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Learn Grafana 10.x
Learn Grafana 10.x

Learn Grafana 10.x: A beginner's guide to practical data analytics, interactive dashboards, and observability , Second Edition

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Learn Grafana 10.x

Introducing Data Visualization with Grafana

Welcome to Learn Grafana 10.x! Together, we will explore Grafana, an exciting, multi-faceted visualization tool for data exploration, analysis, and alerting. We will learn how to install Grafana, become familiar with some of its many features, and even use it to investigate publicly available real-world datasets.

Whether you are an engineer watching terabytes of metrics for a critical system fault, an administrator sifting through a haystack of log output looking for the needle of an application error, or just a curious citizen eager to know how your city works, Grafana can help you monitor, explore, and analyze data. The key to getting a handle on big data is the ability to visualize it.

But before we find out how Grafana gives you that ability, we’ll need to cover a few basic concepts behind data visualization. Following that, we’ll set up our own instance of Grafana, which will form the fundamental building block for the exercises that follow in later chapters.

The following topics will be covered in this chapter:

  • Appreciating data and visualization – we’ll take a brief overview of the data landscape and how visualization is useful
  • Why Grafana? We’ll look at what makes Grafana an attractive solution
  • Installing Grafana – we’ll install the Grafana application server and get it running
  • Connecting to the Grafana server – we’ll launch the Grafana application by connecting to the installed server from a web browser

Tutorial code, dashboards, and other helpful files for this chapter can be found in the book’s GitHub repository at https://github.com/PacktPublishing/Learn-Grafana-10/tree/main/Chapter01.

Technical requirements

Grafana is relatively easy to set up, but since it is a web server application, you will need to execute a few shell commands to get it running. For the purposes of this book, we will assume that you will access Grafana from the same computer that you installed it on. The following are the technical requirements for installing and running Grafana:

  • Familiarity with the command shell
  • A terminal application or an SSH to the machine where you plan to install Grafana
  • Docker (in order to run Grafana from a Docker container)

Optionally, you will need to have the following:

  • Administrator access to install and run Grafana from the command line, rather than in a Docker container

Appreciating data and visualization

In the not-too-distant past, most of us consumed data pretty much solely via a daily newspaper—the financial pages, the sports section, and the weather forecast. However, in recent years, the ubiquity of computing power has immersed every part of our lives in a sea of data.

Around the clock, our built environment and devices collect innumerable amounts of data, which we consume. Our morning routine starts with a review of emails, social media posts, and news feeds on a smartphone or tablet, and whereas we once put down the daily newspaper when we left for work, our phones come with us everywhere.

We walk around or exercise and our phones capture our activity and location data via the global positioning system (GPS), while our smartwatches capture our vital signs. When we browse the web, every single interaction down to a mouse click is logged and stored for analysis. The servers that deliver these experiences are monitored and maintained by engineers on a round-the-clock basis. Marketers and salesforces continually analyze this data in order to make business-critical decisions.

On the way to work, our cars, buses, and trains contain increasingly sophisticated computers that silently log tens of thousands of real-time metrics, using them to calculate efficiency, profitability, engine performance, and environmental impact. Technicians evaluating these physical systems’ health or troubleshooting problems often sift through an enormous stream of data to tease out the signs of a faulty sensor or a failed part. The importance of this data is globally recognized. This is precisely why data recorders are the most valuable forensic artifact after any transportation accident, and why their recovery generates such widespread media coverage.

Meanwhile, in the modern home, a smart thermostat dutifully logs the settings on a Heating, Ventilation, and Air Conditioning (HVAC) system, as well as the current temperature both inside and outside the house. These devices continually gather real-time weather information in order to make decisions about how and when to run most efficiently.

Similar to the systems at home, but on a much larger scale, nearly every building we pass through during the day collects and monitors the health of a number of key infrastructure systems, from air conditioning to plumbing to security. No amount of paper could possibly record the thousands of channels of data flowing through these physical plants, and yet the building management system aggregates this data to make the same kinds of simple decisions as the homeowner does.

