# Path to where grafana can store temp files, sessions, and the sqlite3 db (if that is used)
;data = /var/lib/grafana
# Temporary files in `data` directory older than given duration will be removed
;temp_data_lifetime = 24h
# Directory where grafana can store logs
;logs = /var/log/grafana
# Directory where grafana will automatically scan and look for plugins
;plugins = /var/lib/grafana/plugins
# folder that contains provisioning config files that grafana will apply on startup and while running.
;provisioning = conf/provisioning
#################################### Server ####################################
[server]
# Protocol (http, https, h2, socket)
;protocol = http
# This is the minimum TLS version allowed. By default, this value is empty. Accepted values are: TLS1.2, TLS1.3. If nothing is set TLS1.2 would be taken
;min_tls_version = ""
# The ip address to bind to, empty will bind to all interfaces
;http_addr =
# The http port to use
http_port=4000
# The public facing domain name used to access grafana from a browser
;domain = localhost
# Redirect to correct domain if host header does not match domain
# Prevents DNS rebinding attacks
;enforce_domain = false
# The full public facing url you use in browser, used for redirects and emails
# If you use reverse proxy and sub path specify full url (with sub path)
# You can configure the database connection by specifying type, host, name, user and password
# as separate properties or as on string using the url properties.
# Either "mysql", "postgres" or "sqlite3", it's your choice
; type = mysql
; host = 10.253.5.0:13306
; name = grafana
; user = root
# If the password contains # or ; you have to wrap it with triple quotes. Ex """#password;"""
; password = 123456
# Use either URL or the previous fields to configure the database
# Example: mysql://user:secret@host:port/database
;url =
# For "postgres", use either "disable", "require" or "verify-full"
# For "mysql", use either "true", "false", or "skip-verify".
;ssl_mode = disable
# Database drivers may support different transaction isolation levels.
# Currently, only "mysql" driver supports isolation levels.
# If the value is empty - driver's default isolation level is applied.
# For "mysql" use "READ-UNCOMMITTED", "READ-COMMITTED", "REPEATABLE-READ" or "SERIALIZABLE".
;isolation_level =
;ca_cert_path =
;client_key_path =
;client_cert_path =
;server_cert_name =
# For "sqlite3" only, path relative to data_path setting
;path = grafana.db
# Max idle conn setting default is 2
;max_idle_conn = 2
# Max conn setting default is 0 (mean not set)
;max_open_conn =
# Connection Max Lifetime default is 14400 (means 14400 seconds or 4 hours)
;conn_max_lifetime = 14400
# Set to true to log the sql calls and execution times.
;log_queries =
# For "sqlite3" only. cache mode setting used for connecting to the database. (private, shared)
;cache_mode = private
# For "sqlite3" only. Enable/disable Write-Ahead Logging, https://sqlite.org/wal.html. Default is false.
;wal = false
# For "mysql" only if migrationLocking feature toggle is set. How many seconds to wait before failing to lock the database for the migrations, default is 0.
;locking_attempt_timeout_sec = 0
# For "sqlite" only. How many times to retry query in case of database is locked failures. Default is 0 (disabled).
;query_retries = 0
# For "sqlite" only. How many times to retry transaction in case of database is locked failures. Default is 5.
;transaction_retries = 5
# Set to true to add metrics and tracing for database queries.
;instrument_queries = false
################################### Data sources #########################
[datasources]
# Upper limit of data sources that Grafana will return. This limit is a temporary configuration and it will be deprecated when pagination will be introduced on the list data sources API.
;datasource_limit = 5000
#################################### Cache server #############################
[remote_cache]
# Either "redis", "memcached" or "database" default is "database"
;type = database
# cache connectionstring options
# database: will use Grafana primary database.
# redis: config like redis server e.g. `addr=127.0.0.1:6379,pool_size=100,db=0,ssl=false`. Only addr is required. ssl may be 'true', 'false', or 'insecure'.
