JSON Parser Version 2 Plugin
This parser takes valid JSON input and turns it into line protocol. The query
syntax supported is GJSON Path Syntax, you can go to the
GJSON playground to test out your GJSON path expressions. You can
find multiple examples under the testdata folder.
[!WARNING]
In the current state of the implementation, the json_v2 parser should be
avoided in favor of the XPath parser, especially when working with
arrays.
Configuration
[[inputs.file]]
urls = []
data_format = "json_v2"
[[inputs.file.json_v2]]
measurement_name = "" # A string that will become the new measurement name
measurement_name_path = "" # A string with valid GJSON path syntax, will override measurement_name
timestamp_path = "" # A string with valid GJSON path syntax to a valid timestamp (single value)
timestamp_format = "" # A string with a valid timestamp format (see below for possible values)
timestamp_timezone = "" # A string with a valid timezone (see below for possible values)
[[inputs.file.json_v2.tag]]
path = "" # A string with valid GJSON path syntax to a non-array/non-object value
rename = "new name" # A string with a new name for the tag key
## Setting optional to true will suppress errors if the configured Path doesn't match the JSON
optional = false
[[inputs.file.json_v2.field]]
path = "" # A string with valid GJSON path syntax to a non-array/non-object value
rename = "new name" # A string with a new name for the tag key
type = "int" # A string specifying the type (int,uint,float,string,bool)
## Setting optional to true will suppress errors if the configured Path doesn't match the JSON
optional = false
[[inputs.file.json_v2.object]]
path = "" # A string with valid GJSON path syntax, can include array's and object's
## Setting optional to true will suppress errors if the configured Path doesn't match the JSON
optional = false
## Configuration to define what JSON keys should be used as timestamps ##
timestamp_key = "" # A JSON key (for a nested key, prepend the parent keys with underscores) to a valid timestamp
timestamp_format = "" # A string with a valid timestamp format (see below for possible values)
timestamp_timezone = "" # A string with a valid timezone (see below for possible values)
### Configuration to define what JSON keys should be included and how (field/tag) ###
tags = [] # List of JSON keys (for a nested key, prepend the parent keys with underscores) to be a tag instead of a field, when adding a JSON key in this list you don't have to define it in the included_keys list
included_keys = [] # List of JSON keys (for a nested key, prepend the parent keys with underscores) that should be only included in result
excluded_keys = [] # List of JSON keys (for a nested key, prepend the parent keys with underscores) that shouldn't be included in result
# When a tag/field sub-table is defined, they will be the only field/tag's along with any keys defined in the included_keys list.
# If the resulting values aren't included in the object/array returned by the root object path, it won't be included.
# You can define as many tag/field sub-tables as you want.
[[inputs.file.json_v2.object.tag]]
path = "" # # A string with valid GJSON path syntax, can include array's and object's
rename = "new name" # A string with a new name for the tag key
[[inputs.file.json_v2.object.field]]
path = "" # # A string with valid GJSON path syntax, can include array's and object's
rename = "new name" # A string with a new name for the tag key
type = "int" # A string specifying the type (int,uint,float,string,bool)
### Configuration to modify the resulting line protocol ###
disable_prepend_keys = false (or true, just not both)
[inputs.file.json_v2.object.renames] # A map of JSON keys (for a nested key, prepend the parent keys with underscores) with a new name for the tag key
key = "new name"
[inputs.file.json_v2.object.fields] # A map of JSON keys (for a nested key, prepend the parent keys with underscores) with a type (int,uint,float,string,bool)
key = "int"
You configure this parser by describing the line protocol you want by defining
the fields and tags from the input. The configuration is divided into config
sub-tables called field, tag, and object. In the example below you can see
all the possible configuration keys you can define for each config table. In the
sections that follow these configuration keys are defined in more detail.
General options
The optional measurement_name sets the name of emitted metrics to the provided
string.
The optional measurement_name_path defines a GJSON query to set a metric name
from the JSON input. The query must return a single data value otherwise the
parser will use the default measurement name. This option takes precedence over
measurement_name.
