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Important: This documentation is about an older version. It's relevant only to the release noted, many of the features and functions have been updated or replaced. Please view the current version.

Enterprise Open source

Configuration

The Grafana back-end has a number of configuration options that can be specified in a .ini configuration file or specified using environment variables.

Config file locations

  • Default configuration from $WORKING_DIR/conf/defaults.ini
  • Custom configuration from $WORKING_DIR/conf/custom.ini
  • The custom configuration file path can be overridden using the --config parameter

Note. If you have installed Grafana using the deb or rpm packages, then your configuration file is located at /etc/grafana/grafana.ini. This path is specified in the Grafana init.d script using --config file parameter.

Using environment variables

All options in the configuration file (listed below) can be overridden using environment variables using the syntax:

GF_<SectionName>_<KeyName>

Where the section name is the text within the brackets. Everything should be upper case, . should be replaced by _. For example, given these configuration settings:

# default section
instance_name = ${HOSTNAME}

[security]
admin_user = admin

[auth.google]
client_secret = 0ldS3cretKey

Then you can override them using:

export GF_DEFAULT_INSTANCE_NAME=my-instance
export GF_SECURITY_ADMIN_USER=true
export GF_AUTH_GOOGLE_CLIENT_SECRET=newS3cretKey

instance_name

Set the name of the grafana-server instance. Used in logging and internal metrics and in clustering info. Defaults to: ${HOSTNAME}, which will be replaced with environment variable HOSTNAME, if that is empty or does not exist Grafana will try to use system calls to get the machine name.

[paths]

data

Path to where Grafana stores the sqlite3 database (if used), file based sessions (if used), and other data. This path is usually specified via command line in the init.d script or the systemd service file.

logs

Path to where Grafana will store logs. This path is usually specified via command line in the init.d script or the systemd service file. It can be overridden in the configuration file or in the default environment variable file.

[server]

http_addr

The IP address to bind to. If empty will bind to all interfaces

http_port

The port to bind to, defaults to 3000. To use port 80 you need to either give the Grafana binary permission for example:

$ sudo setcap 'cap_net_bind_service=+ep' /usr/sbin/grafana-server

Or redirect port 80 to the Grafana port using:

$ sudo iptables -t nat -A PREROUTING -p tcp --dport 80 -j REDIRECT --to-port 3000

Another way is put a webserver like Nginx or Apache in front of Grafana and have them proxy requests to Grafana.

protocol

http or https

Note Grafana versions earlier than 3.0 are vulnerable to POODLE. So we strongly recommend to upgrade to 3.x or use a reverse proxy for ssl termination.

domain

This setting is only used in as a part of the root_url setting (see below). Important if you use GitHub or Google OAuth.

enforce_domain

Redirect to correct domain if host header does not match domain. Prevents DNS rebinding attacks. Default is false.

root_url

This is the full URL used to access Grafana from a web browser. This is important if you use Google or GitHub OAuth authentication (for the callback URL to be correct).

Note This setting is also important if you have a reverse proxy in front of Grafana that exposes it through a subpath. In that case add the subpath to the end of this URL setting.

static_root_path

The path to the directory where the front end files (HTML, JS, and CSS files). Default to public which is why the Grafana binary needs to be executed with working directory set to the installation path.

cert_file

Path to the certificate file (if protocol is set to https).

cert_key

Path to the certificate key file (if protocol is set to https).

router_logging

Set to true for Grafana to log all HTTP requests (not just errors). These are logged as Info level events to grafana log.



