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# Useful management and configuration actions
Below you will find some of the most common actions that one can take while using Netdata. You can use this page as a quick reference for installing Netdata, connecting a node to the Cloud, properly editing the configuration, accessing Netdata's API, and more!
### Install Netdata
```bash
wget -O /tmp/netdata-kickstart.sh https://my-netdata.io/kickstart.sh && sh /tmp/netdata-kickstart.sh
# Or, if you have cURL but not wget (such as on macOS):
curl https://my-netdata.io/kickstart.sh > /tmp/netdata-kickstart.sh && sh /tmp/netdata-kickstart.sh
```
#### Connect a node to Netdata Cloud
To do so, sign in to Netdata Cloud, on your Space under the Nodes tab, click `Add Nodes` and paste the provided command into your node’s terminal and run it.
You can also copy the Claim token and pass it to the installation script with `--claim-token` and re-run it.
### Configuration
**Netdata's config directory** is `/etc/netdata/` but in some operating systems it might be `/opt/netdata/etc/netdata/`.
Look for the `# config directory =` line over at `http://NODE_IP:19999/netdata.conf` to find your config directory.
From within that directory you can run `sudo ./edit-config netdata.conf` **to edit Netdata's configuration.**
You can edit other config files too, by specifying their filename after `./edit-config`.
You are expected to use this method in all following configuration changes.
<!-- #### Edit Netdata's other config files (examples):
- `$ sudo ./edit-config apps_groups.conf`
- `$ sudo ./edit-config ebpf.conf`
- `$ sudo ./edit-config health.d/load.conf`
- `$ sudo ./edit-config go.d/prometheus.conf`
#### View the running Netdata configuration: `http://NODE:19999/netdata.conf`
> Replace `NODE` with the IP address or hostname of your node. Often `localhost`.
## Metrics collection & retention
You can tweak your settings in the netdata.conf file.
📄 [Find your netdata.conf file](https://github.com/netdata/netdata/blob/master/daemon/config/README.md)
Open a new terminal and navigate to the netdata.conf file. Use the edit-config script to make changes: `sudo ./edit-config netdata.conf`
The most popular settings to change are:
#### Increase metrics retention (4GiB)
```
sudo ./edit-config netdata.conf
```
```
[global]
dbengine multihost disk space = 4096
```
#### Reduce the collection frequency (every 5 seconds)
```
sudo ./edit-config netdata.conf
```
```
[global]
update every = 5
``` -->
---
#### Enable/disable plugins (groups of collectors)
```bash
sudo ./edit-config netdata.conf
```
```conf
[plugins]
go.d = yes # enabled
node.d = no # disabled
```
#### Enable/disable specific collectors
```bash
sudo ./edit-config go.d.conf # edit a plugin's config
```
```yaml
modules:
activemq: no # disabled
cockroachdb: yes # enabled
```
#### Edit a collector's config
```bash
sudo ./edit-config go.d/mysql.conf
```
### Alerts & notifications
<!-- #### Add a new alert
```
sudo touch health.d/example-alert.conf
sudo ./edit-config health.d/example-alert.conf
``` -->
After any change, reload the Netdata health configuration:
```bash
netdatacli reload-health
#or if that command doesn't work on your installation, use:
killall -USR2 netdata
```
#### Configure a specific alert
```bash
sudo ./edit-config health.d/example-alert.conf
```
#### Silence a specific alert
```bash
sudo ./edit-config health.d/example-alert.conf
```
```
to: silent
```
<!-- #### Disable alerts and notifications
```conf
[health]
enabled = no
``` -->
---
### Manage the daemon
| Intent | Action |
|:----------------------------|------------------------------------------------------------:|
| Start Netdata | `$ sudo service netdata start` |
| Stop Netdata | `$ sudo service netdata stop` |
| Restart Netdata | `$ sudo service netdata restart` |
| Reload health configuration | `$ sudo netdatacli reload-health` `$ killall -USR2 netdata` |
| View error logs | `less /var/log/netdata/error.log` |
| View collectors logs | `less /var/log/netdata/collector.log` |
#### Change the port Netdata listens to (example, set it to port 39999)
```conf
[web]
default port = 39999
```
### See metrics and dashboards
#### Netdata Cloud: `https://app.netdata.cloud`
#### Local dashboard: `https://NODE:19999`
> Replace `NODE` with the IP address or hostname of your node. Often `localhost`.
### Access the Netdata API
You can access the API like this: `http://NODE:19999/api/VERSION/REQUEST`.
If you want to take a look at all the API requests, check our API page at <https://learn.netdata.cloud/api>
<!--
## Interact with charts
| Intent | Action |
| -------------------------------------- | ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------: |
| Stop a chart from updating | `click` |
| Zoom | **Cloud** <br/> use the `zoom in` and `zoom out` buttons on any chart (upper right corner) <br/><br/> **Agent**<br/>`SHIFT` or `ALT` + `mouse scrollwheel` <br/> `SHIFT` or `ALT` + `two-finger pinch` (touchscreen) <br/> `SHIFT` or `ALT` + `two-finger scroll` (touchscreen) |
| Zoom to a specific timeframe | **Cloud**<br/>use the `select and zoom` button on any chart and then do a `mouse selection` <br/><br/> **Agent**<br/>`SHIFT` + `mouse selection` |
| Pan forward or back in time | `click` & `drag` <br/> `touch` & `drag` (touchpad/touchscreen) |
| Select a certain timeframe | `ALT` + `mouse selection` <br/> WIP need to evaluate this `command?` + `mouse selection` (macOS) |
| Reset to default auto refreshing state | `double click` | -->
<!-- ## Dashboards
#### Disable the local dashboard
Use the `edit-config` script to edit the `netdata.conf` file.
```
[web]
mode = none
``` -->
<!-- #### Opt out from anonymous statistics
```
sudo touch .opt-out-from-anonymous-statistics
``` -->
<!-- ## Understanding the dashboard
**Charts**: A visualization displaying one or more collected/calculated metrics in a time series. Charts are generated
by collectors.
**Dimensions**: Any value shown on a chart, which can be raw or calculated values, such as percentages, averages,
minimums, maximums, and more.
**Families**: One instance of a monitored hardware or software resource that needs to be monitored and displayed
separately from similar instances. Example, disks named
**sda**, **sdb**, **sdc**, and so on.
**Contexts**: A grouping of charts based on the types of metrics collected and visualized.
**disk.io**, **disk.ops**, and **disk.backlog** are all contexts. -->
|