Projects to Learn Linux
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Calling it a "one click installer" is very confusing. It's nothing like that. It's a pre-built image.
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@scottalanmiller Ah, this would be my problem... I'm trying to build it myself, lol. Once I can deploy it by hand, then I'd look at a DO droplet or the like.
Learn it the hard way first, that way when you break it from the one-click-installer, you can at least go digging to figure out why it broke.
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So I got my own ELK stack installed in my meager office lab... It wasn't too teribly bad... I enjoy using the most recent packages when I (attempt) to build something, so I used the latest & greatest betas out for Logstash and Elastic. A few quick googles and I was good. 8-)
Now to replicate this on my home server which arguably sees more traffic than my office test setup, lol.
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Just finished installing Mediawiki on Centos
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I want to install next is Logging Server
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ELK is definitely the way to go. So powerful!
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That DO article left out some steps about allowing Firewall rules for some of the ports, I think. I've bee na few days since I've looked at it... I have noticed that I need to set the Kiban4 and logstash processes to restart once a day or the whole thing stops.
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@scottalanmiller said:
ELK is definitely the way to go. So powerful!
I'm stuck in here :
create and edit a new yum repository file for Elasticsearch:
sudo vi /etc/yum.repos.d/elasticsearch.repo
Add the following repository configuration:
/etc/yum.repos.d/elasticsearch.repo**** [elasticsearch-1.4]
name=Elasticsearch repository for 1.4.x packages
baseurl=http://packages.elasticsearch.org/elasticsearch/1.4/centos
gpgcheck=1
gpgkey=http://packages.elasticsearch.org/GPG-KEY-elasticsearch
enabled=1**** -
You should post in a new thread as this is a fresh question.
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@scottalanmiller said:
You should post in a new thread as this is a fresh question.
Done
http://mangolassi.it/topic/6422/how-to-install-elasticsearch-logstash-and-kibana-4-on-centos-7 -
Thanks.
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I really like the Digital Ocean tutorial series they did a while ago, like installing MediaWiki. Creating something which you can use at home also helps make projects like these a bit more personal - and thus interesting. Build your own media server (samba, ftp or a bit more advanced like ownCloud). Just make sure it stays a challenge: buy some Raspberry Pi's or Zero's and cluster a web app with MySQL, Redis and stuff like that...
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Digital Ocean has really made a name for themselves making incredible documentation. In the past year they've become really famous for it. Very well written, well maintained, tested. It's probably their best marketing tool.
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Updated some items here, lots of additional ideas.