Splunk® Enterprise

Managing Indexers and Clusters of Indexers

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Splunk Enterprise version 7.3 is no longer supported as of October 22, 2021. See the Splunk Software Support Policy for details. For information about upgrading to a supported version, see How to upgrade Splunk Enterprise.
This documentation does not apply to the most recent version of Splunk® Enterprise. For documentation on the most recent version, go to the latest release.
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Migrate existing data on an indexer cluster to SmartStore

You can migrate the existing data on your indexer cluster from local storage to the remote store.

This procedure describes how to migrate all the indexes on the indexer cluster to SmartStore. You can modify the procedure if you only want to migrate some of the indexes. Indexers support a mixed environment of SmartStore and non-SmartStore indexes.

Because this process requires the cluster to upload large amounts of data, it can take a long time to complete and can have a significant impact on concurrent indexing and searching.

You cannot revert an index to non-SmartStore after you migrate it to SmartStore.

Migrate data

Perform the migration operation in two phases:

  1. Test the SmartStore configurations and remote connectivity on a standalone test instance.
  2. Run the migration by applying the configurations to your production indexer cluster.

Prerequisites

1. Test the configuration on a standalone instance

The purpose of performing the test on a standalone instance is to:

  • test remote store connectivity.
  • validate the configuration.

Steps

  1. Ensure that you have met all prerequisites relevant to this test setup. In particular, read:
  2. Understand SmartStore security strategies and prepare to implement them as necessary during the deployment process. See SmartStore security strategies.
  3. Install a new Splunk Enterprise instance. For information on how to install Splunk Enterprise, read the Installation Manual.
  4. Edit indexes.conf in $SPLUNK_HOME/etc/system/local to specify the SmartStore settings for your indexes. These should be the same group of settings that you intend to use later on your production deployment.

    This example configures SmartStore indexes, using an S3 remote object store. The SmartStore-related settings are configured at the global level, which means that all indexes are SmartStore-enabled, and they all use a single remote storage volume, named "remote_store". The example also creates one new index, "cs_index".

    [default]
    # Configure all indexes to use the SmartStore remote volume called
    # "remote_store".
    # Note: If you want only some of your indexes to use SmartStore, 
    # place this setting under the individual stanzas for each of the 
    # SmartStore indexes, rather than here.
    remotePath = volume:remote_store/$_index_name
    
    # Configure the remote volume
    [volume:remote_store]
    storageType = remote
    
    # On the next line, the volume's path setting points to the remote storage location 
    # where indexes reside. Each SmartStore index resides directly below the location 
    # specified by the path setting. The <scheme> identifies a supported remote 
    # storage system type, such as S3. The <remote-location-specifier> is a 
    # string specific to the remote storage system that specifies the location 
    # of the indexes inside the remote system. 
    # This is an S3 example: "path = s3://mybucket/some/path". 
    
    path = <scheme>://<remote-location-specifier>
    
    # The following S3 settings are required only if you're using the access and secret 
    # keys. They are not needed if you are using AWS IAM roles.
    
    remote.s3.access_key = <S3 access key>
    remote.s3.secret_key = <S3 secret key>
    remote.s3.endpoint = https:|http://<S3 host>
    
    # Configure a test index.  
    # Here is the configuration for an example "cs_index" index.
    [cs_index]
    homePath = $SPLUNK_DB/cs_index/db
    thawedPath = $SPLUNK_DB/cs_index/thaweddb
    coldPath = $SPLUNK_DB/cs_index/colddb
    

    For details on these settings, see Configure SmartStore. Also see indexes.conf.spec in the Admin Manual.

  5. Restart the instance.
  6. Test the deployment:
    1. To confirm remote storage access:
      1. Place a sample text file in the remote store.
      2. On the Splunk Enterprise instance, run this command, which recursively lists any files that are present in the remote store:
        splunk cmd splunkd rfs -- ls --starts-with volume:remote_store
        

      If you see the sample file when you run the command, you have access to the remote store.

