grafana/docs/sources/administration/provisioning.md
Sofia Papagiannaki 30ee860a18
Docs: Fix dashboard provisioning example (#27595)
Remove unsupported editable field
removed in SHA: d6faa3d06f
2020-09-15 18:56:53 +03:00

25 KiB

+++ title = "Provisioning" description = "" keywords = ["grafana", "provisioning"] type = "docs" aliases = ["/docs/grafana/latest/installation/provisioning"] [menu.docs] parent = "admin" weight = 8 +++

Provisioning Grafana

In previous versions of Grafana, you could only use the API for provisioning data sources and dashboards. But that required the service to be running before you started creating dashboards and you also needed to set up credentials for the HTTP API. In v5.0 we decided to improve this experience by adding a new active provisioning system that uses config files. This will make GitOps more natural as data sources and dashboards can be defined via files that can be version controlled. We hope to extend this system to later add support for users, orgs and alerts as well.

Config File

Check out the [configuration]({{< relref "configuration.md" >}}) page for more information on what you can configure in grafana.ini

Config File Locations

  • Default configuration from $WORKING_DIR/conf/defaults.ini
  • Custom configuration from $WORKING_DIR/conf/custom.ini
  • The custom configuration file path can be overridden using the --config parameter

Note. If you have installed Grafana using the deb or rpm packages, then your configuration file is located at /etc/grafana/grafana.ini. This path is specified in the Grafana init.d script using --config file parameter.

Using Environment Variables

It is possible to use environment variable interpolation in all 3 provisioning config types. Allowed syntax is either $ENV_VAR_NAME or ${ENV_VAR_NAME} and can be used only for values not for keys or bigger parts of the configs. It is not available in the dashboards definition files just the dashboard provisioning configuration. Example:

datasources:
  - name: Graphite
    url: http://localhost:$PORT
    user: $USER
    secureJsonData:
      password: $PASSWORD

If you have a literal $ in your value and want to avoid interpolation, $$ can be used.


Configuration Management Tools

Currently we do not provide any scripts/manifests for configuring Grafana. Rather than spending time learning and creating scripts/manifests for each tool, we think our time is better spent making Grafana easier to provision. Therefore, we heavily rely on the expertise of the community.

Tool Project
Puppet https://forge.puppet.com/puppet/grafana
Ansible https://github.com/cloudalchemy/ansible-grafana
Chef https://github.com/JonathanTron/chef-grafana
Saltstack https://github.com/salt-formulas/salt-formula-grafana
Jsonnet https://github.com/grafana/grafonnet-lib/

Data sources

This feature is available from v5.0

It's possible to manage data sources in Grafana by adding one or more yaml config files in the provisioning/datasources directory. Each config file can contain a list of datasources that will be added or updated during start up. If the data source already exists, then Grafana updates it to match the configuration file. The config file can also contain a list of data sources that should be deleted. That list is called deleteDatasources. Grafana will delete data sources listed in deleteDatasources before inserting/updating those in the datasource list.

Running Multiple Grafana Instances

If you are running multiple instances of Grafana you might run into problems if they have different versions of the datasource.yaml configuration file. The best way to solve this problem is to add a version number to each datasource in the configuration and increase it when you update the config. Grafana will only update datasources with the same or lower version number than specified in the config. That way, old configs cannot overwrite newer configs if they restart at the same time.

Example data source Config File

# config file version
apiVersion: 1

# list of datasources that should be deleted from the database
deleteDatasources:
  - name: Graphite
    orgId: 1

# list of datasources to insert/update depending
# what's available in the database
datasources:
  # <string, required> name of the datasource. Required
  - name: Graphite
    # <string, required> datasource type. Required
    type: graphite
    # <string, required> access mode. proxy or direct (Server or Browser in the UI). Required
    access: proxy
    # <int> org id. will default to orgId 1 if not specified
    orgId: 1
    # <string> custom UID which can be used to reference this datasource in other parts of the configuration, if not specified will be generated automatically
    uid: my_unique_uid
    # <string> url
    url: http://localhost:8080
    # <string> Deprecated, use secureJsonData.password
    password:
    # <string> database user, if used
    user:
    # <string> database name, if used
    database:
    # <bool> enable/disable basic auth
    basicAuth:
    # <string> basic auth username
    basicAuthUser:
    # <string> Deprecated, use secureJsonData.basicAuthPassword
    basicAuthPassword:
    # <bool> enable/disable with credentials headers
    withCredentials:
    # <bool> mark as default datasource. Max one per org
    isDefault:
    # <map> fields that will be converted to json and stored in jsonData
    jsonData:
      graphiteVersion: '1.1'
      tlsAuth: true
      tlsAuthWithCACert: true
    # <string> json object of data that will be encrypted.
    secureJsonData:
      tlsCACert: '...'
      tlsClientCert: '...'
      tlsClientKey: '...'
      # <string> database password, if used
      password:
      # <string> basic auth password
      basicAuthPassword:
    version: 1
    # <bool> allow users to edit datasources from the UI.
    editable: false

