How to load CircleCI data into Elasticsearch via Logstash
Elasticsearch is a popular distributed full-text search engine. By centrally storing data, you can perform ultra-fast searches, fine-tuning relevance, and powerful analytics with ease. Elasticsearch has a pipeline tool for loading data called "Logstash". You can use CData JDBC Drivers to easily import data from any data source into Elasticsearch for search and analysis.
This article explains how to use the CData JDBC Driver for CircleCI to load data from CircleCI into Elasticsearch via Logstash.
Using CData JDBC Driver for CircleCI with Elasticsearch Logstash
- Install the CData JDBC Driver for CircleCI on the machine where Logstash is running.
-
The JDBC Driver will be installed at the following path (the year part, e.g. 20XX, will vary depending on the product version you are using). You will use this path later. Place this .jar file (and the .lic file if it's a licensed version) in Logstash.
C:\Program Files\CData\CData JDBC Driver for API 20XX\lib\cdata.jdbc.api.jar
- Next, install the JDBC Input Plugin, which connects Logstash to the CData JDBC driver. The JDBC Plugin comes by default with the latest version of Logstash, but depending on the version, you may need to add it.
https://www.elastic.co/guide/en/logstash/5.4/plugins-inputs-jdbc.html - Move the CData JDBC Driver’s .jar file and .lic file to Logstash's "/logstash-core/lib/jars/".
Sending CircleCI data to Elasticsearch with Logstash
Now, let's create a configuration file for Logstash to transfer CircleCI data to Elasticsearch.
- Write the process to retrieve CircleCI data in the logstash.conf file, which defines data processing in Logstash. The input will be JDBC, and the output will be Elasticsearch. The data loading job is set to run at 30-second intervals.
- Set the CData JDBC Driver's .jar file as the JDBC driver library, configure the class name, and set the connection properties to CircleCI in the form of a JDBC URL. The JDBC URL allows detailed configuration, so please refer to the product documentation for more specifics.
- AuthScheme: Set this to APIKey.
- APIKey: Set this to your CircleCI personal API token.
Using API Key Authentication
CircleCI uses personal API tokens to authenticate API requests. To generate a personal API token, log in to your CircleCI account, navigate to User Settings > Personal API Tokens, and click Create New Token. Copy the token value immediately as it is only shown once.
After setting the following connection properties, you are ready to connect:
Example connection string:
Profile=C:\profiles\CircleCI.apip;AuthScheme=APIKey;ProfileSettings='APIKey=your_personal_api_token';
Executing data movement with Logstash
Now let's run Logstash using the created "logstash.conf" file.
logstash-7.8.0\bin\logstash -f logstash.conf
A log indicating success will appear. This means the CircleCI data has been loaded into Elasticsearch.
For example, let's view the data transferred to Elasticsearch in Kibana.
GET api_table/_search
{
"query": {
"match_all": {}
}
}
We have confirmed that the data is stored in Elasticsearch.
By using the CData JDBC Driver for CircleCI with Logstash, it functions as a CircleCI connector, making it easy to load data into Elasticsearch. Please try the 30-day free trial.