    2. Validate data transfer to the remote store:
      1. Send some data to the indexer.
      2. Wait for buckets to roll. If you don't want to wait for buckets to roll naturally, you can manually roll some buckets:
        splunk _internal call /data/indexes/<index_name>/roll-hot-buckets -auth <admin>:<password>
        
      3. Look for warm buckets being uploaded to remote storage.
    3. Validate data transfer from the remote store:

      Note: At this point, you should be able to run normal searches against this data. In the majority of cases, you will not be transferring any data from the remote storage, because the data will already be in the local cache. Therefore, to validate data transfer from the remote store, it is recommended that you first evict a bucket from the local cache.
      1. Evict a bucket from the cache, with a POST to this REST endpoint:
        services/admin/cacheman/<cid>/evict
        

        where <cid> is bid|<bucketId>|. For example: "bid|taktaklog~0~7D76564B-AA17-488A-BAF2-5353EA0E9CE5|"

      2. Run a search that requires data from the evicted bucket.

      The instance must now transfer the bucket from remote storage to run the search. After running the search, you can check that the bucket has reappeared in the cache.

2. Run the migration on the indexer cluster

In this procedure, you configure your cluster for SmartStore. The goal of the procedure is to migrate all existing warm and cold buckets on all indexes to SmartStore. Going forward, all new warm buckets will also reside in SmartStore.

The migration process takes a while to complete. If you have a large amount of data, it can take a long while. Expect some degradation of indexing and search performance during the migration. For that reason, it is best to schedule the migration for a time when your indexers will be relatively idle.

Steps

  1. Ensure that you have met the prerequisites. In particular, read:
  2. Understand SmartStore security strategies and prepare to implement them as necessary during the deployment process. See SmartStore security strategies.
  3. Upgrade all cluster nodes (master, peer nodes, search heads) to the latest version of Splunk Enterprise. See Upgrade an indexer cluster.
  4. Confirm that the cluster is in a valid and complete state, with both replication and search factors met. Go to the Master Dashboard to confirm.
  5. Confirm that there are no bucket fixup tasks in progress or pending. Go to the Master Dashboard, click on the Indexes tab, and then click on the Bucket Status button to confirm.
  6. Run splunk enable maintenance-mode on the master. To confirm that the master is in maintenance mode, run splunk show maintenance-mode.
  7. Stop all the peer nodes. When bringing down the peers, use the splunk stop command, not splunk offline.
  8. On the master node, edit the existing $SPLUNK_HOME/etc/master-apps/_cluster/local/indexes.conf file to make the following additions.

    Do not replace the existing indexes.conf file. You need to retain its current settings, such as its index definition settings. Instead, merge these additional settings into the existing file. Be sure to remove any other copies of these settings from the file.

    1. Specify the SmartStore index global and volume settings. Assuming that you have already tested these settings on your standalone instance, you can simply copy the settings over from your standalone instance. For example:
      [default]
      # Configure all indexes to use the SmartStore remote volume called
      # "remote_store".
      # Note: If you want only some of your indexes to use SmartStore, 
      # place this setting under the individual stanzas for each of the 
      # SmartStore indexes, rather than here.
      remotePath = volume:remote_store/$_index_name
      
      # Configure the remote volume
      [volume:remote_store]
      storageType = remote
      
      # On the next line, the volume's path setting points to the remote storage location 
      # where indexes reside. Each SmartStore index resides directly below the location 
      # specified by the path setting. The <scheme> identifies a supported remote 
      # storage system type, such as S3. The <remote-location-specifier> is a 
      # string specific to the remote storage system that specifies the location 
      # of the indexes inside the remote system. 
      # This is an S3 example: "path = s3://mybucket/some/path". 
      
      path = <scheme>://<remote-location-specifier>
      
      # The following S3 settings are required only if you're using the access and secret 
      # keys. They are not needed if you are using AWS IAM roles.
      remote.s3.access_key = <S3 access key>
      remote.s3.secret_key = <S3 secret key>
      remote.s3.endpoint = https:|http://<S3 host>
      
    2. Configure the data retention settings, as necessary, to ensure that the cluster will follow your desired freezing behavior, post-migration. See Configure data retention for SmartStore indexes.

      This step is extremely important, to avoid unwanted bucket freezing and possible data loss. SmartStore bucket-freezing behavior and settings are different from the non-SmartStore behavior and settings.

  9. On the master node, edit $SPLUNK_HOME/etc/master-apps/_cluster/local/server.conf to make any necessary changes to the SmartStore-related server.conf settings on the peer nodes. In particular, configure the cache size to fit the needs of your deployment. See Configure the SmartStore cache manager.
  10. On the master node, run:
    splunk apply cluster-bundle --answer-yes
    
  11. Start all the peer nodes. Wait briefly for the peer nodes to download the configuration bundle with the SmartStore settings. To view the status of the configuration bundle process, you can run the splunk show cluster-bundle-status command, described in Update common peer configurations and apps.
  12. Run splunk disable maintenance-mode on the master. To confirm that the master is not in maintenance mode, run splunk show maintenance-mode.
  13. Wait briefly for the peer nodes to begin uploading their warm and cold buckets to the remote store.

