This page is not yet available in Spanish. We are working on its translation. If you have any questions or feedback about our current translation project, feel free to reach out to us!
This guide covers installing Agent 6. Datadog recommends installing or upgrading to Agent 7 for the latest features. For information on installing the latest version of the Agent, follow the latest Agent Installation Instructions. For information on upgrading to Agent 7 from an earlier version, see Upgrade to Datadog Agent v7.
macOS
Datadog Agent version 6 requires macOS 10.12 or higher.
Agent 6.34 is the last release to support macOS 10.12.
Agent 6.38 is the last Agent 6 release for macOS.
Install the Agent
Command line
Run the following command, replacing MY_API_KEY with your Datadog API key:
The Agent runs at login. You can disable it from the system tray.
LaunchDaemon
The Datadog Agent can be installed as a system-wide LaunchDaemon by specifying DD_SYSTEMDAEMON_INSTALL=true and DD_SYSTEMDAEMON_USER_GROUP=username:groupname. Replace MY_API_KEY with your Datadog API key:
The Agent runs at system startup. A valid non-root user and its group must be provided using the DD_SYSTEMDAEMON_USER_GROUP variable. The agent process runs under this user and group.
The system tray app is not supported under system-wide LaunchDaemon installs.
Add the following line to /opt/datadog-agent/etc/datadog.yaml, replacing MY_API_KEY with your Datadog API key:
api_key: MY_API_KEY
site: datad0g.com
Manage the Agent
To manage the Agent, use:
the Datadog Agent app in the system tray for a single user install.
launchctl for a system-wide LaunchDaemon install.
the datadog-agent command. The binary is located in /usr/local/bin.
Enable or disable integrations in /opt/datadog-agent/etc/conf.d.
Windows
Starting with release 6.11.0, the core and APM/trace components of the Windows Agent run under the ddagentuser account and are created at install time, instead of running under the LOCAL_SYSTEM account. If you’re upgrading from a Datadog Agent version6.x to 6.11 or greater, review the Windows Agent user documentation before your upgrade.
Links to all available versions of the Windows installer are available in JSON format.
The one-step command installs the APT packages for the Datadog Agent and prompts you for your password.
If the Agent is not already installed on your machine and you don’t want it to start automatically after the installation, prepend DD_INSTALL_ONLY=true to the command before running it.
If you have an existing Agent configuration file, existing values are retained during the update.
You can configure some of the Agent options during the initial install process. For more information, check the install_script configuration options.
To install the Agent, run the following command, replacing MY_API_KEY with your Datadog API key:
If you’re not upgrading and do not want to use an old configuration, copy the example config into place and install the Agent. Replace MY_API_KEY with your Datadog API key:
sudo sh -c "sed 's/api_key:.*/api_key: MY_API_KEY/' /etc/datadog-agent/datadog.yaml.example > /etc/datadog-agent/datadog.yaml"
Configure the Datadog region:
sudo sh -c "sed -i 's/# site:.*/site: datad0g.com/'
/etc/datadog-agent/datadog.yaml"
Ensure the Agent user’s permissions are correct::
sudo sh -c "chown dd-agent:dd-agent /etc/datadog-agent/datadog.yaml && chmod 640 /etc/datadog-agent/datadog.yaml"
Start the Agent:
sudo systemctl restart datadog-agent.service
One-step install
The one-step command installs the APT packages for the Datadog Agent and prompts you for your password. If the Agent is not already installed on your machine and you don’t want it to start automatically after the installation, prepend DD_INSTALL_ONLY=true to the command before running it.
Run the following command, replacing MY_API_KEY with your Datadog API key:
If you’re not upgrading and do not want to use an old configuration, copy the example config into place and install the Agent. Replace MY_API_KEY with your Datadog API key:
sudo sh -c "sed 's/api_key:.*/api_key: MY_API_KEY/' /etc/datadog-agent/datadog.yaml.example > /etc/datadog-agent/datadog.yaml"
Configure the Datadog region:
sudo sh -c "sed -i 's/# site:.*/site: datad0g.com/' /etc/datadog-agent/datadog.yaml"
Ensure the Agent user’s permissions are correct::
sudo sh -c "chown dd-agent:dd-agent /etc/datadog-agent/datadog.yaml && chmod 640 /etc/datadog-agent/datadog.yaml"
Start the Agent:
Ubuntu 16.04 and higher:
sudo systemctl restart datadog-agent.service
Ubuntu 14.04:
sudo initctl start datadog-agent
One-step install
The one-step command installs the YUM packages for the Datadog Agent and prompts you for your password.
If the Agent is not already installed on your machine and you don’t want it to start automatically after the installation, prepend DD_INSTALL_ONLY=true to the command before running it.
If you have an existing Agent configuration file, existing values are retained during the update.
You can configure some of the Agent options during the initial install process. For more information, check the install_script configuration options.