Custom Settings per Datasource

Please refer to each datasource documentation for specific provisioning examples.

Datasource Misc
Elasticsearch Elasticsearch uses the database property to configure the index for a datasource

Json Data

Since not all datasources have the same configuration settings we only have the most common ones as fields. The rest should be stored as a json blob in the jsonData field. Here are the most common settings that the core datasources use.

Name Type Datasource Description
tlsAuth boolean All Enable TLS authentication using client cert configured in secure json data
tlsAuthWithCACert boolean All Enable TLS authentication using CA cert
tlsSkipVerify boolean All Controls whether a client verifies the server's certificate chain and host name.
graphiteVersion string Graphite Graphite version
timeInterval string Prometheus, Elasticsearch, InfluxDB, MySQL, PostgreSQL and MSSQL Lowest interval/step value that should be used for this data source
httpMode string Influxdb, Prometheus HTTP Method. 'GET', 'POST', defaults to GET
esVersion number Elasticsearch Elasticsearch version as a number (2/5/56/60/70)
timeField string Elasticsearch Which field that should be used as timestamp
interval string Elasticsearch Index date time format. nil(No Pattern), 'Hourly', 'Daily', 'Weekly', 'Monthly' or 'Yearly'
logMessageField string Elasticsearch Which field should be used as the log message
logLevelField string Elasticsearch Which field should be used to indicate the priority of the log message
authType string Cloudwatch Auth provider. keys/credentials/arn
assumeRoleArn string Cloudwatch ARN of Assume Role
defaultRegion string Cloudwatch AWS region
customMetricsNamespaces string Cloudwatch Namespaces of Custom Metrics
tsdbVersion string OpenTSDB Version
tsdbResolution string OpenTSDB Resolution
sslmode string PostgreSQL SSLmode. 'disable', 'require', 'verify-ca' or 'verify-full'
sslRootCertFile string PostgreSQL SSL server root certificate file, must be readable by the Grafana user
sslCertFile string PostgreSQL SSL client certificate file, must be readable by the Grafana user
sslKeyFile string PostgreSQL SSL client key file, must be readable by only the Grafana user
encrypt string MSSQL Connection SSL encryption handling. 'disable', 'false' or 'true'
postgresVersion number PostgreSQL Postgres version as a number (903/904/905/906/1000) meaning v9.3, v9.4, ..., v10
timescaledb boolean PostgreSQL Enable usage of TimescaleDB extension
maxOpenConns number MySQL, PostgreSQL and MSSQL Maximum number of open connections to the database (Grafana v5.4+)
maxIdleConns number MySQL, PostgreSQL and MSSQL Maximum number of connections in the idle connection pool (Grafana v5.4+)
connMaxLifetime number MySQL, PostgreSQL and MSSQL Maximum amount of time in seconds a connection may be reused (Grafana v5.4+)

Secure Json Data

{"authType":"keys","defaultRegion":"us-west-2","timeField":"@timestamp"}

Secure json data is a map of settings that will be encrypted with [secret key]({{< relref "configuration.md#secret-key" >}}) from the Grafana config. The purpose of this is only to hide content from the users of the application. This should be used for storing TLS Cert and password that Grafana will append to the request on the server side. All of these settings are optional.

Name Type Datasource Description
tlsCACert string All CA cert for out going requests
tlsClientCert string All TLS Client cert for outgoing requests
tlsClientKey string All TLS Client key for outgoing requests
password string All password
basicAuthPassword string All password for basic authentication
accessKey string Cloudwatch Access key for connecting to Cloudwatch
secretKey string Cloudwatch Secret key for connecting to Cloudwatch

Custom HTTP headers for datasources

Data sources managed by Grafanas provisioning can be configured to add HTTP headers to all requests going to that datasource. The header name is configured in the jsonData field and the header value should be configured in secureJsonData.

apiVersion: 1

datasources:
  - name: Graphite
    jsonData:
      httpHeaderName1: 'HeaderName'
      httpHeaderName2: 'Authorization'
    secureJsonData:
      httpHeaderValue1: 'HeaderValue'
      httpHeaderValue2: 'Bearer XXXXXXXXX'

Plugins

This feature is available from v7.1

You can manage plugins in Grafana by adding one or more YAML config files in the [provisioning/plugins]({{< relref "configuration.md#provisioning" >}}) directory. Each config file can contain a list of apps that will be updated during start up. Grafana updates each app to match the configuration file.

