be used.
    # Default value is empty list.
    #hash: []

  # Authentication details. Password is required if username is set.
  #username: ''
  #password: ''

  # SASL authentication mechanism used. Can be one of PLAIN, SCRAM-SHA-256 or SCRAM-SHA-512.
  # Defaults to PLAIN when `username` and `password` are configured.
  #sasl.mechanism: ''

  # Kafka version Packetbeat is assumed to run against. Defaults to the "1.0.0".
  #version: '1.0.0'

  # Configure JSON encoding
  #codec.json:
    # Pretty-print JSON event
    #pretty: false

    # Configure escaping HTML symbols in strings.
    #escape_html: false

  # Metadata update configuration. Metadata contains leader information
  # used to decide which broker to use when publishing.
  #metadata:
    # Max metadata request retry attempts when cluster is in middle of leader
    # election. Defaults to 3 retries.
    #retry.max: 3

    # Wait time between retries during leader elections. Default is 250ms.
    #retry.backoff: 250ms

    # Refresh metadata interval. Defaults to every 10 minutes.
    #refresh_frequency: 10m

    # Strategy for fetching the topics metadata from the broker. Default is false.
    #full: false

  # The number of times to retry publishing an event after a publishing failure.
  # After the specified number of retries, events are typically dropped.
  # Some Beats, such as Filebeat, ignore the max_retries setting and retry until
  # all events are published.  Set max_retries to a value less than 0 to retry
  # until all events are published. The default is 3.
  #max_retries: 3

  # The number of seconds to wait before trying to republish to Kafka
  # after a network error. After waiting backoff.init seconds, the Beat
  # tries to republish. If the attempt fails, the backoff timer is increased
  # exponentially up to backoff.max. After a successful publish, the backoff
  # timer is reset. The default is 1s.
  #backoff.init: 1s

  # The maximum number of seconds to wait before attempting to republish to
  # Kafka after a network error. The default is 60s.
  #backoff.max: 60s

  # The maximum number of events to bulk in a single Kafka request. The default
  # is 2048.
  #bulk_max_size: 2048

  # Duration to wait before sending bulk Kafka request. 0 is no delay. The default
  # is 0.
  #bulk_flush_frequency: 0s

  # The number of seconds to wait for responses from the Kafka brokers before
  # timing out. The default is 30s.
  #timeout: 30s

  # The maximum duration a broker will wait for number of required ACKs. The
  # default is 10s.
  #broker_timeout: 10s

  # The number of messages buffered for each Kafka broker. The default is 256.
  #channel_buffer_size: 256

  # The keep-alive period for an active network connection. If 0s, keep-alives
  # are disabled. The default is 0 seconds.
  #keep_alive: 0

  # Sets the output compression codec. Must be one of none, snappy and gzip. The
  # default is gzip.
  #compression: gzip

  # Set the compression level. Currently only gzip provides a compression level
  # between 0 and 9. The default value is chosen by the compression algorithm.
  #compression_level: 4

  # The maximum permitted size of JSON-encoded messages. Bigger messages will be
  # dropped. The default value is 1000000 (bytes). This value should be equal to
  # or less than the broker's message.max.bytes.
  #max_message_bytes: 1000000

  # The ACK reliability level required from broker. 0=no response, 1=wait for
  # local commit, -1=wait for all replicas to commit. The default is 1.  Note:
  # If set to 0, no ACKs are returned by Kafka. Messages might be lost silently
  # on error.
  #required_acks: 1

  # The configurable ClientID used for logging, debugging, and auditing
  # purposes.  The default is "beats".
  #client_id: beats

  # Use SSL settings for HTTPS.
  #ssl.enabled: true

  # Controls the verification of certificates. Valid values are:
  # * full, which verifies that the provided certificate is signed by a trusted
  # authority (CA) and also verifies that the server's hostname (or IP address)
  # matches the names identified within the certificate.
  # * strict, which verifies that the provided certificate is signed by a trusted
  # authority (CA) and also verifies that the server's hostname (or IP address)
  # matches the names identified within the certificate. If the Subject Alternative
  # Name is empty, it returns an error.
  # * certificate, which verifies that the provided certificate is signed by a
  # trusted authority (CA), but does not perform any hostname verification.
  #  * none, which performs no verification of the server's certificate. This
  # mode disables many of the security benefits of SSL/TLS and should only be used
  # after very careful consideration. It is primarily intended as a temporary
  # diagnostic mechanism when attempting to resolve TLS errors; its use in
  # production environments is strongly discouraged.
  # The default value is full.
  #ssl.verification_mode: full

  # List of supported/valid TLS versions. By default all TLS versions from 1.1
  # up to 1.3 are enabled.
  #ssl.supported_protocols: [TLSv1.1, TLSv1.2, TLSv1.3]

