* First commit with reorganized and updated content. * Updated Getting started topic. * Changed some wording. * Removed extra word "setting". * Update docs/sources/getting-started/getting-started-prometheus.md Co-authored-by: Fiona Artiaga <89225282+GrafanaWriter@users.noreply.github.com> * Update docs/sources/getting-started/getting-started-prometheus.md Co-authored-by: Fiona Artiaga <89225282+GrafanaWriter@users.noreply.github.com> * Updated doc based on review. * Fix linting errors Co-authored-by: Fiona Artiaga <89225282+GrafanaWriter@users.noreply.github.com> Co-authored-by: Piotr Jamróz <pm.jamroz@gmail.com>
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+++ title = "What is Grafana OSS" weight = 5 aliases = ["/docs/grafana/latest/guides/what-is-grafana"] +++
What is Grafana OSS
Grafana open source software allows you to query, visualize, alert on, and understand your data no matter where it’s stored. With Grafana you can create, explore and share all of your data through elegant, flexible dashboards.
After you have [installed Grafana]({{< relref "../installation/_index.md" >}}) and set up your first dashboard using instructions in [Getting started with Grafana]({{< relref "../getting-started/getting-started.md" >}}), you will have many options to choose from depending on your requirements. For example, if you want to view weather data and statistics about your smart home, then you can create a [playlist]({{< relref "../dashboards/playlist.md" >}}). If you are the administrator for an enterprise and are managing Grafana for multiple teams, then you can set up [provisioning]({{< relref "../administration/provisioning.md" >}}) and [authentication]({{< relref "../auth/_index.md" >}}).
In the following sections, you can get an overview of the capabilities of Grafana features as well as links to the product documentation to help you learn more. For more guidance and ideas, check out our Grafana Community forums.
Explore metrics, logs, and traces
Explore your data through ad-hoc queries and dynamic drilldown. Split view and compare different time ranges, queries and data sources side by side. Refer to [Explore]({{< relref "../explore/_index.md" >}}) for more information.
Alerts
If you're using Grafana alerting, then you can have alerts sent through a number of different [alert notifiers]({{< relref "../alerting/old-alerting/notifications.md" >}}), including PagerDuty, SMS, email, VictorOps, OpsGenie, or Slack.
Alert hooks allow you to create different notifiers with a bit of code if you prefer some other channels of communication. Visually define [alert rules]({{< relref "../alerting/_index.md" >}}) for your most important metrics.
Annotations
Annotate graphs with rich events from different data sources. Hover over events to see the full event metadata and tags.
This feature, which shows up as a graph marker in Grafana, is useful for correlating data in case something goes wrong. You can create the annotations manually—just control-click on a graph and input some text—or you can fetch data from any data source. Refer to [Annotations]({{< relref "../dashboards/annotations.md" >}}) for more information.
Dashboard variables
[Template variables]({{< relref "../variables/_index.md" >}}) allow you to create dashboards that can be reused for lots of different use cases. Values aren't hard-coded with these templates, so for instance, if you have a production server and a test server, you can use the same dashboard for both.
Templating allows you to drill down into your data, say, from all data to North America data, down to Texas data, and beyond. You can also share these dashboards across teams within your organization—or if you create a great dashboard template for a popular data source, you can contribute it to the whole community to customize and use.
Configure Grafana
If you're a Grafana administrator, then you'll want to thoroughly familiarize yourself with [Grafana configuration options]({{< relref "../administration/configuration.md" >}}) and the [Grafana CLI]({{< relref "../administration/cli.md" >}}).
Configuration covers both config files and environment variables. You can set up default ports, logging levels, email IP addresses, security, and more.
Import dashboards and plugins
Discover hundreds of dashboards and plugins in the official library. Thanks to the passion and momentum of community members, new ones are added every week.
Authentication
Grafana supports different authentication methods, such as LDAP and OAuth, and allows you to map users to organizations. Refer to the [User authentication overview]({{< relref "../auth/overview.md" >}}) for more information.
In Grafana Enterprise, you can also map users to teams: If your company has its own authentication system, Grafana allows you to map the teams in your internal systems to teams in Grafana. That way, you can automatically give people access to the dashboards designated for their teams. Refer to [Grafana Enterprise]({{< relref "../enterprise/_index.md" >}}) for more information.
Provisioning
While it's easy to click, drag, and drop to create a single dashboard, power users in need of many dashboards will want to automate the setup with a script. You can script anything in Grafana.
For example, if you're spinning up a new Kubernetes cluster, you can also spin up a Grafana automatically with a script that would have the right server, IP address, and data sources preset and locked in so users cannot change them. It's also a way of getting control over a lot of dashboards. Refer to [Provisioning]({{< relref "../administration/provisioning.md" >}}) for more information.
Permissions
When organizations have one Grafana and multiple teams, they often want the ability to both keep things separate and share dashboards. You can create a team of users and then set [permissions]({{< relref "../permissions/_index.md" >}}) on folders, dashboards, and down to the [data source level]({{< relref "../enterprise/datasource_permissions.md" >}}) if you're using [Grafana Enterprise]({{< relref "../enterprise/_index.md" >}}).