outputs.conf
The following are the spec and example files for outputs.conf
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outputs.conf.spec
# Version 9.0.1 # # Forwarders require outputs.conf. Splunk instances that do not forward # do not use it. Outputs.conf determines how the forwarder sends data to # receiving Splunk instances, either indexers or other forwarders. # # To configure forwarding, create an outputs.conf file in # $SPLUNK_HOME/etc/system/local/. For examples of its use, see # outputs.conf.example. # # You must restart the Splunk software to enable configurations. # # To learn more about configuration files (including precedence) see the topic # "About Configuration Files" in the Splunk Enterprise Admin manual. # # To learn more about forwarding, see the topic "About forwarding and # receiving data" in the Splunk Enterprise Forwarding manual.
GLOBAL SETTINGS
# Use the [default] stanza to define any global settings. # * You can also define global settings outside of any stanza, at the top # of the file. # * Each conf file should have at most one default stanza. If there are # multiple default stanzas, settings are combined. In the case of # multiple definitions of the same setting, the last definition in the # file wins. # * If an setting is defined at both the global level and in a specific # stanza, the value in the specific stanza takes precedence. # * Do not use the 'sslPassword', 'socksPassword', or 'token' settings # to set passwords in this stanza as they may remain readable to # attackers, specify these settings in the [tcpout] stanza instead.
TCP Output stanzas
# There are three levels of TCP Output stanzas: # * Global: [tcpout] # * Target group: [tcpout:<target_group>] # * Single server: [tcpout-server://<ip address>:<port>] # # Settings at more specific levels override settings at higher levels. For # example, an setting set for a single server overrides the value of that # setting, if any, set at that server's target group stanza. See the # online documentation on configuring forwarders for details. # # This spec file first describes the three levels of stanzas (and any # settings unique to a particular level). It then describes the optional # settings, which you can set at any of the three levels. # Default: true # If set to 'true', prevents the logs from being forwarded to the indexing tiers. [httpout] httpEventCollectorToken = <string> * The value of the HEC token. * HEC uses this token to authenticate inbound connections. * No default. uri = <string> * The URI and management port of the Http Event Collector(HEC) end point. * For example, https://SplunkHEC01.example.com:8088 * No default. batchSize = <integer> * The size, in bytes, of the HTTP OUT send buffer. * HTTP OUT batch pipeline data before sending out. * If the current buffer size is greater than 'batchSize', HEC sends the data out immediately. * Default: 65536 batchTimeout = <integer> * How often, in seconds, to send out pipeline data. * HTTP OUT batch pipeline data before sending out. * If the wait time is greater than 'batchTimeout', HEC sends the data out immediately. * Default: 30 #----TCP Output Global Configuration ----- # You can overwrite the global configurations specified here in the # [tcpout] stanza in stanzas for specific target groups, as described later. # You can only set the 'defaultGroup' and 'indexAndForward' settings # here, at the global level. # # Starting with version 4.2, the [tcpout] stanza is no longer required. [tcpout] defaultGroup = <comma-separated list> * A comma-separated list of one or more target group names, specified later in [tcpout:<target_group>] stanzas. * The forwarder sends all data to the specified groups. * If you don't want to forward data automatically, don't configure this setting. * Can be overridden by the '_TCP_ROUTING' setting in the inputs.conf file, which in turn can be overridden by a props.conf or transforms.conf modifier. * Starting with version 4.2, this setting is no longer required. indexAndForward = <boolean> * Set to "true" to index all data locally, in addition to forwarding it. * This is known as an "index-and-forward" configuration. * This setting is only available for heavy forwarders. * This setting is only available at the top level [tcpout] stanza. It cannot be overridden in a target group. * Default: false #----Target Group Configuration ----- # If you specify multiple servers in a target group, the forwarder # performs auto load-balancing, sending data alternately to each available # server in the group. For example, assuming you have three servers # (server1, server2, server3) and autoLBFrequency=30, the forwarder sends # all data to server1 for 30 seconds, then it sends all data to server2 for # the next 30 seconds, then all data to server3 for the next 30 seconds, # finally cycling back to server1. # # You can have as many target groups as you want. # If you specify more than one target group, the forwarder sends all data # to each target group. This is known as "cloning" the data. # # NOTE: A target group stanza name cannot contain spaces or colons. # Splunk software ignores target groups whose stanza names contain # spaces or colons. [tcpout:<target_group>] server = <comma-separated list> * A comma-separated list of one or more systems to send data to over a TCP socket. * You can specify each element as either an IP address or a hostname and a port number. For example: 192.168.1.10:9997, mysplunkserver.com:9997 * Required if the 'indexerDiscovery' setting is not set. * Typically used to specify receiving Splunk systems, although you can use it to send data to non-Splunk systems (see the 'sendCookedData' setting). * For each system you list, the following information is required: * The IP address or server name where one or more systems are listening. * The port on which the syslog server is listening. blockWarnThreshold = <integer> * The output pipeline send failure count threshold after which a failure message appears as a banner in Splunk Web. * Optional. * To disable Splunk Web warnings on blocked output queue conditions, set this to a large value (for example, 2000000). * Default: 100 indexerDiscovery = <string> * The name of the manager node to use for indexer discovery. * Instructs the forwarder to fetch the list of indexers from the manager node specified in the corresponding [indexer_discovery:<name>] stanza. * No default. token = <string> * The access token for receiving data. * If you configured an access token for receiving data from a forwarder, Splunk software populates that token here. * If you configured a receiver with an access token and that token is not specified here, the receiver rejects all data sent to it. * This setting is optional. * No default. #----Single server configuration----- # You can define specific configurations for individual indexers on a # server-by-server basis. However, each server must also be part of a # target group. [tcpout-server://<ip address>:<port>] * Optional. There is no requirement to have a [tcpout-server] stanzas.
