This document provides details about the Ops Agent's default and custom configurations. Read this document if any of the following applies to you:
- You want to change the configuration of the Ops Agent to achieve the following goals: - Turn off the built-in logging or metrics ingestion. - To turn off logging ingestion, see Example logging - serviceconfigurations.
- To turn off host-metrics ingestion, see Example metrics - serviceconfigurations.
 
- Customize the file path of the log files that the agent collects logs from; see Logging receivers. 
- Customize the structured log format that the agent uses to process the log entries, by parsing the JSON or by using regular expressions; see Logging processors. 
- Change the sampling rate for metrics; see Metrics receivers. 
- Customize which group or groups of metrics to enable. The agent collects all system metrics, like - cpuand- memory, by default; see Metrics processors.
- Customize how the agent rotates logs; see Log-rotation configuration. 
- Collect metrics and logs from supported third-party applications. See Monitor third-party applications for the list of supported applications. 
- Use the Prometheus receiver to collect custom metrics. 
- Use the OpenTelemetry Protocol (OTLP) receiver to collect custom metrics and traces. 
 
- You're interested in learning the technical details of the Ops Agent's configuration. 
Configuration model
The Ops Agent uses a built-in default configuration; you can't directly modify this built-in configuration. Instead, you create a file of overrides that are merged with the built-in configuration when the agent restarts.
The building blocks of the configuration are as follows:
- receivers: This element describes what is collected by the agent.
- processors: This element describes how the agent can modify the collected information.
- service: This element links receivers and processors together to create data flows, called pipelines. The- serviceelement contains a- pipelineselement, which can contain multiple pipelines.
The built-in configuration is made up of these elements, and you use the same elements to override that built-in configuration.
Built-in configuration
The built-in configuration for the Ops Agent defines the default collection for logs and metrics. The following shows the built-in configuration for Linux and for Windows:
Linux
By default, the Ops Agent collects file-based syslog logs and host metrics.
For more information about the metrics collected, see Metrics ingested by the receivers.
Windows
By default, the Ops Agent collects Windows event logs from System, Application, and Security channels, as well as host metrics, IIS metrics, and SQL Server metrics.
For more information about the metrics collected, see Metrics ingested by the receivers.
These configurations are discussed in more detail in Logging configuration and Metrics configuration.
User-specified configuration
To override the built-in configuration, you add new configuration elements to the user configuration file. Put your configuration for the Ops Agent in the following files:
- For Linux: /etc/google-cloud-ops-agent/config.yaml
- For Windows: C:\Program Files\Google\Cloud Operations\Ops Agent\config\config.yaml
Any user-specified configuration is merged with the built-in configuration when the agent restarts.
To override a built-in receiver, processor, or pipeline, redefine it in your config.yaml file by declaring it with the same identifier. Starting with Ops Agent version 2.31.0, you can also configure the agent's log-rotation feature; for more information, see Configure log rotation in the Ops Agent.
For example, the built-in configuration for metrics includes a hostmetrics receiver that specifies a 60-second collection interval. To change the collection interval for host metrics to 30 seconds, include a metrics receiver called hostmetrics in your config.yaml file that sets the collection_interval value to 30 seconds, as shown in the following example:
metrics:  receivers:  hostmetrics:  type: hostmetrics  collection_interval: 30s For other examples of changing the built-in configurations, see Logging configuration and Metrics configuration. You can also turn off the collection of logging or metric data. These changes are described in the example logging service configurations and metrics service configurations.
You can use this file to prevent the agent from collecting self logs and sending those logs to Cloud Logging. For more information, see Collection of self logs.
You also configure the agent's log-rotation feature by using this file; for more information, see Configure log rotation in the Ops Agent.
You can't configure the Ops Agent to export logs or metrics to services other than Cloud Logging and Cloud Monitoring.
Logging configurations
The logging configuration uses the configuration model described previously:
- receivers: This element describes the data to collect from log files; this data is mapped into a <timestamp, record> model.
- processors: This optional element describes how the agent can modify the collected information.
- service: This element links receivers and processors together to create data flows, called pipelines. The- serviceelement contains a- pipelineselement, which can include multiple pipeline definitions.
Each receiver and each processor can be used in multiple pipelines.
The following sections describe each of these elements.
The Ops Agent sends logs to Cloud Logging. You can't configure it to export logs to other services. You can, however, configure Cloud Logging to export logs; for more information, see Route logs to supported destinations.
