+++ title = "Loki" description = "Guide for using Loki in Grafana" keywords = ["grafana", "loki", "logging", "guide"] aliases = ["/docs/grafana/latest/features/datasources/loki"] weight = 800 +++ # Using Loki in Grafana Grafana ships with built-in support for Loki, an open source log aggregation system by Grafana Labs. This topic explains options, variables, querying, and other options specific to this data source. Add it as a data source and you are ready to build dashboards or query your log data in [Explore]({{< relref "../explore" >}}). Refer to [Add a data source]({{< relref "add-a-data-source.md" >}}) for instructions on how to add a data source to Grafana. Only users with the organization admin role can add data sources. > **Note:** To troubleshoot configuration and other issues, check the log file located at /var/log/grafana/grafana.log on Unix systems or in /data/log on other platforms and manual installations. ## Loki settings To access Loki settings, click the **Configuration** (gear) icon, then click **Data Sources**, and then click the Loki data source. | Name | Description | | --------------------- | --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | | `Name` | The data source name. This is how you refer to the data source in panels, queries, and Explore. | | `Default` | Default data source means that it will be pre-selected for new panels. | | `URL` | The URL of the Loki instance, e.g., `http://localhost:3100` | | `Whitelisted Cookies` | Grafana Proxy deletes forwarded cookies by default. Specify cookies by name that should be forwarded to the data source. | | `Maximum lines` | Upper limit for the number of log lines returned by Loki (default is 1000). Lower this limit if your browser is sluggish when displaying logs in Explore. | ### Derived fields The Derived Fields configuration allows you to: - Add fields parsed from the log message. - Add a link that uses the value of the field. You can use this functionality to link to your tracing backend directly from your logs, or link to a user profile page if a userId is present in the log line. These links appear in the [log details](/explore/logs-integration/#labels-and-detected-fields). Each derived field consists of: - **Name -** Shown in the log details as a label. - **Regex -** A Regex pattern that runs on the log message and captures part of it as the value of the new field. Can only contain a single capture group. - **URL/query -** If the link is external, then enter the full link URL. If the link is internal link, then this input serves as query for the target data source. In both cases, you can interpolate the value from the field with `${__value.raw }` macro. - **Internal link -** Select if the link is internal or external. In case of internal link, a data source selector allows you to select the target data source. Only tracing data sources are supported. You can use a debug section to see what your fields extract and how the URL is interpolated. Click **Show example log message** to show the text area where you can enter a log message. {{< docs-imagebox img="/img/docs/v75/loki_derived_fields_settings.png" class="docs-image--no-shadow" max-width="800px" caption="Screenshot of the derived fields debugging" >}} The new field with the link shown in log details: {{< docs-imagebox img="/img/docs/explore/detected-fields-link-7-4.png" max-width="800px" caption="Detected fields link in Explore" >}} ## Loki query editor You can use the Loki query editor to create log and metric queries. | Name | Description | | ------------------ | ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- | | `Query expression` | Loki query expression, refer to the [LogQL documentation](https://grafana.com/docs/loki/latest/logql/) for more information. | | `Query type` | Choose the type of query to run. The instant type queries against a single point in time. We are using "To" time from the time range. The range type queries over the selected range of time. | | `Line limit` | Upper limit for number of log lines returned by query. The default is the Maximum lines limit set in Loki settings. | | `Legend` | Available only in Dashboard. Controls the name of the time series, using name or pattern. For example `{{hostname}}` is replaced with the label value for the label `hostname`. | ### Log browser With Loki log browser you can easily navigate trough your list of labels and values and construct the query of your choice. Log browser has multi-step selection: 1. Choose the labels you would like to consider for your search. 2. Pick the values for selected labels. Log browser supports facetting and therefore it shows you only possible label combinations. 3. Choose the type of query - logs query or rate metrics query. Additionally, you can also validate selector. {{< docs-imagebox img="/img/docs/v75/loki_log_browser.png" class="docs-image--no-shadow" max-width="800px" caption="Screenshot of the derived fields debugging" >}} ## Querying with Loki There are two types of LogQL queries: - Log queries - Return the contents of log lines. - Metric queries - Extend log queries and calculate sample values based on the content of logs from a log query. ### Log queries Querying and displaying log data from Loki is available via [Explore]({{< relref "../explore" >}}), and with the [logs panel]({{< relref "../panels/visualizations/logs-panel.md" >}}) in dashboards. Select the Loki data source, and then enter a [LogQL](https://grafana.com/docs/loki/latest/logql/#log-queries) query to display your logs. A log