# memcache: 127.0.0.1:11211
;connstr =
# prefix prepended to all the keys in the remote cache
; prefix =
# This enables encryption of values stored in the remote cache
;encryption =
#################################### Data proxy ###########################
[dataproxy]
# This enables data proxy logging, default is false
;logging = false
# How long the data proxy waits to read the headers of the response before timing out, default is 30 seconds.
# This setting also applies to core backend HTTP data sources where query requests use an HTTP client with timeout set.
;timeout = 30
# How long the data proxy waits to establish a TCP connection before timing out, default is 10 seconds.
;dialTimeout = 10
# How many seconds the data proxy waits before sending a keepalive probe request.
;keep_alive_seconds = 30
# How many seconds the data proxy waits for a successful TLS Handshake before timing out.
;tls_handshake_timeout_seconds = 10
# How many seconds the data proxy will wait for a server's first response headers after
# fully writing the request headers if the request has an "Expect: 100-continue"
# header. A value of 0 will result in the body being sent immediately, without
# waiting for the server to approve.
;expect_continue_timeout_seconds = 1
# Optionally limits the total number of connections per host, including connections in the dialing,
# active, and idle states. On limit violation, dials will block.
# A value of zero (0) means no limit.
;max_conns_per_host = 0
# The maximum number of idle connections that Grafana will keep alive.
;max_idle_connections = 100
# How many seconds the data proxy keeps an idle connection open before timing out.
;idle_conn_timeout_seconds = 90
# If enabled and user is not anonymous, data proxy will add X-Grafana-User header with username into the request, default is false.
;send_user_header = false
# Limit the amount of bytes that will be read/accepted from responses of outgoing HTTP requests.
;response_limit = 0
# Limits the number of rows that Grafana will process from SQL data sources.
;row_limit = 1000000
# Sets a custom value for the `User-Agent` header for outgoing data proxy requests. If empty, the default value is `Grafana/<BuildVersion>` (for example `Grafana/9.0.0`).
# Server reporting, sends usage counters to stats.grafana.org every 24 hours.
# No ip addresses are being tracked, only simple counters to track
# running instances, dashboard and error counts. It is very helpful to us.
# Change this option to false to disable reporting.
;reporting_enabled = true
# The name of the distributor of the Grafana instance. Ex hosted-grafana, grafana-labs
;reporting_distributor = grafana-labs
# Set to false to disable all checks to https://grafana.com
# for new versions of grafana. The check is used
# in some UI views to notify that a grafana update exists.
# This option does not cause any auto updates, nor send any information
# only a GET request to https://raw.githubusercontent.com/grafana/grafana/main/latest.json to get the latest version.
;check_for_updates = true
# Set to false to disable all checks to https://grafana.com
# for new versions of plugins. The check is used
# in some UI views to notify that a plugin update exists.
# This option does not cause any auto updates, nor send any information
# only a GET request to https://grafana.com to get the latest versions.
;check_for_plugin_updates = true
# Google Analytics universal tracking code, only enabled if you specify an id here
;google_analytics_ua_id =
# Google Analytics 4 tracking code, only enabled if you specify an id here
;google_analytics_4_id =
# When Google Analytics 4 Enhanced event measurement is enabled, we will try to avoid sending duplicate events and let Google Analytics 4 detect navigation changes, etc.
;external_snapshot_name = Publish to snapshots.raintank.io
# Set to true to enable this Grafana instance act as an external snapshot server and allow unauthenticated requests for
# creating and deleting snapshots.
;public_mode = false
# remove expired snapshot
;snapshot_remove_expired = true
#################################### Dashboards History ##################
[dashboards]
# Number dashboard versions to keep (per dashboard). Default: 20, Minimum: 1
;versions_to_keep = 20
# Minimum dashboard refresh interval. When set, this will restrict users to set the refresh interval of a dashboard lower than given interval. Per default this is 5 seconds.