Logging receivers
The receivers element contains a set of receivers, each identified by a RECEIVER_ID. A receiver describes how to retrieve the logs; for example, by tailing files, by using a TCP port, or from the Windows Event Log.
Structure of logging receivers
Each receiver must have an identifier, RECEIVER_ID, and include a type element. The valid types are:
- files: Collect logs by tailing files on disk.
- fluent_forward(Ops Agent versions 2.12.0 and later): Collect logs sent via the Fluent Forward protocol over TCP.
- tcp(Ops Agent versions 2.3.0 and later): Collect logs in JSON format by listening to a TCP port.
- Linux only: - syslog: Collect Syslog messages over TCP or UDP.
- systemd_journald(Ops Agent versions 2.4.0 and later): Collect systemd journal logs from the systemd-journald service.
 
- Windows only: - windows_event_log: Collect Windows Event Logs using the Windows Event Log API.
 
- Third-party application log receivers
The receivers structure looks like the following:
receivers: RECEIVER_ID: type: files ... RECEIVER_ID_2: type: syslog ...
Depending on the value of the type element, there might be other configuration options, as follows:
- filesreceivers:- include_paths: Required. A list of filesystem paths to read by tailing each file. A wildcard (- *) can be used in the paths; for example,- /var/log/*.log(Linux) or- C:\logs\*.log(Windows).- For a list of common Linux application log files, see Common Linux log files. 
- exclude_paths: Optional. A list of filesystem path patterns to exclude from the set matched by- include_paths.
- record_log_file_path: Optional. If set to- true, then the path to the specific file from which the log record was obtained appears in the output log entry as the value of the- agent.googleapis.com/log_file_pathlabel. When using a wildcard, only the path of the file from which the record was obtained is recorded.
- wildcard_refresh_interval: Optional. The interval at which wildcard file paths in- include_pathsare refreshed. Given as a time duration, for example,- 30s,- 2m. This property might be useful under high logging throughputs where log files are rotated faster than the default interval. If not specified, the default interval is 60 seconds.
 
- fluent_forwardreceivers:- listen_host: Optional. An IP address to listen on. The default value is- 127.0.0.1.
- listen_port: Optional. A port to listen on. The default value is- 24224.
 
- syslogreceivers (for Linux only):- transport_protocol: Supported values:- tcp,- udp.
- listen_host: An IP address to listen on.
- listen_port: A port to listen on.
 
- tcpreceivers:- format: Required. Log format. Supported value:- json.
- listen_host: Optional. An IP address to listen on. The default value is- 127.0.0.1.
- listen_port: Optional. A port to listen on. The default value is- 5170.
 
- windows_event_logreceivers (for Windows only):- channels: Required. A list of Windows Event Log channels from which to read logs.
- receiver_version: Optional. Controls which Windows Event Log API to use. Supported values are- 1and- 2. The default value is- 1.
- render_as_xml: Optional. If set to- true, then all Event Log fields, except for- jsonPayload.Messageand- jsonPayload.StringInserts, are rendered as an XML document in a string field named- jsonPayload.raw_xml. The default value is- false. This cannot be set to- truewhen- receiver_versionis- 1.
 
Examples of logging receivers
Sample files receiver:
receivers:  RECEIVER_ID:  type: files  include_paths: [/var/log/*.log]  exclude_paths: [/var/log/not-this-one.log]  record_log_file_path: true Sample fluent_forward receiver:
receivers:  RECEIVER_ID:  type: fluent_forward  listen_host: 127.0.0.1  listen_port: 24224 Sample syslog receiver (Linux only):
receivers:  RECEIVER_ID:  type: syslog  transport_protocol: tcp  listen_host: 0.0.0.0  listen_port: 5140 Sample tcp receiver:
receivers:  RECEIVER_ID:  type: tcp  format: json  listen_host: 127.0.0.1  listen_port: 5170 Sample windows_event_log receiver (Windows only):
receivers:  RECEIVER_ID:  type: windows_event_log  channels: [System,Application,Security] Sample windows_event_log receiver that overrides the built-in receiver to use version 2:
receivers:  windows_event_log:  type: windows_event_log  channels: [System,Application,Security]  receiver_version: 2 Sample systemd_journald receiver:
receivers:  RECEIVER_ID:  type: systemd_journald Special fields in structured payloads
For processors and receivers that can ingest structured data (the fluent_forward and tcp receivers and the parse_json processor), you can set special fields in the input that will map to specific fields in the LogEntry object that the agent writes to the Logging API.