  # List of root certificates for HTTPS server verifications
  #ssl.certificate_authorities: ["/etc/pki/root/ca.pem"]

  # Certificate for SSL client authentication
  #ssl.certificate: "/etc/pki/client/cert.pem"

  # Client certificate key
  #ssl.key: "/etc/pki/client/cert.key"

  # Optional passphrase for decrypting the certificate key.
  #ssl.key_passphrase: ''

  # Configure cipher suites to be used for SSL connections
  #ssl.cipher_suites: []

  # Configure curve types for ECDHE-based cipher suites
  #ssl.curve_types: []

  # Configure what types of renegotiation are supported. Valid options are
  # never, once, and freely. Default is never.
  #ssl.renegotiation: never

  # Configure a pin that can be used to do extra validation of the verified certificate chain,
  # this allow you to ensure that a specific certificate is used to validate the chain of trust.
  #
  # The pin is a base64 encoded string of the SHA-256 fingerprint.
  #ssl.ca_sha256: ""

  # A root CA HEX encoded fingerprint. During the SSL handshake if the
  # fingerprint matches the root CA certificate, it will be added to
  # the provided list of root CAs (`certificate_authorities`), if the
  # list is empty or not defined, the matching certificate will be the
  # only one in the list. Then the normal SSL validation happens.
  #ssl.ca_trusted_fingerprint: ""

  # Enables restarting packetbeat if any file listed by `key`,
  # `certificate`, or `certificate_authorities` is modified.
  # This feature IS NOT supported on Windows.
  #ssl.restart_on_cert_change.enabled: false

  # Period to scan for changes on CA certificate files
  #ssl.restart_on_cert_change.period: 1m

  # Enable Kerberos support. Kerberos is automatically enabled if any Kerberos setting is set.
  #kerberos.enabled: true

  # Authentication type to use with Kerberos. Available options: keytab, password.
  #kerberos.auth_type: password

  # Path to the keytab file. It is used when auth_type is set to keytab.
  #kerberos.keytab: /etc/security/keytabs/kafka.keytab

  # Path to the Kerberos configuration.
  #kerberos.config_path: /etc/krb5.conf

  # The service name. Service principal name is contructed from
  # service_name/hostname@realm.
  #kerberos.service_name: kafka

  # Name of the Kerberos user.
  #kerberos.username: elastic

  # Password of the Kerberos user. It is used when auth_type is set to password.
  #kerberos.password: changeme

  # Kerberos realm.
  #kerberos.realm: ELASTIC

  # Enables Kerberos FAST authentication. This may
  # conflict with certain Active Directory configurations.
  #kerberos.enable_krb5_fast: false

# -------------------------------- Redis Output --------------------------------
#output.redis:
  # Boolean flag to enable or disable the output module.
  #enabled: true

  # Configure JSON encoding
  #codec.json:
    # Pretty print json event
    #pretty: false

    # Configure escaping HTML symbols in strings.
    #escape_html: false

  # The list of Redis servers to connect to. If load-balancing is enabled, the
  # events are distributed to the servers in the list. If one server becomes
  # unreachable, the events are distributed to the reachable servers only.
  # The hosts setting supports redis and rediss urls with custom password like
  # redis://:password@localhost:6379.
  #hosts: ["localhost:6379"]

  # The name of the Redis list or channel the events are published to. The
  # default is packetbeat.
  #key: packetbeat

  # The password to authenticate to Redis with. The default is no authentication.
  #password:

  # The Redis database number where the events are published. The default is 0.
  #db: 0

  # The Redis data type to use for publishing events. If the data type is list,
  # the Redis RPUSH command is used. If the data type is channel, the Redis
  # PUBLISH command is used. The default value is list.
  #datatype: list

  # The number of workers to use for each host configured to publish events to
  # Redis. Use this setting along with the loadbalance option. For example, if
  # you have 2 hosts and 3 workers, in total 6 workers are started (3 for each
  # host).
  #worker: 1

  # If set to true and multiple hosts or workers are configured, the output
  # plugin load balances published events onto all Redis hosts. If set to false,
  # the output plugin sends all events to only one host (determined at random)
  # and will switch to another host if the currently selected one becomes
  # unreachable. The default value is true.
  #loadbalance: true

  # The Redis connection timeout in seconds. The default is 5 seconds.
  #timeout: 5s

  # The number of times to retry publishing an event after a publishing failure.
  # After the specified number of retries, the events are typically dropped.
  # Some Beats, such as Filebeat, ignore the max_retries setting and retry until
  # all events are published. Set max_retries to a value less than 0 to retry
  # until all events are published. The default is 3.
  #max_retries: 3