Run the following command, replacing MY_API_KEY with your Datadog API key:
If you’re not upgrading and do not want to use an old configuration, copy the example config into place and install the Agent. Replace MY_API_KEY with your Datadog API key:
sudo sh -c "sed 's/api_key:.*/api_key: MY_API_KEY/' /etc/datadog-agent/datadog.yaml.example > /etc/datadog-agent/datadog.yaml"
Configure the Datadog region:
sudo sh -c "sed -i 's/# site:.*/site: datad0g.com/' /etc/datadog-agent/datadog.yaml"
Ensure the Agent user’s permissions are correct::
sudo sh -c "chown dd-agent:dd-agent /etc/datadog-agent/datadog.yaml && chmod 640 /etc/datadog-agent/datadog.yaml"
Start the Agent:
Amazon Linux 2.0:
sudo systemctl restart datadog-agent.service
Amazon Linux 1.0:
sudo initctl start datadog-agent
One-step install
The one-step command installs the YUM packages for the Datadog Agent and prompts you for your password.
If the Agent is not already installed on your machine and you don’t want it to start automatically after the installation, prepend DD_INSTALL_ONLY=true to the command before running it.
If you have an existing Agent configuration file, existing values are retained during the update.
You can configure some of the Agent options during the initial install process. For more information, check the install_script configuration options.
Run the following command, replacing MY_API_KEY with your Datadog API key:
If you’re not upgrading and do not want to use an old configuration, copy the example config into place and install the Agent. Replace MY_API_KEY with your Datadog API key:
sudo sh -c "sudo sh -c "sed 's/api_key:.*/api_key: .*/api_key: MY_API_KEY/' /etc/datadog-agent/datadog.yaml.example > /etc/datadog-agent/datadog.yaml"
Configure the Datadog region:
sudo sh -c "sed -i 's/# site:.*/site: datad0g.com/' /etc/datadog-agent/datadog.yaml"
Ensure the Agent user’s permissions are correct::
sudo sh -c "chown dd-agent:dd-agent /etc/datadog-agent/datadog.yaml && chmod 640 /etc/datadog-agent/datadog.yaml"
Start the Agent:
Centos or Red Hat 7 and higher:
sudo systemctl restart datadog-agent.service
Centos or Red Hat 6:
sudo initctl start datadog-agent
One-step install
The one-step command installs the YUM packages for the Datadog Agent and prompts you for your password.
If the Agent is not already installed on your machine and you don’t want it to start automatically after the installation, prepend DD_INSTALL_ONLY=true to the command before running it.
If you have an existing Agent configuration file, existing values are retained during the update.
You can configure some of the Agent options during the initial install process. For more information, check the install_script configuration options.
Run the following command, replacing MY_API_KEY with your Datadog API key:
If you’re not upgrading and do not want to use an old configuration, copy the example config into place and install the Agent. Replace MY_API_KEY with your Datadog API key:
sudo sh -c "sudo sh -c "sed 's/api_key:.*/api_key: .*/api_key: MY_API_KEY/' /etc/datadog-agent/datadog.yaml.example > /etc/datadog-agent/datadog.yaml"
Configure the Datadog region:
sudo sh -c "sed -i 's/# site:.*/site: datad0g.com/' /etc/datadog-agent/datadog.yaml"
Ensure the Agent user’s permissions are correct::
sudo sh -c "chown dd-agent:dd-agent /etc/datadog-agent/datadog.yaml && chmod 640 /etc/datadog-agent/datadog.yaml"
Restart the Agent:
sudo systemctl restart datadog-agent.service
One-step install
The one-step command installs the YUM packages for the Datadog Agent and prompts you for your password.
If the Agent is not already installed on your machine and you don’t want it to start automatically after the installation, prepend DD_INSTALL_ONLY=true to the command before running it.
If you have an existing Agent configuration file, existing values are retained during the update.
You can configure some of the Agent options during the initial install process. For more information, check the install_script configuration options.
Run the following command, replacing MY_API_KEY with your Datadog API key:
If you’re not upgrading and do not want to use an old configuration, copy the example config into place and install the Agent. Replace MY_API_KEY with your Datadog API key:
sudo sh -c "sudo sh -c "sed 's/api_key:.*/api_key: .*/api_key: MY_API_KEY/' /etc/datadog-agent/datadog.yaml.example > /etc/datadog-agent/datadog.yaml"
Configure the Datadog region:
sudo sh -c "sed -i 's/# site:.*/site: datad0g.com/' /etc/datadog-agent/datadog.yaml"
Ensure the Agent user’s permissions are correct::
sudo sh -c "chown dd-agent:dd-agent /etc/datadog-agent/datadog.yaml && chmod 640 /etc/datadog-agent/datadog.yaml"
Restart the Agent:
sudo systemctl restart datadog-agent.service
One-step install
The one-step command installs the YUM packages for the Datadog Agent and prompts you for your password.