query consists of two parts: log stream selector, and a log pipeline. For performance reasons begin by choosing a log stream by selecting a log label. ### Log context When using a search expression as detailed above, you can retrieve the context surrounding your filtered results. By clicking the `Show Context` link on the filtered rows, you'll be able to investigate the log messages that came before and after the log message you're interested in. ### Live tailing Loki supports Live tailing which displays logs in real-time. This feature is supported in [Explore]({{< relref "../explore/#loki-specific-features" >}}). Note that Live Tailing relies on two Websocket connections: one between the browser and the Grafana server, and another between the Grafana server and the Loki server. If you run any reverse proxies, please configure them accordingly. The following example for Apache2 can be used for proxying between the browser and the Grafana server: ``` ProxyPassMatch "^/(api/datasources/proxy/\d+/loki/api/v1/tail)" "ws://127.0.0.1:3000/$1" ``` The following example shows basic NGINX proxy configuration. It assumes that the Grafana server is available at `http://localhost:3000/`, Loki server is running locally without proxy, and your external site uses HTTPS. If you also host Loki behind NGINX proxy, then you might want to repeat the following configuration for Loki as well. In the `http` section of NGINX configuration, add the following map definition: ``` map $http_upgrade $connection_upgrade { default upgrade; '' close; } ``` In your `server` section, add the following configuration: ``` location ~ /(api/datasources/proxy/\d+/loki/api/v1/tail) { proxy_pass http://localhost:3000$request_uri; proxy_set_header Host $host; proxy_set_header X-Real-IP $remote_addr; proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-for $proxy_add_x_forwarded_for; proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-Proto "https"; proxy_set_header Connection $connection_upgrade; proxy_set_header Upgrade $http_upgrade; } location / { proxy_pass http://localhost:3000/; proxy_set_header Host $host; proxy_set_header X-Real-IP $remote_addr; proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-for $proxy_add_x_forwarded_for; proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-Proto "https"; } ``` > **Note:** This feature is only available in Grafana v6.3+. ## Metric queries LogQL supports wrapping a log query with functions that allow for creating metrics out of the logs. See [LogQL](https://grafana.com/docs/loki/latest/logql/#metric-queries) documentation on how to create and use metrics queries. ## Templating Instead of hard-coding things like server, application and sensor name in your metric queries, you can use variables in their place. Variables are shown as drop-down select boxes at the top of the dashboard. These drop-down boxes make it easy to change the data being displayed in your dashboard. Check out the [Templating]({{< relref "../variables/_index.md" >}}) documentation for an introduction to the templating feature and the different types of template variables. ## Query variable Variable of the type _Query_ allows you to query Loki for a list labels or label values. The Loki data source plugin provides the following functions you can use in the `Query` input field. | Name | Description | | --------------------- | --------------------------------------------------------------- | | `label_names()` | Returns a list of label names. | | `label_values(label)` | Returns a list of label values for the `label` in every metric. | ## Annotations You can use any non-metric Loki query as a source for [annotations]({{< relref "../dashboards/annotations" >}}). Log content will be used as annotation text and your log stream labels as tags, so there is no need for additional mapping. ## Configure the data source with provisioning You can set up the data source via config files with Grafana's provisioning system. You can read more about how it works and all the settings you can set for data sources on the [provisioning docs page]({{< relref "../administration/provisioning/#datasources" >}}) Here is an example: ```yaml apiVersion: 1 datasources: - name: Loki type: loki access: proxy url: http://localhost:3100 jsonData: maxLines: 1000 ``` Here's another with basic auth and derived field. Keep in mind that `$` character needs to be escaped in YAML values as it is used to interpolate environment variables: ```yaml apiVersion: 1 datasources: - name: Loki type: loki access: proxy url: http://localhost:3100 basicAuth: true basicAuthUser: my_user basicAuthPassword: test_password jsonData: maxLines: 1000 derivedFields: # Field with internal link pointing to data source in Grafana. # Right now, Grafana supports only Jaeger and Zipkin data sources as link targets. # datasourceUid value can be anything, but it should be unique across all defined data source uids. - datasourceUid: my_jaeger_uid matcherRegex: "traceID=(\\w+)" name: TraceID # url will be interpreted as query for the datasource url: '$${__value.raw}' # Field with external link. - matcherRegex: "traceID=(\\w+)" name: TraceID url: 'http://localhost:16686/trace/$${__value.raw}' ``` Here's an example of a Jaeger data source corresponding to the above example. Note that the Jaeger `uid` value does match the Loki `datasourceUid` value. ``` datasources: - name: Jaeger type: jaeger url: http://jaeger-tracing-query:16686/ access: proxy # UID should match the datasourceUid in dervidedFields. uid: my_jaeger_uid ```