Collecting Elasticsearch monitoring data with Metricbeat

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Collecting Elasticsearch monitoring data with Metricbeat

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In 6.5 and later, you can use Metricbeat to collect data about Elasticsearch and ship it to the monitoring cluster, rather than routing it through exporters as described in Collecting monitoring data.

Example monitoring architecture

To learn about monitoring in general, see Monitoring the Elastic Stack.

  1. Enable the collection of monitoring data.

    Set xpack.monitoring.collection.enabled to true on the production cluster. By default, it is is disabled (false).

    You can use the following APIs to review and change this setting:

    GET _cluster/settings
    
    PUT _cluster/settings
    {
      "persistent": {
        "xpack.monitoring.collection.enabled": true
      }
    }

    If Elasticsearch security features are enabled, you must have monitor cluster privileges to view the cluster settings and manage cluster privileges to change them.

    For more information, see Monitoring settings and Cluster Update Settings.

  2. Install Metricbeat on each Elasticsearch node in the production cluster.
  3. Enable the Elasticsearch module in Metricbeat on each Elasticsearch node.

    For example, to enable the default configuration in the modules.d directory, run the following command:

    metricbeat modules enable elasticsearch

    For more information, see Specify which modules to run and Elasticsearch module.

  4. Configure the Elasticsearch module in Metricbeat.

    For example, specify the following settings in the modules.d/elasticsearch.yml file:

    - module: elasticsearch
      metricsets:
        - ccr
        - cluster_stats
        - index
        - index_recovery
        - index_summary
        - ml_job
        - node_stats
        - shard
      period: 10s
      hosts: ["http://localhost:9200"]
      #username: "user"
      #password: "secret"
      xpack.enabled: true

    By default, the module collects Elasticsearch monitoring metrics from http://localhost:9200. If that host and port number are not correct, you must update the hosts setting. If you configured Elasticsearch to use encrypted communications, you must access it via HTTPS. For example, use a hosts setting like https://localhost:9200.

    If Elastic security features are enabled, you must also provide a user ID and password so that Metricbeat can collect metrics successfully:

    1. Create a user on the production cluster that has the remote_monitoring_collector built-in role. Alternatively, use the remote_monitoring_user built-in user.
    2. Add the username and password settings to the Elasticsearch module configuration file.
  5. Optional: Disable the system module in Metricbeat.

    By default, the system module is enabled. The information it collects, however, is not shown on the Monitoring page in Kibana. Unless you want to use that information for other purposes, run the following command:

    metricbeat modules disable system
  6. Identify where to send the monitoring data.

    In production environments, we strongly recommend using a separate cluster (referred to as the monitoring cluster) to store the data. Using a separate monitoring cluster prevents production cluster outages from impacting your ability to access your monitoring data. It also prevents monitoring activities from impacting the performance of your production cluster.

    For example, specify the Elasticsearch output information in the Metricbeat configuration file (metricbeat.yml):

    output.elasticsearch:
      # Array of hosts to connect to.
      hosts: ["http://es-mon-1:9200", "http://es-mon2:9200"] 
    
      # Optional protocol and basic auth credentials.
      #protocol: "https"
      #username: "elastic"
      #password: "changeme"

    In this example, the data is stored on a monitoring cluster with nodes es-mon-1 and es-mon-2.

    If you configured the monitoring cluster to use encrypted communications, you must access it via HTTPS. For example, use a hosts setting like https://es-mon-1:9200.

    The Elasticsearch monitoring features use ingest pipelines, therefore the cluster that stores the monitoring data must have at least one ingest node.

    If Elasticsearch security features are enabled on the monitoring cluster, you must provide a valid user ID and password so that Metricbeat can send metrics successfully.

    1. Create a user on the monitoring cluster that has the remote_monitoring_agent built-in role or use the remote_monitoring_user built-in user. If you want to use index lifecycle management features on your Metricbeat indices, the user must also have manage_ilm cluster privileges. If Metricbeat is monitoring only the Elastic Stack, ILM is not required. Disable it by adding setup.ilm.enabled: false to your Metricbeat configuration file. For more information, refer to Configure index lifecycle management in Metricbeat.
    2. Add the username and password settings to the Elasticsearch output information in the Metricbeat configuration file.

    For more information about these configuration options, see Configure the Elasticsearch output.

  7. Start Metricbeat on each node.
  8. Disable the default collection of Elasticsearch monitoring metrics.

    Set xpack.monitoring.elasticsearch.collection.enabled to false on the production cluster.

    You can use the following API to change this setting:

    PUT _cluster/settings
    {
      "persistent": {
        "xpack.monitoring.elasticsearch.collection.enabled": false
      }
    }

    If Elasticsearch security features are enabled, you must have monitor cluster privileges to view the cluster settings and manage cluster privileges to change them.

  9. View the monitoring data in Kibana.