  # The number of seconds to wait before trying to reconnect to Redis
  # after a network error. After waiting backoff.init seconds, the Beat
  # tries to reconnect. If the attempt fails, the backoff timer is increased
  # exponentially up to backoff.max. After a successful connection, the backoff
  # timer is reset. The default is 1s.
  #backoff.init: 1s

  # The maximum number of seconds to wait before attempting to connect to
  # Redis after a network error. The default is 60s.
  #backoff.max: 60s

  # The maximum number of events to bulk in a single Redis request or pipeline.
  # The default is 2048.
  #bulk_max_size: 2048

  # The URL of the SOCKS5 proxy to use when connecting to the Redis servers. The
  # value must be a URL with a scheme of socks5://.
  #proxy_url:

  # This option determines whether Redis hostnames are resolved locally when
  # using a proxy. The default value is false, which means that name resolution
  # occurs on the proxy server.
  #proxy_use_local_resolver: false

  # Use SSL settings for HTTPS.
  #ssl.enabled: true

  # Controls the verification of certificates. Valid values are:
  # * full, which verifies that the provided certificate is signed by a trusted
  # authority (CA) and also verifies that the server's hostname (or IP address)
  # matches the names identified within the certificate.
  # * strict, which verifies that the provided certificate is signed by a trusted
  # authority (CA) and also verifies that the server's hostname (or IP address)
  # matches the names identified within the certificate. If the Subject Alternative
  # Name is empty, it returns an error.
  # * certificate, which verifies that the provided certificate is signed by a
  # trusted authority (CA), but does not perform any hostname verification.
  #  * none, which performs no verification of the server's certificate. This
  # mode disables many of the security benefits of SSL/TLS and should only be used
  # after very careful consideration. It is primarily intended as a temporary
  # diagnostic mechanism when attempting to resolve TLS errors; its use in
  # production environments is strongly discouraged.
  # The default value is full.
  #ssl.verification_mode: full

  # List of supported/valid TLS versions. By default all TLS versions from 1.1
  # up to 1.3 are enabled.
  #ssl.supported_protocols: [TLSv1.1, TLSv1.2, TLSv1.3]

  # List of root certificates for HTTPS server verifications
  #ssl.certificate_authorities: ["/etc/pki/root/ca.pem"]

  # Certificate for SSL client authentication
  #ssl.certificate: "/etc/pki/client/cert.pem"

  # Client certificate key
  #ssl.key: "/etc/pki/client/cert.key"

  # Optional passphrase for decrypting the certificate key.
  #ssl.key_passphrase: ''

  # Configure cipher suites to be used for SSL connections
  #ssl.cipher_suites: []

  # Configure curve types for ECDHE-based cipher suites
  #ssl.curve_types: []

  # Configure what types of renegotiation are supported. Valid options are
  # never, once, and freely. Default is never.
  #ssl.renegotiation: never

  # Configure a pin that can be used to do extra validation of the verified certificate chain,
  # this allow you to ensure that a specific certificate is used to validate the chain of trust.
  #
  # The pin is a base64 encoded string of the SHA-256 fingerprint.
  #ssl.ca_sha256: ""

  # A root CA HEX encoded fingerprint. During the SSL handshake if the
  # fingerprint matches the root CA certificate, it will be added to
  # the provided list of root CAs (`certificate_authorities`), if the
  # list is empty or not defined, the matching certificate will be the
  # only one in the list. Then the normal SSL validation happens.
  #ssl.ca_trusted_fingerprint: ""


# -------------------------------- File Output ---------------------------------
#output.file:
  # Boolean flag to enable or disable the output module.
  #enabled: true

  # Configure JSON encoding
  #codec.json:
    # Pretty-print JSON event
    #pretty: false

    # Configure escaping HTML symbols in strings.
    #escape_html: false

  # Path to the directory where to save the generated files. The option is
  # mandatory.
  #path: "/tmp/packetbeat"

  # Name of the generated files. The default is `packetbeat` and it generates
  # files: `packetbeat-{datetime}.ndjson`, `packetbeat-{datetime}-1.ndjson`, etc.
  #filename: packetbeat

  # Maximum size in kilobytes of each file. When this size is reached, and on
  # every Packetbeat restart, the files are rotated. The default value is 10240
  # kB.
  #rotate_every_kb: 10000

  # Maximum number of files under path. When this number of files is reached,
  # the oldest file is deleted and the rest are shifted from last to first. The
  # default is 7 files.
  #number_of_files: 7

  # Permissions to use for file creation. The default is 0600.
  #permissions: 0600

  # Configure automatic file rotation on every startup. The default is true.
  #rotate_on_startup: true

# ------------------------------- Console Output -------------------------------
#output.console:
  # Boolean flag to enable or disable the output module.
  #enabled: true