Moreover, these examples represent only a drop in the ocean of data. Around the world, governments, scientists, NGOs, and everyday citizens collect, store, and analyze their own datasets. They are all confronted with the same issue: how to aggregate, collate, or distill the mass of data into a form that a human can perceive and act on in a few seconds or less. The response to this issue is effective data storage and visualization.

Storing, retrieving, and visualizing data

For years, the basic language of data visualization was well-defined: using a chart, graph, histogram, and so on. What was missing was the ability to rapidly create these charts and graphs not in hours or days but in seconds or even milliseconds. This requires processing power that draws representations of thousands and thousands of data points in the time it takes to refresh a computer display.

For decades, only the most powerful computers could manage the processing power required to visualize data on this scale, and the software they ran was specialized and expensive. However, a number of trends in computing have converged to produce a renaissance in data acquisition and visualization, making it accessible not only to domain practitioners but also to technically proficient members of the general public. They are as follows:

  • Cheap general-purpose CPUs and graphics GPUs
  • Inexpensive high-capacity storage, optimized for physical size and maximum throughput
  • Web standards and technologies, including JavaScript and CSS
  • Open source software frameworks and toolkits
  • Scalable cloud computation at affordable prices
  • Broadband networking to enterprises, homes, and mobile devices

A common feature of virtually all of this data, that is, for each sample from a sensor or line in a log file, is the snapshot from an invisible ticking clock: a timestamp. A dataset gathered from these data points across a period of time is referred to as a time series. A stored object containing one or more time series is a time-series dataset. An application that can provide optimized access to one or more of these datasets is called, naturally, a time-series database (TSDB). While a whole class of NoSQL time-series databases, such as InfluxDB, OpenTSDB, and Prometheus, have sprung up, venerable SQL relational databases, such as PostgreSQL and MySQL, have added their own support for time-series datasets.

That’s fine for storing and retrieving data, but what about visualizing data? Enter Grafana.

Why Grafana?

While there are many solutions in the data visualization space, Grafana is proving to be one of the most exciting, exhibiting rapid growth in scope and features, broad options for deployment and support, and an enthusiastic community contributing to its future growth. Before going into the specific features that make Grafana an attractive solution, let’s take a look at the criteria we might use to characterize a useful data visualization application:

Figure 1.1 – Grafana UI

Figure 1.1 – Grafana UI

For the purposes of this book, we will be looking at particular software applications that fulfill four major functions: exploration, analysis, presentation, and observability.

Exploration

Quickly loading and displaying a dataset with the idea of identifying the particularly interesting features for deeper analysis, sometimes referred to as drilling down, is an example of data exploration.

Another common term for data exploration is ad hoc analysis. This refers to the nature of using data visualization techniques without a pre-defined analysis in place. Ad hoc analysis is useful for getting a feel for the data’s characteristics, and whether any interesting patterns are discernable.

Figure 1.2 – Grafana exploration

Figure 1.2 – Grafana exploration

In this book, we’ll be frequently using the Explore feature of Grafana to perform just this sort of data exploration.

Analysis

After we have examined our data, we may well want to analyze it. That is, we may want to quantify the data statistically or correlate it with other data. For example, we may want to see what the maximum value or average value is, or otherwise aggregate the data for a specific time range. We may also want to look at multiple datasets over the same time period to look for events that might be time-correlated.

Figure 1.3 – Grafana analysis

Figure 1.3 – Grafana analysis

Grafana contains several analysis features that we highlight throughout the book. We will also leverage Grafana’s powerful transformation features to aid us in our analysis.

Presentation

Once we have identified the data we are interested in, we will want to present it in an aesthetically pleasing manner that also gives the viewer clarity about what the data represents, in effect helping to tell a story about the data, which would be otherwise difficult to do without specific domain knowledge.

Figure 1.4 – Grafana presentation

Figure 1.4 – Grafana presentation

Assembling panels into dashboards is a common Grafana workflow for presentation, and we will spend much of our time in this book covering not only how to construct dashboards to tell the story of our data, but also how to structure our data visualizations to be both clear and meaningful.

