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Deploy Kibana With ElasticsearchDashboard
Before You Begin
At first, you need to have a Kubernetes cluster, and the kubectl
command-line tool must be configured to communicate with your cluster. If you do not already have a cluster, you can create one by using kind.
Now, install the KubeDB operator in your cluster following the steps here.
To keep things isolated, this tutorial uses a separate namespace called demo
throughout this tutorial.
$ kubectl create namespace demo
namespace/demo created
$ kubectl get namespace
NAME STATUS AGE
demo Active 11s
Note: YAML files used in this tutorial are stored in here in GitHub repository kubedb/docs.
Find Available StorageClass
We will have to provide StorageClass
in Elasticsearch CR specification. Check available StorageClass
in your cluster using the following command,
$ kubectl get storageclass
NAME PROVISIONER RECLAIMPOLICY VOLUMEBINDINGMODE ALLOWVOLUMEEXPANSION AGE
standard (default) rancher.io/local-path Delete WaitForFirstConsumer false 1h
Here, we have standard
StorageClass in our cluster from Local Path Provisioner.
Create an Elasticsearch Cluster
We are going to create a Elasticsearch Simple Dedicated Cluster in topology mode. Our cluster will be consist of 2 master nodes, 3 data nodes, 2 ingest nodes. Here, we are using Elasticsearch version (xpack-8.2.3
) of Elasticsearch distribution for this demo. To learn more about the Elasticsearch CR, visit here.
apiVersion: kubedb.com/v1
kind: Elasticsearch
metadata:
name: es-cluster
namespace: demo
spec:
enableSSL: true
version: xpack-8.2.3
storageType: Durable
topology:
master:
replicas: 2
storage:
storageClassName: "standard"
accessModes:
- ReadWriteOnce
resources:
requests:
storage: 1Gi
data:
replicas: 3
storage:
storageClassName: "standard"
accessModes:
- ReadWriteOnce
resources:
requests:
storage: 1Gi
ingest:
replicas: 2
storage:
storageClassName: "standard"
accessModes:
- ReadWriteOnce
resources:
requests:
storage: 1Gi
Here,
spec.version
- is the name of the ElasticsearchVersion CR. Here, we are using Elasticsearch versionxpack-8.2.3
of Elasticsearch distribution.spec.enableSSL
- specifies whether the HTTP layer is secured with certificates or not.spec.storageType
- specifies the type of storage that will be used for Elasticsearch database. It can beDurable
orEphemeral
. The default value of this field isDurable
. IfEphemeral
is used then KubeDB will create the Elasticsearch database usingEmptyDir
volume. In this case, you don’t have to specifyspec.storage
field. This is useful for testing purposes.spec.topology
- specifies the node-specific properties for the Elasticsearch cluster.topology.master
- specifies the properties of master nodes.master.replicas
- specifies the number of master nodes.master.storage
- specifies the master node storage information that passed to the PetSet.
topology.data
- specifies the properties of data nodes.data.replicas
- specifies the number of data nodes.data.storage
- specifies the data node storage information that passed to the PetSet.
topology.ingest
- specifies the properties of ingest nodes.ingest.replicas
- specifies the number of ingest nodes.ingest.storage
- specifies the ingest node storage information that passed to the PetSet.
Let’s deploy the above yaml by the following command:
$ kubectl apply -f https://github.com/kubedb/docs/raw/v2024.8.21/docs/guides/elasticsearch//elasticsearch-dashboard/kibana/yamls/es-cluster.yaml
elasticsearch.kubedb.com/es-cluster created
KubeDB will create the necessary resources to deploy the Elasticsearch cluster according to the above specification. Let’s wait until the database to be ready to use,
$ watch kubectl get elasticsearch -n demo
NAME VERSION STATUS AGE
es-cluster xpack-8.2.3 Ready 4m32s
Here, Elasticsearch is in Ready
state. It means the database is ready to accept connections.
