Default variable details

Some of debops.kibana default variables have more extensive configuration than simple strings or lists, here you can find documentation and examples for them.

kibana__configuration

The kibana__*_configuration variables define the Kibana configuration options that are set in the /etc/kibana/kibana.yml configuration file.

The main Kibana configuration file format is YAML. The reference documentation defines two YAML formats recognized by Kibana, hierarchical (YAML dictionary keys are indented), or flat (YAML dictionary keys are separated by dots). This role focuses only on the latter, flat format since it's used everywhere in the Kibana documentation and seems to be the preferred method for majority of the configuration options.

For quick reference, Kibana configuration file contains options in the following format (similar to Elasticsearch):

cluster.name: example-cluster
node.name: node-1
network.host: [ _local_, _site_ ]
bootstrap.memory_lock: true
discovery.zen.minimum_master_nodes: 3

The kibana__*_configuration variables are a YAML lists of dictionaries. Each YAML dictionary defines an option, or redefines a previously defined option (the variables are flattened and then processed in order).

The first YAML dictionary key of each option (in above case, cluster, node, network, bootstrap, discovery is significant, and is used to separate configuration options into sections defined by the kibana__configuration_sections variable.

Configuration options can be defined as YAML dictionaries directly, with the key being the name of the option, and value being its value:

kibana__configuration:
  - 'cluster.name': 'example-cluster'
  - 'node.name': 'node-1'
  - 'network.host': [ '_local_', '_site_' ]
  - 'bootstrap.memory_lock': True
  - 'discovery.zen.minimum_master_nodes': 3

The extended YAML dictionary format is detected if a YAML dictionary contains a name key. The dictionaries support specific parameters:

name

String. The name of the Kibana option.

value

The value of the Kibana option. Can be a string, a number, a boolean or a YAML list.

comment

An optional comment added to the option, either as a string or a YAML text block.

state

If not specified or present, the option will be included in the configuration. If absent, the option will not be included. If comment, the option will be present but commented out (it's an internal feature and may not work reliably for all cases).

raw

Optional, a YAML text block. The name of the configuration option will be discarded and used only as a marker for these parameters. The contents of the raw key will be added as-is to the configuration file. You can use this to include more extensive configuration defined as a hierarchical YAML structure. An example configuration which should be equivalent to the previous example:

kibana__configuration:
  - name: 'node.meta.host_type'
    raw: |
      # Node type
      node.master: true
      node.data: true
      node.ingest: true

You should make sure that the indentation of the YAML parameters is consistent through the configuration file.

kibana__configuration_sections

The /etc/kibana/kibana.yml configuration file is structured in informal 'sections", each section contains configuration options from a specific group (node, cluster, etc.). The kibana__configuration_sections contains a YAML list of sections and option types to associate with them. The order of the entries on the list determines the order of the sections in the finished configuration file.

Each section definition is a YAML dictionary with specific parameters:

name

Name of the section, stored as a comment.

part or parts

A string or a YAML list of configuration option prefixes (first YAML dictionary key of a given configuration option). Only the parts defined for a given section will be included in that section.

After all of the sections are processed, any left over configuration options not matched with a particular section will be added at the end of the configuration file.

kibana__plugins

The kibana__*_plugins variables are YAML lists that can be used to install or remove Kibana plugins. Support for plugin management using these variables is minimalistic; you can install plugins known by the Elastic plugin repository, or from an URL. More involved management can be done by creating a separate role and using debops.kibana as a role dependency to manage configuration if necessary. See Usage as a role dependency for more details.

Each element of the list is a YAML dictionary with specific parameters:

name

Required. Name of the plugin that shows up in the output of the

bin/kibana-plugin list

command, without the version information included. This parameter will be used to check the state of the plugin.

url

Optional. If the plugin is distributed via an URL, you can provide it here for the plugin management script to use instead of the plugin name.

state

Optional. If not specified or present, the plugin and its configuration will be installed. If absent the plugin and its configuration will be removed.

state

Optional. The system user used for plugin management. Defaults to kibana__user. Certain plugins like X-Pack generate files on installation which Kibana needs to have write permissions to.

configuration or config

Optional. Custom configuration for a given plugin, in the format recognized by the main configuration template.

See kibana__configuration for more details.

Examples

Install a LogTrail plugin:

kibana__plugins:
  - name: 'logtrail'
    url: 'https://github.com/sivasamyk/logtrail/releases/download/0.1.13/logtrail-5.4.0-0.1.13.zip'

kibana__keys

The kibana__*_keys variables define the contents of the Kibana keystore used to keep confidential data like passwords or access tokens. The keys can be referenced in the Kibana configuration files using the ${secret_key} syntax.

Examples

Add an Elasticsearch password used for access over a secure connection. The password is retrieved from the secret/ directory on the Ansible Controller, managed by the debops.secret Ansible role:

kibana__keys:

  - ELASTIC_PASSWORD: '{{ lookup("file", secret + "/elastic-stack/elastic/password") }}'

Update an existing key with new content (presence of the force parameter will update the key on each Ansible run):

kibana__keys:

  - name: 'ELASTIC_PASSWORD'
    value: 'new-elasticsearch-password'
    force: True

Remove a key from the Kibana keystore:

kibana__keys:

  - name: 'ELASTIC_PASSWORD'
    state: 'absent'

Syntax

Each key entry is defined by a YAML dictionary. The keys can be defined using a simple format, with dictionary key being the secret key name, and its value being the secret value. In this case you should avoid the name or value as the secret keys.

Alternatively, secret keys can be defined using YAML dictionaries with specific parameters:

name

Required. Name of the secret key to store in the Kibana keystore.

value

Optional. A string with the value which should be stored under a given key.

state

Optional. If not specified or present, the key will be inserted into the keystore. If absent, the key will be removed from the keystore.

force

Optional, boolean. If present and True, the specified key will be updated in the keystore.