  # Configure JSON encoding
  #codec.json:
    # Pretty-print JSON event
    #pretty: false

    # Configure escaping HTML symbols in strings.
    #escape_html: false

# =================================== Paths ====================================

# The home path for the Packetbeat installation. This is the default base path
# for all other path settings and for miscellaneous files that come with the
# distribution (for example, the sample dashboards).
# If not set by a CLI flag or in the configuration file, the default for the
# home path is the location of the binary.
#path.home:

# The configuration path for the Packetbeat installation. This is the default
# base path for configuration files, including the main YAML configuration file
# and the Elasticsearch template file. If not set by a CLI flag or in the
# configuration file, the default for the configuration path is the home path.
#path.config: ${path.home}

# The data path for the Packetbeat installation. This is the default base path
# for all the files in which Packetbeat needs to store its data. If not set by a
# CLI flag or in the configuration file, the default for the data path is a data
# subdirectory inside the home path.
#path.data: ${path.home}/data

# The logs path for a Packetbeat installation. This is the default location for
# the Beat's log files. If not set by a CLI flag or in the configuration file,
# the default for the logs path is a logs subdirectory inside the home path.
#path.logs: ${path.home}/logs

# ================================== Keystore ==================================

# Location of the Keystore containing the keys and their sensitive values.
#keystore.path: "${path.config}/beats.keystore"

# ================================= Dashboards =================================

# These settings control loading the sample dashboards to the Kibana index. Loading
# the dashboards are disabled by default and can be enabled either by setting the
# options here or by using the `-setup` CLI flag or the `setup` command.
#setup.dashboards.enabled: false

# The directory from where to read the dashboards. The default is the `kibana`
# folder in the home path.
#setup.dashboards.directory: ${path.home}/kibana

# The URL from where to download the dashboard archive. It is used instead of
# the directory if it has a value.
#setup.dashboards.url:

# The file archive (zip file) from where to read the dashboards. It is used instead
# of the directory when it has a value.
#setup.dashboards.file:

# In case the archive contains the dashboards from multiple Beats, this lets you
# select which one to load. You can load all the dashboards in the archive by
# setting this to the empty string.
#setup.dashboards.beat: packetbeat

# The name of the Kibana index to use for setting the configuration. Default is ".kibana"
#setup.dashboards.kibana_index: .kibana

# The Elasticsearch index name. This overwrites the index name defined in the
# dashboards and index pattern. Example: testbeat-*
#setup.dashboards.index:

# Always use the Kibana API for loading the dashboards instead of autodetecting
# how to install the dashboards by first querying Elasticsearch.
#setup.dashboards.always_kibana: false

# If true and Kibana is not reachable at the time when dashboards are loaded,
# it will retry to reconnect to Kibana instead of exiting with an error.
#setup.dashboards.retry.enabled: false

# Duration interval between Kibana connection retries.
#setup.dashboards.retry.interval: 1s

# Maximum number of retries before exiting with an error, 0 for unlimited retrying.
#setup.dashboards.retry.maximum: 0

# ================================== Template ==================================

# A template is used to set the mapping in Elasticsearch
# By default template loading is enabled and the template is loaded.
# These settings can be adjusted to load your own template or overwrite existing ones.

# Set to false to disable template loading.
#setup.template.enabled: true

# Template name. By default the template name is "packetbeat-%{[agent.version]}"
# The template name and pattern has to be set in case the Elasticsearch index pattern is modified.
#setup.template.name: "packetbeat-%{[agent.version]}"

# Template pattern. By default the template pattern is "packetbeat-%{[agent.version]}" to apply to the default index settings.
# The template name and pattern has to be set in case the Elasticsearch index pattern is modified.
#setup.template.pattern: "packetbeat-%{[agent.version]}"

# Path to fields.yml file to generate the template
#setup.template.fields: "${path.config}/fields.yml"

# A list of fields to be added to the template and Kibana index pattern. Also
# specify setup.template.overwrite: true to overwrite the existing template.
#setup.template.append_fields:
#- name: field_name
#  type: field_type

# Enable JSON template loading. If this is enabled, the fields.yml is ignored.
#setup.template.json.enabled: false

# Path to the JSON template file
#setup.template.json.path: "${path.config}/template.json"

# Name under which the template is stored in Elasticsearch
#setup.template.json.name: ""

# Set this option if the JSON template is a data stream.
#setup.template.json.data_stream: false

# Overwrite existing template
# Do not enable this option for more than one instance of packetbeat as it might
# overload your Elasticsearch with too many update requests.
#setup.template.overwrite: false

# Elasticsearch template settings
setup.template.settings:

  # A dictionary of settings to place into the settings.index dictionary
  # of the Elasticsearch template. For more details, please check
  # https://elastic.ac.cn/guide/en/elasticsearch/reference/current/mapping.html
  #index:
    #number_of_shards: 1
    #codec: best_compression