[database]

Grafana needs a database to store users and dashboards (and other things). By default it is configured to use sqlite3 which is an embedded database (included in the main Grafana binary).

url

Use either URL or or the other fields below to configure the database Example: mysql://user:secret@host:port/database

type

Either mysql, postgres or sqlite3, it’s your choice.

path

Only applicable for sqlite3 database. The file path where the database will be stored.

host

Only applicable to MySQL or Postgres. Includes IP or hostname and port. For example, for MySQL running on the same host as Grafana: host = 127.0.0.1:3306

name

The name of the Grafana database. Leave it set to grafana or some other name.

user

The database user (not applicable for sqlite3).

password

The database user’s password (not applicable for sqlite3). If the password contains # or ; you have to wrap it with trippel quotes. Ex """#password;"""

ssl_mode

For Postgres, use either disable, require or verify-full. For MySQL, use either true, false, or skip-verify.

ca_cert_path

(MySQL only) The path to the CA certificate to use. On many linux systems, certs can be found in /etc/ssl/certs.

client_key_path

(MySQL only) The path to the client key. Only if server requires client authentication.

client_cert_path

(MySQL only) The path to the client cert. Only if server requires client authentication.

server_cert_name

(MySQL only) The common name field of the certificate used by the mysql server. Not necessary if ssl_mode is set to skip-verify.

max_idle_conn

The maximum number of connections in the idle connection pool.

max_open_conn

The maximum number of open connections to the database.


[security]

admin_user

The name of the default Grafana admin user (who has full permissions). Defaults to admin.

admin_password

The password of the default Grafana admin. Set once on first-run. Defaults to admin.

login_remember_days

The number of days the keep me logged in / remember me cookie lasts.

secret_key

Used for signing keep me logged in / remember me cookies.

disable_gravatar

Set to true to disable the use of Gravatar for user profile images. Default is false.

data_source_proxy_whitelist

Define a white list of allowed ips/domains to use in data sources. Format: ip_or_domain:port separated by spaces


[users]

allow_sign_up

Set to false to prohibit users from being able to sign up / create user accounts. Defaults to false. The admin user can still create users from the Grafana Admin Pages

allow_org_create

Set to false to prohibit users from creating new organizations. Defaults to false.

auto_assign_org

Set to true to automatically add new users to the main organization (id 1). When set to false, new users will automatically cause a new organization to be created for that new user.

auto_assign_org_role

The role new users will be assigned for the main organization (if the above setting is set to true). Defaults to Viewer, other valid options are Admin and Editor and Read Only Editor. e.g. :

auto_assign_org_role = Read Only Editor


[auth]

disable_login_form

Set to true to disable (hide) the login form, useful if you use OAuth, defaults to false.

disable_signout_menu

Set to true to disable the signout link in the side menu. useful if you use auth.proxy, defaults to false.


[auth.anonymous]

enabled

Set to true to enable anonymous access. Defaults to false

org_name

Set the organization name that should be used for anonymous users. If you change your organization name in the Grafana UI this setting needs to be updated to match the new name.

org_role

Specify role for anonymous users. Defaults to Viewer, other valid options are Editor and Admin.

[auth.github]

You need to create a GitHub application (you find this under the GitHub profile page). When you create the application you will need to specify a callback URL. Specify this as callback:

http://<my_grafana_server_name_or_ip>:<grafana_server_port>/login/github

This callback URL must match the full HTTP address that you use in your browser to access Grafana, but with the prefix path of /login/github. When the GitHub application is created you will get a Client ID and a Client Secret. Specify these in the Grafana configuration file. For example:

[auth.github]
enabled = true
allow_sign_up = true
client_id = YOUR_GITHUB_APP_CLIENT_ID
client_secret = YOUR_GITHUB_APP_CLIENT_SECRET
scopes = user:email
auth_url = https://github.com/login/oauth/authorize
token_url = https://github.com/login/oauth/access_token
api_url = https://api.github.com/user
team_ids =
allowed_organizations =

Restart the Grafana back-end. You should now see a GitHub login button on the login page. You can now login or sign up with your GitHub accounts.

