+++ title = "Installing on RPM-based Linux" description = "Grafana Installation guide for Centos, Fedora, OpenSuse, Redhat." keywords = ["grafana", "installation", "documentation", "centos", "fedora", "opensuse", "redhat"] aliases = ["installation/installation/rpm"] type = "docs" [menu.docs] name = "Installing on Centos / Redhat" identifier = "rpm" parent = "installation" weight = 2 +++ # Installing on RPM-based Linux (CentOS, Fedora, OpenSuse, RedHat) Description | Download ------------ | ------------- Stable for CentOS / Fedora / OpenSuse / Redhat Linux | [x86-64](https://grafana.com/grafana/download?platform=linux) Stable for CentOS / Fedora / OpenSuse / Redhat Linux | [ARM64](https://grafana.com/grafana/download?platform=arm) Stable for CentOS / Fedora / OpenSuse / Redhat Linux | [ARMv7](https://grafana.com/grafana/download?platform=arm) Read [Upgrading Grafana]({{< relref "installation/upgrading.md" >}}) for tips and guidance on updating an existing installation. ## Install Stable You can install Grafana using Yum directly. ```bash $ sudo yum install ``` Example: ```bash $ sudo yum install https://dl.grafana.com/oss/release/grafana-5.4.2-1.x86_64.rpm ``` Or install manually using `rpm`. First execute ```bash $ wget ``` Example: ```bash $ wget https://dl.grafana.com/oss/release/grafana-5.4.2-1.x86_64.rpm ``` ### On CentOS / Fedora / Redhat: ```bash $ sudo yum install initscripts urw-fonts $ sudo rpm -Uvh ``` ### On OpenSuse: ```bash $ sudo rpm -i --nodeps ``` ## Install via YUM Repository Add the following to a new file at `/etc/yum.repos.d/grafana.repo` ```bash [grafana] name=grafana baseurl=https://packages.grafana.com/oss/rpm repo_gpgcheck=1 enabled=1 gpgcheck=1 gpgkey=https://packages.grafana.com/gpg.key sslverify=1 sslcacert=/etc/pki/tls/certs/ca-bundle.crt ``` There is a separate repository if you want beta releases. ```bash [grafana] name=grafana baseurl=https://packages.grafana.com/oss/rpm-beta repo_gpgcheck=1 enabled=1 gpgcheck=1 gpgkey=https://packages.grafana.com/gpg.key sslverify=1 sslcacert=/etc/pki/tls/certs/ca-bundle.crt ``` Then install Grafana via the `yum` command. ```bash $ sudo yum install grafana ``` ### RPM GPG Key The RPMs are signed, you can verify the signature with this [public GPG key](https://packages.grafana.com/gpg.key). ## Package details - Installs binary to `/usr/sbin/grafana-server` - Copies init.d script to `/etc/init.d/grafana-server` - Installs default file (environment vars) to `/etc/sysconfig/grafana-server` - Copies configuration file to `/etc/grafana/grafana.ini` - Installs systemd service (if systemd is available) name `grafana-server.service` - The default configuration uses a log file at `/var/log/grafana/grafana.log` - The default configuration specifies an sqlite3 database at `/var/lib/grafana/grafana.db` ## Start the server (init.d service) You can start Grafana by running: ```bash $ sudo service grafana-server start ``` This will start the `grafana-server` process as the `grafana` user, which is created during package installation. The default HTTP port is `3000`, and default user and group is `admin`. Default login and password `admin`/ `admin` To configure the Grafana server to start at boot time: ```bash $ sudo /sbin/chkconfig --add grafana-server ``` ## Start the server (via systemd) ```bash $ systemctl daemon-reload $ systemctl start grafana-server $ systemctl status grafana-server ``` ### Enable the systemd service to start at boot ```bash sudo systemctl enable grafana-server.service ``` ## Environment file The systemd service file and init.d script both use the file located at `/etc/sysconfig/grafana-server` for environment variables used when starting the back-end. Here you can override log directory, data directory and other variables. ### Logging By default Grafana will log to `/var/log/grafana` ### Database The default configuration specifies a sqlite3 database located at `/var/lib/grafana/grafana.db`. Please backup this database before upgrades. You can also use MySQL or Postgres as the Grafana database, as detailed on [the configuration page]({{< relref "configuration.md#database" >}}). ## Configuration The configuration file is located at `/etc/grafana/grafana.ini`. Go the [Configuration]({{< relref "configuration.md" >}}) page for details on all those options. ### Adding data sources - [Graphite]({{< relref "features/datasources/graphite.md" >}}) - [InfluxDB]({{< relref "features/datasources/influxdb.md" >}}) - [OpenTSDB]({{< relref "features/datasources/opentsdb.md" >}}) - [Prometheus]({{< relref "features/datasources/prometheus.md" >}}) ### Server side image rendering Server side image (png) rendering is a feature that is optional but very useful when sharing visualizations, for example in alert notifications. If the image is missing text make sure you have font packages installed. ```bash yum install fontconfig yum install freetype* yum install urw-fonts ``` ## Installing from binary tar file Download [the latest `.tar.gz` file](https://grafana.com/get) and extract it. This will extract into a folder named after the version you downloaded. This folder contains all files required to run Grafana. There are no init scripts or install scripts in this package. To configure Grafana add a configuration file named `custom.ini` to the `conf` folder and override any of the settings defined in `conf/defaults.ini`. Start Grafana by executing `./bin/grafana-server web`. The `grafana-server` binary needs the working directory to be the root install directory (where the binary and the `public` folder is located). ## Logging in for the first time To run Grafana open your browser and go to http://localhost:3000/. 3000 is the default http port that Grafana listens to if you haven't [configured a different port](/installation/configuration/#http-port). Then follow the instructions [here](/guides/getting_started/).