TCPOUT SETTINGS
# These settings are optional and can appear in any of the three stanza levels. [tcpout<any of above>] #----General Settings---- sendCookedData = <boolean> * Whether or not to send processed or unprocessed data to the receiving server. * A value of "true" means Splunk software processes the events before sending them to the server, thus "cooking" them. * A value of "false" means events are raw and untouched prior to sending. * Set to "false" if you are sending events to a third-party system. * Default: true heartbeatFrequency = <integer> * How often, in seconds, to send a heartbeat packet to the receiving server. * This setting is a mechanism for the forwarder to know that the receiver (indexer) is alive. If the indexer does not send a return packet to the forwarder, the forwarder declares the receiver unreachable and does not forward data to it. * The forwarder only sends heartbeats if the 'sendCookedData' setting is set to "true". * Default: 30 blockOnCloning = <boolean> * Whether or not the TcpOutputProcessor should wait until at least one of the cloned output groups receives events before attempting to send more events. * If set to "true", the TcpOutputProcessor blocks until at least one of the cloned groups receives events. It does not drop events when all the cloned groups are down. * If set to "false", the TcpOutputProcessor drops events when all the cloned groups are down and all queues for the cloned groups are full. When at least one of the cloned groups is up and queues are not full, the events are not dropped. * Default: true blockWarnThreshold = <integer> * The output pipeline send failure count threshold, after which a failure message appears as a banner in Splunk Web. * To disable Splunk Web warnings on blocked output queue conditions, set this to a large value (for example, 2000000). * This setting is optional. * Default: 100 compressed = <boolean> * Whether or not forwarders and receivers communicate with one another in compressed format. * A value of "true" means the receiver communicates with the forwarder in compressed format. * If set to "true", you do not need to set the 'compressed' setting to "true" in the inputs.conf file on the receiver for compression of data to occur. * This setting applies to non-SSL forwarding only. For SSL forwarding, Splunk software uses the 'useClientSSLCompression' setting. * Default: false negotiateProtocolLevel = <unsigned integer> * When setting up a connection to an indexer, Splunk software tries to negotiate the use of the Splunk forwarder protocol with the specified feature level based on the value of this setting. * If set to a lower value than the default, this setting denies the use of newer forwarder protocol features when it negotiates a connection. This might impact indexer efficiency. * Default (if 'negotiateNewProtocol' is "true"): 1 * Default (if 'negotiateNewProtocol' is not "true"): 0 negotiateNewProtocol = <boolean> * The default value of the 'negotiateProtocolLevel' setting. * DEPRECATED. Set 'negotiateProtocolLevel' instead. * Default: true channelReapInterval = <integer> * How often, in milliseconds, that channel codes are reaped, or made available for re-use. * This value sets the minimum time between reapings. In practice, consecutive reapings might be separated by greater than the number of milliseconds specified here. * Default: 60000 (1 minute) channelTTL = <integer> * How long, in milliseconds, a channel can remain "inactive" before it is reaped, or before its code is made available for reuse by a different channel. * Default: 300000 (5 minutes) channelReapLowater = <integer> * This value essentially determines how many active-but-old channels Splunk software keeps "pinned" in memory on both sides of a Splunk-to-Splunk connection. * If the number of active channels is greater than 'channelReapLowater', Splunk software reaps old channels to make their channel codes available for re-use. * If the number of active channels is less than 'channelReapLowater', Splunk software does not reap channels, no matter how old they are. * A non-zero value helps ensure that Splunk software does not waste network resources by "thrashing" channels in the case of a forwarder sending a trickle of data. * Default: 10 socksServer = <string> * The IP address or server name of the Socket Secure version 5 (SOCKS5) server. * Required. Specify this value as either an IP address or hostname and port number, for example: 192.168.1.10:8080 or mysplunkserver.com:8080. * This setting specifies the port on which the SOCKS5 server is listening. * After you configure and restart the forwarder, it connects to the SOCKS5 proxy host, and optionally authenticates to the server on demand if you provide credentials. * NOTE: Only SOCKS5 servers are supported. * No default. socksUsername = <string> * The SOCKS5 username to use when authenticating against the SOCKS5 server. * Optional. socksPassword = <string> * The SOCKS5 password to use when authenticating against the SOCKS5 server. * Optional. socksResolveDNS = <boolean> * Whether or not a forwarder should rely on the SOCKS5 proxy server Domain Name Server (DNS) to resolve hostnames of indexers in the output group to which the forwarder sends data. * A value of "true" means the forwarder sends the hostnames of the indexers to the SOCKS5 server, and lets the SOCKS5 server do the name resolution. It does not attempt to resolve the hostnames on its own. * A value of "false" means the forwarder attempts to resolve the hostnames of the indexers through DNS on its own. * Optional. * Default: false #----Queue Settings---- maxQueueSize = [<integer>|<integer>[KB|MB|GB]|auto] * The maximum size of the forwarder output queue. * The size can be limited based on the number of entries, or on the total memory used by the items in the queue. * If specified as a lone integer (for example, "maxQueueSize=100"), the 'maxQueueSize' setting indicates the maximum count of queued items. * If specified as an integer followed by KB, MB, or GB (for example, maxQueueSize=100MB), the 'maxQueueSize' setting indicates the maximum random access memory (RAM) size of all the items in the queue. * If set to "auto", this setting configures a value for the output queue depending on the value of the 'useACK' setting: * If 'useACK' is set to "false", the output queue uses 500KB. * If 'useACK' is set to "true", the output queue uses 7MB. * If you enable indexer acknowledgment by configuring the 'useACK' setting to "true", the forwarder creates a wait queue where it temporarily stores data blocks while it waits for indexers to acknowledge the receipt of data it previously sent. * The forwarder sets the wait queue size to triple the value of what you set for 'maxQueueSize.' * For example, if you set "maxQueueSize=1024KB" and "useACK=true", then the output queue is 1024KB and the wait queue is 3072KB. * Although the wait queue and the output queue sizes are both controlled by this setting, they are separate. * The wait queue only exists if 'useACK' is set to "true". * Limiting the queue sizes by quantity is historical. However, if you configure queues based on quantity, keep the following in mind: * Queued items can be events or blocks of data. * Non-parsing forwarders, such as universal forwarders, send blocks, which can be up to 64KB. * Parsing forwarders, such as heavy forwarders, send events, which are the size of the events. Some events are as small as a few hundred bytes. In unusual cases (data dependent), you might arrange to produce events that are multiple megabytes. * Default: auto * if 'useACK' is set to "true" and this setting is set to "auto", then the output queue is 7MB and the wait queue is 21MB. dropEventsOnQueueFull = <integer>[ms|s|m] * The amount of time to wait before the output queue throws out all new events until it has space. * If set to 0ms(milliseconds) or 0s(seconds) or 0m(minutes), the queue throws out all new events immediately until it has space. * If set to a positive number, the queue waits 'dropEventsonQueueFull' seconds before throwing out all new events. * If set to -1 or 0, the output queue blocks when it is full. This further blocks events up the processing chain. * If any target group queue is blocked, no more data reaches any other target group. * Using auto load-balancing is the best way to minimize this condition. In this case, multiple receivers must be down (or jammed up) before queue blocking can occur. * CAUTION: DO NOT SET THIS TO A POSITIVE INTEGER IF YOU ARE MONITORING FILES. * Default: -1 dropClonedEventsOnQueueFull = <integer>[ms|s|m] * The amount of time to wait before dropping events from the group. * If set to 0ms(milliseconds) or 0s(seconds) or 0m(minutes), the queue throws out all new events immediately until it has space. * If set to a positive number, the queue does not block completely, but waits up to 'dropClonedEventsOnQueueFull' seconds to queue events to a group. * If it cannot queue to a group for more than 'dropClonedEventsOnQueueFull' seconds, it begins dropping events from the group. It makes sure that at least one group in the cloning configuration can receive events. * The queue blocks if it cannot deliver events to any of the cloned groups. * If set to -1, the TcpOutputProcessor ensures that each group receives all of the events. If one of the groups is down, the TcpOutputProcessor blocks everything. * Default: 5 seconds ####### # Backoff Settings When Unable To Send Events to Indexer # The settings in this section determine forwarding behavior when there are # repeated failures in