This article is part of the series of blogs on Azure Kubernetes Service (AKS). In this article I am going to share my experience of setting up Elasticsearch, Logstash and Kibana cluster in Azure Kubernetes Service (AKS) and consume messages from Event Hub. After the end of this article, we are going to have fully functional ELK stack with Azure Event Hub integration.
A sample client App (e.g. IOT device) will be publishing messages to Event Hub and these messages will be ingested into Elasticsearch using ‘Azure Event Hub’ plugin of Logstash. This article needs x-pack features of Elasticsearch thus I will show steps needed to activate trial license.
The second part of this series goes through steps needed to enable Azure AD SAML based single sign on to secure Elasticsearch and Kibana hosted in AKS. The third part of this series goes through steps needed to ingest Azure Redis Cache messages into Elasticsearch using Logstash’s Redis plugin.
The dev tools used to develop these components are Visual Studio for Mac/Visual Studio 2017, AKS Dashboard as well as kubectl commands are used to create/manager Kubernetes resources in AKS.