Kibana 4 is an analytics and visualization platform that builds on Elasticsearch to give you a better understanding of your data. In this tutorial, we will get you started with Kibana, by showing you how to use its interface to filter and visualize log messages gathered by an Elasticsearch ELK stack. We will cover the main interface components, and demonstrate how to create searches, visualizations, and dashboards.
This tutorial is the third part in the Centralized Logging with Logstash and Kibana series.
It assumes that you have a working ELK setup. The examples assume that you are gathering syslog and Nginx access logs. If you are not gathering these types of logs, you should be able to modify the demonstrations to work with your own log messages.
If you want to follow this tutorial exactly as presented, you should have the following setup, by following the first two tutorials in this series:
When you are ready to move on, let’s look at an overview of the Kibana interface.
The Kibana interface is divided into four main sections:
We will go over the basics of each section, in the listed order, and demonstrate how each piece of the interface can be used.
When you first connect to Kibana 4, you will be taken to the Discover page. By default, this page will display all of your ELK stack’s most recently received logs. Here, you can filter through and find specific log messages based on Search Queries, then narrow the search results to a specific time range with the Time Filter.
Here is a breakdown of the Kibana Discover interface elements:
This animation demonstrates a few of the main features of the Discover page:
Here is a step-by-step description of what is being performed:
type: "nginx-access"
, which only matches Nginx access logsNote that the results are being limited to the “Last 15 minutes”. If you are not getting any results, be sure that there were logs, that match your search query, generated in the time period specified.
The log messages that are gathered and filtered are dependent on your Logstash and Logstash Forwarder configurations. In our example, we are gathering the syslog and Nginx access logs, and filtering them by “type”. If you are gathering log messages but not filtering the data into distinct fields, querying against them will be more difficult as you will be unable to query specific fields.
The search provides an easy and powerful way to select a specific subset of log messages. The search syntax is pretty self-explanatory, and allows boolean operators, wildcards, and field filtering. For example, if you want to find Nginx access logs that were generated by Google Chrome users, you can search for type: "nginx-access" AND agent: "chrome"
. You could also search by specific hosts or client IP address ranges, or any other data that is contained in your logs.
When you have created a search query that you want to keep, you can do that by clicking the Save Search icon then the Save button, like in this animation:
Saved searches can be opened at any time by clicking the Load Saved Search icon, and they can also be used when creating visualizations.
We will save the type: "nginx-access"
search as “type nginx access”, and use it to create a visualization.
The Kibana Visualize page is where you can create, modify, and view your own custom visualizations. There are several different types of visualizations, ranging from Vertical bar and Pie charts to Tile maps (for displaying data on a map) and Data tables. Visualizations can also be shared with other users who have access to your Kibana instance.
If this is your first time using Kibana visualizations, you must reload your field list before proceeding. Instructions to do this are covered in the Reload Field Data subsection, under the Kibana Settings section.
To create a visualization, first, click the Visualize menu item.
Decide which type of visualization you want, and select it. We will create a Vertical bar chart, which is a good starting point.
Now you must select a search source. You may either create a new search or use a saved search. We will go with the latter method, and select the type nginx access search that we created earlier.
At first, the preview graph, on the right side, will be a solid bar (assuming that your search found log messages) because it consists only of a Y-axis of “Count”. That is, it is simply displaying the number of logs that were found with the specified search query.
To make the visualization more useful, let’s add some new buckets to it.
First, add an X-axis bucket, then click the Aggregation drop-down menu and select “Date Histogram”. If you click the Apply button, the single bar will split into several bars along the X-axis. Now the Count is displayed as multiple bars, divided into intervals of time (which can be modified by selecting an interval from the drop-down)—similar to what you would see on the Discover page.
If we want to make the graph a little more interesting, we can click the Add Sub Aggregation button. Select the Split Bars bucket type. Click the Sub Aggregation drop-down menu and select “Significant Terms”, then click the Field drop-down menu and select “clientip.raw”, then click the Size field and enter “10”. Click the Apply button to create the new graph.
Here is a screenshot of what you should see at this point:
If the logs being visualized were generated by multiple IP addresses (i.e. more than one person is accessing your site), you will see that each bar will be divided into colored segments. Each colored segment represents the Count of logs generated by a specific IP address (i.e. a particular visitor to your site), and the graph will show the up to 10 different segments (because of the Size setting). You can mouseover and click any of the items in the graph to drill down to specific log messages.
When you are ready to save your visualization, click the Save Visualization icon, near the top, then name it and click the Save button.
Before continuing to the next section, where we will demonstrate how to create a dashboard, you should create at least one more visualization. Try and explore the various visualization types.
For example, you could create a pie chart of your top 5 (highest count) log “types”. To do this, click Visualize then select Pie chart. Then use a new search, and leave the search as “*” (i.e. all of your logs). Then select Split Slices bucket. Click the Aggregation drop-down and select “Significant Terms”, click the Field drop-down and select “type.raw”, then click the Size field and enter “5”. Now click the Apply button and save the visualization as “Top 5”.
Here is a screenshot of the settings that were just described:
Because, in our example, we’re only collecting syslogs and Nginx access logs, there will only be two slices in the pie chart.