sending events to an indexer ("sending failures"). ####### maxFailuresPerInterval = <integer> * The maximum number of failures allowed per interval before a forwarder applies backoff (stops sending events to the indexer for a specified number of seconds). The interval is defined in the 'secsInFailureInterval' setting. * Default: 2 secsInFailureInterval = <integer> * The number of seconds contained in a failure interval. * If the number of write failures to the indexer exceeds 'maxFailuresPerInterval' in the specified 'secsInFailureInterval' seconds, the forwarder applies backoff. * The backoff time period range is 1-10 * 'autoLBFrequency'. * Default: 1 backoffOnFailure = <positive integer> * The number of seconds a forwarder backs off, or stops sending events, before attempting to make another connection with the indexer. * Default: 30 maxConnectionsPerIndexer = <integer> * The maximum number of allowed connections per indexer. * In the presence of failures, the maximum number of connection attempts per indexer at any point in time. * Default: 2 connectionsPerTarget = [<integer>|auto] * The maximum number of allowed outbound connections for each target IP address as resolved by DNS on the machine. * A value of "auto" or < 1 means splunkd configures a value for connections for each target IP address. Depending on the number of IP addresses that DNS resolves, splunkd sets 'connectionsPerTarget' as follows: * If the number of resolved target IP addresses is greater than or equal to 10, 'connectionsPerTarget' gets a value of 1. * If the number of resolved target IP addresses is greater than 5 and less than 10, 'connectionsPerTarget' gets a value of 2. * If the number of resolved target IP addresses is greater than 3 or less than equal to 5, 'connectionsPerTarget' gets a value of 3. * If the number of resolved target IP addresses is less than or equal to 3, 'connectionsPerTarget' gets a value of 4. * Default: auto connectionTimeout = <integer> * The time to wait, in seconds, for a forwarder to establish a connection with an indexer. * The connection times out if an attempt to establish a connection with an indexer does not complete in 'connectionTimeout' seconds. * Default: 20 readTimeout = <integer> * The time to wait, in seconds, for a forwarder to read from a socket it has created with an indexer. * The connection times out if a read from a socket does not complete in 'readTimeout' seconds. * This timeout is used to read acknowledgment when indexer acknowledgment is enabled (when you set 'useACK' to "true"). * Default: 300 seconds (5 minutes) writeTimeout = <integer> * The time to wait, in seconds, for a forwarder to complete a write to a socket it has created with an indexer. * The connection times out if a write to a socket does not finish in 'writeTimeout' seconds. * Default: 300 seconds (5 minutes) connectionTTL = <integer> * The time, in seconds, for a forwarder to keep a socket connection open with an existing indexer despite switching to a new indexer. * This setting reduces the time required for indexer switching. * Useful during frequent indexer switching potentially caused by using the 'autoLBVolume' setting. * Default: 0 seconds tcpSendBufSz = <integer> * The size of the TCP send buffer, in bytes. * Only use this setting if you are a TCP/IP expert. * Useful to improve throughput with small events, like Windows events. * Default: the system default ackTimeoutOnShutdown = <integer> * The time to wait, in seconds, for the forwarder to receive indexer acknowledgments during a forwarder shutdown. * The connection times out if the forwarder does not receive indexer acknowledgements (ACKs) in 'ackTimeoutOnShutdown' seconds during forwarder shutdown. * Default: 30 seconds polling_interval = <integer> * The initial time to wait upon splunk start, in seconds, for the forwarder to fetch the list of indexers from the indexer discovery server specified in the corresponding [indexer_discovery:<name>] stanza. Subsequently polling interval is set by indexer discovery server response. * Default: 5 seconds dnsResolutionInterval = <integer> * The base time interval, in seconds, at which indexer Domain Name Server (DNS) names are resolved to IP addresses. * This is used to compute runtime dnsResolutionInterval as follows: Runtime interval = 'dnsResolutionInterval' + (number of indexers in server settings - 1) * 30. * The DNS resolution interval is extended by 30 seconds for each additional indexer in the server setting. * Default: 300 seconds (5 minutes) forceTimebasedAutoLB = <boolean> * Forces existing data streams to switch to a newly elected indexer every auto load balancing cycle. * On universal forwarders, use the 'EVENT_BREAKER_ENABLE' and 'EVENT_BREAKER' settings in props.conf rather than 'forceTimebasedAutoLB' for improved load balancing, line breaking, and distribution of events. * Default: false #----Index Filter Settings. # These settings are only applicable under the global [tcpout] stanza. # This filter does not work if it is created under any other stanza. forwardedindex.<n>.whitelist = <regular expression> forwardedindex.<n>.blacklist = <regular expression> * These filters determine which events get forwarded to the index, based on the indexes the events are targeted to. * An ordered list of allow lists and deny lists, which together decide if events are forwarded to an index. * The order is determined by <n>. <n> must start at 0 and continue with positive integers, in sequence. There cannot be any gaps in the sequence. * For example: forwardedindex.0.whitelist, forwardedindex.1.blacklist, forwardedindex.2.whitelist, ... * The filters can start from either whitelist or blacklist. They are tested from forwardedindex.0 to forwardedindex.<max>. * If both 'forwardedindex.<n>.whitelist' and 'forwardedindex.<n>.blacklist' are present for the same value of n, then 'forwardedindex.<n>.whitelist' is honored. 'forwardedindex.<n>.blacklist' is ignored in this case. * In general, you do not need to change these filters from their default settings in $SPLUNK_HOME/system/default/outputs.conf. * Filtered out events are not indexed if you do not enable local indexing. forwardedindex.filter.disable = <boolean> * Whether or not index filtering is active. * A value of "true" means index filtering is disabled. Events for all indexes are then forwarded. * Default: false #----Automatic Load-Balancing # Automatic load balancing is the only way to forward data. # Round-robin method of load balancing is no longer supported. autoLBFrequency = <integer> * The amount of time, in seconds, that a forwarder sends data to an indexer before redirecting outputs to another indexer in the pool. * Use this setting when you are using automatic load balancing of outputs from universal forwarders (UFs). * Every 'autoLBFrequency' seconds, a new indexer is selected randomly from the list of indexers provided in the server setting of the target group stanza. * Default: 30 autoLBFrequencyIntervalOnGroupFailure = <integer> * When the entire target group is not reachable, 'autoLBFrequencyIntervalOnGroupFailure' is the amount of time, in seconds, that a forwarder waits before attempting to connect to a target host in the group. * While 'autoLBFrequencyIntervalOnGroupFailure' is in effect, 'autoLBFrequency' is ignored. Once first connection is established to a group, 'autoLBFrequency' comes into effect again. * This setting is applied only when 'autoLBFrequencyIntervalOnGroupFailure' is less than 'autoLBFrequency'. * Every 'autoLBFrequencyIntervalOnGroupFailure' seconds, a new indexer is selected randomly from the list of indexers provided in the server setting of the target group stanza. * -1 means this setting is not active. * Default: -1 autoLBVolume = <integer> * The volume of data, in bytes, to send to an indexer before a new indexer is randomly selected from the list of indexers provided in the server setting of the target group stanza. * This setting is closely related to the 'autoLBFrequency' setting. The forwarder first uses 'autoLBVolume' to determine if it needs to switch to another indexer. If the 'autoLBVolume' is not reached, but the 'autoLBFrequency' is, the forwarder switches to another indexer as the forwarding target. * A non-zero value means that volume-based forwarding is active. * 0 means the volume-based forwarding is not active. * Default: 0 maxSendQSize = <integer> * The size of the tcpout client send buffer, in bytes. If tcpout client(indexer/receiver connection) send buffer is full, a new indexer is randomly selected from the list of indexers provided in the server setting of the target group stanza. * This setting allows forwarder to switch to new indexer/receiver if current indexer/receiver is slow. * A non-zero value means that max send buffer size is set. * 0 means no limit on max send buffer size. * Default: 0 autoBatch = <boolean> * When set to 'true', the forwarder automatically sends chunks/events in batches to target receiving instance connection. The forwarder creates batches only if there are two or more chunks/events available in output connection queue. * When set to 'false', the forwarder sends one chunk/event to target receiving instance connection. This is old legacy behavior. * Default: true #----Secure Sockets Layer (SSL) Settings---- # To set up SSL on the forwarder, set the following setting/value pairs. # If you want to use SSL for authentication, add a stanza for each receiver # that must be certified. useSSL = <true|false|legacy> * Whether or not the forwarder uses SSL to connect to the receiver, or relies on