When the Ops Agent receives external structured log data, it places top-level fields into the LogEntry's jsonPayload field unless the field name is listed in the following table:
| Record field | LogEntry field | 
|---|---|
| Option 1 
 Option 2 
  | timestamp | 
| receiver_id (not a record field) | logName | 
| logging.googleapis.com/httpRequest(HttpRequest) | httpRequest | 
| logging.googleapis.com/severity(string) | severity | 
| logging.googleapis.com/labels(struct of string:string) | labels | 
| logging.googleapis.com/operation(struct) | operation | 
| logging.googleapis.com/sourceLocation(struct) | sourceLocation | 
| logging.googleapis.com/trace(string) | trace | 
| logging.googleapis.com/spanId(string) | spanId | 
Any remaining structured record fields remain part of the jsonPayload structure.
Common Linux log files
The following table lists common log files for frequently used Linux applications:
| Application | Common log files | 
|---|---|
| apache | For information about Apache log files, see Monitoring third-party applications: Apache Web Server. | 
| cassandra | For information about Cassandra log files, see Monitoring third-party applications: Cassandra. | 
| chef |  /var/log/chef-server/bookshelf/current | 
| gitlab |  /home/git/gitlab/log/application.log | 
| jenkins |  /var/log/jenkins/jenkins.log | 
| jetty |  /var/log/jetty/out.log | 
| joomla |  /var/www/joomla/logs/*.log  | 
| magento |  /var/www/magento/var/log/exception.log | 
| mediawiki |  /var/log/mediawiki/*.log  | 
| memcached | For information about Memcached log files, see Monitoring third-party applications: Memcached. | 
| mongodb | For information about MongoDB log files, see Monitoring third-party applications: MongoDB. | 
| mysql | For information about MySQL log files, see Monitoring third-party applications: MySQL. | 
| nginx | For information about nginx log files, see Monitoring third-party applications: nginx. | 
| postgres | For information about PostgreSQL log files, see Monitoring third-party applications: PostgreSQL. | 
| puppet |  /var/log/puppet/http.log | 
| puppet-enterprise |  /var/log/pe-activemq/activemq.log | 
| rabbitmq | For information about RabbitMQ log files, see Monitoring third-party applications: RabbitMQ. | 
| redis | For information about Redis log files, see Monitoring third-party applications: Redis. | 
| redmine |  /var/log/redmine/*.log  | 
| salt |  /var/log/salt/key | 
| solr | For information about Apache Solr log files, see Monitoring third-party applications: Apache Solr. | 
| sugarcrm |  /var/www/*/sugarcrm.log  | 
| syslog |  /var/log/syslog | 
| tomcat | For information about Apache Tomcat log files, see Monitoring third-party applications: Apache Tomcat. | 
| zookeeper | For information about Apache ZooKeeper log files, see Monitoring third-party applications: Apache ZooKeeper. | 
Default ingested labels
Logs can contain the following labels by default in the LogEntry:
| Field | Sample Value | Description | 
|---|---|---|
| labels."compute.googleapis.com/resource_name" | test_vm | The name of the virtual machine from which this log originates. Written for all logs. | 
| labels."logging.googleapis.com/instrumentation_source" | agent.googleapis.com/apache_access | The value of the receiver typefrom which thus log originates, prefixed byagent.googleapis.com/. Written only by receivers from third-party integrations. | 
Logging processors
The optional processors element contains a set of processing directives, each identified by a PROCESSOR_ID. A processor describes how to manipulate the information collected by a receiver.
Each processor must have a unique identifier and include a type element. The valid types are:
- parse_json: Parse JSON-formatted structured logs.
- parse_multiline: Parse multiline logs. (Linux only)
- parse_regex: Parse text-formatted logs via regex patterns to turn them into JSON-formatted structured logs.
- exclude_logs: Exclude logs that match specified rules (starting in 2.9.0).
- modify_fields: Set/transform fields in log entries (starting in 2.14.0).
The processors structure looks like the following:
processors: PROCESSOR_ID: type: parse_json ... PROCESSOR_ID_2: type: parse_regex ...