If the Agent is not already installed on your machine and you don’t want it to start automatically after the installation, prepend DD_INSTALL_ONLY=true to the command before running it.
If you have an existing Agent configuration file, existing values are retained during the update.
You can configure some of the Agent options during the initial install process. For more information, check the install_script configuration options.
Run the following command, replacing MY_API_KEY with your Datadog API key:
If you’re not upgrading and do not want to use an old configuration, copy the example config into place and install the Agent. Replace MY_API_KEY with your Datadog API key:
sudo sh -c "sudo sh -c "sed 's/api_key:.*/api_key: .*/api_key: MY_API_KEY/' /etc/datadog-agent/datadog.yaml.example > /etc/datadog-agent/datadog.yaml"
Configure the Datadog region:
sudo sh -c "sed -i 's/# site:.*/site: datad0g.com/' /etc/datadog-agent/datadog.yaml"
Ensure the Agent user’s permissions are correct::
sudo sh -c "chown dd-agent:dd-agent /etc/datadog-agent/datadog.yaml && chmod 640 /etc/datadog-agent/datadog.yaml"
Restart the Agent:
sudo systemctl restart datadog-agent.service
One-step install
The one-step command installs the latest BFF package for the Datadog Agent and prompts you for your password if necessary. If the Agent is not already installed on your machine and you don’t want it to start automatically after the installation, prepend DD_INSTALL_ONLY=true to the command before running it.
Run the following command, replacing MY_API_KEY with your Datadog API key:
Ensure that the Datadog Agent has the correct permissions:
sudo sh -c "chown dd-agent:dd-agent /etc/datadog-agent/datadog.yaml && chmod 660 /etc/datadog-agent/datadog.yaml"
Stop the Agent service:
sudo stopsrc -s datadog-agent
Verify the Agent service has stopped:
sudo lssrc -s datadog-agent
Restart the Agent service:
sudo startsrc -s datadog-agent
Cloud and containers
Run the Datadog Agent directly in your Kubernetes cluster to start collecting your cluster and applications metrics, traces, and logs. You can deploy the Agent with a Helm chart, the Datadog Operator or directly with a DaemonSet. For more information about installing the Datadog Agent on different distributions, see the Kubernetes distributions documentation.
Installing the Datadog Agent
To install the chart with a custom release name RELEASE_NAME:
This chart adds the Datadog Agent to all nodes in your cluster using a DaemonSet. Soon after installation, Datadog begins to report hosts and metrics data in your account.
Enabling log collection
To enable log collection with Helm, update your datadog-values.yaml file with the following log collection configuration:
The one-step installation command runs a signed Docker container which embeds the Datadog Agent to monitor your host. The Docker integration is enabled by default, as well as Autodiscovery in automatic configuration mode.
You must not run more than one Datadog Agent per node. Running multiple Agents may result in unexpected behavior.
For a one-step install, run the following command. Replace MY_API_KEY with your Datadog API key:
If the one-step installation command does not work, it’s possible that your system mounts the cgroup directory in an unexpected place or does not use CGroups for memory management. CGroups are required for the Docker check to succeed. To enable CGroups, see the Setup documentation.
If CGroups are enabled, but the check is failing because of an unexpected cgroup directory location:
Run mount | grep "cgroup type tmpfs" to retrieve the location of the cgroup directory.
Replace the first occurence of /sys/fs/cgroup in the one-step installation command with the location of the cgroup directory.
Send custom metrics with DogStatsD
By default, DogStatsD only listens to localhost. To listen to DogStatsD packets from other containers:
Add -e DD_DOGSTATSD_NON_LOCAL_TRAFFIC=true to the container’s parameters.
Bind the container’s statsd port to the hosts’s IP by adding the -p 8125:8125/udp option to the container’s parameters.
Configure your client library to send UDP packets to the hosts’s IP.
Running CoreOS Container Linux is supported with the Docker runtime. For installation instructions, see Docker.
To run CoreOS Tectonic on Kubernetes, see Kubernetes.
Starting with version 6.1, the Datadog Agent supports monitoring OpenShift Origin and Enterprise clusters. Depending on your needs and the security constraints of your cluster, three deployment scenarios are supported:
The Datadog Agent BOSH release only works on Ubuntu and Red Hat stemcells.