the 'clientCert' setting to be active for SSL connections. * You do not need to set 'clientCert' if 'requireClientCert' is set to "false" on the receiver. * A value of "true" means the forwarder uses SSL to connect to the receiver. * A value of "false" means the forwarder does not use SSL to connect to the receiver. * The special value "legacy" means the forwarder uses the 'clientCert' property to determine whether or not to use SSL to connect. * Default: legacy sslPassword = <password> * The password associated with the Certificate Authority certificate (CAcert). * The default Splunk CAcert uses the password "password". * No default. clientCert = <path> * The full path to the client SSL certificate in Privacy Enhanced Mail (PEM) format. * If you have not set 'useSSL', then this connection uses SSL if and only if you specify this setting with a valid client SSL certificate file. * No default. sslCertPath = <path> * DEPRECATED. * Use the 'clientCert' setting instead. * The full path to the client SSL certificate. cipherSuite = <string> * The specified cipher string for the input processors. * This setting ensures that the server does not accept connections using weak encryption protocols. * The default can vary. See the 'cipherSuite' setting in $SPLUNK_HOME/etc/system/default/outputs.conf for the current default. sslCipher = <string> * The specified cipher string for the input processors. * DEPRECATED. * Use the 'cipherSuite' setting instead. ecdhCurves = <comma-separated list> * A list of Elliptic Curve-Diffie-Hellmann curves to use for ECDH key negotiation. * The curves should be specified in the order of preference. * The client sends these curves as a part of an SSL Client Hello. * The server supports only the curves specified in the list. * Splunk software only supports named curves that have been specified by their SHORT names. * The list of valid named curves by their short and long names can be obtained by running this CLI command: $SPLUNK_HOME/bin/splunk cmd openssl ecparam -list_curves * Example setting: "ecdhCurves = prime256v1,secp384r1,secp521r1" * The default can vary. See the 'ecdhCurves' setting in $SPLUNK_HOME/etc/system/default/outputs.conf for the current default. sslRootCAPath = <path> * The full path to the root Certificate Authority (CA) certificate store. * DEPRECATED. * Use the 'server.conf/[sslConfig]/sslRootCAPath' setting instead. * Used only if 'sslRootCAPath' in server.conf is not set. * The <path> must refer to a PEM format file containing one or more root CA certificates concatenated together. * No default. sslVerifyServerCert = <boolean> * Serves as an additional step for authenticating your indexers. * A value of "true" ensures that the server you are connecting to has a valid SSL certificate. * NOTE: Certificates with the same Common Name as the CA's certificate will fail this check. * Both the common name and the alternate name of the server are then checked for a match. * Default: false tlsHostname = <string> * A Transport Layer Security (TLS) extension that allows sending an identifier with SSL Client Hello. * Default: empty string sslVerifyServerName = <boolean> * Whether or not splunkd, as a client, performs a TLS hostname validation check on an SSL certificate that it receives upon an initial connection to a server. * A TLS hostname validation check ensures that a client communicates with the correct server, and has not been redirected to another by a machine-in-the-middle attack, where a malicious party inserts themselves between the client and the target server, and impersonates that server during the session. * Specifically, the validation check forces splunkd to verify that either the Common Name or the Subject Alternate Name in the certificate that the server presents to the client matches the host name portion of the URL that the client used to connect to the server. * For this setting to have any effect, the 'sslVerifyServerCert' setting must have a value of "true". If it doesn't, TLS hostname validation is not possible because certificate verification is not on. * A value of "true" for this setting means that splunkd performs a TLS hostname validation check, in effect, verifying the server's name in the certificate. If that check fails, splunkd terminates the SSL handshake immediately. This terminates the connection between the client and the server. Splunkd logs this failure at the ERROR logging level. * A value of "false" means that splunkd does not perform the TLS hostname validation check. If the server presents an otherwise valid certificate, the client-to-server connection proceeds normally. * Default: false sslCommonNameToCheck = <comma-separated list> * Checks the Common Name of the server's certificate against one or more of the names you specify for this setting. * Separate multiple common names with commas. * The Common Name identifies the host name associated with the certificate. For example, example www.example.com or example.com * If there is no match, assume that Splunk software is not authenticated against this server. * You must set the 'sslVerifyServerCert' setting to "true" for this setting to work. * This setting is optional. * Default: empty string (no common name checking). sslAltNameToCheck = <comma-separated list> * Checks the alternate name of the server's certificate against one or more of the names you specify for this setting. * Separate multiple subject alternate names with commas. * If there is no match, assume that Splunk software is not authenticated against this server. * You must set the 'sslVerifyServerCert' setting to "true" for this setting to work. * This setting is optional. * Default: no alternate name checking useClientSSLCompression = <boolean> * Whether or not compression on SSL connections is enabled. * A value of "true" means compression on SSL is enabled. * Default: true sslQuietShutdown = <boolean> * Enables quiet shutdown mode in SSL. * Default: false sslVersions = <comma-separated list> * A comma-separated list of SSL versions to support. * The versions available are "ssl3", "tls1.0", "tls1.1", and "tls1.2" * The special version "*" selects all supported versions. The version "tls" selects all versions tls1.0 or newer * If you prefix a version with "-", it is removed from the list. * SSLv2 is always disabled; "-ssl2" is accepted in the version list, but does nothing. * When configured in FIPS mode, "ssl3" is always disabled regardless of this configuration. * The default can vary. See the 'sslVersions' setting in $SPLUNK_HOME/etc/system/default/outputs.conf for the current default. #----Indexer Acknowledgment ---- # Indexer acknowledgment ensures that forwarded data is reliably delivered # to the receiver. # # If the receiver is an indexer, it indicates that the indexer has received # the data, indexed it, and written it to the file system. If the receiver # is an intermediate forwarder, it indicates that the intermediate forwarder # has successfully forwarded the data to the terminating indexer and has # received acknowledgment from that indexer. # # Indexer acknowledgment is a complex feature that requires # careful planning. Before using it, read the online topic describing it in # the Splunk Enterprise Distributed Deployment manual. useACK = <boolean> * Whether or not to use indexer acknowledgment. * Indexer acknowledgment is an optional capability on forwarders that helps prevent loss of data when sending data to an indexer. * A value of "true" means the forwarder retains a copy of each sent event until the receiving system sends an acknowledgment. * The receiver sends an acknowledgment when it has fully handled the event (typically when it has written it to disk in indexing). * If the forwarder does not receive an acknowledgment, it resends the data to an alternative receiver. * NOTE: The maximum memory used for the outbound data queues increases significantly by default (500KB -> 28MB) when the 'useACK' setting is enabled. This is intended for correctness and performance. * A value of "false" means the forwarder considers the data fully processed when it finishes writing it to the network socket. * You can configure this setting at the [tcpout] or [tcpout:<target_group>] stanza levels. You cannot set it for individual servers at the [tcpout-server: ...] stanza level. * Default: false
Syslog output----