Depending on the value of the type element, there are other configuration options, as follows.
parse_json processor
 Configuration structure
processors:  PROCESSOR_ID:  type: parse_json  time_key: <field name within jsonPayload>  time_format: <strptime format string> The parse_json processor parses the input JSON into the jsonPayload field of the LogEntry. Other parts of the LogEntry can be parsed by setting certain special top-level fields.
- time_key: Optional. If the log entry provides a field with a timestamp, this option specifies the name of that field. The extracted value is used to set the- timestampfield of the resulting- LogEntryand is removed from the payload.- If the - time_keyoption is specified, you must also specify the following:- time_format: Required if- time_keyis used. This option specifies the format of the- time_keyfield so it can be recognized and analyzed properly. For details of the format, see the- strptime(3)guide.
 
Example configuration
processors:  PROCESSOR_ID:  type: parse_json  time_key: time  time_format: "%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%S.%L%Z" parse_multiline processor
 Configuration structure
processors:  PROCESSOR_ID:  type: parse_multiline  match_any:  - type: <type of the exceptions>  language: <language name> - match_any: Required. A list of one or more rules.- type: Required. Only a single value is supported:- language_exceptions: Allows the processor to concatenate exceptions into one- LogEntry, based on the value of the- languageoption.
 
- language: Required. Only a single value is supported:- java: Concatenates common Java exceptions into one- LogEntry.
- python: Concatenates common Python exceptions into one- LogEntry.
- go: Concatenates common Go exceptions into one- LogEntry.
 
 
Example configuration
logging:  receivers:  custom_file1:  type: files  include_paths:  - /tmp/test-multiline28  processors:  parse_java_multiline:  type: parse_multiline  match_any:  - type: language_exceptions  language: java  extract_structure:  type: parse_regex  field: message  regex: "^(?<time>[\d-]*T[\d:.Z]*) (?<severity>[^ ]*) (?<file>[^ :]*):(?<line>[\d]*) - (?<message>(.|\\n)*)$"  time_key: time  time_format: "%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%S.%L"  move_severity:  type: modify_fields  fields:  severity:  move_from: jsonPayload.severity  service:  pipelines:  pipeline1:  receivers: [custom_file1]  processors: [parse_java_multiline, extract_structure, move_severity] In the extract_structure processor, the field: message statement means that the regular expression is applied to the log entry's jsonPayload.message field. By default, the files receiver places each line of the log file into a log entry with a single payload field called jsonPayload.message.
The extract_structure processor places extracted fields into subfields of the LogEntry.jsonPayload field. Other statements in the YAML file cause two of the extracted fields, time and severity, to be moved. The time_key: time statement pulls the LogEntry.jsonPayload.time field, parses the timestamp, and then adds the LogEntry.timestamp field. The move_severity processor moves the severity field from the LogEntry.jsonPayload.severity field to the LogEntry.severity field.
Example log file:
2022-10-17T22:00:00.187512963Z ERROR HelloWorld:16 - javax.servlet.ServletException: Something bad happened at com.example.myproject.OpenSessionInViewFilter.doFilter(OpenSessionInViewFilter.java:60) at org.mortbay.jetty.servlet.ServletHandler$CachedChain.doFilter(ServletHandler.java:1157) at com.example.myproject.ExceptionHandlerFilter.doFilter(ExceptionHandlerFilter.java:28) at org.mortbay.jetty.servlet.ServletHandler$CachedChain.doFilter(ServletHandler.java:1157) at com.example.myproject.OutputBufferFilter.doFilter(OutputBufferFilter.java:33) Caused by: com.example.myproject.MyProjectServletException at com.example.myproject.MyServlet.doPost(MyServlet.java:169) at javax.servlet.http.HttpServlet.service(HttpServlet.java:727) at javax.servlet.http.HttpServlet.service(HttpServlet.java:820) at org.mortbay.jetty.servlet.ServletHolder.handle(ServletHolder.java:511) at org.mortbay.jetty.servlet.ServletHandler$CachedChain.doFilter(ServletHandler.java:1166) at com.example.myproject.OpenSessionInViewFilter.doFilter(OpenSessionInViewFilter.java:30) ... 27 common frames omitted The agent ingests each line from the log file into Cloud Logging in the following format:
{ "insertId": "...", "jsonPayload": { "line": "16", "message": "javax.servlet.ServletException: Something bad happened\n at com.example.myproject.OpenSessionInViewFilter.doFilter(OpenSessionInViewFilter.java:60)\n at org.mortbay.jetty.servlet.ServletHandler$CachedChain.doFilter(ServletHandler.java:1157)\n at com.example.myproject.ExceptionHandlerFilter.doFilter(ExceptionHandlerFilter.java:28)\n at org.mortbay.jetty.servlet.ServletHandler$CachedChain.doFilter(ServletHandler.java:1157)\n at com.example.myproject.OutputBufferFilter.doFilter(OutputBufferFilter.java:33)\nCaused by: com.example.myproject.MyProjectServletException\n at com.example.myproject.MyServlet.doPost(MyServlet.java:169)\n at javax.servlet.http.HttpServlet.service(HttpServlet.java:727)\n at javax.servlet.http.HttpServlet.service(HttpServlet.java:820)\n at org.mortbay.jetty.servlet.ServletHolder.handle(ServletHolder.java:511)\n at org.mortbay.jetty.servlet.ServletHandler$CachedChain.doFilter(ServletHandler.java:1166)\n at com.example.myproject.OpenSessionInViewFilter.doFilter(OpenSessionInViewFilter.java:30)\n ... 27 common frames omitted\n", "file": "HelloWorld" }, "resource": { "type": "gce_instance", "labels": { "instance_id": "...", "project_id": "...", "zone": "..." } }, "timestamp": "2022-10-17T22:00:00.187512963Z", "severity": "ERROR", "labels": { "compute.googleapis.com/resource_name": "..." }, "logName": "projects/.../logs/custom_file", "receiveTimestamp": "2022-10-18T03:12:38.430364391Z" } parse_regex processor
 Configuration structure
processors:  PROCESSOR_ID:  type: parse_regex  regex: <regular expression>  time_key: <field name within jsonPayload>  time_format: <format string> - time_key: Optional. If the log entry provides a field with a timestamp, this option specifies the name of that field. The extracted value is used to set the- timestampfield of the resulting- LogEntryand is removed from the payload.- If the - time_keyoption is specified, you must also specify the following:- time_format: Required if- time_keyis used. This option specifies the format of the- time_keyfield so it can be recognized and analyzed properly. For details of the format, see the- strptime(3)guide.
 
- regex: Required. The regular expression for parsing the field. The expression must include key names for the matched subexpressions; for example,- "^(?<time>[^ ]*) (?<severity>[^ ]*) (?<msg>.*)$".- The text matched by named capture groups will be placed into fields in the - LogEntry's- jsonPayloadfield. To add additional structure to your logs, use the- modify_fieldsprocessor.- For a set of regular expressions for extracting information from common Linux application log files, see Common Linux log files. 
Example configuration
processors:  PROCESSOR_ID:  type: parse_regex  regex: "^(?<time>[^ ]*) (?<severity>[^ ]*) (?<msg>.*)$"  time_key: time  time_format: "%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%S.%L%Z" exclude_logs processor
 Configuration structure:
type: exclude_logs match_any:  - <filter>  - <filter> The top-level configuration for this processor contains a single field, match_any, which contains a list of filter rules.
- match_any: Required. A list of one or more rules. If a log entry matches any rule, then the Ops Agent doesn't ingest that entry.- The logs that are ingested by Ops Agent follow the - LogEntrystructure. Field names are case-sensitive. You can only specify rules based on the following fields and their subfields:- httpRequest
- jsonPayload
- labels
- operation
- severity
- sourceLocation
- trace
- spanId
 - The following example rule - severity =~ "(DEBUG|INFO)"- uses a regular expression to exclude all - DEBUGand- INFOlevel logs.- Rules follow the Cloud Logging query language syntax but only support a subset of the features that Logging query language supports: - Comparison operators: =,!=,:,=~,!~. Only string comparisons are supported.
- Navigation operator: .. For examplejsonPayload.message.
- Boolean operators: AND,OR,NOT.
- Grouping expressions with ().
 
Example configuration
processors:  PROCESSOR_ID:  type: exclude_logs  match_any:  - '(jsonPayload.message =~ "log spam 1" OR jsonPayload.message =~ "log spam 2") AND severity = "ERROR"'  - 'jsonPayload.application = "foo" AND severity = "INFO"' modify_fields Processor
 The modify_fields processor allows customization of the structure and contents of log entries.
