In this step you’ll set up the Elasticsearch exporter on your machine to collect and expose Elasticsearch metrics in Prometheus format. Step 1: Setting up Elasticsearch Exporter To learn more about Grafana Cloud, please see Grafana Cloud. You will still need to scrape metrics, using either Prometheus installed in your environment, or the Grafana Cloud Agent. Grafana Cloud hosts Grafana and a Cortex-based Prometheus metrics endpoint. To learn how to install Grafana, please see Install Grafana from the Grafana docs. Grafana running in your environment or directly on the machine.To learn how to install Prometheus, please see Installation from the Prometheus docs. Prometheus running in your environment or directly on the machine.To learn more about installing and running Elasticsearch, please see the Elasticsearch Installation Guide. Elasticsearch running on your machine.To see a list of available releases, please see Releases. A machine compatible with a Elasticsearch Exporter release.Prerequisitesīefore you get started, you should have the following available to you: To learn how to set up Elasticsearch Exporter using the Elasticsearch Integration, please see Elasticsearch Integration from the Grafana Cloud docs. The Elasticsearch Integration embeds the Elasticsearch Exporter into the Grafana Cloud Agent and automatically provisions alerting rules and dashboards, so you don’t have to run through the steps in this guide. If you’re using Grafana Cloud, the Elasticsearch Integration can help you get up and running quickly. At the end of this guide you’ll have dashboards that you can use to visualize your Elasticsearch metrics, and set of preconfigured alerts. Finally, you’ll set up a preconfigured and curated set of recording rules, Grafana dashboards, and alerting rules. You’ll then configure Prometheus to scrape Elasticsearch metrics and optionally ship them to Grafana Cloud. In this guide you’ll learn how to set up and configure the Elasticsearch Exporter to collect Elasticsearch metrics like cluster status, active shards, JVM metrics, Elasticsearch load, and expose them as Prometheus-style metrics. To learn how to set up Elasticsearch Exporter using the Elasticsearch Exporter Integration, please see Elasticsearch Exporter Integration from the Grafana Cloud docs. If you’re using Grafana Cloud, you can skip all of the steps in this guide by installing the Elasticsearch Exporter Integration, which is designed to help you get up and running in a few commands and clicks. Grafana Cloud’s Elasticsearch Integration To learn how to do this, please see Reducing Prometheus metrics usage with relabeling from the Grafana Cloud docs. To learn more about configuring Elasticsearch Exporter and toggling its collectors, please see the Elasticsearch Exporter GitHub repository.īeyond toggling Elasticsearch Exporter’s settings, you can reduce metrics usage by dropping time series you don’t need to store in Prometheus or Grafana Cloud. Note that depending on its configuration, Elasticsearch Exporter may collect and publish far more metrics than this default set. To see a list of metrics shipped by default with this exporter, please download a sample metrics scrape here. This exporter publishes roughly 392 Prometheus time series by default. Set up Prometheus alerting rules to alert on your metrics data. Imported Grafana dashboards to visualize your metrics data. Set up a preconfigured and curated set of recording rules to cache frequent Prometheus queries. Elasticsearch Exporter will expose these as Prometheus-style metrics.Ĭonfigured Prometheus to scrape Elasticsearch Exporter metrics and optionally ship them to Grafana Cloud. Set up and configured Elasticsearch Exporter to collect Elasticsearch metrics like cluster status, active shards, JVM metrics, Elasticsearch load. After running through the steps in this quickstart, you will have: The following quickstart provides setup instructions and preconfigured dashboards, alerting rules, and recording rules for Elasticsearch Exporter.
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