- Legacy APM Server Reference:
- Overview
- Getting Started With APM Server
- Setting up APM Server
- Upgrading APM Server
- Configuring APM Server
- General configuration options
- Configure the output
- Parse data using ingest node pipelines
- SSL/TLS settings
- Load the Elasticsearch index template
- Index lifecycle management (ILM)
- Configure logging
- Configure the Kibana endpoint
- Set up Real User Monitoring (RUM) support
- Use environment variables in the configuration
- Configure project paths
- Securing APM Server
- Monitoring APM Server
- Real User Monitoring (RUM)
- Tune Data Ingestion
- Storage Management
- Intake API
- Exploring data in Elasticsearch
- Exported fields
- Troubleshooting
- Release notes
Collect APM Server monitoring data with internal collectorsedit
The following method involves sending the metrics to the production cluster, which ultimately routes them to the monitoring cluster. For an alternative method, see Metricbeat collection.
To learn about monitoring in general, see Monitoring the Elastic Stack.
-
Create a user that has appropriate authority to send system-level monitoring
data to Elasticsearch. For example, you can use the built-in
apm_system
user or assign the built-inapm_system
role to another user. For more information, see Setting Up User Authentication and Built-in Roles. -
Add the
monitoring
settings in the APM Server configuration file. If you configured the Elasticsearch output and want to send APM Server monitoring events to the same Elasticsearch cluster, specify the following minimal configuration:monitoring: enabled: true elasticsearch: username: apm_system password: somepassword
If you configured a different output, such as Logstash or you want to send APM Server monitoring events to a separate Elasticsearch cluster (referred to as the monitoring cluster), you must specify additional configuration options. For example:
- Start APM Server.
- View the monitoring data in Kibana.