Getting Started • Docs • Chat • @vectordotdev • Download v0.8.2
Vector is a lightweight, ultra-fast, open-source tool for building observability pipelines. Compared to Logstash and friends, Vector improves throughput by ~10X while significanly reducing CPU and memory usage.
- Reliability First. - Built in Rust, Vector's primary design goal is reliability.
- One Tool. All Data. - One simple tool gets your logs, metrics, and traces (coming soon) from A to B.
- Single Responsibility. - Vector is a data router, it does not plan to become a distributed processing framework.
- You SHOULD use Vector to replace Logstash, Fluent*, Telegraf, Beats, or similar tools.
- You SHOULD use Vector as a daemon or sidecar.
- You SHOULD use Vector as a Kafka consumer/producer for observability data.
- You SHOULD use Vector in resource constrained environments (such as devices).
- You SHOULD NOT use Vector if you need an advanced distributed stream processing framework.
- You SHOULD NOT use Vector to replace Kafka. Vector is designed to work with Kafka!
- You SHOULD NOT use Vector for non-observability data such as analytics data.
- Vector is downloaded over 100,000 times per day.
- Vector's largest user processes over 10TB daily.
- Vector is used by multiple fortune 500 companies with stringent production requirements.
- Vector has over 15 active contributors and growing.
- Installation - operating systems, package managers, platforms, from archives, from source
- Configuration
- Deployment - strategies, topologies
- Sources - docker, file, http, journald, kafka, socket, and 7 more...
- Transforms - filter, json_parser, kubernetes_pod_metadata, log_to_metric, logfmt_parser, lua, and 19 more...
- Sinks - aws_cloudwatch_logs, aws_s3, clickhouse, elasticsearch, gcp_cloud_storage, gcp_pubsub, and 25 more...
- Community - chat, @vectordotdev, mailing list
- Releases - v0.8.2 (latest)
- Roadmap - vote on new features
- Policies - Security, Privacy, Code of Conduct
The following performance tests demonstrate baseline performance between common protocols with the exception of the Regex Parsing test.
Test | Vector | Filebeat | FluentBit | FluentD | Logstash | SplunkUF | SplunkHF |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
TCP to Blackhole | 86mib/s | n/a | 64.4mib/s | 27.7mib/s | 40.6mib/s | n/a | n/a |
File to TCP | 76.7mib/s | 7.8mib/s | 35mib/s | 26.1mib/s | 3.1mib/s | 40.1mib/s | 39mib/s |
Regex Parsing | 13.2mib/s | n/a | 20.5mib/s | 2.6mib/s | 4.6mib/s | n/a | 7.8mib/s |
TCP to HTTP | 26.7mib/s | n/a | 19.6mib/s | <1mib/s | 2.7mib/s | n/a | n/a |
TCP to TCP | 69.9mib/s | 5mib/s | 67.1mib/s | 3.9mib/s | 10mib/s | 70.4mib/s | 7.6mib/s |
To learn more about our performance tests, please see the Vector test harness.
The following correctness tests are not exhaustive, but they demonstrate fundamental differences in quality and attention to detail:
Test | Vector | Filebeat | FluentBit | FluentD | Logstash | Splunk UF | Splunk HF |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Disk Buffer Persistence | ✅ | ✅ | ❌ | ❌ | ✅ | ✅ | |
File Rotate (create) | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
File Rotate (copytruncate) | ✅ | ❌ | ❌ | ❌ | ❌ | ✅ | ✅ |
File Truncation | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
Process (SIGHUP) | ✅ | ❌ | ❌ | ❌ | ✅ | ✅ | |
JSON (wrapped) | ✅ | ✅ | ❌ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ | ✅ |
To learn more about our correctness tests, please see the Vector test harness.
- All data types - Logs, metrics, and traces (coming soon).
- Customizable log schema - Change Vector's log schema to anything you like.
- Rich type system - Support for JSON primitive types and timestamps.
- Metrics interoperability - A sophisticated metrics data model ensures correct interoperability between systems.
- Metrics aggregation - Aggregated histgorams and summaries reduce volume without loss of precision.
- Pipelining - A directed acyclic graph processing model allows for flexible topologies.
- Control-flow - Transforms like the
swimlanes
transform allow for complex control-flow logic. - Dynamic partitioning - Create dynamic partitions on the fly with Vector's templating syntax.
- Programmable transforms - Lua, Javascript (coming soon), and WASM (coming soon) transforms.
- Rich parsing - Regex, Grok, and more allow for rich parsing.
- Context enrichment - Enrich data with environment context.
- Metrics derivation - Derive logs from metrics.
- Multi-line merging - Merge multi-line logs into one event, such as stacktraces.
- Hot reload - Reload configuration on the fly without disrupting data flow.
- Zero delay start - Starts and restarts without a delay.
- Multi-platform - Linux, MacOS, Windows, x86_64, ARM64, and ARMv7.
- CI friendly - Config linting, dry runs, and unit tests make Vector CI friendly.
- Configurable concurrency - All CPU cores (service) or just one (daemon) via the
--threads
flag. - Custom DNS - Custom DNS makes service discovery possible.
- Optional static binary - Optional MUSL static binaries mean zero required dependencies.
- TLS support - All relevant Vector components offer TLS options for secure communication.
- Memory safety - Vector is built in Rust and is memory safe, avoiding a large class of memory related errors.
- Decoupled buffer design - Buffers are per-sink; a bad sink won't bring the entire pipeline to a halt.
- Intelligent retries - A fibonacci backoff algorithsm with jitter makes Vector a good citizen during outages.
- Backpressure & load shedding - Buffers can be configured to provide backpressure or shed load.
- Rate-limited internal logging - Vector's internal logging is rate-limited avoiding IO saturation if errors occur.
- Sink healthchecks - Healthchecks provide startup safety and prevent deploys with bad configuration.
- Robust disk buffering - Vector uses
leveldb
for robust data durability across restarts.
- Clear Guarantees - A guarantee support matrix helps you make the appropriate tradeoffs with components.
- Config unit tests - Develop Vector config files like code. Avoid the frustrating dev style required by other tools.
- Config linting - Quickly lint Vector config files to spot errors and prevent bad configs in CI.
- Thoughtful docs - Quality documentation that respects your time and reduces communication overhead.
Run the following in your terminal, then follow the on-screen instructions.
curl --proto '=https' --tlsv1.2 -sSf https://sh.vector.dev | sh
Or use your own preferred method.
- Prometheus Source
- EC2 Metadata Enrichments
- Alpha Kubernetes Source
- Use Custom DNS Servers
- Unit Testing Your Vector Config Files
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