Upload the Datadog Agent release to your BOSH Director:
# BOSH CLI v1bosh upload release https://cloudfoundry.datadoghq.com/datadog-agent/datadog-agent-boshrelease-latest.tgz
# BOSH CLI v2bosh upload-release https://cloudfoundry.datadoghq.com/datadog-agent/datadog-agent-boshrelease-latest.tgz
Configure Datadog as an addon in your runtime config. Replace MY_API_KEY with your Datadog API key::
# runtime.yml---releases:- name:datadog-agentversion:$UPLOADED_VERSION# e.g. 1.0.5140addons:- name:datadogjobs:- name:dd-agentrelease:datadog-agentproperties:dd:use_dogstatsd:yesdogstatsd_port:18125# Many Cloud Foundry deployments have their own StatsD listening on port 8125api_key:MY_API_KEYtags:["my-cloud-foundry-deployment"]# optional. Add any tags you wish# Optionally, enable any Agent Checks here# integrations:# directory:# init_config: {}# instances:# directory: "."
Install the Datadog Ansible collection from Ansible Galaxy on your Ansible server:
ansible-galaxy collection install datadog.dd
The Datadog Ansible collection is also available through the Red Hat Automation Hub where it is officially certified by Red Hat.
Installing the collection is recommended. If needed, you can also install Datadog using the standalone role.
To deploy the Datadog Agent on hosts, add the Datadog role and your API key to your playbook. Replace MY_API_KEY with your Datadog API key:
- hosts:serverstasks:- name:Import the Datadog Agent role from the Datadog collectionimport_role:name:datadog.dd.agentvars:datadog_api_key:"MY_API_KEY"datadog_agent_major_version:6datadog_site:"datad0g.com"
To ensure that the Agent can group your hosts together, only use node hostnames that the Datadog Agent is tracking. You can check what hostnames the Agent is tracking using the following command:
sudo datadog-agent status
Specific Agent checks
To use a specific Agent check or integration on one of your nodes, you can use the datadog_checks variable. Here is an example for the process check:
- hosts:serverstasks:- name:Import the Datadog Agent role from the Datadog collectionimport_role:name:datadog.dd.agentvars:datadog_api_key:"MY_API_KEY"datadog_agent_major_version:6datadog_site:"datad0g.com"datadog_checks:process:init_config:instances:- name:sshsearch_string:['ssh','sshd']- name:syslogsearch_string:['rsyslog']cpu_check_interval:0.2exact_match:trueignore_denied_access:true
You can find more examples of the Agent role usage on the GitHub repo for the standalone role.
Metrics and events
To get metrics and events on Datadog after Ansible runs, see the Ansible callback project’s GitHub page.
Starting with version 2.9.0, the datadog_agent module supports both Windows and Linux nodes. Previous versions of the datadog_agent module only support Linux nodes.
Requirements:
Requires Puppet Open Source version >= 4.6 or Puppet Enterprise version >= 2016.4
Install the Agent
Install the datadog_agent module from the Puppet Forge on your Puppet server:
For fresh installs, run the module install command:
puppet module install datadog-datadog_agent
If the module is already installed, upgrade it:
puppet module upgrade datadog-datadog_agent
To deploy the Datadog Agent on nodes, add this parametrized class to your manifests. Replace MY_API_KEY with your Datadog API key:
To ensure that the Agent can group your hosts together, only use node hostnames that the Datadog Agent is tracking. You can check what hostnames the Agent is tracking using the following command:
sudo datadog-agent status
Enable reporting to Datadog on your Puppet server:
Add the following parameters to /etc/puppet/puppet.conf:
Run Puppet on your Puppet server to install all necessary dependencies.
Restart your Puppet server to begin receiving Puppet data in Datadog.
Specific Agent checks
To use a specific Agent check or integration on one of your nodes, see the relevant integration manifest for a code sample. Here is an example for the elasticsearch integration:
If you are using Berkshelf, add the cookbook to your Berksfile:
cookbook 'datadog', '~> 4.0'
If you’re not using Berkshelf, install the cookbook in to your repository using Knife:
knife cookbook site install datadog
Set the Datadog-specific attributes in either a role, environment, or another recipe. Replace MY_API_KEY with your Datadog API key:
node.default['datadog']['api_key'] = "MY_API_KEY"
# Use an existing application key or create a new one for Chef
node.default['datadog']['application_key'] = "Generate Application Key"
# Enable install for Agent version 6
node.default['datadog']['agent_major_version'] = 6
# Set the Datadog site
node.default['datadog']['site'] = "datad0g.com"
The Datadog Saltstack formula only supports Debian-based and RedHat-based systems.
The following instructions add the Datadog formula to the base Salt environment. To add it to another Salt environment, replace references to base with the name of your Salt environment.
Install using gitfs_remotes
Install the Datadog formula in the base environment of your Salt Master node, using the gitfs_remotes option in your Salt Master configuration file (by default /etc/salt/master):
fileserver_backend:- roots# Active by default, necessary to be able to use the local salt files we define in the next steps- gitfs# Adds gitfs as a fileserver backend to be able to use gitfs_remotesgitfs_remotes:- https://github.com/DataDog/datadog-formula.git:- saltenv:- base:- ref:3.0# Pin here the version of the formula you want to use