- Filebeat Reference: other versions:
- Overview
- Getting Started With Filebeat
- Setting up and running Filebeat
- Upgrading Filebeat
- How Filebeat works
- Configuring Filebeat
- Specify which modules to run
- Configure inputs
- Manage multiline messages
- Specify general settings
- Load external configuration files
- Configure the internal queue
- Configure the output
- Configure index lifecycle management
- Load balance the output hosts
- Specify SSL settings
- Filter and enhance the exported data
- Define processors
- Add cloud metadata
- Add fields
- Add labels
- Add the local time zone
- Add tags
- Decode CEF
- Decode CSV fields
- Decode JSON fields
- Decode Base64 fields
- Decompress gzip fields
- Community ID Network Flow Hash
- Convert
- Drop events
- Drop fields from events
- Extract array
- Keep fields from events
- Registered Domain
- Rename fields from events
- Add Kubernetes metadata
- Add Docker metadata
- Add Host metadata
- Add Observer metadata
- Dissect strings
- DNS Reverse Lookup
- Add process metadata
- Script Processor
- Timestamp
- Parse data by using ingest node
- Enrich events with geoIP information
- Configure project paths
- Configure the Kibana endpoint
- Load the Kibana dashboards
- Load the Elasticsearch index template
- Configure logging
- Use environment variables in the configuration
- Autodiscover
- YAML tips and gotchas
- Regular expression support
- HTTP Endpoint
- filebeat.reference.yml
- Beats central management
- Modules
- Modules overview
- Apache module
- Auditd module
- AWS module
- CEF module
- Cisco module
- Coredns Module
- Elasticsearch module
- Envoyproxy Module
- Google Cloud module
- haproxy module
- IBM MQ module
- Icinga module
- IIS module
- Iptables module
- Kafka module
- Kibana module
- Logstash module
- MongoDB module
- MSSQL module
- MySQL module
- nats module
- NetFlow module
- Nginx module
- Osquery module
- Palo Alto Networks module
- PostgreSQL module
- RabbitMQ module
- Redis module
- Santa module
- Suricata module
- System module
- Traefik module
- Zeek (Bro) Module
- Exported fields
- Apache fields
- Auditd fields
- AWS fields
- Beat fields
- Decode CEF processor fields fields
- CEF fields
- Cisco fields
- Cloud provider metadata fields
- Coredns fields
- Docker fields
- ECS fields
- elasticsearch fields
- Envoyproxy fields
- Google Cloud fields
- haproxy fields
- Host fields
- ibmmq fields
- Icinga fields
- IIS fields
- iptables fields
- Jolokia Discovery autodiscover provider fields
- Kafka fields
- kibana fields
- Kubernetes fields
- Log file content fields
- logstash fields
- mongodb fields
- mssql fields
- MySQL fields
- nats fields
- NetFlow fields
- NetFlow fields
- Nginx fields
- Osquery fields
- panw fields
- PostgreSQL fields
- Process fields
- RabbitMQ fields
- Redis fields
- s3 fields
- Google Santa fields
- Suricata fields
- System fields
- Traefik fields
- Zeek fields
- Monitoring Filebeat
- Securing Filebeat
- Troubleshooting
- Get help
- Debug
- Common problems
- Can’t read log files from network volumes
- Filebeat isn’t collecting lines from a file
- Too many open file handlers
- Registry file is too large
- Inode reuse causes Filebeat to skip lines
- Log rotation results in lost or duplicate events
- Open file handlers cause issues with Windows file rotation
- Filebeat is using too much CPU
- Dashboard in Kibana is breaking up data fields incorrectly
- Fields are not indexed or usable in Kibana visualizations
- Filebeat isn’t shipping the last line of a file
- Filebeat keeps open file handlers of deleted files for a long time
- Filebeat uses too much bandwidth
- Error loading config file
- Found unexpected or unknown characters
- Logstash connection doesn’t work
- @metadata is missing in Logstash
- Not sure whether to use Logstash or Beats
- SSL client fails to connect to Logstash
- Monitoring UI shows fewer Beats than expected
- Contributing to Beats
Load the Kibana dashboards
editLoad the Kibana dashboards
editFilebeat comes packaged with example Kibana dashboards, visualizations, and searches for visualizing Filebeat data in Kibana.
To load the dashboards, you can either enable dashboard loading in the
setup.dashboards
section of the filebeat.yml
config file, or you can
run the setup
command. Dashboard loading is disabled by default.
When dashboard loading is enabled, Filebeat uses the Kibana API to load the sample dashboards. Dashboard loading is only attempted when Filebeat starts up. If Kibana is not available at startup, Filebeat will stop with an error.
To enable dashboard loading, add the following setting to the config file:
setup.dashboards.enabled: true
Configuration options
editYou can specify the following options in the setup.dashboards
section of the
filebeat.yml
config file:
setup.dashboards.enabled
editIf this option is set to true, Filebeat loads the sample Kibana dashboards
from the local kibana
directory in the home path of the Filebeat installation.
When dashboard loading is enabled, Filebeat overwrites any existing dashboards that match the names of the dashboards you are loading. This happens every time Filebeat starts.
If no other options are set, the dashboard are loaded
from the local kibana
directory in the home path of the Filebeat installation.
To load dashboards from a different location, you can configure one of the
following options: setup.dashboards.directory
,
setup.dashboards.url
, or
setup.dashboards.file
.
setup.dashboards.directory
editThe directory that contains the dashboards to load. The default is the kibana
folder in the home path.
setup.dashboards.url
editThe URL to use for downloading the dashboard archive. If this option is set, Filebeat downloads the dashboard archive from the specified URL instead of using the local directory.
setup.dashboards.file
editThe file archive (zip file) that contains the dashboards to load. If this option is set, Filebeat looks for a dashboard archive in the specified path instead of using the local directory.
setup.dashboards.beat
editIn case the archive contains the dashboards for multiple Beats, this setting
lets you select the Beat for which you want to load dashboards. To load all the
dashboards in the archive, set this option to an empty string. The default is
"filebeat"
.
setup.dashboards.kibana_index
editThe name of the Kibana index to use for setting the configuration. The default
is ".kibana"
setup.dashboards.index
editThe Elasticsearch index name. This setting overwrites the index name defined
in the dashboards and index pattern. Example: "testbeat-*"
This setting only works for Kibana 6.0 and newer.
setup.dashboards.always_kibana
editForce loading of dashboards using the Kibana API without querying Elasticsearch for the version.
The default is false
.
setup.dashboards.retry.enabled
editIf this option is set to true, and Kibana is not reachable at the time when dashboards are loaded, Filebeat will retry to reconnect to Kibana instead of exiting with an error. Disabled by default.
setup.dashboards.retry.interval
editDuration interval between Kibana connection retries. Defaults to 1 second.
setup.dashboards.retry.maximum
editMaximum number of retries before exiting with an error. Set to 0 for unlimited retrying. Default is unlimited.
On this page
- Configuration options
setup.dashboards.enabled
setup.dashboards.directory
setup.dashboards.url
setup.dashboards.file
setup.dashboards.beat
setup.dashboards.kibana_index
setup.dashboards.index
setup.dashboards.always_kibana
setup.dashboards.retry.enabled
setup.dashboards.retry.interval
setup.dashboards.retry.maximum