Observability

Finally, we may need to observe the data over time, or even in real time as it may represent critical data. If the data crosses into a realm of concern, we may need to be notified immediately.

Grafana has extensive and powerful observability features, along with integrations for popular notification services such as PagerDuty. In this book, we’ll learn how to build alerts to detect anomalies in our data, and how to craft appropriate notifications depending upon the severity of the alert.

Choosing Grafana

While there are quite a few powerful data analytics tools on the market that fulfill these functions, Grafana has a number of features that make it an attractive choice:

  • Fast: The Grafana backend is written in Google’s exciting Go language, making it extremely performant when querying data sources or feeding thousands of data points to multiple dashboard panels.
  • Open: Grafana supports a plugin model for its dashboard panels and data sources. The number of plugins is constantly growing as the Grafana community enthusiastically contributes to the project.
  • Beautiful: Grafana leverages the attractive and powerful D3 library. Many of the popular dashboard tools, such as Datadog and Zabbix, can quickly generate beautiful graphs from thousands of data channels, but they only offer some limited control over the display elements. Grafana provides fine-grained control over most graph elements including axes, lines, points, fills, annotations, and legends. It even offers the much sought-after dark mode.
  • Versatile: Grafana is not tied to a particular database technology. For example, Kibana is a powerful, well-known member of Elasticsearch’s Elasticsearch, Logstash, and Kibana (ELK) stack; it is only capable of visualizing Elasticsearch data sources. This gives it the advantage over Grafana of a better ability to integrate Elasticsearch’s analysis tools in its graphing panels. However, due to its plugin architecture, Grafana can support a variety of ever-growing data sources (at last count in 2022, over 150), from traditional RDBMs, such as MySQL and PostgresQL, to modern TSDBs, such as InfluxDB and Prometheus. Not only can each graph display data from a variety of data sources, but a single graph can also combine data from multiple data sources.
  • Free: While they are very powerful tools indeed, Datadog and Splunk are commercial packages and, as such, charge fees to manage all but the smallest datasets. If you want to get your feet wet, Grafana is freely available under the Apache open source license, and if you do plan to run it in your enterprise, you can purchase tiered support.

These are just some of the criteria you might use to evaluate Grafana against similar products. Your mileage may vary, but now is a great time to be in the market for visualization tools. Grafana and its competitors each have their own strengths and weaknesses, but they are all very capable applications. Here’s a short list of the few we covered:

With this in mind, let’s install Grafana.

Installing Grafana

At its core, Grafana runs as a web server, and as such, it is not a typical double-click application. You will need to be comfortable with the command line and have administrator privileges on the computer you plan to install Grafana on. To download the latest versions of Grafana, check out https://grafana.com/grafana/download.

The Grafana application server runs on *nix operating systems (Linux, OS X, and Windows), and it can be installed locally on a laptop or workstation or on a remote server. It is even available as a hosted application if you’d rather not deal with setting up or managing a server application on your own.

In this section, we’ll walk through the most typical installation options:

  • Docker
  • OS X
  • Linux
  • Windows
  • Hosted Grafana in the cloud

Once you’ve completed the installation of your choice, proceed to the Connecting to the Grafana server section for instructions on how to access Grafana from a web browser.

Grafana in a Docker container

The easiest and least complex installation method is to run Grafana from within a Docker container. Docker is available for all major platforms and can be downloaded by visiting https://www.docker.com/.

After installing Docker, open a terminal window and type in the following command:

% docker run -d --name=grafana -p 3000:3000 grafana/grafana

The percent (%) symbol is simply there to indicate we are typing in commands to an interactive shell such as zsh or Windows PowerShell. If you are cutting and pasting from the book, you’ll want to leave out that symbol.