# The interval string is a possibly signed sequence of decimal numbers, followed by a unit suffix (ms, s, m, h, d), e.g. 30s or 1m.
;min_refresh_interval = 5s
# Path to the default home dashboard. If this value is empty, then Grafana uses StaticRootPath + "dashboards/home.json"
# Set to true to automatically assign new users to the default organization (id 1)
;auto_assign_org = true
# Set this value to automatically add new users to the provided organization (if auto_assign_org above is set to true)
;auto_assign_org_id = 1
# Default role new users will be automatically assigned
;auto_assign_org_role = Viewer
# Require email validation before sign up completes
;verify_email_enabled = false
# Background text for the user field on the login page
;login_hint = email or username
;password_hint = password
# Default UI theme ("dark" or "light")
;default_theme = dark
# Default UI language (supported IETF language tag, such as en-US)
;default_language = en-US
# Path to a custom home page. Users are only redirected to this if the default home dashboard is used. It should match a frontend route and contain a leading slash.
;home_page =
# External user management, these options affect the organization users view
;external_manage_link_url =
;external_manage_link_name =
;external_manage_info =
# Viewers can edit/inspect dashboard settings in the browser. But not save the dashboard.
;viewers_can_edit = false
# Editors can administrate dashboard, folders and teams they create
;editors_can_admin = false
# The duration in time a user invitation remains valid before expiring. This setting should be expressed as a duration. Examples: 6h (hours), 2d (days), 1w (week). Default is 24h (24 hours). The minimum supported duration is 15m (15 minutes).
;user_invite_max_lifetime_duration = 24h
# Enter a comma-separated list of users login to hide them in the Grafana UI. These users are shown to Grafana admins and themselves.
; hidden_users =
[secretscan]
# Enable secretscan feature
;enabled = false
# Interval to check for token leaks
;interval = 5m
# base URL of the grafana token leak check service
;base_url = https://secret-scanning.grafana.net
# URL to send outgoing webhooks to in case of detection
;oncall_url =
# Whether to revoke the token if a leak is detected or just send a notification
;revoke = true
[service_accounts]
# Service account maximum expiration date in days.
# When set, Grafana will not allow the creation of tokens with expiry greater than this setting.
; token_expiration_day_limit =
[auth]
# Login cookie name
;login_cookie_name = grafana_session
# Disable usage of Grafana build-in login solution.
;disable_login = false
# The maximum lifetime (duration) an authenticated user can be inactive before being required to login at next visit. Default is 7 days (7d). This setting should be expressed as a duration, e.g. 5m (minutes), 6h (hours), 10d (days), 2w (weeks), 1M (month). The lifetime resets at each successful token rotation.
;login_maximum_inactive_lifetime_duration =
# The maximum lifetime (duration) an authenticated user can be logged in since login time before being required to login. Default is 30 days (30d). This setting should be expressed as a duration, e.g. 5m (minutes), 6h (hours), 10d (days), 2w (weeks), 1M (month).