Describe the Elasticsearch object to observe the progress if something goes wrong or the status is not changing for a long period of time:
$ kubectl describe elasticsearch -n demo es-cluster
Name: es-cluster
Namespace: demo
Labels: <none>
Annotations: <none>
API Version: kubedb.com/v1
Kind: Elasticsearch
Metadata:
Creation Timestamp: 2022-06-08T11:03:43Z
Finalizers:
kubedb.com
Generation: 1
Resource Version: 1047187
UID: dd90071c-8e64-420f-a836-2be9459e728a
Spec:
Auth Secret:
Name: es-cluster-elastic-cred
Enable SSL: true
Heap Size Percentage: 50
Internal Users:
apm_system:
Backend Roles:
apm_system
Secret Name: es-cluster-apm-system-cred
beats_system:
Backend Roles:
beats_system
Secret Name: es-cluster-beats-system-cred
Elastic:
Backend Roles:
superuser
Secret Name: es-cluster-elastic-cred
kibana_system:
Backend Roles:
kibana_system
Secret Name: es-cluster-kibana-system-cred
logstash_system:
Backend Roles:
logstash_system
Secret Name: es-cluster-logstash-system-cred
remote_monitoring_user:
Backend Roles:
remote_monitoring_collector
remote_monitoring_agent
Secret Name: es-cluster-remote-monitoring-user-cred
Kernel Settings:
Privileged: true
Sysctls:
Name: vm.max_map_count
Value: 262144
Pod Template:
Controller:
Metadata:
Spec:
Affinity:
Pod Anti Affinity:
Preferred During Scheduling Ignored During Execution:
Pod Affinity Term:
Label Selector:
Match Expressions:
Key: ${NODE_ROLE}
Operator: Exists
Match Labels:
app.kubernetes.io/instance: es-cluster
app.kubernetes.io/managed-by: kubedb.com
app.kubernetes.io/name: elasticsearches.kubedb.com
Namespaces:
demo
Topology Key: kubernetes.io/hostname
Weight: 100
Pod Affinity Term:
Label Selector:
Match Expressions:
Key: ${NODE_ROLE}
Operator: Exists
Match Labels:
app.kubernetes.io/instance: es-cluster
app.kubernetes.io/managed-by: kubedb.com
app.kubernetes.io/name: elasticsearches.kubedb.com
Namespaces:
demo
Topology Key: failure-domain.beta.kubernetes.io/zone
Weight: 50
Container Security Context:
Capabilities:
Add:
IPC_LOCK
SYS_RESOURCE
Privileged: false
Run As User: 1000
Resources:
Service Account Name: es-cluster
Storage Type: Durable
Termination Policy: Delete
Tls:
Certificates:
Alias: ca
Private Key:
Encoding: PKCS8
Secret Name: es-cluster-ca-cert
Subject:
Organizations:
kubedb
Alias: transport
Private Key:
Encoding: PKCS8
Secret Name: es-cluster-transport-cert
Subject:
Organizations:
kubedb
Alias: http
Private Key:
Encoding: PKCS8
Secret Name: es-cluster-http-cert
Subject:
Organizations:
kubedb
Alias: client
Private Key:
Encoding: PKCS8
Secret Name: es-cluster-client-cert
Subject:
Organizations:
kubedb
Topology:
Data:
Replicas: 3
Resources:
Limits:
Memory: 2Gi
Requests:
Cpu: 100m
Memory: 1.5Gi
Storage:
Access Modes:
ReadWriteOnce
Resources:
Requests:
Storage: 1Gi
Storage Class Name: standard
Suffix: data
Ingest:
Replicas: 2
Resources:
Limits:
Memory: 2Gi
Requests:
Cpu: 100m
Memory: 1.5Gi
Storage:
Access Modes:
ReadWriteOnce
Resources:
Requests:
Storage: 1Gi
Storage Class Name: standard
Suffix: ingest
Master:
Replicas: 2
Resources:
Limits:
Memory: 2Gi
Requests:
Cpu: 100m
Memory: 1.5Gi
Storage:
Access Modes:
ReadWriteOnce
Resources:
Requests:
Storage: 1Gi
Storage Class Name: standard
Suffix: master
Version: xpack-8.2.3
Status:
Conditions:
Last Transition Time: 2022-06-08T11:03:43Z
Message: The KubeDB operator has started the provisioning of Elasticsearch: demo/es-cluster
Reason: DatabaseProvisioningStartedSuccessfully
Status: True
Type: ProvisioningStarted
Last Transition Time: 2022-06-08T11:09:31Z
Message: Internal Users for Elasticsearch: demo/es-cluster is ready.
