[[access]] == Access {kib} The fastest way to access {kib} is to use our hosted {es} Service. If you <>, access {kib} through the web application. [float] === Set up on cloud include::{docs-root}/shared/cloud/ess-getting-started.asciidoc[] [float] [[log-on-to-the-web-application]] === Log on to the web application If you are using a self-managed deployment, access {kib} through the web application on port 5601. . Point your web browser to the machine where you are running {kib} and specify the port number. For example, `localhost:5601` or `http://YOURDOMAIN.com:5601`. + To remotely connect to {kib}, set > to a non-loopback address. . Log on to your account. . Go to the home page, then click *{kib}*. . To make the {kib} page your landing page, click *Make this my landing page*. [float] [[status]] === Check the {kib} status The status page displays information about the server resource usage and installed plugins. To view the {kib} status page, use the status endpoint. For example, `localhost:5601/status`. [role="screenshot"] image::images/kibana-status-page-7_14_0.png[Kibana server status page] For JSON-formatted server status details, use the `localhost:5601/api/status` API endpoint. [float] [[not-ready]] === {kib} not ready If you receive an error that the {kib} `server is not ready`, check the following: * The {es} connectivity: + [source,sh] ---- `curl -XGET elasticsearch_ip_or_hostname:9200/` ---- * The {kib} logs: ** Linux, DEB or RPM package: `/var/log/kibana/kibana.log` ** Linux, tar.gz package: `$KIBANA_HOME/log/kibana.log` ** Windows: `$KIBANA_HOME\log\kibana.log` * The health status of `.kibana*` indices