;login_maximum_lifetime_duration =
# How often should auth tokens be rotated for authenticated users when being active. The default is each 10 minutes.
;token_rotation_interval_minutes = 10
# Set to true to disable (hide) the login form, useful if you use OAuth, defaults to false
;disable_login_form = false
# Set to true to disable the sign out link in the side menu. Useful if you use auth.proxy or auth.jwt, defaults to false
;disable_signout_menu = false
# URL to redirect the user to after sign out
;signout_redirect_url =
# Set to true to attempt login with OAuth automatically, skipping the login screen.
# This setting is ignored if multiple OAuth providers are configured.
# Deprecated, use auto_login option for specific provider instead.
;oauth_auto_login = false
# OAuth state max age cookie duration in seconds. Defaults to 600 seconds.
;oauth_state_cookie_max_age = 600
# Skip forced assignment of OrgID 1 or 'auto_assign_org_id' for social logins
# Deprecated, use skip_org_role_sync option for specific provider instead.
;oauth_skip_org_role_update_sync = false
# limit of api_key seconds to live before expiration
;api_key_max_seconds_to_live = -1
# Set to true to enable SigV4 authentication option for HTTP-based datasources.
;sigv4_auth_enabled = false
# Set to true to enable verbose logging of SigV4 request signing
;sigv4_verbose_logging = false
# Set to true to enable Azure authentication option for HTTP-based datasources.
;azure_auth_enabled = false
# Set to skip the organization role from JWT login and use system's role assignment instead.
; skip_org_role_sync = false
# Use email lookup in addition to the unique ID provided by the IdP
# Either "console", "file", "syslog". Default is console and file
# Use space to separate multiple modes, e.g. "console file"
;mode = console file
# Either "debug", "info", "warn", "error", "critical", default is "info"
;level = info
# optional settings to set different levels for specific loggers. Ex filters = sqlstore:debug
;filters =
# Set the default error message shown to users. This message is displayed instead of sensitive backend errors which should be obfuscated. Default is the same as the sample value.
;user_facing_default_error = "please inspect Grafana server log for details"
# For "console" mode only
[log.console]
;level =
# log line format, valid options are text, console and json
;format = console
# For "file" mode only
[log.file]
;level =
# log line format, valid options are text, console and json
;format = text
# This enables automated log rotate(switch of following options), default is true
;log_rotate = true
# Max line number of single file, default is 1000000
;max_lines = 1000000
# Max size shift of single file, default is 28 means 1 << 28, 256MB
;max_size_shift = 28
# Segment log daily, default is true
;daily_rotate = true
# Expired days of log file(delete after max days), default is 7
;max_days = 7
[log.syslog]
;level =
# log line format, valid options are text, console and json
;format = text
# Syslog network type and address. This can be udp, tcp, or unix. If left blank, the default unix endpoints will be used.
;network =
;address =
# Syslog facility. user, daemon and local0 through local7 are valid.
;facility =
# Syslog tag. By default, the process' argv[0] is used.
;tag =
[log.frontend]
# Should Faro javascript agent be initialized
;enabled = false
# Custom HTTP endpoint to send events to. Default will log the events to stdout.
;custom_endpoint = /log-grafana-javascript-agent
# Requests per second limit enforced an extended period, for Grafana backend log ingestion endpoint (/log).
;log_endpoint_requests_per_second_limit = 3
# Max requests accepted per short interval of time for Grafana backend log ingestion endpoint (/log).
;log_endpoint_burst_limit = 15
# Should error instrumentation be enabled, only affects Grafana Javascript Agent
;instrumentations_errors_enabled = true
# Should console instrumentation be enabled, only affects Grafana Javascript Agent
;instrumentations_console_enabled = false
# Should webvitals instrumentation be enabled, only affects Grafana Javascript Agent
;instrumentations_webvitals_enabled = false
# Api Key, only applies to Grafana Javascript Agent provider
#Enable the Unified Alerting sub-system and interface. When enabled we'll migrate all of your alert rules and notification channels to the new system. New alert rules will be created and your notification channels will be converted into an Alertmanager configuration. Previous data is preserved to enable backwards compatibility but new data is removed.```
;enabled = true
# Comma-separated list of organization IDs for which to disable unified alerting. Only supported if unified alerting is enabled.
;disabled_orgs =
# Specify the frequency of polling for admin config changes.
# The interval string is a possibly signed sequence of decimal numbers, followed by a unit suffix (ms, s, m, h, d), e.g. 30s or 1m.
;admin_config_poll_interval = 60s
# Specify the frequency of polling for Alertmanager config changes.
# The interval string is a possibly signed sequence of decimal numbers, followed by a unit suffix (ms, s, m, h, d), e.g. 30s or 1m.