Observed Generation: 1
Reason: InternalUsersCredentialsSyncedSuccessfully
Status: True
Type: InternalUsersSynced
Last Transition Time: 2022-06-08T11:04:24Z
Message: All desired replicas are ready.
Reason: AllReplicasReady
Status: True
Type: ReplicaReady
Last Transition Time: 2022-06-08T11:08:58Z
Message: The Elasticsearch: demo/es-cluster is accepting client requests.
Observed Generation: 1
Reason: DatabaseAcceptingConnectionRequest
Status: True
Type: AcceptingConnection
Last Transition Time: 2022-06-08T11:09:31Z
Message: The Elasticsearch: demo/es-cluster is ready.
Observed Generation: 1
Reason: ReadinessCheckSucceeded
Status: True
Type: Ready
Last Transition Time: 2022-06-08T11:09:44Z
Message: The Elasticsearch: demo/es-cluster is successfully provisioned.
Observed Generation: 1
Reason: DatabaseSuccessfullyProvisioned
Status: True
Type: Provisioned
Observed Generation: 1
Phase: Ready
Events:
Type Reason Age From Message
---- ------ ---- ---- -------
Normal Successful 6m27s KubeDB Operator Successfully created governing service
Normal Successful 6m27s KubeDB Operator Successfully created Service
Normal Successful 6m27s KubeDB Operator Successfully created Service
Normal Successful 6m25s KubeDB Operator Successfully created Elasticsearch
Normal Successful 6m25s KubeDB Operator Successfully created appbinding
Normal Successful 6m25s KubeDB Operator Successfully governing service
Normal Successful 6m22s KubeDB Operator Successfully governing service
- Here, in
Status.Conditions
Conditions.Status
isTrue
for theCondition.Type:ProvisioningStarted
which means database provisioning has been started successfully.Conditions.Status
isTrue
for theCondition.Type:ReplicaReady
which specifies all replicas are ready in the cluster.Conditions.Status
isTrue
for theCondition.Type:AcceptingConnection
which means database has been accepting connection request.Conditions.Status
isTrue
for theCondition.Type:Ready
which defines database is ready to use.Conditions.Status
isTrue
for theCondition.Type:Provisioned
which specifies Database has been successfully provisioned.
KubeDB Operator Generated Resources
Let’s check the Kubernetes resources created by the operator on the deployment of Elasticsearch CRO:
$ kubectl get all,secret,pvc -n demo -l 'app.kubernetes.io/instance=es-cluster'
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
pod/es-cluster-data-0 1/1 Running 0 13m
pod/es-cluster-data-1 1/1 Running 0 13m
pod/es-cluster-data-2 1/1 Running 0 13m
pod/es-cluster-ingest-0 1/1 Running 0 13m
pod/es-cluster-ingest-1 1/1 Running 0 13m
pod/es-cluster-master-0 1/1 Running 0 13m
pod/es-cluster-master-1 1/1 Running 0 13m
NAME TYPE CLUSTER-IP EXTERNAL-IP PORT(S) AGE
service/es-cluster ClusterIP 10.96.135.31 <none> 9200/TCP 13m
service/es-cluster-master ClusterIP None <none> 9300/TCP 13m
service/es-cluster-pods ClusterIP None <none> 9200/TCP 13m
NAME READY AGE
petset.apps/es-cluster-data 3/3 13m
petset.apps/es-cluster-ingest 2/2 13m
petset.apps/es-cluster-master 2/2 13m
NAME TYPE VERSION AGE
appbinding.appcatalog.appscode.com/es-cluster kubedb.com/elasticsearch 8.2.0 13m
NAME TYPE DATA AGE
secret/es-cluster-apm-system-cred kubernetes.io/basic-auth 2 13m
secret/es-cluster-beats-system-cred kubernetes.io/basic-auth 2 13m
secret/es-cluster-ca-cert kubernetes.io/tls 2 13m
secret/es-cluster-client-cert kubernetes.io/tls 3 13m
secret/es-cluster-config Opaque 1 13m
secret/es-cluster-elastic-cred kubernetes.io/basic-auth 2 13m
secret/es-cluster-http-cert kubernetes.io/tls 3 13m
secret/es-cluster-kibana-system-cred kubernetes.io/basic-auth 2 13m
secret/es-cluster-logstash-system-cred kubernetes.io/basic-auth 2 13m
