22 rpm packages matching your search terms.
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bastion-product-grafana-10.2.2-0.2.20250920.lbn42.noarch.rpm
Sep 20, 2025 okOur Subscription Manager utilises X509 certificates to define the product(s) a system is built upon/subscribed to. This is the subscription definition for Grafana -
grafana-11.5.6-1.lbn42.x86_64.rpm
Nov 27, 2025 okGrafana is an open source, feature rich metrics dashboard and graph editor for Graphite, InfluxDB & OpenTSDB. Features Graphite Target Editor Graphite target expression parser Feature rich query composer Quickly add and edit functions & parameters Templated queries See it in action Graphing Fast rendering, even over large timespans Click and drag to zoom Multiple Y-axis, logarithmic scales Bars, Lines, Points Smart Y-axis formating Series toggles & color selector Legend values, and formatting options Grid thresholds, axis labels Annotations Any panel can be rendered to PNG (server side using phantomjs) Dashboards Create, edit, save & search dashboards Change column spans and row heights Drag and drop panels to rearrange Templating Scripted dashboards Dashboard playlists Time range controls Share snapshots publicly InfluxDB Use InfluxDB as a metric data source, annotation source Query editor with series and column typeahead, easy group by and function selection OpenTSDB Use as metric data source Query editor with metric name typeahead and tag filtering -
grafana-grizzly-0.7.1-1.lbn42.x86_64.rpm
Sep 20, 2025 okA utility for managing Jsonnet dashboards against the Grafana API. -
grafana-k6-1.0.0-0.1.git41b4984.lbn42.x86_64.rpm
Sep 20, 2025 okk6 is a modern load testing tool, building on our years of experience in the load and performance testing industry. It provides a clean, approachable scripting API, local and cloud execution, and flexible configuration. -
grafana-k6-1.0.0-0.1.git41b4984.lbn42.x86_64.rpm
Sep 20, 2025 okk6 is a modern load testing tool, building on our years of experience in the load and performance testing industry. It provides a clean, approachable scripting API, local and cloud execution, and flexible configuration. -
grafana-kiosk-1.0.9-1.lbn42.x86_64.rpm
Sep 12, 2025 okKiosk Utility for Grafana. -
grafana-loki-3.5.2-0.1.git257d2f6.lbn42.x86_64.rpm
Sep 11, 2025 okLoki: like Prometheus, but for logs. Loki is a horizontally-scalable, highly-available, multi-tenant log aggregation system inspired by Prometheus. It is designed to be very cost effective and easy to operate. It does not index the contents of the logs, but rather a set of labels for each log stream. Compared to other log aggregation systems, Loki: does not do full text indexing on logs. By storing compressed, unstructured logs and only indexing metadata, Loki is simpler to operate and cheaper to run. indexes and groups log streams using the same labels youâre already using with Prometheus, enabling you to seamlessly switch between metrics and logs using the same labels that youâre already using with Prometheus. is an especially good fit for storing Kubernetes Pod logs. Metadata such as Pod labels is automatically scraped and indexed. has native support in Grafana (needs Grafana v6.0). A Loki-based logging stack consists of 3 components: promtail is the agent, responsible for gathering logs and sending them to Loki. loki is the main server, responsible for storing logs and processing queries. Grafana for querying and displaying the logs. Loki is like Prometheus, but for logs: we prefer a multidimensional label-based approach to indexing, and want a single-binary, easy to operate system with no dependencies. Loki differs from Prometheus by focusing on logs instead of metrics, and delivering logs via push, instead of pull. -
grafana-loki-3.5.2-0.1.git257d2f6.lbn42.x86_64.rpm
Sep 11, 2025 okLoki: like Prometheus, but for logs. Loki is a horizontally-scalable, highly-available, multi-tenant log aggregation system inspired by Prometheus. It is designed to be very cost effective and easy to operate. It does not index the contents of the logs, but rather a set of labels for each log stream. Compared to other log aggregation systems, Loki: does not do full text indexing on logs. By storing compressed, unstructured logs and only indexing metadata, Loki is simpler to operate and cheaper to run. indexes and groups log streams using the same labels youâre already using with Prometheus, enabling you to seamlessly switch between metrics and logs using the same labels that youâre already using with Prometheus. is an especially good fit for storing Kubernetes Pod logs. Metadata such as Pod labels is automatically scraped and indexed. has native support in Grafana (needs Grafana v6.0). A Loki-based logging stack consists of 3 components: promtail is the agent, responsible for gathering logs and sending them to Loki. loki is the main server, responsible for storing logs and processing queries. Grafana for querying and displaying the logs. Loki is like Prometheus, but for logs: we prefer a multidimensional label-based approach to indexing, and want a single-binary, easy to operate system with no dependencies. Loki differs from Prometheus by focusing on logs instead of metrics, and delivering logs via push, instead of pull. -
grafana-loki-logcli-3.5.2-0.1.git257d2f6.lbn42.x86_64.rpm
Sep 11, 2025 okIf you are running on Grafana Cloud, use: $ export GRAFANA_ADDR=https://logs-us-west1.grafana.net $ export GRAFANA_USERNAME=<username> $ export GRAFANA_PASSWORD=<password> Otherwise you can point LogCLI to a local instance directly without needing a username and password: $ export GRAFANA_ADDR=http://localhost:3100 Note: If you are running Loki behind a proxy server and you have authentication configured, you will also have to pass in GRAFANA_USERNAME and GRAFANA_PASSWORD accordingly. $ logcli labels job https://logs-dev-ops-tools1.grafana.net/api/prom/label/job/values cortex-ops/consul cortex-ops/cortex-gw -
grafana-loki-logcli-3.5.2-0.1.git257d2f6.lbn42.x86_64.rpm
Sep 11, 2025 okIf you are running on Grafana Cloud, use: $ export GRAFANA_ADDR=https://logs-us-west1.grafana.net $ export GRAFANA_USERNAME=<username> $ export GRAFANA_PASSWORD=<password> Otherwise you can point LogCLI to a local instance directly without needing a username and password: $ export GRAFANA_ADDR=http://localhost:3100 Note: If you are running Loki behind a proxy server and you have authentication configured, you will also have to pass in GRAFANA_USERNAME and GRAFANA_PASSWORD accordingly. $ logcli labels job https://logs-dev-ops-tools1.grafana.net/api/prom/label/job/values cortex-ops/consul cortex-ops/cortex-gw