Docker will automatically download and run the latest version of Grafana for your computer’s architecture. Bear in mind that since this basic container has no persistent storage, nothing will be retained if you delete the container. I suggest you run the container with a temporary volume so that Grafana’s internal database will continue to exist, even if you destroy the container:

% docker volume create grafana-storage
% docker run -d --name=grafana -p 3000:3000  \
    -v grafana-storage:/var/lib/grafana \
    grafana/grafana

Note

The book and its tutorial examples were written for the macOS operating system, a POSIX-compliant OS that shares many similarities to Linux, including the shell. However, with a few syntax modifications here and there, Windows users should be able to use these same commands in PowerShell.

For example, in the preceding command, you’ll want to use the backtick (`) in PowerShell for line continuation, rather than the backslash (\).

I will proceed with Docker and its companion product Docker Compose for the purposes of this book as it will allow an almost turnkey installation experience, as all the necessary dependencies will be automatically downloaded with the container. It will also install in its own sandbox, so you don’t need to worry about installing a stack of software that will be difficult to delete later. Finally, in future chapters, we will be setting up data sources using similar Docker containers, so managing the data pipeline as a combination of containers will be very consistent and straightforward.

Make and Makefile

In the book’s GitHub repository, you’ll find a Makefile in each chapter directory. You can use it to streamline some of the common Docker commands. If you’re not familiar with the make command or it isn’t installed on your computer, you can still cut and paste many of the commands embedded in the Makefile.

While space doesn’t permit a comprehensive introduction to the concepts that underlie make, here is a quick example of how to use it in concert with this book. The following is from the Makefile in the Chapter02 directory of the book’s GitHub repository:

up:
    docker-compose up -d --pull missing

On the first line, the word up before the colon (:) is referred to as the target. Anything following that colon is a dependency; there are no dependencies associated with the target. The second line is the command; there must be at least one command. For decades, the venerable make command and associated Makefile have been the backbone for building software, often with hundreds of complex dependencies. Nonetheless, for our use of make, we’ll use it mostly as a notepad of shortcut commands. To use it, you simply run a make command from the shell:

% make <target>

make will first run any targets named in the list of dependencies, followed by the command(s) associated with the target. Run the following:

% make up

You are using make to run this equivalent command:

% docker-compose up -d --pull missing

There is no requirement to use make for this book; all the commands you need are in the text.

Grafana for macOS

There are two options for installing and running Grafana for macOS:

  • Homebrew
  • Command line binary install

Using Homebrew is the simplest option as it wraps all the installation chores in a single command. To get Homebrew, visit https://brew.sh/. If you want more control over where to install Grafana, the command line option is a better choice.

Homebrew

Homebrew does not ship as part of macOS, but you can easily install it:

% /bin/bash -c "$(curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Homebrew/install/HEAD/install.sh)"

To install Grafana via Homebrew, run the following commands:

% brew update
% brew install grafana

If you want to keep Grafana running even after a reboot, use the Homebrew services subcommand to launch the installed Grafana application as a service. You will first need to confirm services installation:

% brew tap homebrew/services
% brew services start grafana

Command line binary install

To install via the command line, open a Terminal shell window and download the macOS distribution tarball, then untar it into the directory of your choice (replace ${GRAFANA_VERSION} with the current version):

% wget https://dl.grafana.com/oss/release/grafana-${GRAFANA_VERSION}.darwin-amd64.tar.gz
% tar -zxvf grafana-$GRAFANA_VERSION.darwin-amd64.tar.gz

Once you’ve untarred the file, cd into the directory and launch the binary by executing this command:

% ./bin/grafana-server web

Grafana for Linux

While Linux comes in a number of flavors, each falls into one of two installation systems: yum for Red Hat-based releases or apt for Debian or Ubuntu releases. Typically, you download the binary and then run the installer on the package file. To get the latest Grafana binaries for Linux, visit https://grafana.com/grafana/download?platform=linux.