Configuration structure
type: modify_fields fields:  <destination field>:  # Source  move_from: <source field>  copy_from: <source field>  static_value: <string>    # Mutation  default_value: <string>  map_values:  <old value>: <new value>  type: {integer|float}  omit_if: <filter> The top-level configuration for this processor contains a single field, fields, which contains a map of output field names and corresponding translations. For each output field, an optional source and zero or more mutation operations are applied.
All field names use the dot-separated syntax from the Cloud Logging query language. Filters use the Cloud Logging query language.
All transformations are applied in parallel, which means that sources and filters operate on the original input log entry and therefore can not reference the new value of any other fields being modified by the same processor.
Source options: At most one specified source is allowed.
- No source specified - If no source value is specified, the existing value in the destination field will be modified. 
- move_from: <source field>- The value from - <source field>will be used as the source for the destination field. Additionally,- <source field>will be removed from the log entry. If a source field is referenced by both- move_fromand- copy_from, the source field will still be removed.
- copy_from: <source field>- The value from - <source field>will be used as the source for the destination field.- <source field>will not be removed from the log entry unless it is also referenced by a- move_fromoperation or otherwise modified.
- static_value: <string>- The static string - <string>will be used as the source for the destination field.
Mutation options: Zero or more mutation operators may be applied to a single field. If multiple operators are supplied, they will always be applied in the following order.
- default_value: <string>- If the source field did not exist, the output value will be set to - <string>. If the source field already exists (even if it contains an empty string), the original value is unmodified.
- map_values: <map>- If the input value matches one of the keys in - <map>, the output value will be replaced with the corresponding value from the map.
- map_values_exclusive: {true|false}- In case the - <source field>value does not match any keys specified in the- map_valuespairs, the destination field will be forcefully unset if- map_values_exclusiveis true, or left untouched if- map_values_exclusiveis false.
- type: {integer|float}- The input value will be converted to an integer or a float. If the string cannot be converted to a number, the output value will be unset. If the string contains a float but the type is specified as - integer, the number will be truncated to an integer.- Note that the Cloud Logging API uses JSON and therefore it does not support a full 64-bit integer; if a 64-bit (or larger) integer is needed, it must be stored as a string in the log entry. 
- omit_if: <filter>- If the filter matches the input log record, the output field will be unset. This can be used to remove placeholder values, such as: - httpRequest.referer: move_from: jsonPayload.referer omit_if: httpRequest.referer = "-"
Sample Configurations
The parse_json processor would transform a JSON file containing
{  "http_status": "400",  "path": "/index.html",  "referer": "-" } into a LogEntry structure that looks like this:
{  "jsonPayload": {  "http_status": "400",  "path": "/index.html",  "referer": "-"  } } This could then be transformed with modify_fields into this LogEntry:
{  "httpRequest": {  "status": 400,  "requestUrl": "/index.html",  } } by using this Ops Agent configuration:
logging:  receivers:  in:  type: files  include_paths:  - /var/log/http.json  processors:  parse_json:  type: parse_json  set_http_request:  type: modify_fields  fields:  httpRequest.status:  move_from: jsonPayload.http_status  type: integer  httpRequest.requestUrl:  move_from: jsonPayload.path  httpRequest.referer:  move_from: jsonPayload.referer  omit_if: jsonPayload.referer = "-"  service:  pipelines:  pipeline:  receivers: [in]  processors: [parse_json, set_http_request] This configuration reads JSON-formatted logs from /var/log/http.json and populates part of the httpRequest structure from fields in the logs.
Logging service
The logging service customizes verbosity for the Ops Agent's own logs, and links logging receivers and processors together into pipelines. The service section has the following elements:
- log_level
- pipelines
Log verbosity level
The log_level field, available with Ops Agent versions 2.6.0 and later, customizes verbosity for Ops Agent logging submodule's own logs. The default is info. Available options are: error, warn, info, debug, trace.
The following configuration customizes log verbosity for the logging submodule to be debug instead:
logging:  service:  log_level: debug Logging pipelines
The pipelines field can contain multiple pipeline IDs and definitions. Each pipeline value consists of the following elements:
- receivers: Required for new pipelines. A list of receiver IDs, as described in Logging receivers. The order of the receivers IDs in the list doesn't matter. The pipeline collects data from all of the listed receivers.
- processors: Optional. A list of processor IDs, as described in Logging processors. The order of the processor IDs in the list matters. Each record is run through the processors in the listed order.