You may allow users to sign-up via GitHub authentication by setting the allow_sign_up option to true. When this option is set to true, any user successfully authenticating via GitHub authentication will be automatically signed up.

team_ids

Require an active team membership for at least one of the given teams on GitHub. If the authenticated user isn’t a member of at least one of the teams they will not be able to register or authenticate with your Grafana instance. For example:

[auth.github]
enabled = true
client_id = YOUR_GITHUB_APP_CLIENT_ID
client_secret = YOUR_GITHUB_APP_CLIENT_SECRET
scopes = user:email,read:org
team_ids = 150,300
auth_url = https://github.com/login/oauth/authorize
token_url = https://github.com/login/oauth/access_token
allow_sign_up = true

allowed_organizations

Require an active organization membership for at least one of the given organizations on GitHub. If the authenticated user isn’t a member of at least one of the organizations they will not be able to register or authenticate with your Grafana instance. For example

[auth.github]
enabled = true
client_id = YOUR_GITHUB_APP_CLIENT_ID
client_secret = YOUR_GITHUB_APP_CLIENT_SECRET
scopes = user:email,read:org
auth_url = https://github.com/login/oauth/authorize
token_url = https://github.com/login/oauth/access_token
allow_sign_up = true
# space-delimited organization names
allowed_organizations = github google

[auth.google]

You need to create a Google project. You can do this in the Google Developer Console. When you create the project you will need to specify a callback URL. Specify this as callback:

http://<my_grafana_server_name_or_ip>:<grafana_server_port>/login/google

This callback URL must match the full HTTP address that you use in your browser to access Grafana, but with the prefix path of /login/google. When the Google project is created you will get a Client ID and a Client Secret. Specify these in the Grafana configuration file. For example:

[auth.google]
enabled = true
client_id = YOUR_GOOGLE_APP_CLIENT_ID
client_secret = YOUR_GOOGLE_APP_CLIENT_SECRET
scopes = https://www.googleapis.com/auth/userinfo.profile https://www.googleapis.com/auth/userinfo.email
auth_url = https://accounts.google.com/o/oauth2/auth
token_url = https://accounts.google.com/o/oauth2/token
allowed_domains = mycompany.com mycompany.org
allow_sign_up = true

Restart the Grafana back-end. You should now see a Google login button on the login page. You can now login or sign up with your Google accounts. The allowed_domains option is optional, and domains were separated by space.

You may allow users to sign-up via Google authentication by setting the allow_sign_up option to true. When this option is set to true, any user successfully authenticating via Google authentication will be automatically signed up.

[auth.generic_oauth]

This option could be used if have your own oauth service.

This callback URL must match the full HTTP address that you use in your browser to access Grafana, but with the prefix path of /login/generic_oauth.

[auth.generic_oauth]
enabled = true
client_id = YOUR_APP_CLIENT_ID
client_secret = YOUR_APP_CLIENT_SECRET
scopes =
auth_url =
token_url =
api_url =
allowed_domains = mycompany.com mycompany.org
allow_sign_up = true

Set api_url to the resource that returns OpenID UserInfo compatible information.


[auth.basic]

enabled

When enabled is true (default) the http api will accept basic authentication.


[auth.ldap]

enabled

Set to true to enable LDAP integration (default: false)

config_file

Path to the LDAP specific configuration file (default: /etc/grafana/ldap.toml)

allow_sign_up

Allow sign up should almost always be true (default) to allow new Grafana users to be created (if ldap authentication is ok). If set to false only pre-existing Grafana users will be able to login (if ldap authentication is ok).

For details on LDAP Configuration, go to the LDAP Integration page.


[auth.proxy]

This feature allows you to handle authentication in a http reverse proxy.

enabled

Defaults to false

header_name

Defaults to X-WEBAUTH-USER

header_property

Defaults to username but can also be set to email

auto_sign_up

Set to true to enable auto sign up of users who do not exist in Grafana DB. Defaults to true.

whitelist

Limit where auth proxy requests come from by configuring a list of IP addresses. This can be used to prevent users spoofing the X-WEBAUTH-USER header.


[session]

provider

Valid values are memory, file, mysql, postgres, memcache or redis. Default is file.

provider_config

This option should be configured differently depending on what type of session provider you have configured.

  • file: session file path, e.g. data/sessions
  • mysql: go-sql-driver/mysql dsn config string, e.g. user:password@tcp(127.0.0.1:3306)/database_name
  • postgres: ex: user=a password=b host=localhost port=5432 dbname=c sslmode=require
  • memcache: ex: 127.0.0.1:11211
  • redis: ex: addr=127.0.0.1:6379,pool_size=100,prefix=grafana

If you use MySQL or Postgres as the session store you need to create the session table manually.

