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author | Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org> | 2022-01-26 18:05:10 +0000 |
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committer | Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org> | 2022-01-26 18:05:10 +0000 |
commit | 34a0b66bc2d48223748ed1cf5bc1b305c396bd74 (patch) | |
tree | fbd36be86cc6bc4288fe627f2b5beada569848bb /web/README.md | |
parent | Adding upstream version 1.32.1. (diff) | |
download | netdata-34a0b66bc2d48223748ed1cf5bc1b305c396bd74.tar.xz netdata-34a0b66bc2d48223748ed1cf5bc1b305c396bd74.zip |
Adding upstream version 1.33.0.upstream/1.33.0
Signed-off-by: Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org>
Diffstat (limited to 'web/README.md')
-rw-r--r-- | web/README.md | 18 |
1 files changed, 9 insertions, 9 deletions
diff --git a/web/README.md b/web/README.md index fc1d3717..6a7aa68f 100644 --- a/web/README.md +++ b/web/README.md @@ -17,14 +17,14 @@ There are two primary ways to view Netdata's dashboards: 1. The [local Agent dashboard](/web/gui/README.md) that comes pre-configured with every Netdata installation. You can see it at `http://NODE:19999`, replacing `NODE` with `localhost`, the hostname of your node, or its IP address. You can customize the contents and colors of the standard dashboard [using - JavaScript](/web/gui/README.md#customizing-the-standard-dashboard). + JavaScript](/web/gui/README.md#customizing-the-local-dashboard). 2. The [`dashboard.js` JavaScript library](#dashboardjs), which helps you - [customize the standard dashboards](/web/gui/README.md#customizing-the-standard-dashboard) + [customize the standard dashboards](/web/gui/README.md#customizing-the-local-dashboard) using JavaScript, or create entirely new [custom dashboards](/web/gui/custom/README.md) or [Atlassian Confluence dashboards](/web/gui/confluence/README.md). -You can also view all the data Netdata collects through the [REST API v1](/web/api/). +You can also view all the data Netdata collects through the [REST API v1](/web/api/README.md#netdata-rest-api). No matter where you use Netdata's charts, you'll want to know how to [use](#using-charts) them. You'll also want to understand how Netdata defines [charts](#charts), [dimensions](#dimensions), [families](#families), and @@ -164,12 +164,12 @@ top-left corner of a chart. Given the four example contexts, and two families of `sdb` and `sdd`, Netdata will create the following charts and their names: -Context | `sdb` family | `sdd` family ---- | --- | --- -`disk.io` | `disk_io.sdb` | `disk_io.sdd` -`disk.ops` | `disk_ops.sdb` | `disk_ops.sdd` -`disk.backlog` | `disk_backlog.sdb` | `disk_backlog.sdd` -`disk.util` | `disk_util.sdb` | `disk_util.sdd` +| Context | `sdb` family | `sdd` family | +|----------------|--------------------|--------------------| +| `disk.io` | `disk_io.sdb` | `disk_io.sdd` | +| `disk.ops` | `disk_ops.sdb` | `disk_ops.sdd` | +| `disk.backlog` | `disk_backlog.sdb` | `disk_backlog.sdd` | +| `disk.util` | `disk_util.sdb` | `disk_util.sdd` | And here's what two of those charts in the `disk.io` context look like under `sdb` and `sdd` families: |