////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// //// This content is shared by all Elastic Beats. Make sure you keep the //// descriptions here generic enough to work for all Beats that include //// this file. When using cross references, make sure that the cross //// references resolve correctly for any files that include this one. //// Use the appropriate variables defined in the index.asciidoc file to //// resolve Beat names: beatname_uc and beatname_lc. //// Use the following include to pull this content into a doc file: //// include::../../libbeat/docs/shared-kibana-config.asciidoc[] ////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////// [[setup-kibana-endpoint]] == Set up the Kibana endpoint ifdef::deprecate_dashboard_loading[] deprecated[{deprecate_dashboard_loading}] endif::[] ifeval::["{beatname_lc}" == "apm-server"] The Kibana dashboards are loaded into Kibana via the Kibana API. This requires a Kibana endpoint configuration. endif::[] ifeval::["{beatname_lc}" != "apm-server"] Starting with {beatname_uc} 6.0.0, the Kibana dashboards are loaded into Kibana via the Kibana API. This requires a Kibana endpoint configuration. endif::[] You configure the endpoint in the `setup.kibana` section of the +{beatname_lc}.yml+ config file. Here is an example configuration: [source,yaml] ---- setup.kibana.host: "http://localhost:5601" ---- [float] === Configuration options You can specify the following options in the `setup.kibana` section of the +{beatname_lc}.yml+ config file: [float] ==== `setup.kibana.host` The Kibana host where the dashboards will be loaded. The default is `127.0.0.1:5601`. The value of `host` can be a `URL` or `IP:PORT`. For example: `http://192.15.3.2`, `192:15.3.2:5601` or `http://192.15.3.2:6701/path`. If no port is specified, `5601` is used. NOTE: When a node is defined as an `IP:PORT`, the _scheme_ and _path_ are taken from the <> and <> config options. IPv6 addresses must be defined using the following format: `https://[2001:db8::1]:5601`. [float] [[kibana-protocol-option]] ==== `setup.kibana.protocol` The name of the protocol Kibana is reachable on. The options are: `http` or `https`. The default is `http`. However, if you specify a URL for host, the value of `protocol` is overridden by whatever scheme you specify in the URL. Example config: [source,yaml] ---- setup.kibana.host: "192.0.2.255:5601" setup.kibana.protocol: "http" setup.kibana.path: /kibana ---- [float] ==== `setup.kibana.username` The basic authentication username for connecting to Kibana. If you don't specify a value for this setting, {beatname_uc} uses the `username` specified for the Elasticsearch output. [float] ==== `setup.kibana.password` The basic authentication password for connecting to Kibana. If you don't specify a value for this setting, {beatname_uc} uses the `password` specified for the Elasticsearch output. [float] [[kibana-path-option]] ==== `setup.kibana.path` An HTTP path prefix that is prepended to the HTTP API calls. This is useful for the cases where Kibana listens behind an HTTP reverse proxy that exports the API under a custom prefix. [float] ==== `setup.kibana.ssl.enabled` Enables {beatname_uc} to use SSL settings when connecting to Kibana via HTTPS. If you configure {beatname_uc} to connect over HTTPS, this setting defaults to `true` and {beatname_uc} uses the default SSL settings. Example configuration: [source,yaml] ---- setup.kibana.host: "https://192.0.2.255:5601" setup.kibana.ssl.enabled: true setup.kibana.ssl.certificate_authorities: ["/etc/pki/root/ca.pem"] setup.kibana.ssl.certificate: "/etc/pki/client/cert.pem" setup.kibana.ssl.key: "/etc/pki/client/cert.key ---- See <> for more information.