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Amazon Kinesis Firehose

Cribl Edge supports receiving data from Amazon Kinesis Data Firehose delivery streams via Kinesis’ HTTP endpoint destination option.

Type: Push | TLS Support: YES | Event Breaker Support: No

This Source supports gzip-compressed inbound data when the Content‑Encoding: gzip connection header is set.

Configuring Cribl Edge to Receive Data over HTTP(S) from Amazon Kinesis Firehose

From the top nav, click Manage, then select a Fleet to configure. Next, you have two options:

To configure via the graphical QuickConnect UI, click Routing > QuickConnect (Stream) or Collect (Edge). Next, click Add Source at left. From the resulting drawer’s tiles, select [Push >] Amazon > Firehose. Next, click either Add Destination or (if displayed) Select Existing. The resulting drawer will provide the options below.

Or, to configure via the Routing UI, click Data > Sources (Stream) or More > Sources (Edge). From the resulting page’s tiles or left nav, select [Push >] Amazon > Firehose. Next, click New Source to open a New Source modal that provides the options below.

General Settings

Input ID: Enter a unique name to identify this Source definition.

Address: Address to bind on. Defaults to 0.0.0.0 (all addresses).

Port: Enter the port number to listen on.

Authentication Settings

Auth tokens: Shared secrets to be provided by any client (Authorization: <token>). Click Generate to create a new secret. If empty, unauthenticated access will be permitted.

Optional Settings

Tags: Optionally, add tags that you can use to filter and group Sources in Cribl Edge’s Manage Sources page. These tags aren’t added to processed events. Use a tab or hard return between (arbitrary) tag names.

TLS Settings (Server Side)

Enabled defaults to No. When toggled to Yes:

Certificate name: Name of the predefined certificate.

Private key path: Server path containing the private key (in PEM format) to use. Path can reference $ENV_VARS.

Passphrase: Passphrase to use to decrypt private key.

Certificate path: Server path containing certificates (in PEM format) to use. Path can reference $ENV_VARS.

CA certificate path: Server path containing CA certificates (in PEM format) to use. Path can reference $ENV_VARS.

Authenticate client (mutual auth): Require clients to present their certificates. Used to perform mutual authentication using SSL certs. Defaults to No. When toggled to Yes:

  • Validate client certs: Reject certificates that are not authorized by a CA in the CA certificate path, or by another trusted CA (e.g., the system’s CA). Defaults to No.

  • Common name: Regex matching subject common names in peer certificates allowed to connect. Defaults to .*. Matches on the substring after CN=. As needed, escape regex tokens to match literal characters. E.g., to match the subject CN=worker.cribl.local, you would enter: worker\.cribl\.local.

Minimum TLS version: Optionally, select the minimum TLS version to accept from connections.

Maximum TLS version: Optionally, select the maximum TLS version to accept from connections.

Persistent Queue Settings

In this section, you can optionally specify persistent queue storage, using the following controls. This will buffer and preserve incoming events when a downstream Destination is down, or exhibiting backpressure.

On Cribl-managed Cribl.Cloud Workers (with an Enterprise plan), this tab exposes only the Enable Persistent Queue toggle. If enabled, PQ is automatically configured in Always On mode, with a maximum queue size of 1 GB disk space allocated per PQ‑enabled Source, per Worker Process.

The 1 GB limit is on uncompressed inbound data, and no compression is applied to the queue. This limit is not configurable. For configurable queue size, compression, mode, and other options below, use a hybrid Group.

Enable Persistent Queue: Defaults to No. When toggled to Yes:

Mode: Select a condition for engaging persistent queues.

  • Always On: This default option will always write events to the persistent queue, before forwarding them to Cribl Edge’s data processing engine.
  • Smart: This option will engage PQ only when the Source detects backpressure from Cribl Edge’s data processing engine.

Max buffer size: The maximum number of events to hold in memory before reporting backpressure to the sender and writing the queue to disk. Defaults to 1000. (This buffer is per connection, not just per Worker Process – and this can dramatically expand memory usage.)

Commit frequency: The number of events to send downstream before committing that Stream has read them. Defaults to 42.

Max file size: The maximum data volume to store in each queue file before closing it and (optionally) applying the configured Compression. Enter a numeral with units of KB, MB, etc. If not specified, Cribl Edge applies the default 1 MB.

Max queue size: The maximum amount of disk space that the queue is allowed to consume on each Worker Process. Once this limit is reached, this Source will stop queueing data and block incoming data. Required, and defaults to 5 GB. Accepts positive numbers with units of KB, MB, GB, etc. Can be set as high as 1 TB, unless you’ve configured a different Max PQ size per Worker Process in Fleet Settings.