The optional timestamp_path defines a GJSON query to set the metric timestamp
from the JSON input. The query must return a single data value otherwise the
parser will default to the current time.
The optional timestamp_format is required in case timestamp_path is
defined. The option can take the values unix, unix_ms, unix_us, unix_ns,
or a Go "reference time" which is defined to be the specific time
Mon Jan 2 15:04:05 MST 2006
The optional timestamp_timezone defaults to UTC but is required in case
timestamp_path is defined. This option should be set to a
Unix TZ value, such as America/New_York, to Local to utilize the
system timezone or to UTC.
field and tag options
field and tag represent the elements of line protocol. You can use
the field and tag config tables to gather a single value or an array of
values that all share the same type and name. With this you can add a field or
tag to a line protocol from data stored anywhere in your JSON. If you define the
GJSON path to return a single value then you will get a single resulting line
protocol that contains the field/tag. If you define the GJSON path to return an
array of values, then each field/tag will be put into a separate line protocol
(you use the # character to retrieve JSON arrays, see examples).
Note that objects are handled separately, therefore if you provide a path that
returns a object it will be ignored. You will need use the object config table
to parse objects, because field and tag doesn't handle relationships between
data. Each field and tag you define is handled as a separate data point.
The notable difference between field and tag, is that tag values will
always be type string while field can be multiple types. You can define the
type of field to be any type that line protocol supports, which are:
- float
- int
- uint
- string
- bool
field
Using this field configuration you can gather a non-array/non-object values.
Note this acts as a global field when used with the object configuration, if
you gather an array of values using object then the field gathered will be
added to each resulting line protocol without acknowledging its location in the
original JSON. This is defined in TOML as an array table using double brackets.
The required path setting contains a string with valid GJSON path syntax to a
non-array/non-object value.
The optional name defines a string value to set the field name. If not defined
it will use the trailing word from the provided query.
The optional type defines a string value to set the desired type (float, int,
uint, string, bool). If not defined it won't enforce a type and default to using
the original type defined in the JSON (bool, float, or string).
The optional optional setting can suppress errors if the configured path
doesn't match the JSON data. This should be used with caution because it removes
the safety net of verifying the provided path. An example case to use this is
with the inputs.mqtt_consumer plugin when you are expecting multiple JSON
files.
tag
Using this tag configuration you can gather a non-array/non-object values. Note
this acts as a global tag when used with the object configuration, if you
gather an array of values using object then the tag gathered will be added to
each resulting line protocol without acknowledging its location in the original
JSON. This is defined in TOML as an array table using double brackets.
The required path setting contains a string with valid GJSON path syntax to a
non-array/non-object value.
The optional name defines a string value to set the field name. If not defined
it will use the trailing word from the provided query.
The optional optional setting can suppress errors if the configured path
doesn't match the JSON data. This should be used with caution because it removes
the safety net of verifying the provided path. An example case to use this is
with the inputs.mqtt_consumer plugin when you are expecting multiple JSON
files.
For good examples in using field and tag you can reference the following
example configs:
object
With the configuration section object, you can gather values from JSON
objects. This is defined in
TOML as an array table using double brackets.
The following keys can be set for object
The required path must define the GJSON path query that gathers the object.
The optional optional setting can suppress errors if the configured path
doesn't match the JSON data. This should be used with caution because it removes
the safety net of verifying the provided path. An example case to use this is
with the inputs.mqtt_consumer plugin when you are expecting multiple JSON
files.
Keys to define what JSON keys should be used as timestamps
The optional timestamp_key defines a JSON key (for a nested key, prepend the
parent keys with underscores) for the value to be set as the timestamp from the
JSON input.
The optional timestamp_format is required if timestamp_key is defined and
must be set to unix, unix_ms, unix_us, unix_ns, or the Go
"reference time" which is defined to be the specific time
Mon Jan 2 15:04:05 MST 2006
The optional timestamp_timezone defaults to UTC but is required if
timestamp_key is set. This option should be set to a Unix TZ value,
such as America/New_York, to Local to utilize the system timezone or to
UTC.