Yum installation (Red Hat, Fedora, CentOS)

The installer for Red Hat distributions (CentOS, Fedora, and Red Hat) is yum. To download and install it (replace ${GRAFANA_VERSION} with the current version), use the following:

% wget https://dl.grafana.com/oss/release/grafana-%{GRAFANA_VERSION}.x86_64.rpm
% sudo yum install grafana-${GRAFANA_VERSION}.x86_64.rpm

To start up Grafana, use systemctl:

% systemctl daemon-reload
% systemctl start grafana-server
% systemctl status grafana-server

To keep Grafana running even after a reboot, use the following:

% sudo systemctl enable grafana-server.service

Apt installation (Debian, Ubuntu)

The installer for the Debian distributions (Debian and Ubuntu) is dpkg. To download and install it (replace ${GRAFANA_VERSION} with the current version), use the following:

% sudo apt-get install -y adduser libfontconfig1
% wget https://dl.grafana.com/oss/release/grafana_${GRAFANA_VERSION}_amd64.deb
% sudo dpkg -i grafana_${GRAFANA_VERSION}_amd64.deb

To start up Grafana, use the following:

% systemctl daemon-reload
% systemctl start grafana-server
% systemctl status grafana-server

To keep Grafana running even after a reboot, use the following:

% sudo systemctl enable grafana-server.service

Grafana for Windows

Installation for Windows is straightforward:

  1. Go to https://grafana.com/grafana/download?platform=windows.
  2. Download the latest MSI installer file from the download link.
  3. Launch the .msi file to install.

Grafana Cloud

If you would rather not install Grafana on your computer, or you don’t have access to a computer that can run Grafana, there is another option—Grafana will host a free instance for you. Free Grafana Cloud hosting provides very generous limits on the number of users, metrics, logs, and traces. To sign up for the hosted version, go to https://grafana.com/get/ and select Cloud.

Now that you have installed and started up Grafana, let’s have a look at the interface. Grafana is a web application, so we’ll connect to it with an ordinary web browser such as Chrome, Safari, or Edge.

Connecting to the Grafana server

Once you have installed and launched Grafana, open a browser page to access the Grafana application. It can be found at http://localhost:3000. If everything goes well, you should see a login page, as follows:

Figure 1.5 – Grafana login

Figure 1.5 – Grafana login

Log in with the admin username with the password admin. You will then be prompted to change it to something more secure (which you can skip if you wish). Once you have logged in, you should see the base Grafana interface:

Figure 1.6 – Grafana home page

Figure 1.6 – Grafana home page

Great job! You’ve successfully installed and connected the Grafana application.

Summary

Congratulations! Over the course of this chapter, we learned about data visualization and why Grafana is a powerful tool for data visualization. We also downloaded and installed Grafana. Finally, we launched the Grafana application from our browser, setting us on a learning path for future chapters.

In our next chapter, we’ll take a tour of the Grafana interface and familiarize ourselves with its basic features. This will serve as a foundation for upcoming tutorial exercises. I’m looking forward to our shared journey!

Further reading

The official Grafana documentation can be found on their website at https://grafana.com/docs/.

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Key benefits

  • Install, set up, and configure Grafana for real-time data analysis, visualization, and alerting
  • Visualize and monitor data using data sources such as InfluxDB, Telegraf, Prometheus, and Elasticsearch
  • Explore Grafana's cloud support with Microsoft Azure, Amazon CloudWatch, and Google Cloud Monitoring
  • Purchase of the print or Kindle book includes a free PDF eBook

Description

Get ready to unlock the full potential of the open-source Grafana observability platform, ideal for analyzing and monitoring time-series data with this updated second edition. This beginners guide will help you get up to speed with Grafana’s latest features for querying, visualizing, and exploring logs and metrics, no matter where they are stored. Starting with the basics, this book demonstrates how to quickly install and set up a Grafana server using Docker. You’ll then be introduced to the main components of the Grafana interface before learning how to analyze and visualize data from sources such as InfluxDB, Telegraf, Prometheus, Logstash, and Elasticsearch. The book extensively covers key panel visualizations in Grafana, including Time Series, Stat, Table, Bar Gauge, and Text, and guides you in using Python to pipeline data, transformations to facilitate analytics, and templating to build dynamic dashboards. Exploring real-time data streaming with Telegraf, Promtail, and Loki, you’ll work with observability features like alerting rules and integration with PagerDuty and Slack. As you progress, the book addresses the administrative aspects of Grafana, from configuring users and organizations to implementing user authentication with Okta and LDAP, as well as organizing dashboards into folders, and more. By the end of this book, you’ll have gained all the knowledge you need to start building interactive dashboards.

