Load Kibana dashboards
editLoad Kibana dashboards
editPacketbeat comes packaged with example Kibana dashboards, visualizations,
and searches for visualizing Packetbeat data in Kibana. Before you can use
the dashboards, you need to create the index pattern, packetbeat-*
, and
load the dashboards into Kibana.
To do this, you can either run the setup
command (as described here) or
configure dashboard loading in the
packetbeat.yml
config file. This requires a Kibana endpoint configuration. If you didn’t already configure
a Kibana endpoint, see Kibana endpoint.
Load dashboards
editMake sure Kibana is running before you perform this step. If you are accessing a secured Kibana instance, make sure you’ve configured credentials as described in the Quick start: installation and configuration.
To load the recommended index template for writing to Elasticsearch and deploy the sample dashboards for visualizing the data in Kibana, use the command that works with your system.
Use sudo
to run these commands if the config file is owned by root.
packetbeat setup --dashboards
packetbeat setup --dashboards
./packetbeat setup --dashboards
./packetbeat setup --dashboards
docker run --rm --net="host" docker.elastic.co/beats/packetbeat:9.0.0-beta1 setup --dashboards
Open a PowerShell prompt as an Administrator (right-click the PowerShell icon and select Run As Administrator).
From the PowerShell prompt, change to the directory where you installed Packetbeat, and run:
PS > .\packetbeat.exe setup --dashboards
For more options, such as loading customized dashboards, see Importing Existing Beat Dashboards. If you’ve configured the Logstash output, see Load dashboards for Logstash output.
Load dashboards for Logstash output
editDuring dashboard loading, Packetbeat connects to Elasticsearch to check version information. To load dashboards when the Logstash output is enabled, you need to temporarily disable the Logstash output and enable Elasticsearch. To connect to a secured Elasticsearch cluster, you also need to pass Elasticsearch credentials.
The example shows a hard-coded password, but you should store sensitive values in the secrets keystore.
packetbeat setup -e \ -E output.logstash.enabled=false \ -E output.elasticsearch.hosts=['localhost:9200'] \ -E output.elasticsearch.username=packetbeat_internal \ -E output.elasticsearch.password=YOUR_PASSWORD \ -E setup.kibana.host=localhost:5601
packetbeat setup -e \ -E output.logstash.enabled=false \ -E output.elasticsearch.hosts=['localhost:9200'] \ -E output.elasticsearch.username=packetbeat_internal \ -E output.elasticsearch.password=YOUR_PASSWORD \ -E setup.kibana.host=localhost:5601
./packetbeat setup -e \ -E output.logstash.enabled=false \ -E output.elasticsearch.hosts=['localhost:9200'] \ -E output.elasticsearch.username=packetbeat_internal \ -E output.elasticsearch.password=YOUR_PASSWORD \ -E setup.kibana.host=localhost:5601
./packetbeat setup -e \ -E output.logstash.enabled=false \ -E output.elasticsearch.hosts=['localhost:9200'] \ -E output.elasticsearch.username=packetbeat_internal \ -E output.elasticsearch.password=YOUR_PASSWORD \ -E setup.kibana.host=localhost:5601
docker run --rm --net="host" docker.elastic.co/beats/packetbeat:9.0.0-beta1 setup -e \ -E output.logstash.enabled=false \ -E output.elasticsearch.hosts=['localhost:9200'] \ -E output.elasticsearch.username=packetbeat_internal \ -E output.elasticsearch.password=YOUR_PASSWORD \ -E setup.kibana.host=localhost:5601
Open a PowerShell prompt as an Administrator (right-click the PowerShell icon and select Run As Administrator).
From the PowerShell prompt, change to the directory where you installed Packetbeat, and run:
PS > .\packetbeat.exe setup -e ` -E output.logstash.enabled=false ` -E output.elasticsearch.hosts=['localhost:9200'] ` -E output.elasticsearch.username=packetbeat_internal ` -E output.elasticsearch.password=YOUR_PASSWORD ` -E setup.kibana.host=localhost:5601