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106 lines
5 KiB
Text
106 lines
5 KiB
Text
[[setup]]
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== Getting Kibana Up and Running
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You can set up Kibana and start exploring your Elasticsearch indices in minutes.
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All you need is:
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* Elasticsearch {esversion}
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* A modern web browser - http://www.elastic.co/subscriptions/matrix#matrix_browsers[Supported Browsers].
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* Information about your Elasticsearch installation:
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** URL of the Elasticsearch instance you want to connect to.
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** Which Elasticsearch indices you want to search.
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NOTE: If your Elasticsearch installation is protected by http://www.elastic.co/overview/shield/[{scyld}], see
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{shield}/kibana.html#using-kibana4-with-shield[{scyld} with Kibana] for additional setup instructions.
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[float]
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[[install]]
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=== Install and Start Kibana
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To get Kibana up and running:
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. Download the https://www.elastic.co/downloads/kibana[Kibana {version} binary package] for your platform.
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. Extract the `.zip` or `tar.gz` archive file.
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. After installing, run Kibana from the install directory: `bin/kibana` (Linux/MacOSX) or `bin\kibana.bat` (Windows).
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On Unix, you can instead run the package manager suited for your distribution.
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////
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[float]
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include::kibana-repositories.asciidoc[]
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////
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That's it! Kibana is now running on port 5601.
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[float]
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[[kibana-dynamic-mapping]]
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==== Kibana and Elasticsearch Dynamic Mapping
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By default, Elasticsearch enables {ref}dynamic-mapping.html[dynamic mapping] for fields. Kibana needs dynamic mapping
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to use fields in visualizations correctly, as well as to manage the `.kibana` index where saved searches,
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visualizations, and dashboards are stored.
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If your Elasticsearch use case requires you to disable dynamic mapping, you need to manually provide mappings for
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fields that Kibana uses to create visualizations. You also need to manually enable dynamic mapping for the `.kibana`
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index.
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The following procedure assumes that the `.kibana` index does not already exist in Elasticsearch and that the
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`index.mapper.dynamic` setting in `elasticsearch.yml` is set to `false`:
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. Start Elasticsearch.
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. Create the `.kibana` index with dynamic mapping enabled just for that index:
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+
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[source,shell]
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PUT .kibana
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{
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"index.mapper.dynamic": true
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}
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+
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. Start Kibana and navigate to the web UI and verify that there are no error messages related to dynamic mapping.
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[float]
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[[connect]]
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=== Connect Kibana with Elasticsearch
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Before you can start using Kibana, you need to tell it which Elasticsearch indices you want to explore. The first time
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you access Kibana, you are prompted to define an _index pattern_ that matches the name of one or more of your indices.
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That's it. That's all you need to configure to start using Kibana. You can add index patterns at any time from the
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<<settings-create-pattern,Settings tab>>.
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TIP: By default, Kibana connects to the Elasticsearch instance running on `localhost`. To connect to a different
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Elasticsearch instance, modify the Elasticsearch URL in the `kibana.yml` configuration file and restart Kibana. For
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information about using Kibana with your production nodes, see <<production>>.
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To configure the Elasticsearch indices you want to access with Kibana:
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. Point your browser at port 5601 to access the Kibana UI. For example, `localhost:5601` or `http://YOURDOMAIN.com:5601`.
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+
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image:images/Start-Page.png[Kibana start page]
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+
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. Specify an index pattern that matches the name of one or more of your Elasticsearch indices. By default, Kibana
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guesses that you're working with data being fed into Elasticsearch by Logstash. If that's the case, you can use the
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default `logstash-*` as your index pattern. The asterisk (*) matches zero or more characters in an index's name. If
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your Elasticsearch indices follow some other naming convention, enter an appropriate pattern. The "pattern" can also
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simply be the name of a single index.
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. Select the index field that contains the timestamp that you want to use to perform time-based comparisons. Kibana
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reads the index mapping to list all of the fields that contain a timestamp. If your index doesn't have time-based data,
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disable the *Index contains time-based events* option.
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+
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WARNING: Using event times to create index names is *deprecated* in this release of Kibana. Starting in the 2.1
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release, Elasticsearch includes sophisticated date parsing APIs that Kibana uses to determine date information,
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removing the need to specify dates in the index pattern name.
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+
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. Click *Create* to add the index pattern. This first pattern is automatically configured as the default.
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When you have more than one index pattern, you can designate which one to use as the default from *Settings > Indices*.
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All done! Kibana is now connected to your Elasticsearch data. Kibana displays a read-only list of fields configured for
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the matching index.
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[float]
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[[explore]]
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=== Start Exploring your Data!
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You're ready to dive in to your data:
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* Search and browse your data interactively from the <<discover, Discover>> page.
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* Chart and map your data from the <<visualize, Visualize>> page.
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* Create and view custom dashboards from the <<dashboard, Dashboard>> page.
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For a tutorial that explores these core Kibana concepts, take a look at the <<getting-started, Getting
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Started>> page.
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