Queue file path: The location for the persistent queue files. Defaults to $CRIBL_HOME/state/queues. To this field’s specified path, Cribl Edge will append /<worker-id>/inputs/<input-id>.

Compression: Optional codec to compress the persisted data after a file is closed. Defaults to None; Gzip is also available.

In Cribl Edge 4.1 and later, Source-side PQ’s default Mode is Always on, to best ensure events’ delivery. For details on optimizing this selection, see Always On versus Smart Mode.

You can optimize Workers’ startup connections and CPU load at Fleet Settings > Worker Processes.

Processing Settings

Fields

In this section, you can add Fields to each event using Eval-like functionality.

  • Name: Field name.
  • Value: JavaScript expression to compute field’s value, enclosed in quotes or backticks. (Can evaluate to a constant.)

Pre-Processing

In this section’s Pipeline drop-down list, you can select a single existing Pipeline to process data from this input before the data is sent through the Routes.

Advanced Settings

Enable proxy protocol: Toggle to Yes if the connection is proxied by a device that supports Proxy Protocol v1 or v2. This setting affects how the Source handles the __srcIpPort field.

Capture request headers: Toggle this to Yes to add request headers to events, in the __headers field.

Max active requests: Maximum number of active requests allowed for this Source, per Worker Process. Defaults to 256. Enter 0 for unlimited.

Activity log sample rate: Determines how often request activity is logged at the info level. The default 100 value logs every 100th value; a 1 value would log every request; a 10 value would log every 10th request; etc.

Socket timeout (seconds): How long Cribl Edge should wait before assuming that an inactive socket has timed out. The default 0 value means wait forever.

Request timeout (seconds): How long to wait for an incoming request to complete before aborting it. The default 0 value means wait indefinitely.

Keep-alive timeout (seconds): After the last response is sent, Cribl Edge will wait this long for additional data before closing the socket connection. Defaults to 5 seconds; minimum is 1 second; maximum is 600 seconds (10 minutes).

The longer the Keep‑alive timeout, the more Cribl Edge will reuse connections. The shorter the timeout, the closer Cribl Edge gets to creating a new connection for every request. When request frequency is high, you can use longer timeouts to reduce the number of connections created, which mitigates the associated cost.

Environment: If you’re using GitOps, optionally use this field to specify a single Git branch on which to enable this configuration. If empty, the config will be enabled everywhere.

Connected Destinations

Select Send to Routes to enable conditional routing, filtering, and cloning of this Source’s data via the Routing table.

Select QuickConnect to send this Source’s data to one or more Destinations via independent, direct connections.

Internal Fields

Cribl Edge uses a set of internal fields to assist in handling of data. These “meta” fields are not part of an event, but they are accessible, and functions can use them to make processing decisions.

Fields for this Source:

  • __headers – Added only when Advanced Settings > Capture request headers is set to Yes.
  • __inputId
  • __raw
  • __srcIpPort – See details below.

Records also include the following metadata specific to the Amazon Data Firehose service:

  • __firehoseArn: The Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the Amazon Data Firehose delivery stream that served as the data source.
  • __firehoseReqId: A unique identifier assigned to the specific data ingestion request processed by Amazon Data Firehose.
  • __firehoseEndpoint: The service endpoint URL of the Amazon Data Firehose service that received the data.
  • __firehoseToken: An authentication token associated with the Amazon Data Firehose data ingestion request, used for source validation.

Overriding __srcIpPort with Client IP/Port

The __srcIpPort field’s value contains the IP address and (optionally) port of the Kinesis Firehose client sending data to this Source.

When any proxies (including load balancers) lie between the Kinesis Firehose client and the Source, the last proxy adds an X‑Forwarded‑For header whose value is the IP/port of the original client. With multiple proxies, this header’s value will be an array, whose first item is the original client IP/port.

If X‑Forwarded‑For is present, and Advanced Settings > Enable proxy protocol is set to No, the original client IP/port in this header will override the value of __srcIpPort.

If Enable proxy protocol is set to Yes, the X‑Forwarded‑For header’s contents will not override the __srcIpPort value. (Here, the upstream proxy can convey the client IP/port without using this header.)

Limitations/Troubleshooting

If you set the optional IntervalInSeconds and/or SizeInMBs parameters in the Kinesis Firehose BufferingHints API, beware of selecting extreme values (toward the ends of the API’s supported ranges). These can send more bytes than Cribl Edge can buffer, causing Cribl Edge to send HTTP 500 error responses to Kinesis Firehose.