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Install Netdata

This document will guide you through installing the open-source Netdata monitoring Agent on Linux, Docker, Kubernetes, and many others, often with one command.

Netdata is very flexible and can be used to monitor all kinds of infrastructure. Read more about possible Deployment strategies to understand what better suites your needs.

Get started

Netdata is a free and open-source (FOSS) monitoring agent that collects thousands of hardware and software metrics from any physical or virtual system (we call them nodes). These metrics are organized in an easy-to-use and -navigate interface.

Together with Netdata Cloud, you can monitor your entire infrastructure in real time and troubleshoot problems that threaten the health of your nodes.

Netdata runs permanently on all your physical/virtual servers, containers, cloud deployments, and edge/IoT devices. It runs on Linux distributions (Ubuntu, Debian, CentOS, and more), container/microservice platforms (Kubernetes clusters, Docker), and many other operating systems (FreeBSD, macOS), with no sudo required.

To install Netdata in minutes on your platform:

  1. Sign up to https://app.netdata.cloud/
  2. You will be presented with an empty space, and a prompt to "Connect Nodes" with the install command for each platform
  3. Select the platform you want to install Netdata to, copy and paste the script into your node's terminal, and run it

Upon installation completing successfully, you should be able to see the node live in your Netdata Space and live charts in the Overview tab. Read more about the cloud features.

Where you go from here is based on your use case, immediate needs, and experience with monitoring and troubleshooting, but we have some hints on what you might want to do next.

What's next?

Explore our general advanced installation options and troubleshooting, specific options for the single line installer, or other installation methods.

Configuration

Discover the recommended way to configure Netdata's settings or behavior using our built-in edit-config script, then apply that knowledge to mission-critical tweaks, such as changing how long Netdata stores metrics.

Data collection

If Netdata didn't autodetect all the hardware, containers, services, or applications running on your node, you should learn more about how data collectors work. If there's a supported collector for metrics you need, configure the collector or read about its requirements to configure your endpoint to publish metrics in the correct format and endpoint.

Alerts & notifications

Netdata comes with hundreds of preconfigured alerts, designed by our monitoring gurus in parallel with our open-source community, but you may want to edit alerts or enable notifications to customize your Netdata experience.

Make your deployment production ready

Go through our deployment strategies, for suggested configuration changes for production deployments.

Install on Linux with one-line installer

The recommended way to install Netdata on a Linux node (physical, virtual, container, IoT) is our one-line kickstart script. This script automatically installs dependencies and builds Netdata from its source code.

To install, copy the script, paste it into your node's terminal, and hit Enter to begin the installation process.

wget -O /tmp/netdata-kickstart.sh https://get.netdata.cloud/kickstart.sh && sh /tmp/netdata-kickstart.sh

Note

If you plan to also claim the node to Netdata Cloud, make sure to replace YOUR_CLAIM_TOKEN with the claim token of your space, and YOUR_ROOM_ID with the ID of the room you are claiming to. You can leave the room id blank to have your node claimed to the default "All nodes" room.

Jump up to what's next to learn how to view your new dashboard and take your next steps in monitoring and troubleshooting with Netdata.

Other installation methods

The full list of all installation methods for various systems is available in Netdata Learn, under Installation.

Advanced installation options and troubleshooting

Automatic updates

By default, Netdata's installation scripts enable automatic updates for both nightly and stable release channels.

If you would prefer to update your Netdata agent manually, you can disable automatic updates by using the --no-updates option when you install or update Netdata using the automatic one-line installation script.

wget -O /tmp/netdata-kickstart.sh https://get.netdata.cloud/kickstart.sh && sh /tmp/netdata-kickstart.sh --no-updates

With automatic updates disabled, you can choose exactly when and how you update Netdata.

Network usage of Netdata’s automatic updater

The auto-update functionality set up by the installation scripts requires working internet access to function correctly. In particular, it currently requires access to GitHub (to check if a newer version of the updater script is available or not, as well as potentially fetching build-time dependencies that are bundled as part of the install), and Google Cloud Storage (to check for newer versions of Netdata and download the sources if there is a newer version).

Note that the auto-update functionality will check for updates to itself independently of updates to Netdata, and will try to use the latest version of the updater script whenever possible. This is intended to reduce the amount of effort required by users to get updates working again in the event of a bug in the updater code.

Nightly vs. stable releases

The Netdata team maintains two releases of the Netdata agent: nightly and stable. By default, Netdata's installation scripts will give you automatic, nightly updates, as that is our recommended configuration.