Configuration to define what JSON keys should be included and how (field/tag)
The optional included_keys define a list of key's that should be the only data
included in the line protocol, by default it will include everything.
The optional excluded_keys define JSON keys to be excluded in the
line protocol, for a nested key, prepend the parent keys with underscores
The optional tags define JSON keys to be set as tags instead of fields, if you
define a key that is an array or object then all nested values will become a tag
The optional field defines an array table identical to the field
table with two key differences. The path supports arrays and objects and is
defined under the object table and therefore will adhere to how the JSON is
structured. You want to use this if you want the field/tag to be added as it
would if it were in the included_key list, but then use the GJSON path syntax.
The optional tag defines an array table identical to the tag table but
with two key differences. The path supports arrays and objects and is defined
under the object table and therefore will adhere to how the JSON is structured.
You want to use this if you want the field/tag to be added as it would if it
were in the included_key list, but then use the GJSON path syntax.
Configuration to modify the resulting line protocol
The optional disable_prepend_keys prevents resulting nested data to contain
the parent key prepended to its key.
[!NOTE]
Duplicate names can overwrite each other when this is enabled.
The optional renames table matches the JSON key with the desired name (opposed
to defaulting to using the key), use names that include the prepended keys of
its parent keys for nested results
The optional fields table matches the JSON key with the desired type (int,
string, bool, float), if you define a key that is an array or object then all
nested values will become that type
Arrays and Objects
The following describes the high-level approach when parsing arrays and objects:
Array: Every element in an array is treated as a separate line protocol
Object: Every key/value in a object is treated as a single line protocol
When handling nested arrays and objects, these above rules continue to apply as
the parser creates line protocol. When an object has multiple array's as values,
the array's will become separate line protocol containing only non-array values
from the object. Below you can see an example of this behavior, with an input
json containing an array of book objects that has a nested array of characters.
Example JSON:
{
"book": {
"title": "The Lord Of The Rings",
"chapters": [
"A Long-expected Party",
"The Shadow of the Past"
],
"author": "Tolkien",
"characters": [
{
"name": "Bilbo",
"species": "hobbit"
},
{
"name": "Frodo",
"species": "hobbit"
}
],
"random": [
1,
2
]
}
}
Example configuration:
[[inputs.file]]
files = ["./testdata/multiple_arrays_in_object/input.json"]
data_format = "json_v2"
[[inputs.file.json_v2]]
[[inputs.file.json_v2.object]]
path = "book"
tags = ["title"]
disable_prepend_keys = true
Expected line protocol:
file,title=The\ Lord\ Of\ The\ Rings author="Tolkien",chapters="A Long-expected Party"
file,title=The\ Lord\ Of\ The\ Rings author="Tolkien",chapters="The Shadow of the Past"
file,title=The\ Lord\ Of\ The\ Rings author="Tolkien",name="Bilbo",species="hobbit"
file,title=The\ Lord\ Of\ The\ Rings author="Tolkien",name="Frodo",species="hobbit"
file,title=The\ Lord\ Of\ The\ Rings author="Tolkien",random=1
file,title=The\ Lord\ Of\ The\ Rings author="Tolkien",random=2
You can find more complicated examples under the testdata folder.
Types
For each field you have the option to define the types. The following rules are
in place for this configuration:
- If a type is explicitly defined, the parser will enforce this type and convert
the data to the defined type if possible. If the type can't be converted then
the parser will fail.
- If a type isn't defined, the parser will use the default type defined in the
JSON (int, float, string)
The type values you can set:
int, bool, floats or strings (with valid numbers) can be converted to int
uint, bool, floats or strings (with valid numbers) can be converted to uint
string, any data can be formatted as a string
float, string values (with valid numbers) or integers can be converted to float
bool, the string values "true" or "false" (regardless of capitalization) or
the integer values 0 or 1 can be turned to a bool