Big-friendly JSON. Asynchronous streaming functions for large JSON data sets.
Parse JSON with more helpful errors
JSON.parse with context information on error
JSON.parse with context information on error
Parse partial JSON generated by LLM
JSON parse with prototype poisoning protection
Parse JSON without risk of losing numeric information
Read and parse a JSON file
Parse and stringify JSON with comments. It will retain comments even after saved!
The parser/stringifier for Yarn lockfiles.
Parse HTTP Content-Type header according to RFC 7231
Transform HCL into JSON
Parses data: URLs
Parse, Resolve, and Dereference JSON Schema $ref pointers
Promisify a callback-style function
Parse json safely and at max speed
Parse a JSON string that has git merge conflicts, resolving if possible
Read and parse a YAML file.
parses XML BMFont files into a JavaScript object
JSON parse & stringify that supports binary via bops & base64
JavaScript syntax tree transformer, nondestructive pretty-printer, and automatic source map generator
Read a package.json file
Unified diff parser
quote and parse shell commands
See README at https://github.com/ninadpage/fluent-plugin-parser-maybejson/.
Add support for @cee json cookie for rsyslog
Parser plugin for fluent that parses log attributes within JSON LOGS for JSON-in-JSON
Provides a wrapper to external requests providing JSON parsing, logging, metrics, and more.
fluentd plugin to json parse single field, or to combine log structure into single field
Parse mixed type of logs (JSON, Rails, fmtlogs, ...)
fluentd plugin to json parse single field if possible or simply forward the data if impossible. Can also combine log structure into single field
Fluentd parser custom plugin that can parse UPI logs (PredictionLog and RouterLog - https://github.com/caraml-dev/universal-prediction-interface) into json
Log2json lets you read, filter and send logs as JSON objects via Unix pipes. It is inspired by Logstash, and is meant to be compatible with it at the JSON event/record level so that it can easily work with Kibana. Reading logs is done via a shell script(eg, `tail`) running in its own process. You then configure(see the `syslog2json` or the `nginxlog2json` script for examples) and run your filters in Ruby using the `Log2Json` module and its contained helper classes. `Log2Json` reads from stdin the logs(one log record per line), parses the log lines into JSON records, and then serializes and writes the records to stdout, which then can be piped to another process for processing or sending it to somewhere else. Currently, Log2json ships with a `tail-log` script that can be run as the input process. It's the same as using the Linux `tail` utility with the `-v -F` options except that it also tracks the positions(as the numbers of lines read from the beginning of the files) in a few files in the file system so that if the input process is interrupted, it can continue reading from where it left off next time if the files had been followed. This feature is similar to the sincedb feature in Logstash's file input. Note: If you don't need the tracking feature(ie, you are fine with always tailling from the end of file with `-v -F -n0`), then you can just use the `tail` utility that comes with your Linux distribution.(Or more specifically, the `tail` from the GNU coreutils). Other versions of the `tail` utility may also work, but are not tested. The input protocol expected by Log2json is very simple and documented in the source code. ** The `tail-log` script uses a patched version of `tail` from the GNU coreutils package. A binary of the `tail` utility compiled for Ubuntu 12.04 LTS is included with the Log2json gem. If the binary doesn't work for your distribution, then you'll need to get GNU coreutils-8.13, apply the patch(it can be found in the src/ directory of the installed gem), and then replace the bin/tail binary in the directory of the installed gem with your version of the binary. ** P.S. If you know of a way to configure and compile ONLY the tail program in coreutils, please let me know! The reason I'm not building tail post gem installation is that it takes too long to configure && make because that actually builds every utilties in coreutils. For shipping logs to Redis, there's the `lines2redis` script that can be used as the output process in the pipe. For shipping logs from Redis to ElasticSearch, Log2json provides a `redis2es` script. Finally here's an example of Log2json in action: From a client machine: tail-log /var/log/{sys,mail}log /var/log/{kern,auth}.log | syslog2json | queue=jsonlogs \ flush_size=20 \ flush_interval=30 \ lines2redis host.to.redis.server 6379 0 # use redis DB 0 On the Redis server: redis_queue=jsonlogs redis2es host.to.es.server Resources that help writing log2json filters: - look at log2json.rb source and example filters - http://grokdebug.herokuapp.com/ - http://www.ruby-doc.org/stdlib-1.9.3/libdoc/date/rdoc/DateTime.html#method-i-strftime
Log2json lets you read, filter and send logs as JSON objects via Unix pipes. It is inspired by Logstash, and is meant to be compatible with it at the JSON event/record level so that it can easily work with Kibana. Reading logs is done via a shell script(eg, `tail`) running in its own process. You then configure(see the `syslog2json` or the `nginxlog2json` script for examples) and run your filters in Ruby using the `Log2Json` module and its contained helper classes. `Log2Json` reads from stdin the logs(one log record per line), parses the log lines into JSON records, and then serializes and writes the records to stdout, which then can be piped to another process for processing or sending it to somewhere else. Currently, Log2json ships with a `tail-log` script that can be run as the input process. It's the same as using the Linux `tail` utility with the `-v -F` options except that it also tracks the positions(as the numbers of lines read from the beginning of the files) in a few files in the file system so that if the input process is interrupted, it can continue reading from where it left off next time if the files had been followed. This feature is similar to the sincedb feature in Logstash's file input. Note: If you don't need the tracking feature(ie, you are fine with always tailling from the end of file with `-v -F -n0`), then you can just use the `tail` utility that comes with your Linux distribution.(Or more specifically, the `tail` from the GNU coreutils). Other versions of the `tail` utility may also work, but are not tested. The input protocol expected by Log2json is very simple and documented in the source code. ** The `tail-log` script uses a patched version of `tail` from the GNU coreutils package. A binary of the `tail` utility compiled for Ubuntu 12.04 LTS is included with the Log2json gem. If the binary doesn't work for your distribution, then you'll need to get GNU coreutils-8.13, apply the patch(it can be found in the src/ directory of the installed gem), and then replace the bin/tail binary in the directory of the installed gem with your version of the binary. ** P.S. If you know of a way to configure and compile ONLY the tail program in coreutils, please let me know! The reason I'm not building tail post gem installation is that it takes too long to configure && make because that actually builds every utilties in coreutils. For shipping logs to Redis, there's the `lines2redis` script that can be used as the output process in the pipe. For shipping logs from Redis to ElasticSearch, Log2json provides a `redis2es` script. Finally here's an example of Log2json in action: From a client machine: tail-log /var/log/{sys,mail}log /var/log/{kern,auth}.log | syslog2json | queue=jsonlogs \ flush_size=20 \ flush_interval=30 \ lines2redis host.to.redis.server 6379 0 # use redis DB 0 On the Redis server: redis_queue=jsonlogs redis2es host.to.es.server Resources that help writing log2json filters: - look at log2json.rb source and example filters - http://grokdebug.herokuapp.com/ - http://www.ruby-doc.org/stdlib-1.9.3/libdoc/date/rdoc/DateTime.html#method-i-strftime
Contentful API wrapper library exposing an ActiveRecord-like interface
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