Nightly: We create nightly builds every 24 hours. They contain fully-tested code that fixes bugs or security flaws, or introduces new features to Netdata. Every nightly release is a candidate for then becoming a stable release—when we're ready, we simply change the release tags on GitHub. That means nightly releases are stable and proven to function correctly in the vast majority of Netdata use cases. That's why nightly is the best choice for most Netdata users.

Stable: We create stable releases whenever we believe the code has reached a major milestone. Most often, stable releases correlate with the introduction of new, significant features. Stable releases might be a better choice for those who run Netdata in mission-critical production systems, as updates will come more infrequently, and only after the community helps fix any bugs that might have been introduced in previous releases.

Pros of using nightly releases:

  • Get the latest features and bug fixes as soon as they're available
  • Receive security-related fixes immediately
  • Use stable, fully-tested code that's always improving
  • Leverage the same Netdata experience our community is using

Pros of using stable releases:

  • Protect yourself from the rare instance when major bugs slip through our testing and negatively affect a Netdata installation
  • Retain more control over the Netdata version you use

Anonymous statistics

Starting with v1.30, Netdata collects anonymous usage information by default and sends it to a self-hosted PostHog instance within the Netdata infrastructure. Read about the information collected, and learn how to-opt, on our anonymous statistics page.

The usage statistics are vital for us, as we use them to discover bugs and prioritize new features. We thank you for actively contributing to Netdata's future.

Troubleshooting and known issues

We are tracking a few issues related to installation and packaging.

Installs on hosts without IPv4 connectivity

Our regular installation process requires access to a number of GitHub services that do not have IPv6 connectivity. As such, using the kickstart install script on such hosts generally does not work, and will typically fail with an error from cURL or wget about connection timeouts. You can check if your system is affected by this by attempting to connect to (or ping) https://api.github.com/. Failing to connect indicates that you are affected by this issue.

There are three potential workarounds for this:

  1. You can configure your system with a proper IPv6 transition mechanism, such as NAT64. GitHub’s anachronisms affect many projects other than just Netdata, and there are unfortunately a number of other services out there that do not provide IPv6 connectivity, so taking this route is likely to save you time in the future as well.
  2. If you are using a system that we publish native packages for (see our platform support policy for more details), you can manually set up our native package repositories as outlined in our native package install documentation. Our official package repositories do provide service over IPv6, so they work without issue on hosts without IPv4 connectivity.
  3. If neither of the above options work for you, you can still install using our offline installation instructions, though do note that the offline install source must be prepared from a system with IPv4 connectivity.

Older distributions (Ubuntu 14.04, Debian 8, CentOS 6) and OpenSSL

If you're running an older Linux distribution or one that has reached EOL, such as Ubuntu 14.04 LTS, Debian 8, or CentOS 6, your Agent may not be able to securely connect to Netdata Cloud due to an outdated version of OpenSSL. These old versions of OpenSSL cannot perform hostname validation, which helps securely encrypt SSL connections.

If you choose to continue using the outdated version of OpenSSL, your node will still connect to Netdata Cloud, albeit with hostname verification disabled. Without verification, your Netdata Cloud connection could be vulnerable to man-in-the-middle attacks.

CentOS 6 and CentOS 8

To install the Agent on certain CentOS and RHEL systems, you must enable non-default repositories, such as EPEL or PowerTools, to gather hard dependencies. See the CentOS 6 and CentOS 8 sections for more information.

Access to file is not permitted

If you see an error similar to Access to file is not permitted: /usr/share/netdata/web/index.html when you try to visit the Agent dashboard at http://NODE:19999, you need to update Netdata's permissions to match those of your system.

Run ls -la /usr/share/netdata/web/index.html to find the file's permissions. You may need to change this path based on the error you're seeing in your browser. In the below example, the file is owned by the user root and the group root.

ls -la /usr/share/netdata/web/index.html
-rw-r--r--. 1 root root 89377 May 5 06:30 /usr/share/netdata/web/index.html

These files need to have the same user and group used to install your netdata. Suppose you installed netdata with user netdata and group netdata, in this scenario you will need to run the following command to fix the error:

# chown -R netdata:netdata /usr/share/netdata/web

Multiple versions of OpenSSL

We've received reports from the community about issues with running the kickstart.sh script on systems that have both a distribution-installed version of OpenSSL and a manually-installed local version. The Agent's installer cannot handle both.

Clang compiler on Linux

Our current build process has some issues when using certain configurations of the clang C compiler on Linux. See the section on nonrepresentable section on output errors for a workaround.


Do you have any feedback for this page? If so, you can open a new issue on our netdata/learn repository.