Preview Release

Falcon LogScale 1.147.0 Preview (2024-07-16)

Version?Type?Release Date?Availability?End of Support

Security

Updates

Upgrades

From?

JDK

Compatibility?

Config.

Changes?
1.147.0Preview2024-07-16

Cloud

Next StableYes1.11221-22No

Bug fixes and updates.

Advanced Warning

The following items are due to change in a future release.

  • Installation and Deployment

    • The LogScale Launcher Script script for starting LogScale will be modified to change the way CPU core usage can be configured. The -XX:ActiveProcessorCount=n command-line option will be ignored if set. Users that need to configure the core count manually should set CORES=n environmant variable instead. This will cause the launcher to configure both LogScale and the JVM properly.

      This change is scheduled for 1.148.0.

      For more information, see Configuring Available CPU Cores.

Deprecation

Items that have been deprecated and may be removed in a future release.

  • The following API endpoints are deprecated and marked for removal in 1.148.0:

    • POST /api/v1/clusterconfig/kafka-queues/partition-assignment

    • GET /api/v1/clusterconfig/kafka-queues/partition-assignment

    • POST /api/v1/clusterconfig/kafka-queues/partition-assignment/set-replication-defaults

    The deprecated methods are used for viewing and changing the partition assignment in Kafka for the ingest queue. Administrators should use Kafka's own tools for editing partition assignments instead, such as the bin/kafka-reassign-partitions.sh and bin/kafka-topics.sh scripts that ship with the Kafka install.

  • The server.tar.gz release artifact has been deprecated. Users should switch to the OS/architecture-specific server-linux_x64.tar.gz or server-alpine_x64.tar.gz, which include bundled JDKs. Users installing a Docker image do not need to make any changes. With this change, LogScale will no longer support bringing your own JDK, we will bundle one with releases instead.

    We are making this change for the following reasons:

    • By bundling a JDK specifically for LogScale, we can customize the JDK to contain only the functionality needed by LogScale. This is a benefit from a security perspective, and also reduces the size of release artifacts.

    • Bundling the JDK ensures that the JDK version in use is one we've tested with, which makes it more likely a customer install will perform similar to our own internal setups.

    • By bundling the JDK, we will only need to support one JDK version. This means we can take advantage of enhanced JDK features sooner, such as specific performance improvements, which benefits everyone.

    The last release where server.tar.gz artifact is included will be 1.154.0.

  • The HUMIO_JVM_ARGS environment variable in the LogScale Launcher Script script will be removed in 1.154.0.

    The variable existed for migration from older deployments where the launcher script was not available. The launcher script replaces the need for manually setting parameters in this variable, so the use of this variable is no longer required. Using the launcher script is now the recommended method of launching LogScale. For more details on the launcher script, see LogScale Launcher Script. Clusters that still set this configuration should migrate to the other variables described at Override garbage collection configuration within the launcher script.

  • We are deprecating the humio/kafka and humio/zookeeper Docker images due to low use. The planned final release for these images will be with LogScale 1.148.0.

    Better alternatives are available going forward. We recommend the following:

    • If your cluster is deployed on Kubernetes: STRIMZI

    • If your cluster is deployed to AWS: MSK

    If you still require humio/kafka or humio/zookeeper for needs that cannot be covered by these alternatives, please contact Support and share your concerns.

  • The lastScheduledSearch field from the ScheduledSearch datatype is now deprecated and planned for removal in LogScale version 1.202. The new lastExecuted and lastTriggered fields have been added to the ScheduledSearch datatype to replace lastScheduledSearch.

New features and improvements

  • UI Changes

    • A new timestamp column has been added in the Event list displaying the alert timestamp selected (@ingesttimestamp or @timestamp). This will show as the new default column along with the usual @rawstring field column.

      For more information, see Alert Properties.

    • The Time Interval panel now displays the @ingesttimestamp/@timestamp options selected when querying events for Aggregate Alerts.

      For more information, see Changing Time Interval.

  • Automation and Alerts

    • A new Disabled actions status is added and can be visible from the Alerts overview table. This status will be displayed when there is an alert (or scheduled search) with only disabled actions attached.

      For more information, see Alerts Overview.

    • Standard Alerts have been renamed to Legacy Alerts. It is recommended using Filter Alerts or Aggregate Alerts alerts instead of legacy alerts.

      For more information, see Alerts.

    • A new aggregate alert type is introduced. The aggregate alert is now the recommended alert type for any queries containing aggregate functions. Like filter alerts, aggregate alerts use ingest timestamps and run back-to-back searches, guaranteeing at least once delivery to the actions for more robust results, even in case of ingest delays of up to 24 hours.

      For more information, see Aggregate Alerts.

    • The following UI changes are introduced for alerts:

      • The Alerts overview page now presents a table with search and filtering options.

      • An alert-specific version of the Search page is now available for creating and refining your query before saving it as an alert.

      • The alert's properties are opened in a side panel when creating or editing an alert.

      • In the side panel, the recommended alert type to choose is suggested based on the query.

      • For aggregate alerts, the side panel allows you to select the timestamp (@ingesttimestamp or @timestamp).

      For more information, see Creating Alerts, Alert Properties.

  • Log Collector

    • RemoteUpdate version dialog has been improved, with the ability to cancel pending and scheduled updates.

Fixed in this release

  • Ingestion

    • When shutting down a node, the process that load files used by a parser would be stopped before the parser itself. This could lead to ingested events not being parsed. This issue has now been fixed.

  • Functions

    • parseXml() would sometimes only partially extract text elements when the text contained newline characters. This issue has now been fixed.

    • Live queries using Field Aliasing on a repository with Tag Groupings enabled could fail. This issue has now been fixed.

    • Long running queries using window() could end up never completing. This issue has now been fixed.