  # A dictionary of settings for the _source field. For more details, please check
  # https://elastic.ac.cn/guide/en/elasticsearch/reference/current/mapping-source-field.html
  #_source:
    #enabled: false

# ====================== Index Lifecycle Management (ILM) ======================

# Configure index lifecycle management (ILM) to manage the backing indices
# of your data streams.

# Enable ILM support. Valid values are true, or false.
#setup.ilm.enabled: true

# Set the lifecycle policy name. The default policy name is
# 'beatname'.
#setup.ilm.policy_name: "mypolicy"

# The path to a JSON file that contains a lifecycle policy configuration. Used
# to load your own lifecycle policy.
#setup.ilm.policy_file:

# Disable the check for an existing lifecycle policy. The default is true.
# If you set this option to false, lifecycle policy will not be installed,
# even if setup.ilm.overwrite is set to true.
#setup.ilm.check_exists: true

# Overwrite the lifecycle policy at startup. The default is false.
#setup.ilm.overwrite: false

# ======================== Data Stream Lifecycle (DSL) =========================

# Configure Data Stream Lifecycle to manage data streams while connected to Serverless elasticsearch.
# These settings are mutually exclusive with ILM settings which are not supported in Serverless projects.

# Enable DSL support. Valid values are true, or false.
#setup.dsl.enabled: true

# Set the lifecycle policy name or pattern. For DSL, this name must match the data stream that the lifecycle is for.
# The default data stream pattern is packetbeat-%{[agent.version]}"
# The template string `%{[agent.version]}` will resolve to the current stack version.
# The other possible template value is `%{[beat.name]}`.
#setup.dsl.data_stream_pattern: "packetbeat-%{[agent.version]}"

# The path to a JSON file that contains a lifecycle policy configuration. Used
# to load your own lifecycle policy.
# If no custom policy is specified, a default policy with a lifetime of 7 days will be created.
#setup.dsl.policy_file:

# Disable the check for an existing lifecycle policy. The default is true. If
# you disable this check, set setup.dsl.overwrite: true so the lifecycle policy
# can be installed.
#setup.dsl.check_exists: true

# Overwrite the lifecycle policy at startup. The default is false.
#setup.dsl.overwrite: false

# =================================== Kibana ===================================

# Starting with Beats version 6.0.0, the dashboards are loaded via the Kibana API.
# This requires a Kibana endpoint configuration.
setup.kibana:

  # Kibana Host
  # Scheme and port can be left out and will be set to the default (http and 5601)
  # In case you specify and additional path, the scheme is required: https://127.0.0.1:5601/path
  # IPv6 addresses should always be defined as: https://[2001:db8::1]:5601
  #host: "localhost:5601"

  # Optional protocol and basic auth credentials.
  #protocol: "https"
  #username: "elastic"
  #password: "changeme"

  # Optional HTTP path
  #path: ""

  # Optional Kibana space ID.
  #space.id: ""

  # Custom HTTP headers to add to each request
  #headers:
  #  X-My-Header: Contents of the header

  # Use SSL settings for HTTPS.
  #ssl.enabled: true

  # Controls the verification of certificates. Valid values are:
  # * full, which verifies that the provided certificate is signed by a trusted
  # authority (CA) and also verifies that the server's hostname (or IP address)
  # matches the names identified within the certificate.
  # * strict, which verifies that the provided certificate is signed by a trusted
  # authority (CA) and also verifies that the server's hostname (or IP address)
  # matches the names identified within the certificate. If the Subject Alternative
  # Name is empty, it returns an error.
  # * certificate, which verifies that the provided certificate is signed by a
  # trusted authority (CA), but does not perform any hostname verification.
  #  * none, which performs no verification of the server's certificate. This
  # mode disables many of the security benefits of SSL/TLS and should only be used
  # after very careful consideration. It is primarily intended as a temporary
  # diagnostic mechanism when attempting to resolve TLS errors; its use in
  # production environments is strongly discouraged.
  # The default value is full.
  #ssl.verification_mode: full

  # List of supported/valid TLS versions. By default all TLS versions from 1.1
  # up to 1.3 are enabled.
  #ssl.supported_protocols: [TLSv1.1, TLSv1.2, TLSv1.3]

  # List of root certificates for HTTPS server verifications
  #ssl.certificate_authorities: ["/etc/pki/root/ca.pem"]

  # Certificate for SSL client authentication
  #ssl.certificate: "/etc/pki/client/cert.pem"

  # Client certificate key
  #ssl.key: "/etc/pki/client/cert.key"

  # Optional passphrase for decrypting the certificate key.
  #ssl.key_passphrase: ''

  # Configure cipher suites to be used for SSL connections
  #ssl.cipher_suites: []

  # Configure curve types for ECDHE-based cipher suites
  #ssl.curve_types: []

  # Configure what types of renegotiation are supported. Valid options are
  # never, once, and freely. Default is never.
  #ssl.renegotiation: never

