https://github.com/openobserve/openobserve . Built in rust - No JVM. Much lighter than the alternatives mentioned here and with extremely good UI. Beautiful dashboards. Could even run on raspberry pi.
Self-Hosted Main
A place to share alternatives to popular online services that can be self-hosted without giving up privacy or locking you into a service you don't control.
For Example
- Service: Dropbox - Alternative: Nextcloud
- Service: Google Reader - Alternative: Tiny Tiny RSS
- Service: Blogger - Alternative: WordPress
We welcome posts that include suggestions for good self-hosted alternatives to popular online services, how they are better, or how they give back control of your data. Also include hints and tips for less technical readers.
Useful Lists
- Awesome-Selfhosted List of Software
- Awesome-Sysadmin List of Software
Dozzle may be a bit basic for your needs, but it could be one tool in your toolbox.
Dozzle is fantastic!
ELK
Loki to Grafana.
Depending on your existing monitoring stack, some options might be:
- Grafana Loki
- Sentry can be self-hosted for application logging
- Logstash is self-explanatory, use with other parts of Elastic's software like Kibana for visualization.
Anyone here got a solution working in Unraid? I looked into this recently but got a bit stuck.
Opted for loki since it allows using the same interface for multiple purposes
I like Grafana/Loki/promtail etc.
But Datalust Seq is also nice.
Graylog can do a lot but its too bloated and too hungry for my taste (damn elasticsearch).
A simple syslog server is ready.
Look into ELK stack. I personally hate it but if you can learn it there's a chance you can build a career on it.
I come from a Cybersecurity background which might explain my answer: Security Onion had proven adept at cross referencing logs and pcaps which is pretty awesome for troubleshooting
And +1 for Dozzle to see real-time Docker logs.
For most self hosted use cases Splunk's free 500MB (per day) license should be enough. It's way easier to set up and maintain than ELK and has tons of free extensions for parsing log formats and dashboards.
I considered it, seems nice.
Problem is that they recommend a 12 physical cores and 12GB which is a waste for the usual selfhosted lab.
I ran it on a VM with 2 cores tops and a couple of GB of RAM for about 50MB of logs per day.
Also using Graylog, dead simple to set up with rsyslog and at work we even use the sidecar for window logs.
Splunk
Just write your logs as files on a centralized syslog server with good file structure and you'll be good.
You may really underestimate how fast and convenient grep+less combo is in comparison to webui-based solutions.
s/grep/ripgrep 😉
It's a hybrid solution but I prefer putting my logs with an S3 provider, it's just cheap storage that I don't have to care about. And there are a lot of tools to do it with, like loki for example.
Another vote for graylog, runs well with opensearch instead of elastic.
Anyone else looking at openobserve. Looks OK for homelab, but not really stable
What do you mean by not stable? It's in use in production by hundreds of organizations.
They state in their documentation that the software is alpha (https://openobserve.ai/docs/ OpenObserve is currently in alpha, but don't let that stop you from trying it out.) . To be honest I didn't bother to investigate why ingesting data stops working after a few days, might be my installation then.
I'm very curious which organisation uses alpha software in production
Graylog
I use the ELK stack (Elasticsearch, Kibana, Beats)
I tried some tools and the one that I am currently using is OpenObserve, it's light has a very good compression and is simple to manage, as an observability platform I think that open observe has some features that can be used instead of datadog like log injestion and open telemetry traces