Example plugin configuration file

apiVersion: 1

apps:
  # <string> the type of app, plugin identifier. Required
  - type: raintank-worldping-app
    # <int> Org ID. Default to 1, unless org_name is specified
    org_id: 1
    # <string> Org name. Overrides org_id unless org_id not specified
    org_name: Main Org.
    # <bool> disable the app. Default to false.
    disabled: false
    # <map> fields that will be converted to json and stored in jsonData. Custom per app.
    jsonData:
      # key/value pairs of string to object
      key: value
    # <map> fields that will be converted to json, encrypted and stored in secureJsonData. Custom per app.
    secureJsonData:
      # key/value pairs of string to string
      key: value

Dashboards

You can manage dashboards in Grafana by adding one or more YAML config files in the [provisioning/dashboards]({{< relref "configuration.md" >}}) directory. Each config file can contain a list of dashboards providers that load dashboards into Grafana from the local filesystem.

The dashboard provider config file looks somewhat like this:

apiVersion: 1

providers:
  # <string> an unique provider name. Required
  - name: 'a unique provider name'
    # <int> Org id. Default to 1
    orgId: 1
    # <string> name of the dashboard folder.
    folder: ''
    # <string> folder UID. will be automatically generated if not specified
    folderUid: ''
    # <string> provider type. Default to 'file'
    type: file
    # <bool> disable dashboard deletion
    disableDeletion: false
    # <int> how often Grafana will scan for changed dashboards
    updateIntervalSeconds: 10
    # <bool> allow updating provisioned dashboards from the UI
    allowUiUpdates: false
    options:
      # <string, required> path to dashboard files on disk. Required when using the 'file' type
      path: /var/lib/grafana/dashboards
      # <bool> use folder names from filesystem to create folders in Grafana
      foldersFromFilesStructure: true

When Grafana starts, it will update/insert all dashboards available in the configured path. Then later on poll that path every updateIntervalSeconds and look for updated json files and update/insert those into the database.

Note: Dashboards are provisioned to the General folder if the folder option is missing or empty.

Making changes to a provisioned dashboard

It's possible to make changes to a provisioned dashboard in the Grafana UI. However, it is not possible to automatically save the changes back to the provisioning source. If allowUiUpdates is set to true and you make changes to a provisioned dashboard, you can Save the dashboard then changes will be persisted to the Grafana database.

Note: If a provisioned dashboard is saved from the UI and then later updated from the source, the dashboard stored in the database will always be overwritten. The version property in the JSON file will not affect this, even if it is lower than the existing dashboard.

If a provisioned dashboard is saved from the UI and the source is removed, the dashboard stored in the database will be deleted unless the configuration option disableDeletion is set to true.

If allowUiUpdates is configured to false, you are not able to make changes to a provisioned dashboard. When you click Save, Grafana brings up a Cannot save provisioned dashboard dialog. The screenshot below illustrates this behavior.

Grafana offers options to export the JSON definition of a dashboard. Either Copy JSON to Clipboard or Save JSON to file can help you synchronize your dashboard changes back to the provisioning source.

Note: The JSON definition in the input field when using Copy JSON to Clipboard or Save JSON to file will have the id field automatically removed to aid the provisioning workflow.

{{< docs-imagebox img="/img/docs/v51/provisioning_cannot_save_dashboard.png" max-width="500px" class="docs-image--no-shadow" >}}

Reusable Dashboard URLs

If the dashboard in the json file contains an uid, Grafana will force insert/update on that uid. This allows you to migrate dashboards betweens Grafana instances and provisioning Grafana from configuration without breaking the URLs given since the new dashboard URL uses the uid as identifier. When Grafana starts, it will update/insert all dashboards available in the configured folders. If you modify the file, the dashboard will also be updated. By default Grafana will delete dashboards in the database if the file is removed. You can disable this behavior using the disableDeletion setting.

