Awesome
Introduction
This is a collection of examples to help you get familiar with the Elastic Stack. Each example folder includes a README with detailed instructions for getting up and running with the particular example. The following information pertains to the examples repo as a whole.
Contents
Quick start
You have a few options to get started with the examples:
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If you want to try them all, you can download the entire repo . Or, if you are familiar with Git, you can clone the repo. Then, simply follow the instructions in the individual README of the examples you're interested in to get started.
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If you are only interested in a specific example or two, you can download the contents of just those examples - follow instructions in the individual READMEs OR you can use some of the options mentioned here.
Contributing
See here
Example catalog
Below is the list of examples available in this repo:
Common Data Formats
Exploring Public Datasets
Examples using the Elastic Stack for analyzing public dataset.
- DonorsChoose.org donations
- NCEDC earthquakes data
- NYC traffic accidents
- US FEC campaign contributions
- CDC health behavior survey
- NYC restaurant health grades
- NHL Match Data
Getting Started with Graph exploration
Alerting on Elastic Stack
Alerting lets you set up watches (or rules) to detect and alert on changes in your Elasticsearch data. Below is a list of examples watches that configured to detect and alert on a few common scenarios:
- High I/O wait on CPU
- Critical error in logs
- High filesystem usage
- Lateral movement in user communication
- Alerting on Machine Learning
- Monitoring Cluster Health
- Monitoring Free Disk Space
- New process started on hosts
- Port scan detected
- Interrupted log flow from hosts
- Trending hashtag on twitter
- Unexpected account activity
- Watch history dashboard
- Alert on Large Shards
Machine learning
Search & API Examples
Security Analytics
- Audit Analysis
- CEF with Kafka
- DNS Tunnel Detection
- Malware Analysis
- SSH Analysis
- Elastic SIEM at Home