Lance,

Thanks for the clarification. Yeah, the consensus seems to be to either 
issue the same REST command off-line (not available to Windows PMs, since I 
am not going to touch Windows with a pole shorter than 25m :-), or to write 
a server plug-in (would allow even Windows users to invoke the scripts).

But one question: When I click on the Info button near the upper right of a 
panel, it shows the JSON request as invoked by curl. But that's only a 
suggestion, right? In other words, my browser is not using curl?

I've run into issues with curl's buffer limitations with large queries, and 
am hoping that Kibana is only giving me a suggestion to use curl, but isn't 
telling my browser to use curl.

Brian

On Friday, September 26, 2014 2:51:38 PM UTC-4, Lance A. Brown wrote:
>
> On 2014-09-25 11:57 am, Brian wrote: 
> > And as my part of the bargain, I will use Perl, R, or whatever else is 
> > at my disposal to create custom commands that can run on the Kibana 
> > host and perform all of the analysis that our group needs. 
>
> Something to remember: The "Kibana host" is your browser.  The current 
> version of Kibana run entirely within the browser, making calls to 
> Elasticsearch for data, processing it and generating graphs all within 
> the browser.  There is no server-side operating component, just static 
> files that get loaded into your browser. 
>

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