Watcher

Watcher is an Elasticsearch feature that you can use to create actions based on conditions, which are periodically evaluated using queries on your data. Watches are helpful for analyzing mission-critical and business-critical streaming data. For example, you might watch application logs for performance outages or audit access logs for security threats.

To get started with the Watcher UI, open then menu, then go to Stack Management > Alerts and Insights > Watcher. With this UI, you can:

Watcher list

Alerting on cluster and index events is a good source for detailed information on how watches work. If you are using the UI to create a threshold watch, take a look at the different watcher actions. If you are creating an advanced watch, you should be familiar with the parts of a watch—input, schedule, condition, and actions.

Watcher security

If the Elasticsearch security features are enabled, you must have the manage_watcher or monitor_watcher cluster privileges to use Watcher in Kibana.

Alternately, you can have the built-in kibana_admin role and either of these watcher roles:

  • watcher_admin. You can perform all Watcher actions, including create and edit watches.
  • watcher_user. You can view watches, but not create or edit them.

To manage roles, open then menu, then go to Stack Management > Security > Roles, or use the Kibana Role Management API. Watches are shared between all users with the same role.

If you are creating a threshold watch, you must also have the view_index_metadata index privilege. See Managing Indices for detailed information.

Create a threshold alert

A threshold alert is one of the most common types of watches that you can create. This alert periodically checks when your data is above, below, equals, or is in between a certain threshold within a given time interval.

The following example walks you through creating a threshold alert. The alert is triggered when the maximum total CPU usage on a machine goes above a certain percentage. The example uses Metricbeat to collect metrics from your systems and services. Learn more on how to install and get started with Metricbeat.

Define the watch input and schedule

  1. Click Create and then select Create threshold alert.

    You’re navigated to a page where you’re asked to define the watch name, the data that you want to evaluate, and how often you want to trigger the watch.

  2. Enter a name that you want to call the alert, for example, cpu_threshold_alert.

  3. In the Indices to query field, enter metricbeat-* and select @timestamp as the time field.
  4. Use the default schedule to run the watch every 1 minute.

    Input and schedule for threshold alert

Add a condition

You should now see a panel with default conditions and a visualization of the data based on those conditions. The condition evaluates the data you’ve loaded into the watch and determines if any action is required.

  1. Click the WHEN expression and change the value to max().

    The OF expression now appears.

  2. Search for system.process.cpu.total.norm.pct and select it from the list.

  3. Select the IS ABOVE expression and change the value to .25 to trigger an alert whenever the CPU is above 25%.

    As you change the condition, the visualization is automatically updated. The black line represents the threshold (25%), while the green fluctuating line represents the change in CPU over the set time period.

    Condition for threshold alert

Add an action

Now that the condition is set, you must add an action. The action triggers when the watch condition is met. For a complete list of actions and how to configure them, see Adding conditions to actions.

In this example, you’ll configure an email action. You must have an email account configured in Elasticsearch for this example to work.

  1. Click Add action and select Email.
  2. In the To email address field, enter one or more email addresses to whom you want to send the message when the condition is met.
  3. Enter a subject and body for the email.

    Action for threshold alert

  4. To test the action before saving the watch, click Send test email.

    A sample email is sent using the configuration you set up.

  5. Click Create alert.

    The alert appears on the Watcher overview page, where you can drill down into the watch history and status.

Delete the alert

In this example, you set the threshold to 25% so you can see the watch fire. In a real-world scenario, this threshold is likely too low because the alerts are so frequent. Once you are done experimenting, you should delete the alert. Find the alert on the Watcher overview page and click the trash icon in the Actions column.

Edit the alert

Alternatively, you can keep the alert and adjust the threshold value. To edit an alert, find the alert on the Watcher overview page and click the pencil icon in the Actions column.

View watch history and status

The Watcher overview page lists your watches and includes details such as state, last fired, and last triggered. A watch has one of four states:

  • Firing. The watch is triggered and actively performing the associated actions.
  • Error. The watch is not working properly.
  • OK. The watch is not actively firing but working properly.
  • Disabled. The watch will not fire under any circumstances.

From this page you can drill down into a watch to investigate its history and status.

View watch history

The Execution history tab shows each time the watch is triggered and the results of the query, whether the condition was met, and what actions were taken.

Execution history tab

Acknowledge action status

The Action statuses tab lists all actions associated with the watch and the state of each action. If the action is firing, you can acknowledge the watch to prevent too many executions of the same action for the same watch. See Acknowledgement and throttling for details.

Action status tab

Deactivate and delete a watch

Actions for deactivating and deleting a watch are on each watch detail page:

  • Deactivate a watch if you know a situation is planned that will cause a false alarm. You can reactivate the watch when the situation is resolved.
  • Delete a watch to permanently remove it from the system. You can delete the watch you are currently viewing, or go to the Watcher overview, and delete watches in bulk.

Create an advanced watch

Advanced watches are for users who are more familiar with Elasticsearch query syntax and the Watcher framework. The UI is aligned with using the REST APIs. For more information, see Query DSL.

Create the watch

On the Watch overview page, click Create and choose Create advanced watch. An advanced watch requires a name and ID. Name is a user-friendly way to identify the watch, and ID refers to the identifier used by Elasticsearch. Refer to Watch definition for how to input the watch JSON.

Create advanced watch

Simulate the watch

The Simulate tab allows you to override parts of the watch, and then run a simulation. Be aware of these implementation details on overrides:

  • Trigger overrides use date math.
  • Input overrides accepts a JSON blob.
  • Condition overrides indicates if you want to force the condition to always be true.
  • Action overrides support multiple options.

After starting the simulation, you’ll see a results screen. For more information on the fields in the response, see the Execute watch API.

Create advanced watch

Examples of advanced watches

Refer to these examples for creating an advanced watch:

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