Splunk® App for PCI Compliance

Installation and Configuration Manual

This documentation does not apply to the most recent version of Splunk® App for PCI Compliance. For documentation on the most recent version, go to the latest release.

Deployment options

Splunk App for PCI Compliance is available as a standalone app, or as a content addition to Splunk Enterprise Security.

Common deployment architectures

This topic covers how to integrate the Splunk App for PCI Compliance into common Splunk Enterprise architectures:

  • Single instance deployment
  • Distributed deployment

Single instance deployment

You can install the Splunk App for PCI Compliance (for Splunk Enterprise) on a single Splunk platform instance. A single instance serves as both search head and indexer, providing both search and storage capability. A single instance deployment can support one or two users running concurrent searches.

You can also install the Splunk App for PCI Compliance (for Splunk Enterprise Security) along with Splunk Enterprise Security on a single Splunk platform instance, but a distributed deployment is recommended.

Distributed deployment

A distributed Splunk Enterprise deployment is recommended for the Splunk App for PCI Compliance. A dedicated search head provides the web interface and search management, while a collection of indexers provide improved search performance by distributing the workload of searches across multiple nodes. Multiple indexers also allow for the distribution of incoming data from the forwarders and the workload of processing that data.

You can install this app on a search head cluster and run it with an indexer cluster.

Search Head considerations

Install the Splunk App for PCI Compliance on one dedicated search head or search head cluster. Install only Common Information Model (CIM)-compatible add-ons on a search head or search head cluster with this app.

Install the Splunk App for PCI Compliance (for Splunk Enterprise Security) on the same search head as Splunk Enterprise Security 4.2 or later.

Hardware Requirement Additional Considerations
CPU cores 16 Additional cores needed depending on search concurrency, search type, and number of users.
Memory 16GB RAM Add additional memory to address search concurrency, number of enabled correlation searches, and the size of the asset and identity tables.

Search head clustering

You can install the Splunk App for PCI Compliance on a search head cluster and run it with an indexer cluster. Splunk App for PCI Compliance supports installation on Linux-based search head clusters only. Review the requirements and differences of search head clustering.

Indexer considerations

Indexing is an I/O-intensive process. The indexers require sufficient disk I/O to ingest and parse data efficiently while responding to search requests. For the latest IOPS requirements to run Splunk Enterprise, see Reference Hardware: Indexer in the Capacity Planning Manual. A Splunk App for PCI Compliance indexer requires a minimum of 32GB of RAM and 16 CPU Cores.

Using the Splunk App for PCI Compliance (for Splunk Enterprise Security) on the same search head as Splunk Enterprise Security introduces added indexer load of 15%. This results in reduced throughput capacity of 85GB, compared with 100GB per day when using Splunk Enterprise Security by itself.

A collection of indexers can serve more than one search head. Additional search heads using the same indexers will impact the total performance, and reduce the resources available to the Enterprise Security search infrastructure. Always increase the number of indexers to scale with increases in search load and search concurrency.

Since the Splunk App for PCI Compliance uses the same framework as Splunk Enterprise Security, the Performance test results are useful to review. Data model usage and correlation search load are the two largest factors in sizing the Splunk App for PCI Compliance. Changing correlation search counts and data model usage may require additional indexers.

Indexes

Splunk App for PCI Compliance defines custom indexes for event storage. For more information about the indexes required, see "Configure and deploy indexes" in the Installation and Upgrade Manual for Splunk Enterprise Security.

Indexer clustering

Splunk App for PCI Compliance supports both single site and multisite cluster architectures. See The basics of indexer cluster architecture and Multisite cluster architecture in the Managing Indexers and Clusters Manual.

A single site or multisite indexer cluster architecture may have one search head or a search head cluster with a running instance of the Splunk App for PCI Compliance. Additional, single instance search heads cannot run this app.

Data model accelerations

Splunk App for PCI Compliance accelerates data models to provide dashboard panel and correlation search results. Data model acceleration uses the indexers for processing and storage, placing the accelerated data alongside each index. To calculate the additional storage needed on the indexers based on the total volume of data, use the following formula: accelerated data model storage/year = data volume per day * 3.4

This formula assumes that you are using the recommended retention rates for the accelerated data models.

Example: If you process 100GB/day of data volume for use with this app, you need approximately 340GB more space available across all of the indexers to allow for up to one year of data model retention and source retention.

The storage used for data model acceleration is not added to index sizing calculations for maintenance tasks such as bucket rolling and free space checks.