  # Configure a pin that can be used to do extra validation of the verified certificate chain,
  # this allow you to ensure that a specific certificate is used to validate the chain of trust.
  #
  # The pin is a base64 encoded string of the SHA-256 fingerprint.
  #ssl.ca_sha256: ""

  # A root CA HEX encoded fingerprint. During the SSL handshake if the
  # fingerprint matches the root CA certificate, it will be added to
  # the provided list of root CAs (`certificate_authorities`), if the
  # list is empty or not defined, the matching certificate will be the
  # only one in the list. Then the normal SSL validation happens.
  #ssl.ca_trusted_fingerprint: ""


# ================================== Logging ===================================

# There are four options for the log output: file, stderr, syslog, eventlog
# The file output is the default.

# Sets log level. The default log level is info.
# Available log levels are: error, warning, info, debug
#logging.level: info

# Enable debug output for selected components. To enable all selectors use ["*"]
# Other available selectors are "beat", "publisher", "service"
# Multiple selectors can be chained.
#logging.selectors: [ ]

# Send all logging output to stderr. The default is false.
#logging.to_stderr: false

# Send all logging output to syslog. The default is false.
#logging.to_syslog: false

# Send all logging output to Windows Event Logs. The default is false.
#logging.to_eventlog: false

# If enabled, Packetbeat periodically logs its internal metrics that have changed
# in the last period. For each metric that changed, the delta from the value at
# the beginning of the period is logged. Also, the total values for
# all non-zero internal metrics are logged on shutdown. The default is true.
#logging.metrics.enabled: true

# The period after which to log the internal metrics. The default is 30s.
#logging.metrics.period: 30s

# A list of metrics namespaces to report in the logs. Defaults to [stats].
# `stats` contains general Beat metrics. `dataset` may be present in some
# Beats and contains module or input metrics.
#logging.metrics.namespaces: [stats]

# Logging to rotating files. Set logging.to_files to false to disable logging to
# files.
logging.to_files: true
logging.files:
  # Configure the path where the logs are written. The default is the logs directory
  # under the home path (the binary location).
  #path: /var/log/packetbeat

  # The name of the files where the logs are written to.
  #name: packetbeat

  # Configure log file size limit. If the limit is reached, log file will be
  # automatically rotated.
  #rotateeverybytes: 10485760 # = 10MB

  # Number of rotated log files to keep. The oldest files will be deleted first.
  #keepfiles: 7

  # The permissions mask to apply when rotating log files. The default value is 0600.
  # Must be a valid Unix-style file permissions mask expressed in octal notation.
  #permissions: 0600

  # Enable log file rotation on time intervals in addition to the size-based rotation.
  # Intervals must be at least 1s. Values of 1m, 1h, 24h, 7*24h, 30*24h, and 365*24h
  # are boundary-aligned with minutes, hours, days, weeks, months, and years as
  # reported by the local system clock. All other intervals are calculated from the
  # Unix epoch. Defaults to disabled.
  #interval: 0

  # Rotate existing logs on startup rather than appending them to the existing
  # file. Defaults to true.
  # rotateonstartup: true

#=============================== Events Logging ===============================
# Some outputs will log raw events on errors like indexing errors in the
# Elasticsearch output, to prevent logging raw events (that may contain
# sensitive information) together with other log messages, a different
# log file, only for log entries containing raw events, is used. It will
# use the same level, selectors and all other configurations from the
# default logger, but it will have it's own file configuration.
#
# Having a different log file for raw events also prevents event data
# from drowning out the regular log files.
#
# IMPORTANT: No matter the default logger output configuration, raw events
# will **always** be logged to a file configured by `logging.event_data.files`.

# logging.event_data:
# Logging to rotating files. Set logging.to_files to false to disable logging to
# files.
#logging.event_data.to_files: true
#logging.event_data:
  # Configure the path where the logs are written. The default is the logs directory
  # under the home path (the binary location).
  #path: /var/log/packetbeat

  # The name of the files where the logs are written to.
  #name: packetbeat-events-data

  # Configure log file size limit. If the limit is reached, log file will be
  # automatically rotated.
  #rotateeverybytes: 5242880 # = 5MB

  # Number of rotated log files to keep. The oldest files will be deleted first.
  #keepfiles: 2

  # The permissions mask to apply when rotating log files. The default value is 0600.
  # Must be a valid Unix-style file permissions mask expressed in octal notation.
  #permissions: 0600

  # Enable log file rotation on time intervals in addition to the size-based rotation.
  # Intervals must be at least 1s. Values of 1m, 1h, 24h, 7*24h, 30*24h, and 365*24h
  # are boundary-aligned with minutes, hours, days, weeks, months, and years as
  # reported by the local system clock. All other intervals are calculated from the
  # Unix epoch. Defaults to disabled.
  #interval: 0

  # Rotate existing logs on startup rather than appending them to the existing
  # file. Defaults to false.
  # rotateonstartup: false

# ============================= X-Pack Monitoring ==============================
# Packetbeat can export internal metrics to a central Elasticsearch monitoring
# cluster.  This requires xpack monitoring to be enabled in Elasticsearch.  The
# reporting is disabled by default.