;alertmanager_config_poll_interval = 60s
# The redis server address that should be connected to.
;ha_redis_address =
# The username that should be used to authenticate with the redis server.
;ha_redis_username =
# The password that should be used to authenticate with the redis server.
;ha_redis_password =
# The redis database, by default it's 0.
;ha_redis_db =
# A prefix that is used for every key or channel that is created on the redis server
# as part of HA for alerting.
;ha_redis_prefix =
# The name of the cluster peer that will be used as identifier. If none is
# provided, a random one will be generated.
;ha_redis_peer_name =
# Listen address/hostname and port to receive unified alerting messages for other Grafana instances. The port is used for both TCP and UDP. It is assumed other Grafana instances are also running on the same port. The default value is `0.0.0.0:9094`.
;ha_listen_address = "0.0.0.0:9094"
# Listen address/hostname and port to receive unified alerting messages for other Grafana instances. The port is used for both TCP and UDP. It is assumed other Grafana instances are also running on the same port. The default value is `0.0.0.0:9094`.
;ha_advertise_address = ""
# Comma-separated list of initial instances (in a format of host:port) that will form the HA cluster. Configuring this setting will enable High Availability mode for alerting.
;ha_peers = ""
# Time to wait for an instance to send a notification via the Alertmanager. In HA, each Grafana instance will
# be assigned a position (e.g. 0, 1). We then multiply this position with the timeout to indicate how long should
# each instance wait before sending the notification to take into account replication lag.
# The interval string is a possibly signed sequence of decimal numbers, followed by a unit suffix (ms, s, m, h, d), e.g. 30s or 1m.
;ha_peer_timeout = "15s"
# The label is an optional string to include on each packet and stream.
# It uniquely identifies the cluster and prevents cross-communication
# issues when sending gossip messages in an enviromenet with multiple clusters.
;ha_label =
# The interval between sending gossip messages. By lowering this value (more frequent) gossip messages are propagated
# across cluster more quickly at the expense of increased bandwidth usage.
# The interval string is a possibly signed sequence of decimal numbers, followed by a unit suffix (ms, s, m, h, d), e.g. 30s or 1m.
;ha_gossip_interval = "200ms"
# The interval between gossip full state syncs. Setting this interval lower (more frequent) will increase convergence speeds
# across larger clusters at the expense of increased bandwidth usage.
# The interval string is a possibly signed sequence of decimal numbers, followed by a unit suffix (ms, s, m, h, d), e.g. 30s or 1m.
;ha_push_pull_interval = "60s"
# Enable or disable alerting rule execution. The alerting UI remains visible. This option has a legacy version in the `[alerting]` section that takes precedence.
;execute_alerts = true
# Alert evaluation timeout when fetching data from the datasource. This option has a legacy version in the `[alerting]` section that takes precedence.
# The timeout string is a possibly signed sequence of decimal numbers, followed by a unit suffix (ms, s, m, h, d), e.g. 30s or 1m.
;evaluation_timeout = 30s
# Number of times we'll attempt to evaluate an alert rule before giving up on that evaluation. This option has a legacy version in the `[alerting]` section that takes precedence.
;max_attempts = 3
# Minimum interval to enforce between rule evaluations. Rules will be adjusted if they are less than this value or if they are not multiple of the scheduler interval (10s). Higher values can help with resource management as we'll schedule fewer evaluations over time. This option has a legacy version in the `[alerting]` section that takes precedence.
# The interval string is a possibly signed sequence of decimal numbers, followed by a unit suffix (ms, s, m, h, d), e.g. 30s or 1m.
;min_interval = 10s
[unified_alerting.reserved_labels]
# Comma-separated list of reserved labels added by the Grafana Alerting engine that should be disabled.
# For example: `disabled_labels=grafana_folder`
;disabled_labels =
[unified_alerting.state_history]
# Enable the state history functionality in Unified Alerting. The previous states of alert rules will be visible in panels and in the UI.
; enabled = true
# Select which pluggable state history backend to use. Either "annotations", "loki", or "multiple"
# "loki" writes state history to an external Loki instance. "multiple" allows history to be written to multiple backends at once.
