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HAProxy log analyzer

This Python package is a HAProxy log parser that allows you to analyze your HAProxy log files in multiple ways (see commands section below).

Note

Currently only the HTTP log format is supported.

Tests and coverage

No project is trustworthy if does not have tests and a decent coverage!

https://travis-ci.org/gforcada/haproxy_log_analysis.png?branch=master https://coveralls.io/repos/gforcada/haproxy_log_analysis/badge.png?branch=master

Documentation

See the documentation and API at ReadTheDocs.

Command-line interface

The current --help looks like this:

usage: haproxy_log_analysis [-h] [-l LOG] [-s START] [-d DELTA] [-c COMMAND]
                            [-f FILTER] [-n] [--list-commands]
                            [--list-filters]

Analyze HAProxy log files and outputs statistics about it

optional arguments:
  -h, --help            show this help message and exit
  -l LOG, --log LOG     HAProxy log file to analyze
  -s START, --start START
                        Process log entries starting at this time, in HAProxy
                        date format (e.g. 11/Dec/2013 or
                        11/Dec/2013:19:31:41). At least provide the
                        day/month/year. Values not specified will use their
                        base value (e.g. 00 for hour). Use in conjunction with
                        -d to limit the number of entries to process.
  -d DELTA, --delta DELTA
                        Limit the number of entries to process. Express the
                        time delta as a number and a time unit, e.g.: 1s, 10m,
                        3h or 4d (for 1 second, 10 minutes, 3 hours or 4
                        days). Use in conjunction with -s to only analyze
                        certain time delta. If no start time is given, the
                        time on the first line will be used instead.
  -c COMMAND, --command COMMAND
                        List of commands, comma separated, to run on the log
                        file. See -l to get a full list of them.
  -f FILTER, --filter FILTER
                        List of filters to apply on the log file. Passed as
                        comma separated and parameters within square brackets,
                        e.g ip[192.168.1.1],ssl,path[/some/path]. See --list-
                        filters to get a full list of them.
  -n, --negate-filter   Make filters passed with -f work the other way around,
                          i.e. ifthe ``ssl`` filter is passed instead of showing
                        only ssl requests it will show non-ssl traffic. If the
                        ``ip`` filter isused, then all but that ip passed to
                        the filter will be used.
  --list-commands       Lists all commands available.
  --list-filters        Lists all filters available.

Commands

Commands are small purpose specific programs in itself that report specific statistics about the log file being analyzed. See the --help (or the section above) to know how to run them.

counter
Reports how many log lines could be parsed.
counter_invalid
Reports how many log lines could not be parsed.
http_methods
Reports a breakdown of how many requests have been made per HTTP method (GET, POST...)
ip_counter
Reports a breakdown of how many requests have been made per IP. Note that for this to work you need to configure HAProxy to capture the header that has the ip on it (usually the X-Forwarded-For header). Something like: capture request header X-Forwarded-For len 20
top_ips
Reports the 10 IPs with most requests (and the amount of requests).
status_codes_counter
Reports a breakdown of how many requests per HTTP status code (404, 500, 200, 301..) are on the log file.
request_path_counter
Reports a breakdown of how many requests per path (/rss, /, /another/path).
top_request_paths
Reports the 10 paths with most requests.
slow_requests
Reports a list of requests that downstream servers took more than 1 second to response.
counter_slow_requests
Reports the amount of requests that downstream servers took more than 1 second to response.
average_response_time
Reports the average time (in milliseconds) servers spend to answer requests. .. note:: Aborted requests are not considered.
average_waiting_time
Reports the average time (in milliseconds) requests spend waiting on the various HAProxy queues.
server_load
Reports a breakdown of how many requests were processed by each downstream server. Note that currently it does not take into account the backend the server is configured on.
queue_peaks
Reports a list of queue peaks. A queue peak is defined by the biggest value on the backend queue on a series of log lines that are between log lines without being queued.
connection_type
Reports on how many requests were made on SSL and how many on plain HTTP. This command only works if the default port for SSL (443) appears on the path.
requests_per_minute
Reports on how many requests were made per minute. It works best when used with -s and -d command line arguments, as the output can be huge.
print
Prints the raw lines. This can be useful to trim down a file (with -s and -d for example) so that later runs are faster.

Filters

Filters, contrary to commands, are a way to reduce the amount of log lines to be processed.

Note

The -n command line argument allows to reverse filters output.

This helps when looking for specific traces, like a certain IP, a path...

ip
Filters log lines by the given IP.
ip_range
Filters log lines by the given IP range (all IPs that begin with the same prefix).
path
Filters log lines by the given string.
ssl
Filters log lines that are from SSL connections. See :method::.HaproxyLogLine.is_https for its limitations.
slow_requests
Filters log lines that take at least the given time to get answered (in milliseconds).
time_frame
This is an implicit filter that is used when --start, and optionally, --delta are used. Do not type this filter on the command line, use --start and --delta.
status_code
Filters log lines that match the given HTTP status code (i.e. 404, 200...).
status_code_family
Filters log lines that match the given HTTP status code family (i.e. 4 for all 4xx status codes, 5 for 5xx status codes...).
http_method
Filters log lines by the HTTP method used (GET, POST...).
backend
Filters log lines by the HAProxy backend the connection was handled with.
frontend
Filters log lines by the HAProxy frontend the connection arrived from.
server
Filters log lines by the downstream server that handled the connection.
response_size
Filters log lines by the response size (in bytes). Specially useful when looking for big file downloads.

Installation

After installation you will have a console script haproxy_log_analysis:

$ python setup.py install

TODO

  • add more commands: (help appreciated)
    • reports on servers connection time
    • reports on termination state
    • reports around connections (active, frontend, backend, server)
    • your ideas here
  • think of a way to show the commands output in a meaningful way
  • be able to specify an output format. For any command that makes sense (slow requests for example) output the given fields for each log line (i.e. acceptance date, path, downstream server, load at that time...)
  • your ideas

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