# The syslog output processor is not available for universal or light # forwarders. # The following configuration is used to send output using syslog. [syslog] defaultGroup = <target_group>, <target_group>, ... dropEventsOnQueueFull = <integer>[ms|s|m] * See 'dropEventsOnQueueFull' in the "[tcpout]" stanza for information on this setting. dropClonedEventsOnQueueFull = <integer>[ms|s|m] * See 'dropClonedEventsOnQueueFull' in the "[tcpout]" stanza for information on this setting. ####### # For the following settings, see the [syslog:<target_group>] stanza. type = [tcp|udp] priority = <<integer>> | NO_PRI maxEventSize = <integer> [syslog:<target_group>] #----REQUIRED SETTINGS---- # The following settings are required for a syslog output group. server = [<ip>|<servername>]:<port> * The IP address or server name and port where the syslog server is running. * Required. * This setting specifies the port on which the syslog server listens. * Default: 514 #----OPTIONAL SETTINGS---- # The following are optional settings for syslog output: type = [tcp|udp] * The network protocol to use. * Default: udp priority = <<integer>>|NO_PRI * The priority value included at the beginning of each syslog message. * The priority value ranges from 0 to 191 and is made up of a Facility value and a Level value. * Enclose the priority value in "<>" delimeters. For example, specify a priority of 34 as follows: <34> * The integer must be one to three digits in length. * The value you enter appears in the syslog header. * The value mimics the number passed by a syslog interface call. See the *nix man page for syslog for more information. * Calculate the priority value as follows: Facility * 8 + Severity For example, if Facility is 4 (security/authorization messages) and Severity is 2 (critical conditions), the priority will be (4 * 8) + 2 = 34. Set the setting to <34>. * If you do not want to add a priority value, set the priority to "<NO_PRI>". * The table of facility and severity (and their values) is located in RFC3164. For example, http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc3164.txt section 4.1.1 * The table is reproduced briefly below. Some values are outdated. Facility: 0 kernel messages 1 user-level messages 2 mail system 3 system daemons 4 security/authorization messages 5 messages generated internally by syslogd 6 line printer subsystem 7 network news subsystem 8 UUCP subsystem 9 clock daemon 10 security/authorization messages 11 FTP daemon 12 NTP subsystem 13 log audit 14 log alert 15 clock daemon 16 local use 0 (local0) 17 local use 1 (local1) 18 local use 2 (local2) 19 local use 3 (local3) 20 local use 4 (local4) 21 local use 5 (local5) 22 local use 6 (local6) 23 local use 7 (local7) Severity: 0 Emergency: system is unusable 1 Alert: action must be taken immediately 2 Critical: critical conditions 3 Error: error conditions 4 Warning: warning conditions 5 Notice: normal but significant condition 6 Informational: informational messages 7 Debug: debug-level messages * Default: <13> (Facility of "user" and Severity of "Notice") syslogSourceType = <string> * Specifies an additional rule for handling data, in addition to that provided by the 'syslog' source type. * This string is used as a substring match against the sourcetype key. For example, if the string is set to "syslog", then all sourcetypes containing the string 'syslog' receive this special treatment. * To match a sourcetype explicitly, use the pattern "sourcetype::sourcetype_name". * Example: syslogSourceType = sourcetype::apache_common * Data that is "syslog" or matches this setting is assumed to already be in syslog format. * Data that does not match the rules has a header, optionally a timestamp (if defined in 'timestampformat'), and a hostname added to the front of the event. This is how Splunk software causes arbitrary log data to match syslog expectations. * No default. timestampformat = <format> * If specified, Splunk software prepends formatted timestamps to events forwarded to syslog. * As above, this logic is only applied when the data is not syslog, or the type specified in the 'syslogSourceType' setting, because it is assumed to already be in syslog format. * If the data is not in syslog-compliant format and you do not specify a 'timestampformat', the output will not be RFC3164-compliant. * The format is a strftime (string format time)-style timestamp formatting string. This is the same implementation used in the 'eval' search command, Splunk logging, and other places in splunkd. * For example: %b %e %H:%M:%S for RFC3164-compliant output * %b - Abbreviated month name (Jan, Feb, ...) * %e - Day of month * %H - Hour * %M - Minute * %s - Second * For a more exhaustive list of the formatting specifiers, refer to the online documentation. * Do not put the string in quotes. * No default. No timestamp is added to the front of events. maxEventSize = <integer> * The maximum size of an event, in bytes, that Splunk software will transmit. * All events exceeding this size are truncated. * Optional. * Default: 1024 #---- Routing Data to Syslog Server ----- # To route data to syslog servers: # 1) Decide which events to route to which servers. # 2) Edit the props.conf, transforms.conf, and outputs.conf files on the # forwarders. # Edit $SPLUNK_HOME/etc/system/local/props.conf and set a TRANSFORMS-routing # setting as shown below. # # [<spec>] # TRANSFORMS-routing=<unique_stanza_name> * <spec> can be: * <sourcetype>, the source type of an event * host::<host>, where <host> is the host for an event * source::<source>, where <source> is the source for an event * Use the <unique_stanza_name> when creating your entry in transforms.conf. # Edit $SPLUNK_HOME/etc/system/local/transforms.conf and set rules to match # your props.conf stanza: # # [<unique_stanza_name>] # REGEX = <your_regex> # DEST_KEY = _SYSLOG_ROUTING # FORMAT = <unique_group_name> * Set <unique_stanza_name> to match the name you created in props.conf. * Enter the regex rules in 'REGEX' to determine which events get conditionally routed. * Set 'DEST_KEY' to "_SYSLOG_ROUTING" to send events via syslog. * Set 'FORMAT' to match the syslog group name you create in outputs.conf.
IndexAndForward Processor-----
# The IndexAndForward processor determines the default behavior for indexing # data on a Splunk instance. It has the "index" property, which determines # whether indexing occurs. # # When the Splunk platform instance is not configured as a forwarder, # 'index' is set to "true". That is, the Splunk platform instance indexes # data by default. # # When the Splunk platform instance is configured as a forwarder, the # processor sets 'index' to "false". That is, the Splunk platform instance # does not index data by default. # # The IndexAndForward processor has no effect on the universal forwarder, # which can never index data. # # If the [tcpout] stanza configures the indexAndForward setting, the value # of that setting overrides the default value of 'index'. However, if you # set 'index' in the [indexAndForward] stanza described below, it # supersedes any value set in [tcpout]. [indexAndForward] index = <boolean> * Whether or not indexing is enabled on a Splunk platform instance. * A value of "true" means the Splunk platform instance indexes data. * A value of "false" means the Splunk platform instance does not index data. * The default can vary. It depends on whether the Splunk platform instance is configured as a forwarder, and whether it is modified by any value configured for the 'indexAndForward' setting in the [tcpout] stanza. selectiveIndexing = <boolean> * Whether or not to index specific events that have the '_INDEX_AND_FORWARD_ROUTING' setting configured. * A value of "true" means you can choose to index only specific events that have the '_INDEX_AND_FORWARD_ROUTING' setting configured. * Configure the '_INDEX_AND_FORWARD_ROUTING' setting in inputs.conf as: [<input_stanza>] _INDEX_AND_FORWARD_ROUTING = local * Default: false [indexer_discovery:<name>] pass4SymmKey = <string> * The security key used to communicate between the cluster manager and the forwarders. * This value must be the same for all forwarders and the manager node. * You must explicitly set this value for each forwarder. * If you specify a password here, you must also specify the same password on the manager node identified by the 'manager_uri' setting. send_timeout = <decimal> * The low-level timeout, in seconds, for sending messages to the manager node. * Fractional seconds are allowed (for example, 60.95 seconds). * Default: 30 rcv_timeout = <decimal> * The low-level timeout, in seconds, for receiving messages from the manager node. * Fractional seconds are allowed (for example, 60.95 seconds). * Default: 30 cxn_timeout = <decimal> * The low-level timeout, in seconds, for connecting to the manager node. * Fractional seconds are allowed (for example, 60.95 seconds). * Default: 30 manager_uri = <string> * The URI and management port of the cluster manager used in indexer discovery. * For example, https://SplunkManager01.example.com:8089 master_uri = <string> * DEPRECATED. Use the 'manager_uri' setting instead.
Remote Queue Output
[remote_queue:<name>] * This section explains possible settings for configuring a remote queue. * Each remote_queue stanza represents an individually configured remote queue output. * NOTE: Only ONE remote queue stanza is supported as an output queue. remote_queue.* = <string> * Currently not supported. This setting is related to a feature that is still under development. * Optional. * This section explains possible settings for configuring a remote queue. * With remote queues, the splunk indexer might require additional configuration, specific to the type of remote queue. You can pass configuration information to the splunk indexer by specifying the settings through the following schema: remote_queue.<scheme>.<config-variable> = <value>. For example: remote_queue.sqs.access_key = ACCESS_KEY * This setting is optional. * No default. remote_queue.type = sqs|kinesis|sqs_smartbus * Currently not supported. This setting is related to a feature that is still under development. * Required. * Specifies the remote queue type, either SQS or Kinesis or SQS Smartbus. compressed = <boolean> * See the description for TCPOUT SETTINGS in outputs.conf.spec. negotiateProtocolLevel = <unsigned integer> * See the description for TCPOUT SETTINGS in outputs.conf.spec. channelReapInterval = <integer> * See the description for TCPOUT SETTINGS in outputs.conf.spec. channelTTL = <integer> * See the description for TCPOUT SETTINGS in outputs.conf.spec. channelReapLowater = <integer> * See the description for TCPOUT SETTINGS in outputs.conf.spec. concurrentChannelLimit = <unsigned integer> * See the description for [splunktcp] in inputs.conf.spec.