# Defaults to "annotations".
; backend = "multiple"
# For "multiple" only.
# Indicates the main backend used to serve state history queries.
# Either "annotations" or "loki"
; primary = "loki"
# For "multiple" only.
# Comma-separated list of additional backends to write state history data to.
; secondaries = "annotations"
# For "loki" only.
# URL of the external Loki instance.
# Either "loki_remote_url", or both of "loki_remote_read_url" and "loki_remote_write_url" is required for the "loki" backend.
; loki_remote_url = "http://loki:3100"
# For "loki" only.
# URL of the external Loki's read path. To be used in configurations where Loki has separated read and write URLs.
# Either "loki_remote_url", or both of "loki_remote_read_url" and "loki_remote_write_url" is required for the "loki" backend.
# Configures the batch size for the annotation clean-up job. This setting is used for dashboard, API, and alert annotations.
;cleanupjob_batchsize = 100
# Enforces the maximum allowed length of the tags for any newly introduced annotations. It can be between 500 and 4096 inclusive (which is the respective's column length). Default value is 500.
# Setting it to a higher value would impact performance therefore is not recommended.
;tags_length = 500
[annotations.dashboard]
# Dashboard annotations means that annotations are associated with the dashboard they are created on.
# Configures how long dashboard annotations are stored. Default is 0, which keeps them forever.
# This setting should be expressed as a duration. Examples: 6h (hours), 10d (days), 2w (weeks), 1M (month).
;max_age =
# Configures max number of dashboard annotations that Grafana stores. Default value is 0, which keeps all dashboard annotations.
;max_annotations_to_keep =
[annotations.api]
# API annotations means that the annotations have been created using the API without any
# association with a dashboard.
# Configures how long Grafana stores API annotations. Default is 0, which keeps them forever.
# This setting should be expressed as a duration. Examples: 6h (hours), 10d (days), 2w (weeks), 1M (month).
;max_age =
# Configures max number of API annotations that Grafana keeps. Default value is 0, which keeps all API annotations.
# Used for uploading images to public servers so they can be included in slack/email messages.
# you can choose between (s3, webdav, gcs, azure_blob, local)
;provider =
[external_image_storage.s3]
;endpoint =
;path_style_access =
;bucket =
;region =
;path =
;access_key =
;secret_key =
[external_image_storage.webdav]
;url =
;public_url =
;username =
;password =
[external_image_storage.gcs]
;key_file =
;bucket =
;path =
[external_image_storage.azure_blob]
;account_name =
;account_key =
;container_name =
;sas_token_expiration_days =
[external_image_storage.local]
# does not require any configuration
[rendering]
# Options to configure a remote HTTP image rendering service, e.g. using https://github.com/grafana/grafana-image-renderer.
# URL to a remote HTTP image renderer service, e.g. http://localhost:8081/render, will enable Grafana to render panels and dashboards to PNG-images using HTTP requests to an external service.
;server_url =
# If the remote HTTP image renderer service runs on a different server than the Grafana server you may have to configure this to a URL where Grafana is reachable, e.g. http://grafana.domain/.
;callback_url =
# An auth token that will be sent to and verified by the renderer. The renderer will deny any request without an auth token matching the one configured on the renderer side.
;renderer_token = -
# Concurrent render request limit affects when the /render HTTP endpoint is used. Rendering many images at the same time can overload the server,
# which this setting can help protect against by only allowing a certain amount of concurrent requests.
;concurrent_render_request_limit = 30
# Determines the lifetime of the render key used by the image renderer to access and render Grafana.
# This setting should be expressed as a duration. Examples: 10s (seconds), 5m (minutes), 2h (hours).
# Default is 5m. This should be more than enough for most deployments.
# Change the value only if image rendering is failing and you see `Failed to get the render key from cache` in Grafana logs.
