Metadata
In Bento each message has raw contents and metadata, which is a map of key/value pairs representing an arbitrary amount of complementary data.
When an input protocol supports attributes or metadata they will automatically be added to your messages, refer to the respective input documentation for a list of metadata keys. When an output supports attributes or metadata any metadata key/value pairs in a message will be sent (subject to service limits).
Editing Metadata
Bento allows you to add and remove metadata using the mapping
processor. For example, you can do something like this in your pipeline:
pipeline:
processors:
- mapping: |
# Remove all existing metadata from messages
meta = deleted()
# Add a new metadata field `time` from the contents of a JSON
# field `event.timestamp`
meta time = event.timestamp
You can also use Bloblang to delete individual metadata keys with:
meta foo = deleted()
Or do more interesting things like remove all metadata keys with a certain prefix:
meta = @.filter(kv -> !kv.key.has_prefix("kafka_"))
Using Metadata
There are two functions to reference metadata: meta()
and metadata()
. meta()
has been depreciated in favor of metadata()
.
Metadata values can be referenced in any field that supports interpolation functions. For example, you can route messages to Kafka topics using interpolation of metadata keys:
output:
kafka:
addresses: [ TODO ]
topic: ${! metadata("target_topic") }
Bento also allows you to conditionally process messages based on their metadata with the switch
processor:
pipeline:
processors:
- switch:
- check: '@doc_type == "nested"'
processors:
- sql_insert:
driver: mysql
dsn: foouser:foopassword@tcp(localhost:3306)/foodb
table: footable
columns: [ foo, bar, baz ]
args_mapping: |
root = [
this.document.foo,
this.document.bar,
@kafka_topic,
]
Restricting Metadata
Outputs that support metadata, headers or some other variant of enriched fields on messages will attempt to send all metadata key/value pairs by default. However, sometimes it's useful to refer to metadata fields at the output level even though we do not wish to send them with our data. In this case it's possible to restrict the metadata keys that are sent with the field metadata.exclude_prefixes
within the respective output config.
For example, if we were sending messages to kafka using a metadata key target_topic
to determine the topic but we wished to prevent that metadata key from being sent as a header we could use the following configuration:
output:
kafka:
addresses: [ TODO ]
topic: ${! metadata("target_topic") }
metadata:
exclude_prefixes:
- target_topic
And when the list of metadata keys that we do not want to send is large it can be helpful to use a Bloblang mapping in order to give all of these "private" keys a common prefix:
pipeline:
processors:
# Has an explicit list of public metadata keys, and everything else is given
# an underscore prefix.
- mapping: |
let allowed_meta = [
"foo",
"bar",
"baz",
]
meta = @.map_each_key(key -> if !$allowed_meta.contains(key) {
"_" + key
})
output:
kafka:
addresses: [ TODO ]
topic: ${! metadata("_target_topic") }
metadata:
exclude_prefixes: [ "_" ]