# Set to true to enable the monitoring reporter.
#monitoring.enabled: false

# Sets the UUID of the Elasticsearch cluster under which monitoring data for this
# Packetbeat instance will appear in the Stack Monitoring UI. If output.elasticsearch
# is enabled, the UUID is derived from the Elasticsearch cluster referenced by output.elasticsearch.
#monitoring.cluster_uuid:

# Uncomment to send the metrics to Elasticsearch. Most settings from the
# Elasticsearch output are accepted here as well.
# Note that the settings should point to your Elasticsearch *monitoring* cluster.
# Any setting that is not set is automatically inherited from the Elasticsearch
# output configuration, so if you have the Elasticsearch output configured such
# that it is pointing to your Elasticsearch monitoring cluster, you can simply
# uncomment the following line.
#monitoring.elasticsearch:

  # Array of hosts to connect to.
  # Scheme and port can be left out and will be set to the default (http and 9200)
  # In case you specify an additional path, the scheme is required: https://127.0.0.1:9200/path
  # IPv6 addresses should always be defined as: https://[2001:db8::1]:9200
  #hosts: ["localhost:9200"]

  # Set gzip compression level.
  #compression_level: 0

  # Protocol - either `http` (default) or `https`.
  #protocol: "https"

  # Authentication credentials - either API key or username/password.
  #api_key: "id:api_key"
  #username: "beats_system"
  #password: "changeme"

  # Dictionary of HTTP parameters to pass within the URL with index operations.
  #parameters:
    #param1: value1
    #param2: value2

  # Custom HTTP headers to add to each request
  #headers:
  #  X-My-Header: Contents of the header

  # Proxy server url
  #proxy_url: http://proxy:3128

  # The number of times a particular Elasticsearch index operation is attempted. If
  # the indexing operation doesn't succeed after this many retries, the events are
  # dropped. The default is 3.
  #max_retries: 3

  # The maximum number of events to bulk in a single Elasticsearch bulk API index request.
  # The default is 50.
  #bulk_max_size: 50

  # The number of seconds to wait before trying to reconnect to Elasticsearch
  # after a network error. After waiting backoff.init seconds, the Beat
  # tries to reconnect. If the attempt fails, the backoff timer is increased
  # exponentially up to backoff.max. After a successful connection, the backoff
  # timer is reset. The default is 1s.
  #backoff.init: 1s

  # The maximum number of seconds to wait before attempting to connect to
  # Elasticsearch after a network error. The default is 60s.
  #backoff.max: 60s

  # Configure HTTP request timeout before failing a request to Elasticsearch.
  #timeout: 90

  # Use SSL settings for HTTPS.
  #ssl.enabled: true

  # Controls the verification of certificates. Valid values are:
  # * full, which verifies that the provided certificate is signed by a trusted
  # authority (CA) and also verifies that the server's hostname (or IP address)
  # matches the names identified within the certificate.
  # * strict, which verifies that the provided certificate is signed by a trusted
  # authority (CA) and also verifies that the server's hostname (or IP address)
  # matches the names identified within the certificate. If the Subject Alternative
  # Name is empty, it returns an error.
  # * certificate, which verifies that the provided certificate is signed by a
  # trusted authority (CA), but does not perform any hostname verification.
  #  * none, which performs no verification of the server's certificate. This
  # mode disables many of the security benefits of SSL/TLS and should only be used
  # after very careful consideration. It is primarily intended as a temporary
  # diagnostic mechanism when attempting to resolve TLS errors; its use in
  # production environments is strongly discouraged.
  # The default value is full.
  #ssl.verification_mode: full

  # List of supported/valid TLS versions. By default all TLS versions from 1.1
  # up to 1.3 are enabled.
  #ssl.supported_protocols: [TLSv1.1, TLSv1.2, TLSv1.3]

  # List of root certificates for HTTPS server verifications
  #ssl.certificate_authorities: ["/etc/pki/root/ca.pem"]

  # Certificate for SSL client authentication
  #ssl.certificate: "/etc/pki/client/cert.pem"

  # Client certificate key
  #ssl.key: "/etc/pki/client/cert.key"

  # Optional passphrase for decrypting the certificate key.
  #ssl.key_passphrase: ''

  # Configure cipher suites to be used for SSL connections
  #ssl.cipher_suites: []

  # Configure curve types for ECDHE-based cipher suites
  #ssl.curve_types: []

  # Configure what types of renegotiation are supported. Valid options are
  # never, once, and freely. Default is never.
  #ssl.renegotiation: never