secret/es-cluster-remote-monitoring-user-cred kubernetes.io/basic-auth 2 13m
secret/es-cluster-transport-cert kubernetes.io/tls 3 13m
NAME STATUS VOLUME CAPACITY ACCESS MODES STORAGECLASS AGE
persistentvolumeclaim/data-es-cluster-data-0 Bound pvc-ef297d44-6adc-4307-ac53-93d09999622a 1Gi RWO standard 13m
persistentvolumeclaim/data-es-cluster-data-1 Bound pvc-9bc2ccc5-f775-49f5-9148-f1b70a1cd3b3 1Gi RWO standard 13m
persistentvolumeclaim/data-es-cluster-data-2 Bound pvc-fca1f3fc-a9e6-4fd2-8531-767c4f4286ee 1Gi RWO standard 13m
persistentvolumeclaim/data-es-cluster-ingest-0 Bound pvc-77f128cf-d0b5-40e2-94fd-1be506a17a4a 1Gi RWO standard 13m
persistentvolumeclaim/data-es-cluster-ingest-1 Bound pvc-024a1697-7737-4a53-8f48-e89ee0530cad 1Gi RWO standard 13m
persistentvolumeclaim/data-es-cluster-master-0 Bound pvc-775f89a2-4fcd-4660-b0c3-8c46dd1b0a67 1Gi RWO standard 13m
persistentvolumeclaim/data-es-cluster-master-1 Bound pvc-53fd7683-96a6-4737-9c4c-eade942e6743 1Gi RWO standard 13m
PetSet
- 3 PetSets are created for 3 types Elasticsearch nodes. The PetSets are named after the Elasticsearch instance with given suffix:{Elasticsearch-Name}-{Sufix}
.Services
- 3 services are generated for each Elasticsearch database.{Elasticsearch-Name}
- the client service which is used to connect to the database. It points to theingest
nodes.{Elasticsearch-Name}-master
- the master service which is used to connect to the master nodes. It is a headless service.{Elasticsearch-Name}-pods
- the node discovery service which is used by the Elasticsearch nodes to communicate each other. It is a headless service.
AppBinding
- an AppBinding which hold the connect information for the database. It is also named after the ElasticsSecrets
- 3 types of secrets are generated for each Elasticsearch database.{Elasticsearch-Name}-{username}-cred
- the auth secrets which hold theusername
andpassword
for the Elasticsearch users.{Elasticsearch-Name}-{alias}-cert
- the certificate secrets which holdtls.crt
,tls.key
, andca.crt
for configuring the Elasticsearch database.{Elasticsearch-Name}-config
- the default configuration secret created by the operator.
Deploy ElasticsearchDashboard
apiVersion: elasticsearch.kubedb.com/v1alpha1
kind: ElasticsearchDashboard
metadata:
name: es-cluster-dashboard
namespace: demo
spec:
enableSSL: true
databaseRef:
name: es-cluster
terminationPolicy: WipeOut
Note: Elasticsearch Database and Elasticsearch dashboard should have to be deployed in the same namespace. In this tutorial, we use demo namespace for both cases.
spec.enableSSL
specifies whether the HTTP layer is secured with certificates or not.spec.databaseRef.name
refers to the Elasticsearch database name.spec.deletionPolicy
refers to the strategy to follow during dashboard deletion.Wipeout
means that the database will be deleted without restrictions. It can also beDoNotTerminate
which will cause a restriction to delete the dashboard. Learn More about these HERE.
Let’s deploy the above yaml by the following command:
$ kubectl apply -f https://github.com/kubedb/docs/raw/v2024.8.21/docs/guides/elasticsearch/elasticsearch-dashboard/kibana/yamls/es-cluster-dashboard.yaml
elasticsearchdashboard.elasticsearch.kubedb.com/es-cluster-dashboard created
KubeDB will create the necessary resources to deploy the dashboard according to the above specification. Let’s wait until the database to be ready to use,
$ watch kubectl get elasticsearchdashboard -n demo
NAME TYPE DATABASE STATUS AGE
es-cluster-dashboard elasticsearch.kubedb.com/v1alpha1 es-cluster Ready 9m
Here, Elasticsearch Dashboard is in Ready
state.