Who is this book for?

This book is for business intelligence developers, business analysts, data analysts, and anyone interested in performing time-series data analysis and monitoring using Grafana. You’ll also find this book useful if you’re looking to create and share interactive dashboards or get up to speed with the latest features of Grafana. Although no prior knowledge of Grafana is required, basic knowledge of data visualization and some Python programming experience will help you understand the concepts covered in the book.

What you will learn

  • Learn the techniques of data visualization using Grafana
  • Get familiar with the major components of Time series visualization
  • Explore data transformation operations, query inspector, and time interval settings
  • Work with advanced dashboard features, such as annotations, variable-based templating, and dashboard linking and sharing
  • Connect user authentication through Okta, Google, GitHub, and other external providers
  • Discover Grafana's monitoring support for cloud service infrastructures

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Length: 542 pages
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Length: 542 pages
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Grafana
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Table of Contents

22 Chapters
Part 1 – Getting Started with Grafana Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Chapter 1: Introducing Data Visualization with Grafana Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Chapter 2: Touring the Grafana Interface Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Chapter 3: Diving into Grafana's Time Series Visualization Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Part 2 – Real-World Grafana Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Chapter 4: Connecting Grafana to a Prometheus Data Source Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Chapter 5: Extracting and Visualizing Data with InfluxDB and Grafana Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Chapter 6: Shaping Data with Grafana Transformations Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Chapter 7: Surveying Key Grafana Visualizations Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Chapter 8: Surveying Additional Grafana Visualizations Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Chapter 9: Creating Insightful Dashboards Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Chapter 10: Working with Advanced Dashboard Features and Elasticsearch Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Chapter 11: Streaming Real-Time IoT Data from Telegraf Agent to Grafana Live Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Chapter 12: Monitoring Data Streams with Grafana Alerts Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Chapter 13: Exploring Log Data with Grafana’s Loki Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Part 3 – Managing Grafana Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Chapter 14: Organizing Dashboards and Folders Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Chapter 15: Managing Permissions for Users, Teams, and Organizations Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Chapter 16: Authenticating Grafana Logins Using LDAP or OAuth 2 Providers Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Chapter 17: Cloud Monitoring AWS, Azure, and GCP Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Index Chevron down icon Chevron up icon
Other Books You May Enjoy Chevron down icon Chevron up icon

Customer reviews

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5 star 33.3%
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3 star 33.3%
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1 star 33.3%
AB Mar 11, 2024
Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon 5
I have been implementing Grafana based data visualization for our various Digitalization requirements for my global organization. I always had the challenge in training others and bringing them up to speed with Grafana.This book is well written and organized for the new as well as the experienced as a reference book. Large organizations trying to drive digitalization/cloud strategies etc need to visualize their continuous progress. To do that, every appropriately involved person needs to bring up their creative way of data identification and visualization.This book should be digitally or physically available to the engineers/operations personnel to get into the world of Grafana. This book shall facilitate way more than an introduction. I highly recommend this book.
Amazon Verified review Amazon
N/A Nov 14, 2024
Full star icon Full star icon Full star icon Empty star icon Empty star icon 3
Here's a crappy review that (a) I hope stops the onslaught of "review now!" emails and which will catch somebody's eye: You can't prompt for a review of a 542-page volume after just 2 days and expect a realistic review from the vast majority of your customer base. If you really want legitimate feedback, you need to wait a least a couple weeks.
Feefo Verified review Feefo
N/A Nov 11, 2024
Full star icon Empty star icon Empty star icon Empty star icon Empty star icon 1
Here's a crappy review that (a) I hope stops the onslaught of "review now!" emails and which will catch somebody's eye: You can't prompt for a review of a 542-page volume after just 2 days and expect a realistic review from the vast majority of your customer base. If you really want legitimate feedback, you need to wait a least a couple weeks.
Feefo Verified review Feefo
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FAQs

What is included in a Packt subscription? Chevron down icon Chevron up icon

A subscription provides you with full access to view all Packt and licnesed content online, this includes exclusive access to Early Access titles. Depending on the tier chosen you can also earn credits and discounts to use for owning content

How can I cancel my subscription? Chevron down icon Chevron up icon

To cancel your subscription with us simply go to the account page - found in the top right of the page or at https://subscription.packtpub.com/my-account/subscription - From here you will see the ‘cancel subscription’ button in the grey box with your subscription information in.

