![]() You can give the data view a name and an index pattern. At Discover, you’re asked to create a data view.Ĭlick on the “Create data view” button. If I understand correctly, this “data view” is what used to be called an “index pattern” before. There, you’ll be prompted to create a “data view” (if you don’t have any data, you’ll be shown a different prompt offering integrations instead). Now that we know that some data exists, click the hamburger menu at the top-left corner again and go to “Discover” (the first item). GET _cat/indices shows that we have a Filebeat index. If you see an index whose name contains “filebeat” in the results panel on the right, then that’s encouraging. We can follow the same pattern as the other services in instances.yml to create a certificate for Filebeat: It creates a file at config/certs/instances.yml specifying what certificates are needed, and passes that to the bin/elasticsearch-certutil command to create them. The setup service in docker-compose.yml has a script that generates the certificates used by all the Elastic stack services defined there. certs: this is the same as in all the other services and is part of what allows them to communicate securely using SSL certificates. ![]()
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