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Kibana vs Blueflood: What are the differences?

Developers describe Kibana as "Explore & Visualize Your Data". Kibana is an open source (Apache Licensed), browser based analytics and search dashboard for Elasticsearch. Kibana is a snap to setup and start using. Kibana strives to be easy to get started with, while also being flexible and powerful, just like Elasticsearch. On the other hand, Blueflood is detailed as "A distributed system designed to ingest and process time series data". It is a high throughput, low latency, multi-tenant distributed metric processing system behind Rackspace Metrics, which is currently used in production by the Rackspace Monitoring team and Rackspace Public Cloud team to store metrics generated by their systems.

Kibana and Blueflood belong to "Monitoring Tools" category of the tech stack.

Some of the features offered by Kibana are:

  • Flexible analytics and visualization platform
  • Real-time summary and charting of streaming data
  • Intuitive interface for a variety of users

On the other hand, Blueflood provides the following key features:

  • Ingestion
  • Query
  • Rollup

Kibana and Blueflood are both open source tools. Kibana with 12.9K GitHub stars and 5.01K forks on GitHub appears to be more popular than Blueflood with 591 GitHub stars and 94 GitHub forks.

Advice on Blueflood and Kibana
Needs advice
on
GrafanaGrafana
and
KibanaKibana

From a StackShare Community member: “We need better analytics & insights into our Elasticsearch cluster. Grafana, which ships with advanced support for Elasticsearch, looks great but isn’t officially supported/endorsed by Elastic. Kibana, on the other hand, is made and supported by Elastic. I’m wondering what people suggest in this situation."

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Replies (7)
Recommends
on
GrafanaGrafana
at

For our Predictive Analytics platform, we have used both Grafana and Kibana

Kibana has predictions and ML algorithms support, so if you need them, you may be better off with Kibana . The multi-variate analysis features it provide are very unique (not available in Grafana).

For everything else, definitely Grafana . Especially the number of supported data sources, and plugins clearly makes Grafana a winner (in just visualization and reporting sense). Creating your own plugin is also very easy. The top pros of Grafana (which it does better than Kibana ) are:

  • Creating and organizing visualization panels
  • Templating the panels on dashboards for repetetive tasks
  • Realtime monitoring, filtering of charts based on conditions and variables
  • Export / Import in JSON format (that allows you to version and save your dashboard as part of git)
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Recommends
on
KibanaKibana

I use both Kibana and Grafana on my workplace: Kibana for logging and Grafana for monitoring. Since you already work with Elasticsearch, I think Kibana is the safest choice in terms of ease of use and variety of messages it can manage, while Grafana has still (in my opinion) a strong link to metrics

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Bram Verdonck
Recommends
on
GrafanaGrafana
at

After looking for a way to monitor or at least get a better overview of our infrastructure, we found out that Grafana (which I previously only used in ELK stacks) has a plugin available to fully integrate with Amazon CloudWatch . Which makes it way better for our use-case than the offer of the different competitors (most of them are even paid). There is also a CloudFlare plugin available, the platform we use to serve our DNS requests. Although we are a big fan of https://smashing.github.io/ (previously dashing), for now we are starting with Grafana .

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Recommends
on
KibanaKibana

I use Kibana because it ships with the ELK stack. I don't find it as powerful as Splunk however it is light years above grepping through log files. We previously used Grafana but found it to be annoying to maintain a separate tool outside of the ELK stack. We were able to get everything we needed from Kibana.

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Recommends
on
KibanaKibana

Kibana should be sufficient in this architecture for decent analytics, if stronger metrics is needed then combine with Grafana. Datadog also offers nice overview but there's no need for it in this case unless you need more monitoring and alerting (and more technicalities).

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Recommends
on
GrafanaGrafana

I use Grafana because it is without a doubt the best way to visualize metrics

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Povilas Brilius
PHP Web Developer at GroundIn Software · | 0 upvotes · 646.8K views
Recommends
on
KibanaKibana
at

@Kibana, of course, because @Grafana looks like amateur sort of solution, crammed with query builder grouping aggregates, but in essence, as recommended by CERN - KIbana is the corporate (startup vectored) decision.

Furthermore, @Kibana comes with complexity adhering ELK stack, whereas @InfluxDB + @Grafana & co. recently have become sophisticated development conglomerate instead of advancing towards a understandable installation step by step inheritance.

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Pros of Blueflood
Pros of Kibana
    Be the first to leave a pro
    • 88
      Easy to setup
    • 65
      Free
    • 45
      Can search text
    • 21
      Has pie chart
    • 13
      X-axis is not restricted to timestamp
    • 9
      Easy queries and is a good way to view logs
    • 6
      Supports Plugins
    • 4
      Dev Tools
    • 3
      More "user-friendly"
    • 3
      Can build dashboards
    • 2
      Out-of-Box Dashboards/Analytics for Metrics/Heartbeat
    • 2
      Easy to drill-down
    • 1
      Up and running

    Sign up to add or upvote prosMake informed product decisions

    Cons of Blueflood
    Cons of Kibana
      Be the first to leave a con
      • 7
        Unintuituve
      • 4
        Works on top of elastic only
      • 4
        Elasticsearch is huge
      • 3
        Hardweight UI

      Sign up to add or upvote consMake informed product decisions

      13
      1
      1.1K
      260
      6.4K
      - No public GitHub repository available -

      What is Blueflood?

      It is a high throughput, low latency, multi-tenant distributed metric processing system behind Rackspace Metrics, which is currently used in production by the Rackspace Monitoring team and Rackspace Public Cloud team to store metrics generated by their systems.

      What is Kibana?

      Kibana is an open source (Apache Licensed), browser based analytics and search dashboard for Elasticsearch. Kibana is a snap to setup and start using. Kibana strives to be easy to get started with, while also being flexible and powerful, just like Elasticsearch.

      Need advice about which tool to choose?Ask the StackShare community!

      Jobs that mention Blueflood and Kibana as a desired skillset
      Postman
      San Francisco, United States
      What companies use Blueflood?
      What companies use Kibana?
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      What tools integrate with Blueflood?
      What tools integrate with Kibana?

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      Blog Posts

      May 21 2019 at 12:20AM

      Elastic

      ElasticsearchKibanaLogstash+4
      12
      5350
      GitHubPythonReact+42
      49
      41073
      GitGitHubPython+22
      17
      14345
      GitHubMySQLSlack+44
      109
      50840
      What are some alternatives to Blueflood and Kibana?
      OpenTSDB
      It is a distributed, scalable time series database to store, index & serve metrics collected from computer systems at a large scale. It can store and serve massive amounts of time series data without losing granularity.
      New Relic
      The world’s best software and DevOps teams rely on New Relic to move faster, make better decisions and create best-in-class digital experiences. If you run software, you need to run New Relic. More than 50% of the Fortune 100 do too.
      Grafana
      Grafana is a general purpose dashboard and graph composer. It's focused on providing rich ways to visualize time series metrics, mainly though graphs but supports other ways to visualize data through a pluggable panel architecture. It currently has rich support for for Graphite, InfluxDB and OpenTSDB. But supports other data sources via plugins.
      Sentry
      Sentry’s Application Monitoring platform helps developers see performance issues, fix errors faster, and optimize their code health.
      Amazon CloudWatch
      It helps you gain system-wide visibility into resource utilization, application performance, and operational health. It retrieve your monitoring data, view graphs to help take automated action based on the state of your cloud environment.
      See all alternatives