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Learn Grafana 10.x - Second Edition

You're reading from  Learn Grafana 10.x - Second Edition

Product type Book
Published in Dec 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781803231082
Pages 542 pages
Edition 2nd Edition
Languages
Author (1):
Eric Salituro Eric Salituro
Profile icon Eric Salituro

Table of Contents (23) Chapters

Preface Part 1 – Getting Started with Grafana
Chapter 1: Introducing Data Visualization with Grafana Chapter 2: Touring the Grafana Interface Chapter 3: Diving into Grafana's Time Series Visualization Part 2 – Real-World Grafana
Chapter 4: Connecting Grafana to a Prometheus Data Source Chapter 5: Extracting and Visualizing Data with InfluxDB and Grafana Chapter 6: Shaping Data with Grafana Transformations Chapter 7: Surveying Key Grafana Visualizations Chapter 8: Surveying Additional Grafana Visualizations Chapter 9: Creating Insightful Dashboards Chapter 10: Working with Advanced Dashboard Features and Elasticsearch Chapter 11: Streaming Real-Time IoT Data from Telegraf Agent to Grafana Live Chapter 12: Monitoring Data Streams with Grafana Alerts Chapter 13: Exploring Log Data with Grafana’s Loki Part 3 – Managing Grafana
Chapter 14: Organizing Dashboards and Folders Chapter 15: Managing Permissions for Users, Teams, and Organizations Chapter 16: Authenticating Grafana Logins Using LDAP or OAuth 2 Providers Chapter 17: Cloud Monitoring AWS, Azure, and GCP Index Other Books You May Enjoy

Loading system logs into Loki

To get started, cd to the Chapter13 directory in your clone of this book’s repository.

To stand up a Loki logging pipeline, we’ll need to set up a series of services in Docker Compose. In our initial deployment, we will set up three services: loki, promtail, and grafana. By now, adding these services to a docker-compose.yml file should be familiar and straightforward.

Networking our services

Before we start up our services, we will want to establish a network that links them all together. All services started from a single docker-compose.yml file that shares a common network called myapp_default. We will not use the default name and instead define the network name for our service as loki. There is no requirement to do this, but it demonstrates how you can link up multiple services to not just one default network but potentially several in a more complex network topology.

This is how we will start off our docker-compose.yml file...

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