Book Image

Implementing Splunk 7, Third Edition - Third Edition

Book Image

Implementing Splunk 7, Third Edition - Third Edition

Overview of this book

Splunk is the leading platform that fosters an efficient methodology and delivers ways to search, monitor, and analyze growing amounts of big data. This book will allow you to implement new services and utilize them to quickly and efficiently process machine-generated big data. We introduce you to all the new features, improvements, and offerings of Splunk 7. We cover the new modules of Splunk: Splunk Cloud and the Machine Learning Toolkit to ease data usage. Furthermore, you will learn to use search terms effectively with Boolean and grouping operators. You will learn not only how to modify your search to make your searches fast but also how to use wildcards efficiently. Later you will learn how to use stats to aggregate values, a chart to turn data, and a time chart to show values over time; you'll also work with fields and chart enhancements and learn how to create a data model with faster data model acceleration. Once this is done, you will learn about XML Dashboards, working with apps, building advanced dashboards, configuring and extending Splunk, advanced deployments, and more. Finally, we teach you how to use the Machine Learning Toolkit and best practices and tips to help you implement Splunk services effectively and efficiently. By the end of this book, you will have learned about the Splunk software as a whole and implemented Splunk services in your tasks at projects
Table of Contents (19 chapters)
Title Page
Packt Upsell
Contributors
Preface
Index

Editing navigation


Navigation is controlled by an XML file that can be accessed by going to Settings | User interface | Navigation menus:

There can only be one active navigation file per app, and it is always called default.

After clicking on the name, we see the XML provided by the barebones template:

<nav search_view="search" color="#65A637"> 
 <view name="search" default='true' /> 
 <view name="data_models" /> 
 <view name="reports" /> 
 <view name="alerts" /> 
 <view name="dashboards" /> 
</nav> 

Note that if you check the navigation for another app (search), you will notice the same XML.

The structure of the XML is essentially the following:

nav 
view 
saved 
collection 
view 
a href 
saved 
divider 
collection 

The logic of navigation is probably best absorbed by simply editing it and seeing what happens. You should keep a backup as this XML is somewhat fragile and Splunk does not provide any kind of version control. Here are some general details...