Example logging service configurations
 A service configuration has the following structure:
service: log_level: CUSTOM_LOG_LEVEL pipelines: PIPELINE_ID: receivers: [...] processors: [...] PIPELINE_ID_2: receivers: [...] processors: [...]
To stop the agent from collecting and sending either /var/log/message or /var/log/syslog entries, redefine the default pipeline with an empty receivers list and no processors. This configuration does not stop the agent's logging subcomponent, because the agent must be able to collect logs for the monitoring subcomponent. The entire empty logging configuration looks like the following:
logging:  service:  pipelines:  default_pipeline:  receivers: [] The following service configuration defines a pipeline with the ID custom_pipeline:
logging:  service:  pipelines:  custom_pipeline:  receivers:  - RECEIVER_ID  processors:  - PROCESSOR_ID Metrics configurations
The metrics configuration uses the configuration model described previously:
- receivers: a list of receiver definitions. A- receiverdescribes the source of the metrics; for example, system metrics like- cpuor- memory. The receivers in this list can be shared among multiple pipelines.
- processors: a list of processor definitions. A- processordescribes how to modify the metrics collected by a receiver.
- service: contains a- pipelinessection that is a list of- pipelinedefinitions. A- pipelineconnects a list of- receiversand a list of- processorsto form the data flow.
The following sections describe each of these elements.
The Ops Agent sends metrics to Cloud Monitoring. You can't configure it to export metrics to other services.
Metrics receivers
The receivers element contains a set of receiver definitions. A receiver describes from where to retrieve the metrics, such as cpu and memory. A receiver can be shared among multiple pipelines.
Structure of metrics receivers
Each receiver must have an identifier, RECEIVER_ID, and include a type element. Valid built-in types are:
- hostmetrics
- iis(Windows only)
- mssql(Windows only)
A receiver can also specify the operation collection_interval option. The value is in the format of a duration, for example, 30s or 2m. The default value is 60s.
Each of these receiver types collects a set of metrics; for information about the specific metrics included, see Metrics ingested by the receivers.
You can create only one receiver for each type. For example, you can't define two receivers of type hostmetrics.
Changing the collection interval in the metrics receivers
Some critical workloads might require fast alerting. By reducing the the collection interval for the metrics, you can configure more sensitive alerts. For information on how alerts are evaluated, see Behavior of metric-based alerting policies.
For example, the following receiver changes the collection interval for host metrics (the receiver ID is hostmetrics) from the default of 60 seconds to 10 seconds:
metrics:  receivers:  hostmetrics:  type: hostmetrics  collection_interval: 10s You can also override the collection interval for the Windows iis and mssql metrics receivers using the same technique.
Metrics ingested by the receivers
The metrics ingested by the Ops Agent have identifiers that begin with the following pattern: agent.googleapis.com/GROUP. The GROUP component identifies a set of related metrics; it has values like cpu, network, and others.
The hostmetrics receiver
 The hostmetrics receiver ingests the following metric groups. For more information, see the linked section for each group on the Ops Agent metrics page.
| Group | Metric | 
|---|---|
| cpu | CPU load at 1 minute intervals CPU load at 5 minute intervals CPU load at 15 minute intervals CPU usage, with labels for CPU number and CPU state CPU usage percent, with labels for CPU number and CPU state | 
| disk | Disk bytes read, with label for device Disk bytes written, with label for device Disk I/O time, with label for device Disk weighted I/O time, with label for device Disk pending operations, with label for device Disk merged operations, with labels for device and direction Disk operations, with labels for device and direction Disk operation time, with labels for device and direction Disk usage, with labels for device and state Disk utilization, with labels for device and state | 
| gpuLinux only; see About the gpumetrics for other important information. | Current number of GPU memory bytes used, by state Maximum amount of GPU memory, in bytes, that has been allocated by the process Percentage of time in the process lifetime that one or more kernels has been running on the GPU Percentage of time, since last sample, the GPU has been active | 
| interfaceLinux only | Total count of network errors Total count of packets sent over the network Total number of bytes sent over the network | 
| memory | Memory usage, with label for state (buffered, cached, free, slab, used) Memory usage percent, with label for state (buffered, cached, free, slab, used) | 
| network | TCP connection count, with labels for port and TCP state | 
| swap | Swap I/O operations, with label for direction Swap bytes used, with labels for device and state Swap percent used, with labels for device and state | 
| pagefileWindows only | Current percentage of pagefile used by state | 
| processes | Processes count, with label for state Processes forked count Per-process disk read I/O, with labels for process name + others Per-process disk write I/O, with labels for process name + others Per-process RSS usage, with labels for process name + others Per-process VM usage, with labels for process name + others | 
The iis receiver (Windows only)
 The iis receiver (Windows only) ingests metrics of the iis group. For more information, see the Agent metrics page.
