Sleep filter plugin

Pauses the pipeline for a configured interval. Primarily used for throttling or testing; production pipelines should rarely need this.

  • Package: logstash-filter-sleep
  • Coverage source: default/bundled
  • Official catalog entry: Yes

Plugin overview

sleep is used in the Logstash filter stage. Introduces delays while processing events.

Typical use cases

  • Transform fields before indexing to keep schema and naming consistent.
  • Prepare high-quality fields for alerts, dashboards, and downstream pipelines.

Input and output behavior

  • Flow: processes matching events and mutates fields/tags within the same event.
  • Input: works on events that match your surrounding if conditions.
  • Output: updates the current event in place unless configured otherwise.
  • Important options: every, replay, time.

Options

Required

  • No required plugin-specific options.

Optional

  • every (type: string; default: 1) — Only sleep once every N events.
  • replay (type: boolean; default: false) — When true, scale the sleep according to each event's timestamp (useful for replay scenarios).
  • time (type: string; default: none) — Seconds to sleep per matching event.

Example configuration

filter {
  if "load_test" in [tags] {
    sleep {
      time  => 0.1
      every => 10
    }
  }
}

Common options configuration

All Logstash filter plugins support these shared options:

  • add_field (type: hash; default: {}) — Adds fields when the filter succeeds. Supports dynamic field names and values.
  • add_tag (type: array; default: []) — Adds one or more tags when the filter succeeds.
  • enable_metric (type: boolean; default: true) — Enables or disables metric collection for this plugin instance.
  • id (type: string; default: none) — Sets an explicit plugin instance ID for monitoring and troubleshooting.
  • periodic_flush (type: boolean; default: false) — Calls the filter flush method at regular intervals.
  • remove_field (type: array; default: []) — Removes fields when the filter succeeds. Supports dynamic field names.
  • remove_tag (type: array; default: []) — Removes tags when the filter succeeds.
filter {
  sleep {
    add_field => { "pipeline_stage" => "parsed" }
    add_tag => ["parsed", "logstash_filter"]
    enable_metric => true
    id => "my_filter_instance"
    periodic_flush => false
    remove_field => ["tmp_field"]
    remove_tag => ["temporary"]
  }
}

Apply in Logit.io

  1. Open your stack in Logit.io and navigate to Logstash Pipelines.
  2. In the filter { ... } section, add a sleep block.
  3. Save your pipeline changes, then restart the Logstash pipeline if prompted.
  4. Send sample events and verify parsed/enriched fields in OpenSearch Dashboards.

Validation checklist

  • Confirm the sleep block compiles without syntax errors.
  • Verify expected new/updated fields exist in sample documents.
  • Verify unexpected fields are not removed unless explicitly configured.
  • Confirm tags added on success/failure align with your alerting and routing rules.

Troubleshooting

  • If events are unchanged, verify your filter condition (if ...) matches incoming events.
  • If the pipeline fails to start, validate braces/quotes and retry with a minimal filter block.
  • If throughput drops, reduce expensive operations and test with representative sample volume.

References