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Enterprise Open source

Getting started with Grafana and MS SQL Server

Microsoft SQL Server is a popular relational database management system that is widely used in development and production environments. This topic walks you through the steps to create a series of dashboards in Grafana to display metrics from a MS SQL Server database. You can also configure the MS SQL Server data source on a Grafana Cloud instance without having to host Grafana yourself.

Step 1. Install Grafana and build your first dashboard

Use the instructions in Getting started with Grafana to:

  • Install Grafana.
  • Log in to Grafana.
  • Create your first dashboard.

Note: You must install Grafana 5.1+ in order to use the integrated MS SQL data source.

Step 2. Download MS SQL Server

MS SQL Server can be installed on many different operating systems. Refer to the MS SQL Server downloads page, for a complete list of all available options.

Alternately, if you are working on Mac or Linux, then you can install MS SQL Server using the resources available in grafana/grafana GitHub repository (recommended). Here you will find a collection of supported data sources, including MS SQL Server, along with test data and pre-configured dashboards for use.

Note: Installing MS SQL Server on Windows from the grafana/grafana GitHub repository is not supported at this time.

Step 3. Install MS SQL Server

You can install MS SQL Server on the host running Grafana or on a remote server. To install the software from the downloads page, follow their setup prompts.

Otherwise, follow the instructions below to install and configure MS SQL Server from the grafana/grafana repository.

  1. Clone the grafana/grafana repository to your local system.
  2. Install Docker or verify that it is installed on your machine.
  3. Within your local grafana repository, change directory to devenv.
  4. Run the bash command to setup data sources and dashboards.
     ./setup.sh
  5. Restart the Grafana server.
  6. Change directory back to master.
  7. Run the make command to create the MS SQL Server database.
     make devenv sources=mssql

This creates an image of the SQL Server database and runs it as a Docker container.

Step 4. Adding the MS SQL data source

To add MS SQL Server data source:

  1. In the Grafana side menu, hover your cursor over the Configuration (gear) icon and then click Data Sources.
  2. Filter by mssql and select the Microsoft SQL Server option.
  3. Click Add data source in the top right header to open the configuration page.
  4. Enter the information specified in the table below, then click Save & Test.
NameDescription
NameThe data source name. This is how you refer to the data source in panels and queries.
HostThe IP address/hostname and optional port of your MS SQL instance. If port is omitted, the default 1433 will be used.
DatabaseName of your MS SQL database.
UserDatabase user’s login/username.
PasswordDatabase user’s password.

For installations from the grafana/grafana repository, gdev-mssql data source is available. Once you add this data source, you can use the Datasource tests - MSSQL dashboard with three panels showing metrics generated from a test database.

Optionally, play around this dashboard and customize it to:

  • Create different panels.
  • Change titles for panels.
  • Change frequency of data polling.
  • Change the period for which the data is displayed.
  • Rearrange and resize panels.

Step 5. Start building dashboards

Now that you have gained some idea of using the pre-packaged MS SQL data source and some test data, the next step is to setup your own instance of MS SQL Server database and data your development or sandbox area. In the previous steps, if you followed along the path of deploying your own instance of MS SQL Server, you are already on your way.

To fetch data from your own instance of MS SQL Server, add the data source using instructions in Step 4 of this topic. In Grafana Explore build queries to experiment with the metrics you want to monitor.

Once you have a curated list of queries, create dashboards to render metrics from the SQL Server database. For troubleshooting, user permissions, known issues, and query examples, refer to Using Microsoft SQL Server in Grafana.