The Quickwit data source plugin allows you to query and visualize Quickwit data from within Grafana.
It is available for installation directly from the Grafana catalog or you can download the latest version and follow the installation guide.
This plugin is heavily inspired by the elasticsearch
plugin available on the Grafana repository. First of all, huge thanks to the Grafana team for open-sourcing all their work.
It's more or less a fork of this plugin to adapt the code to Quickwit API. See LICENSING for details on the license and the changes made.
The license for this project is AGPL-3.0, and a notice was added to respect the Grafana Labs license.
We recommend Grafana v10.X.
Quickwit 0.7 is compatible with 0.3.x versions only.
Quickwit 0.8 is compatible with 0.4.x versions only.
You can either download the plugin manually and unzip it into the plugin directory or use the env variable GF_INSTALL_PLUGINS
to install it.
Run grafana-oss
container with the env variable:
docker run -p 3000:3000 -e GF_INSTALL_PLUGINS="https://github.com/quickwit-oss/quickwit-datasource/releases/download/v0.4.6/quickwit-quickwit-datasource-0.4.6.zip;quickwit-quickwit-datasource" grafana/grafana-oss run
Or download the plugin manually and start Grafana
wget https://github.com/quickwit-oss/quickwit-datasource/releases/download/v0.4.6/quickwit-quickwit-datasource-0.4.6.zip
mkdir -p plugins
unzip quickwit-quickwit-datasource-0.4.6.zip -d plugins/quickwit-quickwit-datasource-0.4.6
docker run -p 3000:3000 -e GF_PATHS_PLUGINS=/data/plugins -v ${PWD}/plugins:/data/plugins grafana/grafana-oss run
Run grafana-oss
container with the env variable:
docker run -p 3000:3000 -e GF_INSTALL_PLUGINS="https://github.com/quickwit-oss/quickwit-datasource/releases/download/v0.3.2/quickwit-quickwit-datasource-0.3.2.zip;quickwit-quickwit-datasource" grafana/grafana-oss run
Or download the plugin manually and start Grafana
wget https://github.com/quickwit-oss/quickwit-datasource/releases/download/v0.3.2/quickwit-quickwit-datasource-0.3.2.zip
mkdir -p plugins
unzip quickwit-quickwit-datasource-0.3.2.zip -d plugins/quickwit-quickwit-datasource-0.3.2
docker run -p 3000:3000 -e GF_PATHS_PLUGINS=/data/plugins -v ${PWD}/plugins:/data/plugins grafana/grafana-oss run
If you are running a local Quickwit instance on Linux, add the --network=host
argument to the docker run
command. This will allow Grafana to access services on the host machine. You can later use http://localhost:7280/api/v1
in the Quickwit API URL when configuring the data source.
The default username and password are admin
and admin
.
You're all set!
For detailed instructions on how to install plugins on Grafana Cloud or locally, please check out the Plugin management docs.
To configure the Quickwit datasource, you need to provide the following information:
/api/v1
suffix. If you have a Quickwit local instance, set the host to http://host.docker.internal:7280/api/v1
on macOS or http://localhost:7280/api/v1
on Linux.Follow these instructions to add a new Quickwit data source, and enter configuration options.
apiVersion: 1
datasources:
- name: Quickwit
type: quickwit-quickwit-datasource
url: http://localhost:7280/api/v1
jsonData:
index: 'hdfs-logs'
logMessageField: body
logLevelField: severity_text
If you’re sure your query is correct and the results are fetched, then you’re fine! The query linting feature is still quite rough around the edges and will improve in future versions of the plugin. If results are not fetched, make sure you are using a recent version of Quickwit, as some improvements have been made to the query parser.
This is probably due to a bug in Grafana up to versions 10.3, the next release of Grafana v10.4 should fix the issue.
This may be due to a limitation of the pagination scheme. In order to avoid querying data without controlling the size of the response, we set a limit on how many records to fetch per query. The pagination scheme then tries to fetch the next chunk of results based on the timestamps already collected and may skip some logs if there was more records with a given timestamp. To avoid that : try using timestamps with a finer resolution if possible, set the query limits higher or refine your query.
Details on our contributing guide.