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This image is built by Calyptia, the company who created and maintains Fluent Bit. This image is derived from the upstream Fluent Bit OSS project.
Fluent Bit is a fast Log and Metrics Processor and Forwarder for Linux, Windows, Embedded Linux, MacOS and BSD family operating systems. It's part of the Graduated Fluentd Ecosystem and a CNCF sub-project.
Fluent Bit allows to collect log events or metrics from different sources, process them and deliver them to different backends such as Fluentd, Elasticsearch, Splunk, DataDog, Kafka, New Relic, Azure services, AWS services, Google services, NATS, InfluxDB or any custom HTTP end-point.
Fluent Bit comes with full SQL Stream Processing capabilities: data manipulation and analytics using SQL queries.
The following information was extracted from the containerfile and other sources.
Summary | Calyptia Fluent Bit v2.0.5 |
Description | The Universal Base Image Minimal is a stripped down image that uses microdnf as a package manager. This base image is freely redistributable, but Red Hat only supports Red Hat technologies through subscriptions for Red Hat products. This image is maintained by Red Hat and updated regularly. |
Provider | Calyptia |
Maintainer | Patrick Stephens <hello@calyptia.com> |
The following information was extracted from the containerfile and other sources.
Repository name | calyptia/fluent-bit |
Image version | ubi9-v2.0.5 |
Architecture | amd64 |
Use the following instructions to get images from a Red Hat container registry using registry service account tokens. You will need to create a registry service account to use prior to completing any of the following tasks.
First, you will need to add a reference to the appropriate secret and repository to your Kubernetes pod configuration via an imagePullSecrets field.
Then, use the following from the command line or from the OpenShift Dashboard GUI interface.
Use the following command(s) from a system with podman installed
Use the following command(s) from a system with docker service installed and running
Use the following instructions to get images from a Red Hat container registry using your Red Hat login.
For best practices, it is recommended to use registry tokens when pulling content for OpenShift deployments.
Use the following command(s) from a system with podman installed
Use the following command(s) from a system with docker service installed and running