
Grafana: The open and composable observability platform
Grafana allows you to query, visualize, alert on, and understand your metrics no matter where they are stored. Create, explore, and share beautiful dashboards with your team and foster a …
Download Grafana | Grafana Labs
Dec 16, 2025 · Overview of how to download and install different versions of Grafana on different operating systems.
Grafana | Query, visualize, alerting observability platform
With Grafana, you can take any of your existing data- be it from your Kubernetes cluster, raspberry pi, different cloud services, or even Google Sheets- and visualize it however you …
About Grafana | Grafana documentation
Grafana Faro: Grafana Faro is an open source JavaScript agent that embeds in web applications to collect real user monitoring (RUM) data: performance metrics, logs, exceptions, events, and …
Grafana dashboards | Grafana Labs
After last year's record sellout, our biggest community event is headed to Seattle on May 6-8! Discover what's new in Grafana 12, learn from 20+ talks covering Prometheus, …
Grafana OSS | Leading observability tool for visualizations
Improve operational efficiency, monitor your infrastructure, and analyze metrics, logs, and traces with Grafana, the leading open source tool for dashboards and visualizations.
Grafana get started | Cloud, Self-managed, Enterprise
The best way scale and secure metrics, logs and Grafana on your own infrastructure. For teams with millions of metrics that need enterprise-grade scalability, security and support.
Grafana OSS and Enterprise | Grafana documentation
Find answers to your technical questions and learn how to use Grafana OSS and Enterprise products.
Introduction | Grafana documentation
Grafana open source is open source visualization and analytics software. It allows you to query, visualize, alert on, and explore your metrics, logs, and traces no matter where they are stored.
Grafana fundamentals | Grafana Labs
3 days ago · Grafana displays all logs within the log file of the sample application. The height of each bar in the graph encodes the number of logs that were generated at that time.