- Observability: other versions:
- What is Elastic Observability?
- What’s new in 8.7
- Send data to Elasticsearch
- Spin up the Elastic Stack
- Deploy Elastic Agent to send data
- Deploy Beats to send data
- Elastic Serverless Forwarder for AWS
- Deploy serverless forwarder
- Configuration options
- Troubleshooting
- Observability overview page
- Application performance monitoring (APM)
- Application logs
- Log monitoring
- Infrastructure monitoring
- Uptime
- Synthetics (beta)
- Get started
- Scripting browser monitors
- Configure lightweight monitors
- Manage monitors
- Analyze monitor data
- Monitor resources on private networks
- Use the CLI
- Configure projects
- Configure Synthetics settings
- Grant users access to secured resources
- Manage data retention
- Use Synthetics with traffic filters
- Migrate from the Elastic Synthetics integration
- User Experience
- Universal Profiling
- Alerting
- Cases
- CI/CD observability
- Troubleshooting
- Fields reference
- Tutorials
- Monitor Amazon Web Services (AWS) with Elastic Agent
- Monitor Amazon Web Services (AWS) with Beats
- Monitor Google Cloud Platform
- Monitor a Java application
- Monitor Kubernetes
- Monitor Microsoft Azure with Elastic Agent
- Monitor Microsoft Azure with the native Azure integration
- Monitor Microsoft Azure with Beats
Configure individual browser monitors
editConfigure individual browser monitors
editThis functionality is in beta and is subject to change. The design and code is less mature than official GA features and is being provided as-is with no warranties. Beta features are not subject to the support SLA of official GA features.
This is only relevant for project monitors. For more information on configuring browser monitors added in the Synthetics app, refer to Use the Synthetics app.
After writing synthetic journeys, you can use monitor.use
to configure the browser monitors that will run your tests.
You’ll need to set a few configuration options:
- Give your monitor a name. Provide a human readable name and a unique ID for the monitor. This will appear in Kibana where you can view and manage monitors after they’re created.
- Set the schedule. Specify the interval at which your tests will run.
- Specify where the monitors should run. You can run monitors on Elastic’s global managed testing infrastructure or create a Private Location to run monitors from your own premises.
- Set other options as needed. There are several other options you can set to customize your implementation including params, tags, screenshot options, throttling options, and more.
Configure each monitor directly in your journey
code using monitor.use
.
The monitor
API allows you to set unique options for each journey’s monitor directly through code.
For example:
import { journey, step, monitor, expect } from '@elastic/synthetics'; journey('Ensure placeholder is correct', ({ page, params }) => { monitor.use({ id: 'example-monitor', schedule: 10, throttling: { download: 10, upload: 5, latency: 100, }, }); step('Load the demo page', async () => { await page.goto('https://elastic.github.io/synthetics-demo/'); }); step('Assert placeholder text', async () => { const placeholderValue = await page.getAttribute( 'input.new-todo', 'placeholder' ); expect(placeholderValue).toBe('What needs to be done?'); }); });
For each journey, you can specify its schedule
and the locations
in which it runs.
When those options are not set, Synthetics will use the default values in the global configuration file.
For more details, refer to Configure projects.