Simple Queue Service (SQS) specific settings
remote_queue.sqs.access_key = <string> * Currently not supported. This setting is related to a feature that is still under development. * The access key to use when authenticating with the remote queue system that supports the SQS API. * If not specified, the forwarder looks for the environment variables AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID or AWS_ACCESS_KEY (in that order). If the environment variables are not set and the forwarder is running on EC2, the forwarder attempts to use the secret key from the IAM (Identity and Access Management) role. * Optional. * Default: not set remote_queue.sqs.secret_key = <string> * Currently not supported. This setting is related to a feature that is still under development. * Specifies the secret key to use when authenticating with the remote queue system supporting the SQS API. * If not specified, the forwarder looks for the environment variables AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY or AWS_SECRET_KEY (in that order). If the environment variables are not set and the forwarder is running on EC2, the forwarder attempts to use the secret key from the IAM (Identity and Access Management) role. * Optional. * Default: not set remote_queue.sqs.auth_region = <string> * Currently not supported. This setting is related to a feature that is still under development. * The authentication region to use when signing the requests while interacting with the remote queue system supporting the Simple Queue Service (SQS) API. * If not specified and the forwarder is running on EC2, the auth_region is constructed automatically based on the EC2 region of the instance where the the forwarder is running. * Optional. * Default: not set remote_queue.sqs.endpoint = <string> * Currently not supported. This setting is related to a feature that is still under development. * The URL of the remote queue system supporting the Simple Queue Service (SQS) API. * Use the scheme, either http or https, to enable or disable SSL connectivity with the endpoint. * If not specified, the endpoint is constructed automatically based on the auth_region as follows: https://sqs.<auth_region>.amazonaws.com * If specified, the endpoint must match the effective auth_region, which is either a value specified via the 'remote_queue.sqs.auth_region' setting or a value constructed automatically based on the EC2 region of the running instance. * Example: https://sqs.us-west-2.amazonaws.com/ * Optional. remote_queue.sqs.message_group_id = <string> * Currently not supported. This setting is related to a feature that is still under development. * Specifies the Message Group ID for Amazon Web Services Simple Queue Service (SQS) First-In, First-Out (FIFO) queues. * Setting a Message Group ID controls how messages within an AWS SQS queue are processed. * For information on SQS FIFO queues and how messages in those queues are processed, see "Recommendations for FIFO queues" in the AWS SQS Developer Guide. * If you configure this setting, Splunk software assumes that the SQS queue is a FIFO queue, and that messages in the queue should be processed first-in, first-out. * Otherwise, Splunk software assumes that the SQS queue is a standard queue. * Can be between 1-128 alphanumeric or punctuation characters. * NOTE: FIFO queues must have Content-Based De-duplication enabled. * Optional. * Default: not set remote_queue.sqs.retry_policy = max_count|none * Sets the retry policy to use for remote queue operations. * A retry policy specifies whether and how to retry file operations that fail for those failures that might be intermittent. * Retry policies: + "max_count": Imposes a maximum number of times a queue operation is retried upon intermittent failure. Set max_count with the 'max_count.max_retries_per_part' setting. + "none": Do not retry file operations upon failure. * Optional. * Default: max_count remote_queue.sqs.max_count.max_retries_per_part = <unsigned integer> * When the 'remote_queue.sqs.retry_policy' setting is "max_count", sets the maximum number of times a queue operation will be retried upon intermittent failure. * Optional. * Default: 9 remote_queue.sqs.timeout.connect = <unsigned integer> * Currently not supported. This setting is related to a feature that is still under development. * Optional. * Sets the connection timeout, in milliseconds, to use when interacting with the SQS for this queue. * Default: 5000 remote_queue.sqs.timeout.read = <unsigned integer> * Currently not supported. This setting is related to a feature that is still under development. * Sets the read timeout, in milliseconds, to use when interacting with the SQS for this queue. * Optional. * Default: 60000 remote_queue.sqs.timeout.write = <unsigned integer> * Currently not supported. This setting is related to a feature that is still under development. * Sets the write timeout, in milliseconds, to use when interacting with the SQS for this queue. * Optional. * Default: 60000 remote_queue.sqs.large_message_store.endpoint = <string> * Currently not supported. This setting is related to a feature that is still under development. * The URL of the remote storage system supporting the S3 API. * Use the scheme, either http or https, to enable or disable SSL connectivity with the endpoint. * If not specified, the endpoint is constructed automatically based on the auth_region as follows: https://s3-<auth_region>.amazonaws.com * If specified, the endpoint must match the effective auth_region, which is either a value specified via 'remote_queue.sqs.auth_region' or a value constructed automatically based on the EC2 region of the running instance. * Example: https://s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/ * Optional. * Default: not set remote_queue.sqs.large_message_store.path = <string> * Currently not supported. This setting is related to a feature that is still under development. * The remote storage location where messages larger than the underlying queue's maximum message size will reside. * The format for this value is: <scheme>://<remote-location-specifier> * The "scheme" identifies a supported external storage system type. * The "remote-location-specifier" is an external system-specific string for identifying a location inside the storage system. * The following external systems are supported: * Object stores that support AWS's S3 protocol. These stores use the scheme "s3". For example, "path=s3://mybucket/some/path". * If not specified, the queue drops messages exceeding the underlying queue's maximum message size. * Optional. * Default: not set remote_queue.sqs.send_interval = <number><unit> * Currently not supported. This setting is related to a feature that is still under development. * The interval that the remote queue output processor waits for data to arrive before sending a partial batch to the remote queue. * Examples: 30s, 1m * Optional. * Default: 30s remote_queue.sqs.max_queue_message_size = <integer>[KB|MB|GB] * Currently not supported. This setting is related to a feature that is still under development. * The maximum message size to which events are batched for upload to the remote queue. * Specify this value as an integer followed by KB, MB, or GB (for example, 10MB is 10 megabytes) * Queue messages are sent to the remote queue when the next event processed would otherwise result in a message exceeding the maximum message size. * The maximum value for this setting is 5GB. * Optional. * Default: 10MB remote_queue.sqs.enable_data_integrity_checks = <boolean> * If "true", Splunk software sets the data checksum in the metadata field of the HTTP header during upload operation to S3. * The checksum is used to verify the integrity of the data on uploads. * Default: false remote_queue.sqs.enable_signed_payloads = <boolean> * If "true", Splunk software signs the payload during upload operation to S3. * This setting is valid only for remote.s3.signature_version = v4 * Default: true
Kinesis specific settings
remote_queue.kinesis.access_key = <string> * Currently not supported. This setting is related to a feature that is still under development. * Specifies the access key to use when authenticating with the remote queue system supporting the Kinesis API. * If not specified, the forwarder looks for the environment variables AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID or AWS_ACCESS_KEY (in that order). If the environment variables are not set and the forwarder is running on EC2, the forwarder attempts to use the secret key from the IAM role. * Optional. * Default: not set remote_queue.kinesis.secret_key = <string> * Currently not supported. This setting is related to a feature that is still under development. * Specifies the secret key to use when authenticating with the remote queue system supporting the Kinesis API. * If not specified, the forwarder looks for the environment variables AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY or AWS_SECRET_KEY (in that order). If the environment variables are not set and the forwarder is running on EC2, the forwarder attempts to use the secret key from the IAM role. * Optional. * Default: not set remote_queue.kinesis.auth_region = <string> * Currently not supported. This setting is related to a feature that is still under development. * The authentication region to use when signing the requests when interacting with the remote queue system supporting the Kinesis API. * If not specified and the forwarder is running on EC2, the auth_region is constructed automatically based on the EC2 region of the instance where the the forwarder is running. * Optional. * Default: not set remote_queue.kinesis.endpoint = <string> * Currently not supported. This setting is related to a feature that is still under development. * The URL of the remote queue system supporting the Kinesis API. * Use the scheme, either http or https, to enable or disable SSL connectivity with the endpoint. * If not specified, the endpoint is constructed automatically based on the auth_region as follows: https://kinesis.