    Cold buckets use the cold path as their cache location, post-migration.

    In all respects, cold buckets are functionally equivalent to warm buckets. The cache manager manages the migrated cold buckets in the same way that it manages warm buckets. The only difference is that the cold buckets will be fetched into the cold path location, rather than the home path location.

  14. To confirm remote storage access across the indexer cluster, run this command from one of the peer nodes:
    splunk cmd splunkd rfs -- ls --starts-with volume:remote_store
    

    This command recursively lists any files that are present in the remote store. It should show that the cluster is starting to upload warm buckets to the remote store. If necessary, wait a little while for the first uploads to occur.

  15. On the master node, make any necessary changes to ensure that the indexer cluster's replication factor and search factor use the same values, for example, 3/3.
  16. To determine that migration is complete:
    • Confirm that the cluster is in a valid and complete state, with both replication and search factors met.
    • Confirm that the search |rest splunk_server=idx1 ... /services/admin/cacheman |search cm:bucket.stable=0 |stats count returns 0.
  17. Test SmartStore functionality. At this point, you should be able to run normal searches against this data. In the majority of cases, you will not be transferring any data from the remote storage, because the data will already be in the local cache. To validate data fetching from remote storage, do the following:
    1. On one of the peer nodes, look for a fully populated bucket, containing both tsidx files and the rawdata file.
    2. Evict the bucket from the cache, using this REST endpoint:
      services/admin/cacheman/<cid>/evict
      

      where <cid> is bid|<bucketId>|. For example: "bid|taktaklog~0~7D76564B-AA17-488A-BAF2-5353EA0E9CE5|"

    3. Run a search locally on the peer node. The search must be one that requires data from the evicted bucket.

    The peer must now transfer the bucket from remote storage to run the search. After running the search, you can check that the bucket has reappeared in the cache.

If you need to restart the cluster during migration, upon restart, migration will continue from where it left off.

Refrain from rebalancing data or removing excess buckets until you have run the SmartStore-enabled cluster successfully for a while. In particular, run these operations only after you have set the replication factor and search factor to use equal values and the cluster has performed any related bucket fixup.

Monitor the migration process

You can use the monitoring console to monitor migration progress. See Troubleshoot with the monitoring console.

You can also run an endpoint from the master node to determine the status of the migration:

$ splunk search "|rest /services/admin/cacheman/_metrics |fields splunk_server migration.*" -auth admin:passwd

The endpoint returns data on the migration, which you can use to determine how far along in the process each of the peers is. In this example, peer1 is on its 8th job, out of a total of 35, so the peer's migration is about 20-25% complete. The start_epoch field tells you when the migration began, allowing you to extrapolate an approximate completion time:

splunk_server      migration.current_job migration.start_epoch migration.status migration.total_jobs
---------------  ----------------------- --------------------- --------------- ---------------------
cluster1-master                                                  not_started
peer1.ajax.com              8                 1484942186         running               35
peer2.ajax.com              7                 1484942190         running               37
peer2.ajax.com              5                 1484942194         running               36

Once migration.status reaches "finished" on all peers, the migration is finished, and current_job will match total_jobs.

If any peer restarts during migration, its migration information is lost, and this endpoint cannot be used to check status of that peer, although the migration will, in fact, resume. The peer's reported status will remain "not_started" even after migration resumes.

Instead, you can run the following endpoint on the restarted peer:

"|rest /services/admin/cacheman |search cm:bucket.stable=0 |stats count"

The count equals the number of upload jobs remaining, where an upload job represents a single bucket to be uploaded, or, in other words, (total_jobs - current_jobs) from the earlier endpoint. The count decrements to zero as migration continues.

Last modified on 11 August, 2020
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This documentation applies to the following versions of Splunk® Enterprise: 7.3.0, 7.3.1, 7.3.2, 7.3.3, 7.3.4, 7.3.5, 7.3.6, 7.3.7, 7.3.8, 7.3.9, 8.0.0, 8.0.1, 8.0.2, 8.0.3, 8.0.4, 8.0.5, 8.0.6, 8.0.7, 8.0.8, 8.0.9, 8.0.10


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