Mysql Example:

CREATE TABLE `session` (
    `key`       CHAR(16) NOT NULL,
    `data`      BLOB,
    `expiry`    INT(11) UNSIGNED NOT NULL,
    PRIMARY KEY (`key`)
) ENGINE=MyISAM DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8;

Postgres Example:

CREATE TABLE session (
    key       CHAR(16) NOT NULL,
    data      BYTEA,
    expiry    INTEGER NOT NULL,
    PRIMARY KEY (key)
);

Postgres valid sslmode are disable, require (default), verify-ca, and verify-full.

The name of the Grafana session cookie.

Set to true if you host Grafana behind HTTPS only. Defaults to false.

session_life_time

How long sessions lasts in seconds. Defaults to 86400 (24 hours).


[analytics]

reporting_enabled

When enabled Grafana will send anonymous usage statistics to stats.grafana.org. No IP addresses are being tracked, only simple counters to track running instances, versions, dashboard & error counts. It is very helpful to us, so please leave this enabled. Counters are sent every 24 hours. Default value is true.

google_analytics_ua_id

If you want to track Grafana usage via Google analytics specify your Universal Analytics ID here. By default this feature is disabled.


[dashboards.json]

If you have a system that automatically builds dashboards as json files you can enable this feature to have the Grafana backend index those json dashboards which will make them appear in regular dashboard search.

enabled

true or false. Is disabled by default.

path

The full path to a directory containing your json dashboards.

[smtp]

Email server settings.

enabled

defaults to false

host

defaults to localhost:25

user

In case of SMTP auth, defaults to empty

password

In case of SMTP auth, defaults to empty

cert_file

File path to a cert file, defaults to empty

key_file

File path to a key file, defaults to empty

skip_verify

Verify SSL for smtp server? defaults to false

from_address

Address used when sending out emails, defaults to admin@grafana.localhost

from_name

Name to be used when sending out emails, defaults to Grafana

[log]

mode

Either “console”, “file”, “syslog”. Default is console and file Use space to separate multiple modes, e.g. “console file”

level

Either “debug”, “info”, “warn”, “error”, “critical”, default is “info”

filters

optional settings to set different levels for specific loggers. Ex filters = sqlstore:debug

[metrics]

enabled

Enable metrics reporting. defaults true. Available via HTTP API /api/metrics.

interval_seconds

Flush/Write interval when sending metrics to external TSDB. Defaults to 10s.

[metrics.graphite]

Include this section if you want to send internal Grafana metrics to Graphite.

address

Format <Hostname or ip>:port

prefix

Graphite metric prefix. Defaults to prod.grafana.%(instance_name)s.

[snapshots]

external_enabled

Set to false to disable external snapshot publish endpoint (default true)

external_snapshot_url

Set root url to a Grafana instance where you want to publish external snapshots (defaults to https://snapshots-origin.raintank.io)

external_snapshot_name

Set name for external snapshot button. Defaults to Publish to snapshot.raintank.io

remove expired snapshot

Enabled to automatically remove expired snapshots

remove snapshots after 90 days

Time to live for snapshots.

[external_image_storage]

These options control how images should be made public so they can be shared on services like slack.

provider

You can choose between (s3, webdav). If left empty Grafana will ignore the upload action.

[external_image_storage.s3]

bucket_url

Bucket URL for S3. AWS region can be specified within URL or defaults to ‘us-east-1’, e.g.

access_key

Access key. e.g. AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA

Access key requires permissions to the S3 bucket for the ‘s3:PutObject’ and ‘s3:PutObjectAcl’ actions.

secret_key

Secret key. e.g. AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA

[external_image_storage.webdav]

url

Url to where Grafana will send PUT request with images

public_url

Optional parameter. Url to send to users in notifications, directly appended with the resulting uploaded file name.

username

basic auth username

password

basic auth password

[alerting]

enabled

Defaults to true. Set to false to disable alerting engine and hide Alerting from UI.

execute_alerts

execute_alerts = true

Makes it possible to turn off alert rule execution.