Starting Clean - Kibana
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@DustinB3403 said in Starting Clean - Kibana:
Filebeat is installed on XS.
Are you sure?! That looks like the info for the current executing command.
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@DustinB3403 said in Starting Clean - Kibana:
Filebeat is installed on XS.
No that's the grep you ran for Filebeat. It's not running.
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@DustinB3403 said in Starting Clean - Kibana:
Filebeat is installed on XS.
ps tells you what is running, not what is installed (although if it is running, it would imply that it is installed.)
Yours shows that it is not running. But grep is running
Old timer Linux admin trick, tack this onto your ps commands....
ps aux | grep filebeat | grep -v grep
It greps out grep.
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Well then what is wrong here, I'm about fed up with trying to figure this Kibana out..
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Use graylog and rsyslog. If you are supposed to treat XenServer as an appliance, don't install Filebeat and use the built in tools.
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Also Filebeat is for logstash not kibana.
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Kibana is supposed to be using Elk, Logstash and Filebeat to collect and present the logs.
At least according the guide written.
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Filebeat is the forwarder for logstash. You could use both elasticsearch and logstash and not install kibana. It's just a front end for data visualization.
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@DustinB3403 said in Starting Clean - Kibana:
Kibana is supposed to be using Elk, Logstash and Filebeat to collect and present the logs.
At least according the guide written.
Kibana doesn't "use" anything. I think you are confusing what the parts do. Kibana is just the interface on top, it just shows graphs and stuff. The system doing the work is Logstash and ElasticSearch. Logstash is using Filebeat. Logstash is storing the data. Logstash is the real application here. Kibana doesn't "do" anything when you aren't looking at it.
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@DustinB3403 said in Starting Clean - Kibana:
Well then what is wrong here, I'm about fed up with trying to figure this Kibana out..
Figure out Logstash and Filebeat, the rest will take care of itself. RIght now, Filebeat isn't running. Start there. Why isn't it starting. Look at the logs.
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Looking right so far?
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Yup, it is up and running now. Now monitor the logs, it should tell you when log egress happens.
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So in a sidebar conversation with @scottalanmiller
I don't have any new logs in /var/log on XS6.5
So where else should I look for this?
(Same on the logging server)
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@DustinB3403 Did you use XC to change the logging to a remote location?
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@Danp said in Starting Clean - Kibana:
@DustinB3403 Did you use XC to change the logging to a remote location?
Yes.
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@DustinB3403 Then it stops writing to the local logs in some cases as described at the bottom of this article.
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OK I'm done with this trial......
I'm just going in circles and before I break something I need a breather...
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Damn - I'm glad Dustin ran through this first I think I would have been pulling my hair out LONG before he did.
Dustin (and I) want NO local logging on our XS boxes. We would love to have this log information inside something like ELK where we can do easy searches and graphs on it.
If Filebeat forwards the local logs to the ELK server how do we get a situation where no local logs are stored on the XS boxes?
Do we seriously have to setup a syslog server in the middle that does nothing but collect logs and run Filebeat, which then forwards the syslog's logs to the ELK server?
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Hopefully there is a way to send the logs to Logstash directly, instead of sending them via Filebeat.
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@DustinB3403 said in Starting Clean - Kibana:
@Danp said in Starting Clean - Kibana:
@DustinB3403 Did you use XC to change the logging to a remote location?
Yes.
Check the logs there, then.