1.0 Dashboard Basics In this section, we'll take a look at basic access to the FileWave dashboard and give information on it's various built-in components. If you intend to use this dashboard, but you are new to it, then this is the place to start. 1.1 Accessing the FileWave Dashboard What Your account will need permission to access the FileWave Dashboard. When/Why There are three permission levels for the dashboard for each admin logon: No Access Read-Only Access Read-Write Access The permissions are defined with the following options in the Manage Administrators Assistant:   How Accessing the dashboard itself is quite simple once your account has proper permissions.  From the WebAdmin, simply choose the Go To Dashboard link: You will automatically be authenticated using the already established credentials to the WebAdmin.  Note that all access to the dashboard is routed through the WebAdmin 1.2 Default Dashboard What When you open the dashboard, FileWave shows the default system dashboard: When/Why The default dashboard, FileWave System, gives you a quick health view of core FileWave services and configuration items. Green widgets indicate healthy or configured items, while red widgets point to items that need attention. How Resolve the underlying issue to clear the dashboard warning. In the example above, the dep widget is red because no macOS client is specified for use by DEP. After you upload the pre-configured client, the widget should turn green. 1.3 FileWave Provided Dashboards What FileWave includes several default dashboards. Some are useful for day-to-day admin checks, while others give FileWave Support a faster view into system health. When/Why Use these dashboards as reporting examples and starting points. They show common ways to organize FileWave system, configuration, patching, application, and deployment status data. Operations dashboards focus on FileWave system performance. FileWave dashboards show configuration and system details. Patching dashboards are examples you can use when building your own reporting around patch, application, and deployment status. How FileWave-provided dashboards are templates. You cannot edit them directly, but you can copy them and then adjust the panels, filters, transformations, and layout for your own reporting needs. 1.4 Switching Between Dashboards What Use dashboards to move between FileWave data views after you log in. When/Why Different dashboards show different slices of FileWave data. You can open dashboards in separate browser tabs, switch views in one tab, or use a playlist to cycle through dashboards automatically. How For basic switching, use the dashboard links in the header as shown below: You can also use Dashboards > Manage to browse dashboard folders, playlists, snapshots, and dashboard management actions: 1.5 Dashboard Panel/Widget Layout What Dashboard panels/widgets can be moved and resized so the dashboard shows the most useful information first. When/Why After you copy or add dashboard content, adjust the layout so related panels sit together and high-priority panels are easy to see. How Drag a panel/widget to move it. Use the panel edge or corner handles to resize it, as shown in the video below: 1.6 Exposing an Association to Dashboard What FileWave can expose an association to the Dashboard so deployment progress is visible as a Dashboard widget. When/Why Use this when a rollout is important enough that administrators or other stakeholders need a quick progress view. It is most useful for larger deployments, client upgrades, or staged rollouts where completion, remaining devices, warnings, and errors need to be watched without opening the association every time. How Open the association you want to track. On the association options, enable Expose to Dashboard. Save the association and confirm the change through your normal FileWave workflow. Open the Dashboard and review the association progress widget. The exact surrounding labels may vary by FileWave version, but the association option is shown below. After the change is active and clients report status, the Dashboard shows progress for the exposed association. Related content Configuring and using the Dashboard Using Associations with Filesets Importing a Grafana Dashboard What There's no need to build a grafana dashboard from scratch if you can "borrow" one from a friend.  This article explains how to import a grafana dashboard from another system. When/Why We'll want to import a dashboard whenever someone else has done the work for us, and we'd like to have a dashboard the easy way. How The steps are actually quite simple...from FileWave Anywhere, Go To Dashboard: Within the dashboard, go to Home> Dashboards: Then to New, Import: And then either import the JSON file or copy and paste the JSON content: Now just set a name and a destination (note: every dashboard must have a unique UID): And that is it, our new dashboard is imported: Related Content Content Packs Dashboard (Grafana)