<auth_region>.amazonaws.com * If specified, the endpoint must match the effective auth_region, which is either a value specified via the 'remote_queue.kinesis.auth_region' setting or a value constructed automatically based on the EC2 region of the running instance. * Optional. * Example: https://kinesis.us-west-2.amazonaws.com/ remote_queue.kinesis.enable_data_integrity_checks = <boolean> * If "true", Splunk software sets the data checksum in the metadata field of the HTTP header during upload operation to S3. * The checksum is used to verify the integrity of the data on uploads. * Default: false remote_queue.kinesis.enable_signed_payloads = <boolean> * If "true", Splunk software signs the payload during upload operation to S3. * This setting is valid only for remote.s3.signature_version = v4 * Default: true remote_queue.kinesis.retry_policy = max_count|none * Sets the retry policy to use for remote queue operations. * Optional. * A retry policy specifies whether and how to retry file operations that fail for those failures that might be intermittent. * Retry policies: + "max_count": Imposes a maximum number of times a queue operation is retried upon intermittent failure. Specify the max_count with the 'max_count.max_retries_per_part' setting. + "none": Do not retry file operations upon failure. * Default: max_count remote_queue.kinesis.max_count.max_retries_per_part = <unsigned integer> * When the 'remote_queue.kinesis.retry_policy' setting is max_count, sets the maximum number of times a queue operation is retried upon intermittent failure. * Optional. * Default: 9 remote_queue.kinesis.timeout.connect = <unsigned integer> * Currently not supported. This setting is related to a feature that is still under development. * Optional. * Sets the connection timeout, in milliseconds, to use when interacting with Kinesis for this queue. * Default: 5000 remote_queue.kinesis.timeout.read = <unsigned integer> * Currently not supported. This setting is related to a feature that is still under development. * Optional. * Sets the read timeout, in milliseconds, to use when interacting with Kinesis for this queue. * Default: 60000 remote_queue.kinesis.timeout.write = <unsigned integer> * Currently not supported. This setting is related to a feature that is still under development. * Sets the write timeout, in milliseconds, to use when interacting with Kinesis for this queue. * Optional. * Default: 60000 remote_queue.kinesis.large_message_store.endpoint = <string> * Currently not supported. This setting is related to a feature that is still under development. * The URL of the remote storage system supporting the S3 API. * Use the scheme, either http or https, to enable or disable SSL connectivity with the endpoint. * If not specified, the endpoint is constructed automatically based on the auth_region as follows: https://s3-<auth_region>.amazonaws.com * If specified, the endpoint must match the effective auth_region, which is either a value specified via 'remote_queue.kinesis.auth_region' or a value constructed automatically based on the EC2 region of the running instance. * Example: https://s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/ * Optional. * Default: not set remote_queue.kinesis.large_message_store.path = <string> * Currently not supported. This setting is related to a feature that is still under development. * The remote storage location where messages larger than the underlying queue's maximum message size will reside. * The format for this setting is: <scheme>://<remote-location-specifier> * The "scheme" identifies a supported external storage system type. * The "remote-location-specifier" is an external system-specific string for identifying a location inside the storage system. * The following external systems are supported: * Object stores that support AWS's S3 protocol. These stores use the scheme "s3". For example, "path=s3://mybucket/some/path". * If not specified, the queue drops messages exceeding the underlying queue's maximum message size. * Optional. * Default: not set remote_queue.kinesis.send_interval = <number><unit> * Currently not supported. This setting is related to a feature that is still under development. * The interval that the remote queue output processor waits for data to arrive before sending a partial batch to the remote queue. * For example, 30s, 1m * Optional. * Default: 30s remote_queue.kinesis.max_queue_message_size = <integer>[KB|MB|GB] * Currently not supported. This setting is related to a feature that is still under development. * The maximum message size to which events are batched for upload to the remote queue. * Specify this value as an integer followed by KB or MB (for example, 500KB is 500 kilobytes). * Queue messages are sent to the remote queue when the next event processed would otherwise result in the message exceeding the maximum message size. * The maximum value for this setting is 5GB. * Optional. * Default: 10MB remote_queue.kinesis.tenantId = <string> * Currently not supported. This setting is related to a feature that is still under development. * The ID of the tenant that owns the messages being written to the remote queue. * If not specified, the messages do not belong to any tenant. * Optional. * Default: not set
Simple Queue Service Smartbus (SQS Smartbus) specific settings
remote_queue.sqs_smartbus.encoding_format = protobuf|s2s * Currently not supported. This setting is related to a feature that is still under development. * Specifies the encoding format used to write data to the remote queue. * Default: protobuf remote_queue.sqs_smartbus.access_key = <string> * Currently not supported. This setting is related to a feature that is still under development. * The access key to use when authenticating with the remote queue system that supports the SQS API. * If not specified, the splunk instance looks for the environment variables AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID or AWS_ACCESS_KEY (in that order). If the environment variables are not set and the forwarder is running on EC2, the splunk instance attempts to use the secret key from the IAM (Identity and Access Management) role. * Optional. * Default: not set remote_queue.sqs_smartbus.secret_key = <string> * Currently not supported. This setting is related to a feature that is still under development. * Specifies the secret key to use when authenticating with the remote queue system supporting the SQS API. * If not specified, the splunk instance looks for the environment variables AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY or AWS_SECRET_KEY (in that order). If the environment variables are not set and the forwarder is running on EC2, the splunk instance attempts to use the secret key from the IAM (Identity and Access Management) role. * Optional. * Default: not set remote_queue.sqs_smartbus.auth_region = <string> * Currently not supported. This setting is related to a feature that is still under development. * Optional. * The authentication region to use when signing the requests while interacting with the remote queue system supporting the Simple Queue Service (SQS) API. * If not specified and the splunk instance is running on EC2, the auth_region is constructed automatically based on the EC2 region of the instance where the the splunk instance is running. * Default: not set remote_queue.sqs_smartbus.endpoint = <string> * Currently not supported. This setting is related to a feature that is still under development. * The URL of the remote queue system supporting the Simple Queue Service (SQS) API. * Use the scheme, either http or https, to enable or disable SSL connectivity with the endpoint. * If not specified, the endpoint is constructed automatically based on the auth_region as follows: https://sqs.