  # Configure a pin that can be used to do extra validation of the verified certificate chain,
  # this allow you to ensure that a specific certificate is used to validate the chain of trust.
  #
  # The pin is a base64 encoded string of the SHA-256 fingerprint.
  #ssl.ca_sha256: ""

  # A root CA HEX encoded fingerprint. During the SSL handshake if the
  # fingerprint matches the root CA certificate, it will be added to
  # the provided list of root CAs (`certificate_authorities`), if the
  # list is empty or not defined, the matching certificate will be the
  # only one in the list. Then the normal SSL validation happens.
  #ssl.ca_trusted_fingerprint: ""

  # Enable Kerberos support. Kerberos is automatically enabled if any Kerberos setting is set.
  #kerberos.enabled: true

  # Authentication type to use with Kerberos. Available options: keytab, password.
  #kerberos.auth_type: password

  # Path to the keytab file. It is used when auth_type is set to keytab.
  #kerberos.keytab: /etc/elastic.keytab

  # Path to the Kerberos configuration.
  #kerberos.config_path: /etc/krb5.conf

  # Name of the Kerberos user.
  #kerberos.username: elastic

  # Password of the Kerberos user. It is used when auth_type is set to password.
  #kerberos.password: changeme

  # Kerberos realm.
  #kerberos.realm: ELASTIC

  #metrics.period: 10s
  #state.period: 1m

# The `monitoring.cloud.id` setting overwrites the `monitoring.elasticsearch.hosts`
# setting. You can find the value for this setting in the Elastic Cloud web UI.
#monitoring.cloud.id:

# The `monitoring.cloud.auth` setting overwrites the `monitoring.elasticsearch.username`
# and `monitoring.elasticsearch.password` settings. The format is `<user>:<pass>`.
#monitoring.cloud.auth:

# =============================== HTTP Endpoint ================================

# Each beat can expose internal metrics through an HTTP endpoint. For security
# reasons the endpoint is disabled by default. This feature is currently experimental.
# Stats can be accessed through https://127.0.0.1:5066/stats. For pretty JSON output
# append ?pretty to the URL.

# Defines if the HTTP endpoint is enabled.
#http.enabled: false

# The HTTP endpoint will bind to this hostname, IP address, unix socket, or named pipe.
# When using IP addresses, it is recommended to only use localhost.
#http.host: localhost

# Port on which the HTTP endpoint will bind. Default is 5066.
#http.port: 5066

# Define which user should be owning the named pipe.
#http.named_pipe.user:

# Define which permissions should be applied to the named pipe, use the Security
# Descriptor Definition Language (SDDL) to define the permission. This option cannot be used with
# `http.user`.
#http.named_pipe.security_descriptor:

# Defines if the HTTP pprof endpoints are enabled.
# It is recommended that this is only enabled on localhost as these endpoints may leak data.
#http.pprof.enabled: false

# Controls the fraction of goroutine blocking events that are reported in the
# blocking profile.
#http.pprof.block_profile_rate: 0

# Controls the fraction of memory allocations that are recorded and reported in
# the memory profile.
#http.pprof.mem_profile_rate: 524288

# Controls the fraction of mutex contention events that are reported in the
# mutex profile.
#http.pprof.mutex_profile_rate: 0

# ============================== Process Security ==============================

# Enable or disable seccomp system call filtering on Linux. Default is enabled.
#seccomp.enabled: true

# ============================== Instrumentation ===============================

# Instrumentation support for the packetbeat.
#instrumentation:
    # Set to true to enable instrumentation of packetbeat.
    #enabled: false

    # Environment in which packetbeat is running on (eg: staging, production, etc.)
    #environment: ""

    # APM Server hosts to report instrumentation results to.
    #hosts:
    #  - https://127.0.0.1:8200

    # API Key for the APM Server(s).
    # If api_key is set then secret_token will be ignored.
    #api_key:

    # Secret token for the APM Server(s).
    #secret_token:

    # Enable profiling of the server, recording profile samples as events.
    #
    # This feature is experimental.
    #profiling:
        #cpu:
            # Set to true to enable CPU profiling.
            #enabled: false
            #interval: 60s
            #duration: 10s
        #heap:
            # Set to true to enable heap profiling.
            #enabled: false
            #interval: 60s

# ================================= Migration ==================================

# This allows to enable 6.7 migration aliases
#migration.6_to_7.enabled: false

# =============================== Feature Flags ================================

# Enable and configure feature flags.
#features:
#  fqdn:
#    enabled: true