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Getting Started with Elastic Stack 8.0

You're reading from  Getting Started with Elastic Stack 8.0

Product type Book
Published in Mar 2022
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781800569492
Pages 474 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Author (1):
Asjad Athick Asjad Athick
Profile icon Asjad Athick

Table of Contents (18) Chapters

Preface Section 1: Core Components
Chapter 1: Introduction to the Elastic Stack Chapter 2: Installing and Running the Elastic Stack Section 2: Working with the Elastic Stack
Chapter 3: Indexing and Searching for Data Chapter 4: Leveraging Insights and Managing Data on Elasticsearch Chapter 5: Running Machine Learning Jobs on Elasticsearch Chapter 6: Collecting and Shipping Data with Beats Chapter 7: Using Logstash to Extract, Transform, and Load Data Chapter 8: Interacting with Your Data on Kibana Chapter 9: Managing Data Onboarding with Elastic Agent Section 3: Building Solutions with the Elastic Stack
Chapter 10: Building Search Experiences Using the Elastic Stack Chapter 11: Observing Applications and Infrastructure Using the Elastic Stack Chapter 12: Security Threat Detection and Response Using the Elastic Stack Chapter 13: Architecting Workloads on the Elastic Stack Other Books You May Enjoy

Getting insights from data using aggregations

When looking to understand insights in your data, retrieving documents that fit the question you're looking to answer is just the first part of the problem. For example, if an analyst is looking to understand how much traffic their web servers served in a given day, running a query to retrieve logs in the given period may still return millions of events.

Aggregations allow you to summarize large volumes of data into something easier to consume. Elasticsearch can perform two primary types of aggregations:

  • Metric aggregations can calculate metrics such as count, sum, min, max, and average on numeric data.
  • Bucket aggregations can be used to organize large datasets into groups, depending on the value of a field. Buckets can be created based on a range, date, the frequency of a term in the search results (or corpus), and so on.

An exhaustive list of all supported aggregations can be found in the Elasticsearch guide...

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