Splunk Enterprise 6.1.0 and later implements new configuration parameters for data model acceleration tasks. See Advanced configurations for persistently accelerated data models in the Knowledge Manager Manual.

TSIDX reduction compatibility

A retention policy for an index's TSDIX files is available in Splunk Enterprise 6.4.x. For more information on TSIDX reduction, see Reduce tsidx disk usage in the Splunk Enterprise Managing Indexers and Clusters of Indexers manual. Setting a retention policy for the TSIDX files does not effect data model acceleration retention.

Some searches provided with the Splunk App for PCI compliance will not work on buckets with reduced TSIDX files.

Panel/Search Name Default time range Workaround
Forwarder Audit panel: Event Count Over Time by Host -30d Set the TSIDX retention to a value greater then the time range, or reduce the default time range for the search to a value under the TSIDX retention value.
Saved Search: Audit - Event Count Over Time By Top 10 Hosts -30d Set the TSIDX retention to a value greater then the time range, or reduce the default time range for the search to a value under the TSIDX retention value.
Saved Search: Audit - Events Per Day - Lookup Gen -1d Set the TSIDX retention to a value greater then the default time range.
Saved Search: Endpoint - Index Time Delta 2 - Summary Gen -1d Set the TSIDX retention to a value greater then the default time range.

Deploying add-ons

Deploy add-ons to forwarders and indexers to distribute index-time knowledge.

  • If you use a distributed deployment without index or search head clusters, use the deployment server. For information about the deployment server configuration and use, see About deployment server and forwarder management in the Updating Splunk Enterprise Instances Manual.
  • If you use indexer clustering, see Manage common configurations across all cluster peers and Manage app deployment across all cluster peers in the Managing Indexers and Clusters Manual.
  • If you use search head clustering, use the search head cluster deployer to distribute configurations across the set of search head cluster members. See Use the deployer to distribute apps and configuration updates in the Distributed Search Manual.
    • To facilitate using the deployer to manage configuration files with hashed passwords, the captain replicates its Splunk.secret file to all other cluster members during initial deployment of the cluster. For more information, see Deploy secure passwords across multiple servers in the Securing Splunk Enterprise Manual.
  • Splunk App for PCI Compliance includes the Distributed Configuration Management tool to gather the indexes.conf and index-time props.conf and transforms.conf settings from all enabled apps and add-ons on the search head and assemble them into one add-on.

Virtualized hardware

Installing Splunk App for PCI Compliance in a virtualized environment requires the same memory and CPU allocation as an installation in a non-virtualized environment. You must reserve all CPU and memory resources, with no oversubscription of hardware.

In a virtualized environment, test the storage IOPS across all Splunk platform indexer nodes simultaneously. The results from every node must conform to the Reference Hardware IOPS specified in the Capacity Planning Manual.

Insufficient storage performance is a common cause for poor search response and timeouts when scaling the Splunk platform in a virtualized environment.

Splunk Cloud

For more information on Splunk Cloud services, see the Splunk Cloud Products page.

Deploying with other apps

For optimal performance, install the Splunk App for PCI Compliance on a dedicated search head. The dedicated search head should not have any other apps installed, and use indexers that have only the necessary Common Information Model-compatible technology add-ons. In some cases, it might be necessary to install other apps on the same search head or instance as the Splunk App for PCI Compliance. Apps compatible with the Splunk App for PCI Compliance are documented as CIM-compatible. Splunk apps and other add-ons that are not CIM-compatible could prevent PCI Compliance searches and dashboards from functioning properly.

If you have Splunk Enterprise Security 4.x or later, you can install the Splunk App for PCI Compliance (for Splunk Enterprise Security) on the same search head. Test and consider the data volume that you process in your environment before doing so.

Remote data collection

Use forwarders to collect data from remote systems. See Using forwarding agents. A node where a forwarder is installed is a collection point for one or more data sources. The technology add-ons for those data sources should be installed on the forwarder, ensuring that the data is properly tagged. To manage and distribute technology add-ons across many forwarders, use the Splunk deployment server or a third party software distribution system. See About deployment server If Splunk Enterprise Security 4.x or later is already installed and the technology add-ons are already collecting data on a specific node, this node can act as a forwarder.

Last modified on 26 October, 2016
Identify data feeds   Data management overview

This documentation applies to the following versions of Splunk® App for PCI Compliance: 3.2.1


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