Note. Provisioning allows you to overwrite existing dashboards which leads to problems if you re-use settings that are supposed to be unique. Be careful not to re-use the same title multiple times within a folder or uid within the same installation as this will cause weird behaviors.

Provision folders structure from filesystem to Grafana

If you already store your dashboards using folders in a git repo or on a filesystem, and also you want to have the same folder names in the Grafana menu, you can use foldersFromFilesStructure option.

For example, to replicate these dashboards structure from the filesystem to Grafana,

/etc/dashboards
├── /server
│   ├── /common_dashboard.json
│   └── /network_dashboard.json
└── /application
    ├── /requests_dashboard.json
    └── /resources_dashboard.json

you need to specify just this short provision configuration file.

apiVersion: 1

providers:
- name: dashboards
  type: file
  updateIntervalSeconds: 30
  options:
    path: /etc/dashboards
    foldersFromFilesStructure: true

server and application will become new folders in Grafana menu.

Note. folder and folderUid options should be empty or missing to make foldersFromFilesStructure work.

Note: To provision dashboards to the General folder, store them in the root of your path.

Alert Notification Channels

Alert Notification Channels can be provisioned by adding one or more yaml config files in the provisioning/notifiers directory.

Each config file can contain the following top-level fields:

  • notifiers, a list of alert notifications that will be added or updated during start up. If the notification channel already exists, Grafana will update it to match the configuration file.
  • delete_notifiers, a list of alert notifications to be deleted before inserting/updating those in the notifiers list.

Provisioning looks up alert notifications by uid, and will update any existing notification with the provided uid.

By default, exporting a dashboard as JSON will use a sequential identifier to refer to alert notifications. The field uid can be optionally specified to specify a string identifier for the alert name.

{
  ...
      "alert": {
        ...,
        "conditions": [...],
        "frequency": "24h",
        "noDataState": "ok",
        "notifications": [
           {"uid": "notifier1"},
           {"uid": "notifier2"},
        ]
      }
  ...
}

Example Alert Notification Channels Config File

notifiers:
  - name: notification-channel-1
    type: slack
    uid: notifier1
    # either
    org_id: 2
    # or
    org_name: Main Org.
    is_default: true
    send_reminder: true
    frequency: 1h
    disable_resolve_message: false
    # See `Supported Settings` section for settings supported for each
    # alert notification type.
    settings:
      recipient: 'XXX'
      uploadImage: true
      token: 'xoxb' # legacy setting since Grafana v7.2 (stored non-encrypted)
      url: https://slack.com # legacy setting since Grafana v7.2 (stored non-encrypted)
    # Secure settings that will be encrypted in the database (supported since Grafana v7.2). See `Supported Settings` section for secure settings supported for each notifier.
    secure_settings:
      token: 'xoxb'
      url: https://slack.com

delete_notifiers:
  - name: notification-channel-1
    uid: notifier1
    # either
    org_id: 2
    # or
    org_name: Main Org.
  - name: notification-channel-2
    # default org_id: 1

Supported Settings

The following sections detail the supported settings and secure settings for each alert notification type. Secure settings are stored encrypted in the database and you add them to secure_settings in the YAML file instead of settings.

Note

: Secure settings is supported since Grafana v7.2.

Alert notification pushover

Name Secure setting
apiToken yes
userKey yes
device
retry
expire

Alert notification slack

Name Secure setting
url yes
recipient
username
icon_emoji
icon_url
uploadImage
mentionUsers
mentionGroups
mentionChannel
token yes

Alert notification victorops

Name
url
autoResolve

Alert notification kafka

Name
kafkaRestProxy
kafkaTopic

Alert notification LINE

Name Secure setting
token yes

Alert notification pagerduty

Name Secure setting
integrationKey yes
autoResolve

Alert notification sensu

Name Secure setting
url
source
handler
username
password yes

Alert notification prometheus-alertmanager

Name Secure setting
url
basicAuthUser
basicAuthPassword yes

Alert notification teams

Name
url

Alert notification dingding

Name
url

Alert notification email

Name
singleEmail
addresses

Alert notification hipchat

Name
url
apikey
roomid

Alert notification opsgenie

Name Secure setting
apiKey yes
apiUrl
autoClose
overridePriority

Alert notification telegram

Name Secure setting
bottoken yes
chatid
uploadImage

Alert notification threema

Name Secure setting
gateway_id
recipient_id
api_secret yes

Alert notification webhook

Name Secure setting
url
username
password yes

Alert notification googlechat

Name
url