| Group | Metric | 
|---|---|
| iisWindows only | Currently open connections to IIS Network bytes transferred by IIS Connections opened to IIS Requests made to IIS | 
The mssql receiver (Windows only)
 The mssql receiver (Windows only) ingests metrics of the mssql group. For more information, see the Ops Agent metrics page.
| Group | Metric | 
|---|---|
| mssqlWindows only | Currently open connections to SQL server SQL server total transactions per second SQL server write transactions per second | 
Metrics processors
The processor element contains a set of processor definitions. A processor describes metrics from the receiver type to exclude. The only supported type is exclude_metrics, which takes a metrics_pattern option. The value is a list of globs that match the Ops Agent metric types you want to exclude from the group collected by a receiver. For example:
- To exclude all agent CPU metrics, specify agent.googleapis.com/cpu/*.
- To exclude the agent CPU utilization metric, specify agent.googleapis.com/cpu/utilization.
- To exclude the client-side request-count metric from the metrics collected by the Apache Cassandra third-party integration, specify workloads.googleapis.com/cassandra.client.request.count.
- To exclude all client-side metrics from the metrics collected by the Apache Cassandra third-party integration, specify workloads.googleapis.com/cassandra.client.*.
Sample metrics processor
The following example shows the exclude_metrics processor supplied in the built-in configurations. This processor supplies an empty metrics_pattern value, so it doesn't exclude any metrics.
processors:  metrics_filter:  type: exclude_metrics  metrics_pattern: [] To disable the collection of all process metrics by the Ops Agent, add the following to your config.yaml file:
metrics: processors: metrics_filter: type: exclude_metrics metrics_pattern: - agent.googleapis.com/processes/*
This excludes process metrics from collection in the metrics_filter processor that applies to the default pipeline in the metrics service.
Metrics service
The metrics service customizes verbosity for the Ops Agent metrics module's own logs and links metrics receivers and processors together into pipelines. The service section has two elements: log_level and pipelines.
Metrics verbosity level
log_level, available with Ops Agent versions 2.6.0 and later, customizes verbosity for Ops Agent metrics submodule's own logs. The default is info. Available options are: error, warn, info, debug.
Metrics pipelines
The service section has a single element, pipelines, which can contain multiple pipeline IDs and definitions. Each pipeline definition consists of the following elements:
- receivers: Required for new pipelines. A list of receiver IDs, as described in Metrics receivers. The order of the receivers IDs in the list doesn't matter. The pipeline collects data from all of the listed receivers.
- processors: Optional. A list of processor IDs, as described in Metrics processors. The order of the processor IDs in the list does matter. Each metric point is run through the processors in the listed order.
Example metrics service configurations
 A service configuration has the following structure:
service: log_level: CUSTOM_LOG_LEVEL pipelines: PIPELINE_ID: receivers: [...] processors: [...] PIPELINE_ID_2: receivers: [...] processors: [...]
To turn off the built-in ingestion of host metrics, redefine the default pipeline with an empty receivers list and no processors. The entire metrics configuration looks like the following:
metrics:  service:  pipelines:  default_pipeline:  receivers: [] The following example shows the built-in service configuration for Windows:
metrics:  service:  pipelines:  default_pipeline:  receivers:  - hostmetrics  - iis  - mssql  processors:  - metrics_filter The following service configuration customizes log verbosity for the metrics submodule to be debug instead:
metrics:  service:  log_level: debug Collection of self logs
By default, the Ops Agent's Fluent Bit self logs are sent to Cloud Logging. These logs can include a lot of information, and the additional volume might increase your costs to use Cloud Logging.
You can disable the collection of these self logs, starting with Ops Agent version 2.44.0, by using the default_self_log_file_collection option.
To disable self-log collection, add a global section to your user-specified configuration file and set the default_self_log_file_collection option to the value false:
logging: ... metrics: ... global: default_self_log_file_collection: false
Log-rotation configuration
Starting with Ops Agent version 2.31.0, you can also set up the agent's log-rotation feature by using the configuration files. For more information, see Configure log rotation in the Ops Agent.