system-config/modules/kibana/templates/config.rb.erb
Clark Boylan 5dd697f3c4 Fix elasticsearch connectivity on logstash.o.o.
The new elasticsearch server needs to be able to connect back to
logstash over the elasticsearch ports. Also make kibana talk to the new
elasticsearch server.

Change-Id: I88af40c7885b263fcef5ff16210f073cd0a696a5
Reviewed-on: https://review.openstack.org/30354
Reviewed-by: Jeremy Stanley <fungi@yuggoth.org>
Approved: Clark Boylan <clark.boylan@gmail.com>
Reviewed-by: Clark Boylan <clark.boylan@gmail.com>
Tested-by: Jenkins
2013-05-23 23:46:30 +00:00

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module KibanaConfig
# A Note: While the only option you really have to set is "Elasticsearch" it
# is HIGHLY recommended you glance over every option. I personally consider
# 'Facet_index_limit' really important.
# Your elastic search server(s). This may be set as an array for round robin
# load balancing
# Elasticsearch = ["elasticsearch1:9200","elasticsearch2:9200"]
Elasticsearch = "<%= scope.lookupvar("::kibana::elasticsearch_host") %>:9200"
#Set the Net::HTTP read/open timeouts for the connection to the ES backend
ElasticsearchTimeout = 500
# The port Kibana should listen on
KibanaPort = 5601
# The adress ip Kibana should listen on. Comment out or set to
# 0.0.0.0 to listen on all interfaces.
KibanaHost = '127.0.0.1'
# The record type as defined in your logstash configuration.
# Seperate multiple types with a comma, no spaces. Leave blank
# for all.
Type = ''
# Results to show per page
Per_page = 100
# Timezone. Leave this set to 'user' to have the user's browser autocorrect.
# Otherwise, set a timezone string
# Examples: 'UTC', 'America/Phoenix', 'Europe/Athens', MST
# You can use `date +%Z` on linux to get your timezone string
Timezone = 'UTC'
# Format for timestamps. Defaults to mm/dd HH:MM:ss.
# For syntax see: http://blog.stevenlevithan.com/archives/date-time-format
# Time_format = 'isoDateTime'
Time_format = 'yyyy-mm-dd\'T\'HH:MM:ss.l'
# Change which fields are shown by default. Must be set as an array
# Default_fields = ['@fields.vhost','@fields.response','@fields.request']
Default_fields = ['@message']
# If set to true, Kibana will use the Highlight feature of Elasticsearch to
# display highlighted search results
Highlight_results = true
# A field needs to be specified for the highlight feature. By default,
# Elasticsearch doesn't allow highlighting on _all because the field has to
# be either stored or part of the _source field.
Highlighted_field = "@message"
# Make URLs clickable in detailed view
Clickable_URLs = true
# The default operator used if no explicit operator is specified.
# For example, with a default operator of OR, the query capital of
# Hungary is translated to capital OR of OR Hungary, and with default
# operator of AND, the same query is translated to capital AND of AND
# Hungary. The default value is OR.
Default_operator = 'OR'
# When using analyze, use this many of the most recent
# results for user's query
Analyze_limit = 2000
# Show this many results in analyze/trend/terms/stats modes
Analyze_show = 25
# Show this many results in an rss feed
Rss_show = 25
# Show this many results in an exported file
Export_show = 2000
# Delimit exported file fields with what?
# You may want to change this to something like "\t" (tab) if you have
# commas in your logs
Export_delimiter = ","
# You may wish to insert a default search which all user searches
# must match. For example @source_host:www1 might only show results
# from www1.
Filter = ''
# When searching, Kibana will attempt to only search indices
# that match your timeframe, to make searches faster. You can
# turn this behavior off if you use something other than daily
# indexing
Smart_index = true
# You can define your custom pattern here for index names if you
# use something other than daily indexing. Pattern needs to have
# date formatting like '%Y.%m.%d'. Will accept an array of smart
# indexes.
# Smart_index_pattern = ['logstash-web-%Y.%m.%d', 'logstash-mail-%Y.%m.%d']
Smart_index_pattern = 'logstash-%Y.%m.%d'
# Number of seconds between each index. 86400 = 1 day.
Smart_index_step = 86400
# ElasticSearch has a default limit on URL size for REST calls,
# so Kibana will fall back to _all if a search spans too many
# indices. Use this to set that 'too many' number. By default this
# is set really high, ES might not like this
Smart_index_limit = 150
# Elasticsearch has an internal mechanism called "faceting" for performing
# analysis that we use for the "Stats" and "Terms" modes. However, on large
# data sets/queries facetting can cause ES to crash if there isn't enough
# memory available. It is suggested that you limit the number of indices that
# Kibana will use for the "Stats" and "Terms" to prevent ES crashes. For very
# large data sets and undersized ES clusers, a limit of 1 is not unreasonable.
# Default is 0 (unlimited)
Facet_index_limit = 1
# You probably don't want to touch anything below this line
# unless you really know what you're doing
# Primary field. By default Elastic Search has a special
# field called _all that is searched when no field is specified.
# Dropping _all can reduce index size significantly. If you do that
# you'll need to change primary_field to be '@message'
Primary_field = '@message'
# Default Elastic Search index to query
Default_index = '@message'
# TODO: This isn't functional yet
# Prevent wildcard search terms which result in extremely slow queries
# See: http:#www.elasticsearch.org/guide/reference/query-dsl/wildcard-query.html
Disable_fullscan = false
# Set headers to allow kibana to be loaded in an iframe from a different origin.
Allow_iframed = false
# Use this interval as fallback.
Fallback_interval = 900
end