What are credits? Chevron down icon Chevron up icon

Credits can be earned from reading 40 section of any title within the payment cycle - a month starting from the day of subscription payment. You also earn a Credit every month if you subscribe to our annual or 18 month plans. Credits can be used to buy books DRM free, the same way that you would pay for a book. Your credits can be found in the subscription homepage - subscription.packtpub.com - clicking on ‘the my’ library dropdown and selecting ‘credits’.

What happens if an Early Access Course is cancelled? Chevron down icon Chevron up icon

Projects are rarely cancelled, but sometimes it's unavoidable. If an Early Access course is cancelled or excessively delayed, you can exchange your purchase for another course. For further details, please contact us here.

Where can I send feedback about an Early Access title? Chevron down icon Chevron up icon

If you have any feedback about the product you're reading, or Early Access in general, then please fill out a contact form here and we'll make sure the feedback gets to the right team. 

Can I download the code files for Early Access titles? Chevron down icon Chevron up icon

We try to ensure that all books in Early Access have code available to use, download, and fork on GitHub. This helps us be more agile in the development of the book, and helps keep the often changing code base of new versions and new technologies as up to date as possible. Unfortunately, however, there will be rare cases when it is not possible for us to have downloadable code samples available until publication.

When we publish the book, the code files will also be available to download from the Packt website.

How accurate is the publication date? Chevron down icon Chevron up icon

The publication date is as accurate as we can be at any point in the project. Unfortunately, delays can happen. Often those delays are out of our control, such as changes to the technology code base or delays in the tech release. We do our best to give you an accurate estimate of the publication date at any given time, and as more chapters are delivered, the more accurate the delivery date will become.

How will I know when new chapters are ready? Chevron down icon Chevron up icon

We'll let you know every time there has been an update to a course that you've bought in Early Access. You'll get an email to let you know there has been a new chapter, or a change to a previous chapter. The new chapters are automatically added to your account, so you can also check back there any time you're ready and download or read them online.

I am a Packt subscriber, do I get Early Access? Chevron down icon Chevron up icon

Yes, all Early Access content is fully available through your subscription. You will need to have a paid for or active trial subscription in order to access all titles.

How is Early Access delivered? Chevron down icon Chevron up icon

Early Access is currently only available as a PDF or through our online reader. As we make changes or add new chapters, the files in your Packt account will be updated so you can download them again or view them online immediately.

How do I buy Early Access content? Chevron down icon Chevron up icon

Early Access is a way of us getting our content to you quicker, but the method of buying the Early Access course is still the same. Just find the course you want to buy, go through the check-out steps, and you’ll get a confirmation email from us with information and a link to the relevant Early Access courses.

What is Early Access? Chevron down icon Chevron up icon

Keeping up to date with the latest technology is difficult; new versions, new frameworks, new techniques. This feature gives you a head-start to our content, as it's being created. With Early Access you'll receive each chapter as it's written, and get regular updates throughout the product's development, as well as the final course as soon as it's ready.We created Early Access as a means of giving you the information you need, as soon as it's available. As we go through the process of developing a course, 99% of it can be ready but we can't publish until that last 1% falls in to place. Early Access helps to unlock the potential of our content early, to help you start your learning when you need it most. You not only get access to every chapter as it's delivered, edited, and updated, but you'll also get the finalized, DRM-free product to download in any format you want when it's published. As a member of Packt, you'll also be eligible for our exclusive offers, including a free course every day, and discounts on new and popular titles.