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Installing and Configuring Grafana

Installing and Configuring Grafana
Hostman Team
Technical writer
Linux
17.04.2025
Reading time: 4 min

Working with any IT project becomes much easier when the administrator has a wide range of metrics and monitoring data at their fingertips. It's even better when the data is presented in a clear and visual format. This is where tools like Grafana come in — an open-source solution designed to gather information from various sources and consolidate it into visual reports.

Grafana supports multiple platforms — Windows, macOS, Linux (including popular distributions like Debian, Ubuntu, CentOS, Fedora, OpenSuse, or RedHat). It can work with databases such as SQLite, MySQL, and PostgreSQL. With so many options, administrators rarely need to adapt the solution to their environment.

In this tutorial, we'll go over how to install Grafana, configure it, and work with dashboards.

Installing Grafana on CentOS Stream

When ordering a Linux VPS, users can install any Linux operating system. Usually, this is one of the common distributions like CentOS or Ubuntu. For this example, we'll assume the OS is already installed and ready for Grafana and other utility programs.

  1. Let's import the GPG keys:
wget -q -O gpg.key https://rpm.grafana.com/gpg.key
sudo rpm --import gpg.key
  1. Create a new official repository configuration:

sudo nano /etc/yum.repos.d/grafana.repo
  1. Add the following content to the file:

[grafana]
name=grafana
baseurl=https://rpm.grafana.com
repo_gpgcheck=1
enabled=1
gpgcheck=1
gpgkey=https://rpm.grafana.com/gpg.key
sslverify=1
sslcacert=/etc/pki/tls/certs/ca-bundle.crt
  1. Install the application:

sudo dnf install grafana
  1. Enable autostart and launch Grafana:

sudo systemctl enable grafana-server
sudo systemctl start grafana-server
  1. Check the status to ensure Grafana is running:

sudo systemctl status grafana-server

You should see a message confirming that the service is loaded and active. This step is especially useful if someone previously worked with the server or installed a custom Linux build with bundled utilities.

Installing Grafana on Ubuntu

The process is similar: we install Grafana from the official repository after preparing the system to trust the source.

Run these commands:

wget -q -O - https://packages.grafana.com/gpg.key | sudo apt-key add -
sudo add-apt-repository "deb https://packages.grafana.com/oss/deb stable main"
sudo apt update
sudo apt install grafana
sudo systemctl enable grafana-server
sudo systemctl start grafana-server
sudo systemctl status grafana-server

Firewall Configuration for Grafana

By default, Grafana uses port 3000. Here's how to open it in different firewalls.

For iptables:

  1. Add the rule:

sudo iptables -A INPUT -p tcp --dport 3000 -m state --state NEW -j ACCEPT
  1. Save the rules so they persist after reboot:

sudo service iptables save
  1. Restart iptables to apply changes:

sudo systemctl restart iptables

For firewalld:

firewall-cmd --zone=public --add-port=3000/tcp --permanent
systemctl reload firewalld

Default Login and Password

Grafana uses the default login/password:

  • Username: admin
  • Password: admin

If forgotten, reset it with:

grafana-cli admin reset-admin-password --homepath "/usr/share/grafana" new_password

Data Sources and Plugin Installation

Grafana supports numerous data sources: Prometheus, Graphite, OpenTSDB, InfluxDB, and more. It also allows plugin installations to enhance functionality.

For example, to install the Zabbix plugin, run:

grafana-cli plugins install alexanderzobnin-zabbix-app
systemctl restart grafana-server

After restart, go to Configuration > Plugins and find Zabbix. After you enable it, you can configure it under Data Sources.

This same process applies to other plugins like Grafana PostgreSQL or Grafana Elasticsearch.

Working with Grafana Dashboards

The core of Grafana is dashboards — sets of panels that visually display data. Users can create their own dashboards by clicking New Dashboard and selecting panel types.

Dashboard Types:

  • Graph – multiple metrics in one panel.
  • Stat – single metric graph.
  • Gauge – speedometer-style display.
  • Bar Gauge – vertical bar graph.
  • Table – table with multiple metrics.
  • Text – freeform text.
  • Heatmap – heatmap display.
  • Alert List – list of Grafana alerts.
  • Dashboard List – list of favorite dashboards.

You can also display logs from external sources using Grafana Logs, and export/import dashboards for reuse.

For advanced control, refer to the official documentation. You can directly edit the grafana.ini file to change:

  • Default ports
  • Log storage paths
  • Proxy settings
  • User access controls
  • Feature toggles

Conclusion

Grafana is a powerful and flexible monitoring solution. To fully unlock its potential, experiment with dashboards, try manual config via grafana.ini, and explore third-party plugins. As an actively developed project, Grafana remains one of the top data visualization and monitoring tools.

Linux
17.04.2025
Reading time: 4 min

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Start and Monitor the Daemon sudo systemctl daemon-reload # Reload systemd configuration sudo systemctl start mydaemon # Start the daemon sudo systemctl status mydaemon # Check its status If everything works, the status will show active. To view logs: journalctl -u mydaemon.service -e Examples of Daemon Usage Web Servers Their job is to listen on a network port (usually 80 or 443), accept HTTP/HTTPS requests, generate a response (an HTML page, JSON data, etc.), and send the result back to the client. In most cases, a web server starts with the system and continues running until the server is shut down or a stop command is issued (e.g., systemctl stop nginx). Database Daemons MySQL/MariaDB, PostgreSQL, MongoDB — all of these are also daemons. They start with the system and continue running in the background, accepting requests from client applications or web services. 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Init System Daemons (systemd, init, Upstart) In modern systems, the role of the "main daemon" is fulfilled by systemd (replacing the older SysV init system). systemd is the first process to start after the kernel and is responsible for launching and managing all other services and processes. It starts them in parallel and handles their dependencies. Simply put, systemd is itself a daemon that “orchestrates” all others in the system. Advantages and Disadvantages of Daemons Advantages: Automation: Daemons enable system behavior to be automated — from responding to network requests to scheduling tasks — without user intervention. Isolation: Running under separate user/group accounts and detaching from terminals enhances security by limiting potential damage in case of compromise. Continuous Operation: A daemon can keep servicing requests (like a web server) without interruption even if the user logs out or the console is closed. 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Conclusion Daemons are central to Linux operating systems' architecture, offering vast automation and background services capabilities. They allow administrators to flexibly configure network operations, scheduled tasks, logging, security systems, and many other components. Writing your own daemon requires understanding processes, signals, system calls, and careful attention to logging and security. Modern init systems (especially systemd) have simplified daemon management and service logic, making the creation of custom services more structured and flexible. However, it remains a complex field that demands careful design, debugging, and ongoing maintenance.
11 April 2025 · 8 min to read

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