Book Image

Improving Your Splunk Skills

By : James D. Miller, Paul R. Johnson, Josh Diakun, Derek Mock
Book Image

Improving Your Splunk Skills

By: James D. Miller, Paul R. Johnson, Josh Diakun, Derek Mock

Overview of this book

Splunk makes it easy for you to take control of your data and drive your business with the cutting edge of operational intelligence and business analytics. Through this Learning Path, you'll implement new services and utilize them to quickly and efficiently process machine-generated big data. You'll begin with an introduction to the new features, improvements, and offerings of Splunk 7. You'll learn to efficiently use wildcards and modify your search to make it faster. You'll learn how to enhance your applications by using XML dashboards and configuring and extending Splunk. You'll also find step-by-step demonstrations that'll walk you through building an operational intelligence application. As you progress, you'll explore data models and pivots to extend your intelligence capabilities. By the end of this Learning Path, you'll have the skills and confidence to implement various Splunk services in your projects. This Learning Path includes content from the following Packt products: Implementing Splunk 7 - Third Edition by James Miller Splunk Operational Intelligence Cookbook - Third Edition by Paul R Johnson, Josh Diakun, et al
Table of Contents (21 chapters)
Title Page

Locating Splunk configuration files

Splunk's configuration files live in $SPLUNK_HOME/etc. This is reminiscent of Unix's /etc directory but is instead contained within Splunk's directory structure.

This has the advantage that the files don't have to be owned by root. In fact, the entire Splunk installation can run as an unprivileged user (assuming you don't need to open a port below 1024 or read files only readable by another user).

The directories that contain configurations are as follows:

  • $SPLUNK_HOME/etc/system/default: These are the default configuration files that ship with Splunk. Never edit these files as they will be overwritten each time you upgrade.
  • $SPLUNK_HOME/etc/system/local: This is the location of the global configuration overrides specific to this host. There are very few configurations that need to live here—most configurations...