![]() The Juju Ecosystem team has added elastic stack monitoring to a bunch of existing bundles. The standalone bundle is useful but let’s use a more practical example. Let’s connect it to something interesting, like an Apache Spark deployment. Juju add-relation topbeat:beats-host myapplication Juju add-relation filebeat:beats-host myapplication We need something to connect it to, and then introduce it to beats, so something like: juju deploy myapplication Now do a `juju status kibana` to get the ip address to the unit it’s allocated. Once everything is deployed we need to deploy the dashboards: juju action do kibana/0 deploy-dashboard dashboard=beats ![]() juju deploy ~containers/bundle/beats-core -channel=development Note: if you wish to deploy the latest version of this bundle, the ~containers team is publishing a development channel release as new beats are added to the core bundle. This will give you a complete stack, it looks like this: juju deploy ~containers/bundle/beats-core Though you can easily deploy these onto any major public cloud. We used LXD as a backend in order to maximize our ability to explore the cluster on our desktops/laptops. This will allow us to model our clusters easily and repeatedly. Filebeats for windows install#
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