# Kibana Input Plugin This plugin collects metrics about service status from [Kibana][kibana] instances via the server's API. > [!NOTE] > This plugin requires Kibana version 6.0+. ⭐ Telegraf v1.8.0 🏷️ applications, server 💻 all [kibana]: https://www.elastic.co/kibana ## Global configuration options In addition to the plugin-specific configuration settings, plugins support additional global and plugin configuration settings. These settings are used to modify metrics, tags, and field or create aliases and configure ordering, etc. See the [CONFIGURATION.md][CONFIGURATION.md] for more details. [CONFIGURATION.md]: ../../../docs/CONFIGURATION.md#plugins ## Configuration ```toml @sample.conf # Read status information from one or more Kibana servers [[inputs.kibana]] ## Specify a list of one or more Kibana servers servers = ["http://localhost:5601"] ## Timeout for HTTP requests timeout = "5s" ## HTTP Basic Auth credentials # username = "username" # password = "pa$$word" ## Optional TLS Config # tls_ca = "/etc/telegraf/ca.pem" # tls_cert = "/etc/telegraf/cert.pem" # tls_key = "/etc/telegraf/key.pem" ## Use TLS but skip chain & host verification # insecure_skip_verify = false ## If 'use_system_proxy' is set to true, Telegraf will check env vars such as ## HTTP_PROXY, HTTPS_PROXY, and NO_PROXY (or their lowercase counterparts). ## If 'use_system_proxy' is set to false (default) and 'http_proxy_url' is ## provided, Telegraf will use the specified URL as HTTP proxy. # use_system_proxy = false # http_proxy_url = "http://localhost:8888" ``` ## Metrics - kibana - tags: - name (Kibana reported name) - source (Kibana server hostname or IP) - status (Kibana health: green, yellow, red) - version (Kibana version) - fields: - status_code (integer, green=1 yellow=2 red=3 unknown=0) - heap_total_bytes (integer) - heap_max_bytes (integer; deprecated in 1.13.3: use `heap_total_bytes` field) - heap_used_bytes (integer) - heap_size_limit (integer) - uptime_ms (integer) - response_time_avg_ms (float) - response_time_max_ms (integer) - concurrent_connections (integer) - requests_per_sec (float) ## Example Output ```text kibana,host=myhost,name=my-kibana,source=localhost:5601,status=green,version=6.5.4 concurrent_connections=8i,heap_max_bytes=447778816i,heap_total_bytes=447778816i,heap_used_bytes=380603352i,requests_per_sec=1,response_time_avg_ms=57.6,response_time_max_ms=220i,status_code=1i,uptime_ms=6717489805i 1534864502000000000 ``` ## Run example environment Requires the following tools: - [Docker](https://docs.docker.com/get-docker/) - [Docker Compose](https://docs.docker.com/compose/install/) From the root of this project execute the following script: `./plugins/inputs/kibana/test_environment/run_test_env.sh` This will build the latest Telegraf and then start up Kibana and Elasticsearch, Telegraf will begin monitoring Kibana's status and write its results to the file `/tmp/metrics.out` in the Telegraf container. Then you can attach to the telegraf container to inspect the file `/tmp/metrics.out` to see if the status is being reported. The Visual Studio Code [Remote - Containers][remote] extension provides an easy user interface to attach to the running container. [remote]: https://marketplace.visualstudio.com/items?itemName=ms-vscode-remote.remote-containers