;render_key_lifetime = 5m
[panels]
# If set to true Grafana will allow script tags in text panels. Not recommended as it enable XSS vulnerabilities.
;disable_sanitize_html = false
[plugins]
;enable_alpha = false
;app_tls_skip_verify_insecure = false
# Enter a comma-separated list of plugin identifiers to identify plugins to load even if they are unsigned. Plugins with modified signatures are never loaded.
;allow_loading_unsigned_plugins =
# Enable or disable installing / uninstalling / updating plugins directly from within Grafana.
# Instruct headless browser instance to use a default timezone when not provided by Grafana, e.g. when rendering panel image of alert.
# See ICU’s metaZones.txt (https://cs.chromium.org/chromium/src/third_party/icu/source/data/misc/metaZones.txt) for a list of supported
# timezone IDs. Fallbacks to TZ environment variable if not set.
;rendering_timezone =
# Instruct headless browser instance to use a default language when not provided by Grafana, e.g. when rendering panel image of alert.
# Please refer to the HTTP header Accept-Language to understand how to format this value, e.g. 'fr-CH, fr;q=0.9, en;q=0.8, de;q=0.7, *;q=0.5'.
;rendering_language =
# Instruct headless browser instance to use a default device scale factor when not provided by Grafana, e.g. when rendering panel image of alert.
# Default is 1. Using a higher value will produce more detailed images (higher DPI), but will require more disk space to store an image.
;rendering_viewport_device_scale_factor =
# Instruct headless browser instance whether to ignore HTTPS errors during navigation. Per default HTTPS errors are not ignored. Due to
# the security risk it's not recommended to ignore HTTPS errors.
;rendering_ignore_https_errors =
# Instruct headless browser instance whether to capture and log verbose information when rendering an image. Default is false and will
# only capture and log error messages. When enabled, debug messages are captured and logged as well.
# For the verbose information to be included in the Grafana server log you have to adjust the rendering log level to debug, configure
# [log].filter = rendering:debug.
;rendering_verbose_logging =
# Instruct headless browser instance whether to output its debug and error messages into running process of remote rendering service.
# Default is false. This can be useful to enable (true) when troubleshooting.
;rendering_dumpio =
# Additional arguments to pass to the headless browser instance. Default is --no-sandbox. The list of Chromium flags can be found
# here (https://peter.sh/experiments/chromium-command-line-switches/). Multiple arguments is separated with comma-character.
;rendering_args =
# You can configure the plugin to use a different browser binary instead of the pre-packaged version of Chromium.
# Please note that this is not recommended, since you may encounter problems if the installed version of Chrome/Chromium is not
# compatible with the plugin.
;rendering_chrome_bin =
# Instruct how headless browser instances are created. Default is 'default' and will create a new browser instance on each request.
# Mode 'clustered' will make sure that only a maximum of browsers/incognito pages can execute concurrently.
# Mode 'reusable' will have one browser instance and will create a new incognito page on each request.
;rendering_mode =
# When rendering_mode = clustered, you can instruct how many browsers or incognito pages can execute concurrently. Default is 'browser'
# and will cluster using browser instances.
# Mode 'context' will cluster using incognito pages.
;rendering_clustering_mode =
# When rendering_mode = clustered, you can define the maximum number of browser instances/incognito pages that can execute concurrently. Default is '5'.
;rendering_clustering_max_concurrency =
# When rendering_mode = clustered, you can specify the duration a rendering request can take before it will time out. Default is `30` seconds.
;rendering_clustering_timeout =
# Limit the maximum viewport width, height and device scale factor that can be requested.
;rendering_viewport_max_width =
;rendering_viewport_max_height =
;rendering_viewport_max_device_scale_factor =
# Change the listening host and port of the gRPC server. Default host is 127.0.0.1 and default port is 0 and will automatically assign
# a port not in use.
;grpc_host =
;grpc_port =
[support_bundles]
# Enable support bundle creation (default: true)
#enabled = true
# Only server admins can generate and view support bundles (default: true)
#server_admin_only = true
# If set, bundles will be encrypted with the provided public keys separated by whitespace
#public_keys = ""
[enterprise]
# Path to a valid Grafana Enterprise license.jwt file
;license_path =
[feature_toggles]
