Kibana and Microsoft Fabric Integration

Powerful performance with an easy integration, powered by Telegraf, the open source data connector built by InfluxData.

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This is not the recommended configuration for real-time query at scale. For query and compression optimization, high-speed ingest, and high availability, you may want to consider Kibana and InfluxDB.

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Powerful Performance, Limitless Scale

Collect, organize, and act on massive volumes of high-velocity data. Any data is more valuable when you think of it as time series data. with InfluxDB, the #1 time series platform built to scale with Telegraf.

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Input and output integration overview

The Kibana plugin enables users to obtain status metrics from Kibana, a data visualization tool for Elasticsearch. By connecting to the Kibana API, this plugin captures various performance indicators and the health status of the Kibana service.

The Microsoft Fabric plugin writes metrics to Real time analytics in Fabric services, enabling powerful data storage and analysis capabilities.

Integration details

Kibana

The Kibana input plugin is designed to query the Kibana API to gather service status information. This plugin allows users to monitor their Kibana instances effectively by pulling metrics related to its health, performance, and operational metrics. By querying the Kibana API, this plugin provides insights into key parameters such as the current health status (green, yellow, red), uptime, heap memory usage, and request performance metrics. This information is crucial for administrators and operational teams looking to maintain optimal system performance and quickly address any issues that may arise. The configuration settings allow for flexible integration with other components in a microservices architecture, facilitating comprehensive monitoring solutions aligned with organizational needs, making it an essential tool for those leveraging the Elastic Stack in their infrastructure.

Microsoft Fabric

This plugin allows you to leverage Microsoft Fabric’s capabilities to store and analyze your Telegraf metrics. Eventhouse is a high-performance, scalable data-store designed for real-time analytics. It allows you to ingest, store and query large volumes of data with low latency. The plugin supports both events and metrics with versatile grouping options. It provides various configuration parameters including connection strings specifying details like the data source, ingestion types, and which tables to use for storage. With support for streaming ingestion and event streams, this plugin enables seamless integration and data flow into Microsoft’s analytics ecosystem, allowing for rich data querying capabilities and near-real-time processing.

Configuration

Kibana

[[inputs.kibana]]
  ## Specify a list of one or more Kibana servers
  servers = ["http://localhost:5601"]

  ## Timeout for HTTP requests
  timeout = "5s"

  ## HTTP Basic Auth credentials
  # username = "username"
  # password = "pa$$word"

  ## Optional TLS Config
  # tls_ca = "/etc/telegraf/ca.pem"
  # tls_cert = "/etc/telegraf/cert.pem"
  # tls_key = "/etc/telegraf/key.pem"
  ## Use TLS but skip chain & host verification
  # insecure_skip_verify = false
 
  ## If 'use_system_proxy' is set to true, Telegraf will check env vars such as
  ## HTTP_PROXY, HTTPS_PROXY, and NO_PROXY (or their lowercase counterparts).
  ## If 'use_system_proxy' is set to false (default) and 'http_proxy_url' is
  ## provided, Telegraf will use the specified URL as HTTP proxy.
  # use_system_proxy = false
  # http_proxy_url = "http://localhost:8888"

Microsoft Fabric

[[outputs.microsoft_fabric]]
  ## The URI property of the resource on Azure
  connection_string = "https://trd-abcd.xx.kusto.fabric.microsoft.com;Database=kusto_eh;Table Name=telegraf_dump;Key=value"

  ## Client timeout
  # timeout = "30s"

Input and output integration examples

Kibana

  1. Kibana Health Monitoring: Implement a dedicated dashboard to periodically poll the metrics from Kibana. This setup allows operations teams to have a real-time view of their Kibana instances’ health and metrics, enabling proactive performance management and immediate response capabilities in case of service degradation or failure.

  2. Automated Alerting System: Integrate the metrics gathered from the Kibana plugin with an alerting system using tools like Prometheus or PagerDuty. By setting thresholds for key metrics (e.g., response time or heap usage), this integration can automatically notify the relevant personnel of performance issues, thereby reducing downtime and improving the response time for operational issues.

  3. Resource Optimization Strategy: Use the memory usage and response time metrics collected by this plugin to formulate strategies for optimizing resource allocation in Kubernetes or other orchestration platforms. By analyzing trends over time, teams can adjust resource limits and requests dynamically, ensuring that Kibana instances function efficiently without over-provisioning resources.

Microsoft Fabric

  1. Real-time Monitoring Dashboards: Utilize the Microsoft Fabric plugin to feed live metrics from your applications into a real-time dashboard on Microsoft Fabric. This allows teams to visualize key performance indicators instantly, enabling quick decision-making and timely responses to performance issues.

  2. Automated Data Ingestion from IoT Devices: Use this plugin in scenarios where metrics from IoT devices need to be ingested into Azure for analysis. Using the plugin’s capabilities, data can be streamed continuously, facilitating real-time analytics and reporting without complex coding efforts.

  3. Cross-Platform Data Aggregation: Leverage the plugin to consolidate metrics from multiple systems and applications into a single Azure Data Explorer table. This use case enables easier data management and analysis by centralizing disparate data sources within a unified analytics framework.

  4. Enhanced Event Transformation Workflows: Integrate the plugin with Eventstreams to facilitate real-time event ingestion and transformation. By configuring different metrics and partition keys, users can manipulate the flow of data as it enters the system, allowing for advanced processing before the data reaches its final destination.

Feedback

Thank you for being part of our community! If you have any general feedback or found any bugs on these pages, we welcome and encourage your input. Please submit your feedback in the InfluxDB community Slack.

Powerful Performance, Limitless Scale

Collect, organize, and act on massive volumes of high-velocity data. Any data is more valuable when you think of it as time series data. with InfluxDB, the #1 time series platform built to scale with Telegraf.

See Ways to Get Started

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