This post details the setup of Logstash for managing Elastic Agents through Fleet. It covers installation, certificate generation for secure communication, and configuring Fleet outputs. Additionally, it highlights scenarios where Logstash enhances data processing, routing, and control before reaching Elasticsearch, emphasizing its flexibility for Elastic Stack deployments.
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Deploying the Elastic Stack in an Air-Gapped environment – Part 3
The post outlines the setup of the Elastic Stack’s Fleet in an air-gapped environment, detailing steps to load the Elastic Package Registry (EPR) and configure Kibana. It includes instructions for setting up an HTTP server for agent binaries, adding a Fleet Server, and setting up encryption. The conclusion hints at future topics.
Deploying the Elastic Stack in an Air-Gapped environment – Part 2
This post provides a detailed guide on installing Elasticsearch and Kibana in an air-gapped environment. It includes steps for installing, configuring system services, generating enrollment tokens, and optional TLS setup. The process culminates with connecting to Kibana via a browser and preparing for the next phase of setup.
Deploying the Elastic Stack in an Air-Gapped environment – Part 1
This blog series instructs on installing the Elastic Stack—Elasticsearch, Logstash, Kibana, and Fleet agents—in air-gapped environments for enhanced security. The guide outlines prerequisites, lab setup, and necessary packages, emphasizing the importance of proper file transfer and organization. Future posts will detail Elasticsearch and Kibana installation processes.
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