Connect with Elasticsearch Dashboard
We will use port forwarding to connect with our Elasticsearch dashboard. Then We are going to login into kibana with authentication credentials and make API requests from dev tools to check cluster health so that we can verify that our Elasticsearch database is working well.
Port-forward the Service
KubeDB will create few Services to connect with the database. Let’s check the Services by following command,
$ kubectl get service -n demo
NAME TYPE CLUSTER-IP EXTERNAL-IP PORT(S) AGE
es-cluster ClusterIP 10.96.103.250 <none> 9200/TCP 13m
es-cluster-dashboard ClusterIP 10.96.108.252 <none> 5601/TCP 11m
es-cluster-master ClusterIP None <none> 9300/TCP 13m
es-cluster-pods ClusterIP None <none> 9200/TCP 13m
Here, we are going to use es-cluster-dashboard
Service to connect with the database. Now, let’s port-forward the es-cluster
Service to the port 5601
to local machine:
$ kubectl port-forward -n demo service/es-cluster-dashboard 5601
Forwarding from 127.0.0.1:5601 -> 5601
Forwarding from [::1]:5601 -> 5601
Now, our Elasticsearch cluster dashboard is accessible at https://localhost:5601
.
Export the Credentials
KubeDB also create some Secrets for the database. Let’s check which Secrets have been created by KubeDB for our es-cluster
.
$ kubectl get secret -n demo | grep es-cluster
es-cluster-apm-system-cred kubernetes.io/basic-auth 2 14m
es-cluster-beats-system-cred kubernetes.io/basic-auth 2 14m
es-cluster-ca-cert kubernetes.io/tls 2 14m
es-cluster-client-cert kubernetes.io/tls 3 14m
es-cluster-config Opaque 1 14m
es-cluster-elastic-cred kubernetes.io/basic-auth 2 14m
es-cluster-http-cert kubernetes.io/tls 3 14m
es-cluster-kibana-system-cred kubernetes.io/basic-auth 2 14m
es-cluster-logstash-system-cred kubernetes.io/basic-auth 2 14m
es-cluster-remote-monitoring-user-cred kubernetes.io/basic-auth 2 14m
es-cluster-token-8tbg6 kubernetes.io/service-account-token 3 14m
es-cluster-transport-cert kubernetes.io/tls 3 14m
Now, we can connect to the database with es-cluster-elastic-cred
which contains the admin level credentials to connect with the database.
Accessing Database Through Dashboard
To access the database through Dashboard, we have to get the credentials. We can do that by following command,
$ kubectl get secret -n demo es-cluster-elastic-cred -o jsonpath='{.data.username}' | base64 -d
elastic
$ kubectl get secret -n demo es-cluster-elastic-cred -o jsonpath='{.data.password}' | base64 -d
5m2YFv!JO6w5_LrD
Now, let’s go to https://localhost:5601
from our browser and login by using those credentials.
After login successfully, we will see Elasticsearch Dashboard UI. Now, We are going to Dev tools
for running some queries into our Elasticsearch database.
Here, in Dev tools
we will use Console
section for running some queries. Let’s run GET /
query to check node informations.
Now, we are going to insert some sample data to our Elasticsearch cluster index appscode/_doc/1
by using PUT
query.
Let’s check that sample data in the index appscode/_doc/1
by using GET
query.
Now, we are going to update sample data in the index appscode/_doc/1
by using POST
query.
Let’s verify the index appscode/_doc/1
again to see whether the data is updated or not.
We can see that the data has been updated successfully.
Now, Let’s remove that index by using DELETE
query.
Cleaning Up
To cleanup the Kubernetes resources created by this tutorial, run:
$ kubectl delete elasticsearchdashboard -n demo es-cluster-dashboard
$ kubectl patch -n demo elasticsearch es-cluster -p '{"spec":{"deletionPolicy":"WipeOut"}}' --type="merge"
$ kubectl delete elasticsearch -n demo es-cluster
# Delete namespace
$ kubectl delete namespace demo
Next Steps
- Learn about taking backup of Elasticsearch database using Stash.
- Detail concepts of Elasticsearch object.
- Use private Docker registry to deploy Elasticsearch with KubeDB.
- Want to hack on KubeDB? Check our contribution guidelines.