» datadog_timeboard

Provides a Datadog timeboard resource. This can be used to create and manage Datadog timeboards.

» Example Usage

# Create a new Datadog timeboard
resource "datadog_timeboard" "redis" {
  title       = "Redis Timeboard (created via Terraform)"
  description = "created using the Datadog provider in Terraform"
  read_only   = true

  graph {
    title = "Redis latency (ms)"
    viz   = "timeseries"

    request {
      q    = "avg:redis.info.latency_ms{$host}"
      type = "bars"
    }
  }

  graph {
    title = "Redis memory usage"
    viz   = "timeseries"

    request {
      q       = "avg:redis.mem.used{$host} - avg:redis.mem.lua{$host}, avg:redis.mem.lua{$host}"
      stacked = true
    }

    request {
      q = "avg:redis.mem.rss{$host}"

      style {
        palette = "warm"
      }
    }
  }

  graph {
    title = "Top System CPU by Docker container"
    viz   = "toplist"

    request {
      q = "top(avg:docker.cpu.system{*} by {container_name}, 10, 'mean', 'desc')"
    }
  }

  template_variable {
    name   = "host"
    prefix = "host"
  }
}

» Argument Reference

The following arguments are supported:

  • title - (Required) The name of the dashboard.
  • description - (Required) A description of the dashboard's content.
  • read_only - (Optional) The read-only status of the timeboard. Default is false.
  • graph - (Required) Nested block describing a graph definition. The structure of this block is described below. Multiple graph blocks are allowed within a datadog_timeboard resource.
  • template_variable - (Optional) Nested block describing a template variable. The structure of this block is described below. Multiple template_variable blocks are allowed within a datadog_timeboard resource.

» Nested graph blocks

Nested graph blocks have the following structure:

  • title - (Required) The name of the graph.
  • viz - (Required) The type of visualization to use for the graph. Valid choices are "change", "distribution", "heatmap", "hostmap", "query_value", timeseries", and "toplist".
  • request - Nested block describing a graph definition request (a metric query to plot on the graph). The structure of this block is described below. Multiple request blocks are allowed within a graph block.
  • events - (Optional) A list of event filter strings. Note that, while supported by the Datadog API, the Datadog UI does not (currently) support multiple event filters very well, so use at your own risk.
  • autoscale - (Optional) Boolean that determines whether to autoscale graphs.
  • precision - (Optional) Number of digits displayed, use * for full precision.
  • custom_unit - (Optional) Display a custom unit on the graph (such as 'hertz')
  • text_align - (Optional) How to align text in the graph, can be one of 'left', 'center', or 'right'.
  • style - (Optional) Nested block describing hostmaps. The structure of this block is described below.
  • group - (Optional) List of groups for hostmaps (shown as 'group by' in the UI).
  • include_no_metric_hosts - (Optional) If set to true, will display hosts on hostmap that have no reported metrics.
  • include_ungrouped_hosts - (Optional) If set to true, will display hosts without groups on hostmaps.
  • node_type - (Optional) What nodes to display in a hostmap. Can be one of 'host' (default) or 'container'.
  • scope - (Optional) List of scopes for hostmaps (shown as 'filter by' in the UI).
  • yaxis - (Optional) Nested block describing modifications to the yaxis rendering. The structure of this block is described below.
  • marker - (Optional) Nested block describing lines / ranges added to graph for formatting. The structure of this block is described below. Multiple marker blocks are allowed within a graph block.

» Nested graph marker blocks

Nested graph marker blocks have the following structure:

  • type - (Required) How the marker lines will look. Possible values are {"error", "warning", "info", "ok"} {"dashed", "solid", "bold"}. Example: "error dashed".
  • value - (Required) Mathematical expression describing the marker. Examples: "y > 1", "-5 < y < 0", "y = 19".
  • label - (Optional) A label for the line or range. Warning: when a label is enabled but left empty through the UI, the Datadog API returns a boolean value, not a string. This makes terraform plan fail with a JSON decoding error.

» Nested graph yaxis block

  • min - (Optional) Minimum bound for the graph's yaxis, a string.
  • max - (Optional) Maximum bound for the graph's yaxis, a string.
  • scale - (Optional) How to scale the yaxis. Possible values are: "linear", "log", "sqrt", "pow##" (eg. pow2, pow0.5, 2 is used if only "pow" was provided). Default: "linear".

» Nested graph request blocks

Nested graph request blocks have the following structure:

  • q - (Required) The query of the request. Pro tip: Use the JSON tab inside the Datadog UI to help build you query strings.
  • aggregator - (Optional) The aggregation method used when the number of data points outnumbers the max that can be shown.
  • stacked - (Optional) Boolean value to determine if this is this a stacked area graph. Default: false (line chart).
  • type - (Optional) Choose how to draw the graph. For example: "line", "bars" or "area". Default: "line".
  • style - (Optional) Nested block to customize the graph style.
  • conditional_format - (Optional) Nested block to customize the graph style if certain conditions are met. Currently only applies to Query Value and Top List type graphs.

» Nested graph style block

The nested style block is used specifically for styling hostmap graphs, and has the following structure:

  • fill_max - (Optional) Maximum value for the hostmap fill query.
  • fill_min - (Optional) Minimum value for the hostmap fill query.
  • palette - (Optional) Spectrum of colors to use when styling a hostmap. For example: "green_to_orange", "yellow_to_green", "YlOrRd", or "hostmap_blues". Default: "green_to_orange".
  • palette_flip - (Optional) Flip how the hostmap is rendered. For example, with the default palette, low values are represented as green, with high values as orange. If palette_flip is "true", then low values will be orange, and high values will be green.

» Nested graph request style block

The nested style blocks has the following structure:

  • palette - (Optional) Color of the line drawn. For example: "classic", "cool", "warm", "purple", "orange" or "gray". Default: "classic".
  • width - (Optional) Line width. Possible values: "thin", "normal", "thick". Default: "normal".
  • type - (Optional) Type of line drawn. Possible values: "dashed", "solid", "dotted". Default: "solid".

» Nested graph request conditional_format block

The nested conditional_format blocks has the following structure:

  • palette - (Optional) Color scheme to be used if the condition is met. For example: "red_on_white", "white_on_red", "yellow_on_white", "white_on_yellow", "green_on_white", "white_on_green", "gray_on_white", "white_on_gray", "custom_text", "custom_bg", "custom_image".
  • comparator - (Required) Comparison operator. Example: ">", "<".
  • value - (Optional) Value that is the threshold for the conditional format.
  • custom_fg_color - (Optional) Used when palette is set to custom_text. Set the color of the text to a custom web color, such as "#205081".
  • custom_bg_color - (Optional) Used when palette is set to custom_bg. Set the color of the background to a custom web color, such as "#205081".

» Nested template_variable blocks

Nested template_variable blocks have the following structure:

  • name - (Required) The variable name. Can be referenced as $name in graph request q query strings.
  • prefix - (Optional) The tag group. Default: no tag group.
  • default - (Optional) The default tag. Default: "*" (match all).

» Attributes Reference

The following attributes are exported:

  • id - The unique ID of this timeboard in your Datadog account. The web interface URL to this timeboard can be generated by appending this ID to https://app.datadoghq.com/dash/

» Import

Timeboards can be imported using their numeric ID, e.g.

$ terraform import datadog_timeboard.my_service_timeboard 2081