# there are currently two ways to enable feature toggles in the `grafana.ini`.
# you can either pass an array of feature you want to enable to the `enable` field or
# configure each toggle by setting the name of the toggle to true/false. Toggles set to true/false
# will take presidence over toggles in the `enable` list.
;enable = feature1,feature2
;feature1 = true
;feature2 = false
[date_formats]
# For information on what formatting patterns that are supported https://momentjs.com/docs/#/displaying/
# Default system date format used in time range picker and other places where full time is displayed
;full_date = YYYY-MM-DD HH:mm:ss
# Used by graph and other places where we only show small intervals
;interval_second = HH:mm:ss
;interval_minute = HH:mm
;interval_hour = MM/DD HH:mm
;interval_day = MM/DD
;interval_month = YYYY-MM
;interval_year = YYYY
# Experimental feature
;use_browser_locale = false
# Default timezone for user preferences. Options are 'browser' for the browser local timezone or a timezone name from IANA Time Zone database, e.g. 'UTC' or 'Europe/Amsterdam' etc.
;default_timezone = browser
[expressions]
# Enable or disable the expressions functionality.
;enabled = true
[geomap]
# Set the JSON configuration for the default basemap
# Options to configure the experimental Feature Toggle Admin Page feature, which is behind the `featureToggleAdminPage` feature toggle. Use at your own risk.
# Allow editing of feature toggles in the feature management page
;allow_editing = false
# Allow customization of URL for the controller that manages feature toggles
;update_webhook =
# Allow configuring an auth token for feature management update requests
;update_webhook_token =
# Hide specific feature toggles from the feature management page
;hidden_toggles =
# Disable updating specific feature toggles in the feature management page
# To troubleshoot and get more log info enable ldap debug logging in grafana.ini
# [log]
# filters = ldap:debug
[[servers]]
# Ldap server host (specify multiple hosts space separated)
host="127.0.0.1"
# Default port is 389 or 636 if use_ssl = true
port=389
# Set to true if LDAP server should use an encrypted TLS connection (either with STARTTLS or LDAPS)
use_ssl=false
# If set to true, use LDAP with STARTTLS instead of LDAPS
start_tls=false
# The value of an accepted TLS cipher. By default, this value is empty. Example value: ["TLS_AES_256_GCM_SHA384"])
# For a complete list of supported ciphers and TLS versions, refer to: https://go.dev/src/crypto/tls/cipher_suites.go
tls_ciphers=[]
# This is the minimum TLS version allowed. By default, this value is empty. Accepted values are: TLS1.1, TLS1.2, TLS1.3.
min_tls_version=""
# set to true if you want to skip ssl cert validation
ssl_skip_verify=false
# set to the path to your root CA certificate or leave unset to use system defaults
# root_ca_cert = "/path/to/certificate.crt"
# Authentication against LDAP servers requiring client certificates
# client_cert = "/path/to/client.crt"
# client_key = "/path/to/client.key"
# Search user bind dn
bind_dn="cn=admin,dc=grafana,dc=org"
# Search user bind password
# If the password contains # or ; you have to wrap it with triple quotes. Ex """#password;"""
bind_password='grafana'
# We recommend using variable expansion for the bind_password, for more info https://grafana.com/docs/grafana/latest/setup-grafana/configure-grafana/#variable-expansion
# bind_password = '$__env{LDAP_BIND_PASSWORD}'
# Timeout in seconds (applies to each host specified in the 'host' entry (space separated))
timeout=10
# User search filter, for example "(cn=%s)" or "(sAMAccountName=%s)" or "(uid=%s)"
search_filter="(cn=%s)"
# An array of base dns to search through
search_base_dns=["dc=grafana,dc=org"]
## For Posix or LDAP setups that does not support member_of attribute you can define the below settings