Once you are done creating visualizations, let’s move on to creating a Kibana dashboard.
The Kibana Dashboard page is where you can create, modify, and view your own custom dashboards. With a dashboard, you can combine multiple visualizations onto a single page, then filter them by providing a search query or by selecting filters by clicking elements in the visualization. Dashboards are useful for when you want to get an overview of your logs, and make correlations among various visualizations and logs.
To create a Kibana dashboard, first, click the Dashboard menu item.
If you haven’t created a dashboard before, you will see a mostly blank page that says “Ready to get started?”. If you don’t see this screen (i.e. there are already visualizations on the dashboard), press the New Dashboard icon (to the right of the search bar) to get there.
This animation demonstrates how to can add visualizations to your dashboard:
Here is a breakdown of the steps that are being performed:
Choose a name for your dashboard before saving it.
This should give you a good idea of how to create a dashboard. Go ahead and create any dashboards that you think you might want. We’ll cover using dashboards next.
Dashboards can be filtered further by entering a search query, changing the time filter, or clicking on the elements within the visualization.
For example, if you click on a particular color segment in the histogram, Kibana will allow you to filter on the significant term that the segment represents. Here is an example screenshot of applying a filter to a dashboard:
Be sure to click the Apply Now button to filter the results, and redraw the dashboard’s visualizations. Filters can be applied and removed as needed.
The search and time filters work just like they do in the Discover page, except they are only applied to the data subsets that are presented in the dashboard.
The Kibana Settings page lets you change a variety of things like default values or index patterns. In this tutorial, we will keep it simple and focus on the Indices and Objects sections.
When you add new fields to your Logstash data, e.g. if you add a filter for a new log type, you may need to reload your field list. It is necessary to reload the field list if you are unable find filtered fields in Kibana, as this data is only cached periodically.
To do so, click the Settings menu item, then click “logstash-*” (under Index Patterns):
Then click the yellow Reload Field List button. Hit the OK button to confirm.
The Objects section allows you to edit, view, and delete any of your saved dashboards, searches, and visualizations.
To get there, click on the Settings menu item, then the Objects sub-menu.
Here, you can select from the tabs to find the objects that you want to edit, view, or delete:
In the screenshot, we have selected a duplicate visualization. It can be edited, viewed, or deleted by clicking on the appropriate button.
If you followed this tutorial, you should have a good understanding of how to use Kibana 4. You should know how to search your log messages, and create visualizations and dashboards.
Be sure to check out the next tutorial in this series, How To Map User Location with GeoIP and ELK
If you have any questions or suggestions, please leave a comment!
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Centralized logging can be very useful when attempting to identify problems with your servers or applications, as it allows you to search through all of your logs in a single place. It is also useful because it allows you to identify issues that span multiple servers by correlating their logs during a specific time frame.
This series will teach you how to install Logstash and Kibana on Ubuntu, then how to add more filters to structure your log data. Then it will teach you how to use Kibana.
Centralized logging can be very useful when attempting to identify problems with your servers or applications, as it allows you to search through all of your logs in a single place. It is also useful because it allows you to identify issues that span multiple servers by correlating their logs during a specific time frame. This series will teach you how to install Logstash and Kibana on Ubuntu, then how to add more filters to structure your log data. Then it will teach you how to use Kibana.
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Hi @manicas, thanks for this tutorial. I have the same isue as @rubendob, in the query appears this “No cached mapping for this field. Refresh your mapping for the Settings > Indices page”. I tried to Reload field list and then works.
Hi!
firstable, thank you very much for this tutorial. I’m system administrator but Im totally new to ELK so your tutorials have been very useful.
Just, maybe silly question, If I check a search for type:nginx-access and I click in some log I can see … clientip 192.168.33.150 agent “Wget/1.16 (darwin14.0.0)” …
but then when I go to Visualizations and, following your tutorial, try to add Sub-Aggregation / SplitBars/Signficant Terms/etc etc I just can’t see the CLIENTIP… I have host,host.raw…etc but no CLIENTIP
Anyone have some idea why I can’t see clientip value in Visualizations?
Thanks
I am able to create dashboard and save it, after i login to kibana and check dashboard, I don’t see any dashboard. I don’t know what’s the issue is? But I can see dashboard if I don’t log out
nice
Hi i have committed a short search over my issue on this page and could not find, so i m sorry if i missed that and asked. i m willing to add application to the Kibana in order to logs of more than 1 app. how can i?.
thanks in advanced. Eran
Thank you so much for these tutorials !
Just a little issue here. When I want to build my second visualisation I only got nginx-access log. But in the discover panel if I query ‘type: “syslog”’ i got some result.
Any idea why ?
I know the question escapes from it, the more someone knows how the gifs that are used in digital ocean, like that of the home and this post are created?
This comment has been deleted
Is there a way to have Kibana Dashboards update dynamically upon receiving new log entries? Or must I manually take action to see the latest data?
i want to make a bar graph but i want to change the color of bar if it exceed some limit and it should change from the point where it starts exceeding. is it possible in kibana ?? if yes then how? plz reply soon