<auth_region>.amazonaws.com * If specified, the endpoint must match the effective auth_region, which is either a value specified via the 'remote_queue.sqs.auth_region' setting or a value constructed automatically based on the EC2 region of the running instance. * Example: https://sqs.us-west-2.amazonaws.com/ * Optional. remote_queue.sqs_smartbus.message_group_id = <string> * Currently not supported. This setting is related to a feature that is still under development. * Specifies the Message Group ID for Amazon Web Services Simple Queue Service (SQS) First-In, First-Out (FIFO) queues. * Setting a Message Group ID controls how messages within an AWS SQS queue are processed. * For information on SQS FIFO queues and how messages in those queues are processed, see "Recommendations for FIFO queues" in the AWS SQS Developer Guide. * If you configure this setting, Splunk software assumes that the SQS queue is a FIFO queue, and that messages in the queue should be processed first-in, first-out. * Otherwise, Splunk software assumes that the SQS queue is a standard queue. * Can be between 1-128 alphanumeric or punctuation characters. * NOTE: FIFO queues must have Content-Based De-duplication enabled. * Optional. * Default: not set remote_queue.sqs_smartbus.retry_policy = max_count|none * Sets the retry policy to use for remote queue operations. * Optional. * A retry policy specifies whether and how to retry file operations that fail for those failures that might be intermittent. * Retry policies: + "max_count": Imposes a maximum number of times a queue operation is retried upon intermittent failure. Set max_count with the 'max_count.max_retries_per_part' setting. + "none": Do not retry file operations upon failure. * Default: max_count remote_queue.sqs_smartbus.max_count.max_retries_per_part = <unsigned integer> * When the 'remote_queue.sqs_smartbus.retry_policy' setting is "max_count", sets the maximum number of times a queue operation will be retried upon intermittent failure. * Optional. * Default: 3 remote_queue.sqs_smartbus.timeout.connect = <unsigned integer> * Currently not supported. This setting is related to a feature that is still under development. * Sets the connection timeout, in milliseconds, to use when interacting with the SQS for this queue. * Optional. * Default: 5000 remote_queue.sqs_smartbus.timeout.read = <unsigned integer> * Currently not supported. This setting is related to a feature that is still under development. * Sets the read timeout, in milliseconds, to use when interacting with the SQS for this queue. * Optional. * Default: 60000 remote_queue.sqs_smartbus.timeout.write = <unsigned integer> * Currently not supported. This setting is related to a feature that is still under development. * Sets the write timeout, in milliseconds, to use when interacting with the SQS for this queue. * Optional. * Default: 60000 remote_queue.sqs_smartbus.large_message_store.endpoint = <string> * Currently not supported. This setting is related to a feature that is still under development. * The URL of the remote storage system supporting the S3 API. * Use the scheme, either http or https, to enable or disable SSL connectivity with the endpoint. * If not specified, the endpoint is constructed automatically based on the auth_region as follows: https://s3-<auth_region>.amazonaws.com * If specified, the endpoint must match the effective auth_region, which is either a value specified via 'remote_queue.sqs_smartbus.auth_region' or a value constructed automatically based on the EC2 region of the running instance. * Example: https://s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com/ * Optional. * Default: not set remote_queue.sqs_smartbus.large_message_store.path = <string> * Currently not supported. This setting is related to a feature that is still under development. * The remote storage location where messages larger than the underlying queue's maximum message size will reside. * The format for this value is: <scheme>://<remote-location-specifier> * The "scheme" identifies a supported external storage system type. * The "remote-location-specifier" is an external system-specific string for identifying a location inside the storage system. * The following external systems are supported: * Object stores that support AWS's S3 protocol. These stores use the scheme "s3". For example, "path=s3://mybucket/some/path". * If not specified, the queue drops messages exceeding the underlying queue's maximum message size. * Optional. * Default: not set remote_queue.sqs_smartbus.large_message_store.sslVerifyServerCert = <boolean> * If set to true, the Splunk platform verifies the certificate presented by the S3 server and checks that the common name and alternate name match the ones specified in 'remote_queue.sqs_smartbus.large_message_store.sslCommonNameToCheck' and 'remote_queue.sqs_smartbus.large_message_store.sslAltNameToCheck'. * Default: false remote_queue.sqs_smartbus.large_message_store.sslVersions = <comma-separated list> * Comma-separated list of SSL versions to connect to 'remote.sqs_smartbus.large_message_store.endpoint'. * The versions available are "ssl3", "tls1.0", "tls1.1", and "tls1.2". * The special version "*" selects all supported versions. The version "tls" selects all versions tls1.0 or newer. * If a version is prefixed with "-" it is removed from the list. * SSLv2 is always disabled; "-ssl2" is accepted in the version list but does nothing. * When configured in FIPS mode, ssl3 is always disabled regardless of this configuration. * Default: tls1.2 remote_queue.sqs_smartbus.large_message_store.sslCommonNameToCheck = <comma-separated list> * If this value is set, and 'remote_queue.sqs_smartbus.large_message_store.sslVerifyServerCert' is set to true, the Splunk platform instance checks the common name of the certificate presented by the remote server (specified in 'remote_queue.sqs_smartbus.large_message_store.endpoint') against this list of common names. * Default: not set remote_queue.sqs_smartbus.large_message_store.sslAltNameToCheck = <comma-separated list> * If this value is set, and 'remote_queue.sqs_smartbus.large_message_store.sslVerifyServerCert' is set to true, the Splunk platform instance checks the alternate name(s) of the certificate presented by the remote server (specified in 'remote_queue.sqs_smartbus.large_message_store.endpoint') against this list of subject alternate names. * Default: not set remote_queue.sqs_smartbus.large_message_store.sslRootCAPath = <path> * Full path to the Certificate Authority (CA) certificate PEM format file containing one or more certificates concatenated together. S3 certificate will be validated against the CAs present in this file. * Default: The value of [sslConfig]/'caCertFile' in server.conf remote_queue.sqs_smartbus.large_message_store.cipherSuite = <cipher suite string> * If set, uses the specified cipher string for the SSL connection. * If not set, uses the default cipher string. * Must specify 'dhFile' to enable any Diffie-Hellman ciphers. * Default: TLSv1+HIGH:TLSv1.2+HIGH:@STRENGTH remote_queue.sqs_smartbus.large_message_store.ecdhCurves = <comma-separated list> * ECDH curves to use for ECDH key negotiation. * Specify the curves in the order of preference. * The client sends these curves as a part of Client Hello. * Splunk software only supports named curves specified by their short names. * The list of valid named curves by their short/long names can be obtained by executing this command: $SPLUNK_HOME/bin/splunk cmd openssl ecparam -list_curves * e.g. ecdhCurves = prime256v1,secp384r1,secp521r1 * Default: not set remote_queue.sqs_smartbus.large_message_store.dhFile = <string> * PEM format Diffie-Hellman parameter file name. * DH group size must be no less than 2048bits. * This file is required in order to enable any Diffie-Hellman ciphers. * Optional. * Default: not set remote_queue.sqs_smartbus.send_interval = <number><unit> * Currently not supported. This setting is related to a feature that is still under development. * Optional. * The interval that the remote queue output processor waits for data to arrive before sending a partial batch to the remote queue. * Examples: 100ms, 5s * Default: 2s remote_queue.sqs_smartbus.max_queue_message_size = <integer>[KB|MB|GB] * Currently not supported. This setting is related to a feature that is still under development. * The maximum message size for batched events for upload to the remote queue. * Queue messages contain a series of one or more events. When an event causes the message size to exceed this setting, the message is sent to the remote queue. * Specify this value as an integer followed by KB, MB, or GB (for example, 10MB is 10 megabytes) * Default: 10MB remote_queue.sqs_smartbus.enable_data_integrity_checks = <boolean> * If "true", Splunk software sets the data checksum in the metadata field of the HTTP header during upload operation to S3. * The checksum is used to verify the integrity of the data on uploads. * Default: false remote_queue.sqs_smartbus.enable_signed_payloads = <boolean> * If "true", Splunk software signs the payload during upload operation to S3. * This setting is valid only for remote.s3.signature_version = v4 * Default: true remote_queue.sqs_smartbus.executor_max_workers_count = <positive integer> * Currently not supported. This setting is related to a feature that is still under development. * The maximum number of worker threads available per pipeline set to execute SQS output worker tasks. * A value of 0 is equivalent to 1. * The maximum value for this setting is 20. * Default: 4 remote_queue.sqs_smartbus.executor_max_jobs_count = <positive integer> * Currently not supported. This setting is related to a feature that is still under development. * The maximum number of jobs that each worker thread per pipeline set can queue. * A value of 0 is equivalent to 1. * The maximum value for this setting is 50. * Default: 20 remote_queue.sqs_smartbus.large_message_store.encryption_scheme = sse-s3 | sse-c | none * Currently not supported. This setting is related to a feature that is still under development. * The encryption scheme used by remote storage. * Default: none. remote_queue.sqs_smartbus.large_message_store.kms_endpoint = <string> * Currently not supported. This setting is related to a feature that is still under development. * The endpoint to connect to for generating KMS keys. * This setting is required if 'large_message_store.encryption_scheme' is set to sse-c. * Examples: https://kms.us-east-2.amazonaws.com * No default. remote_queue.sqs_smartbus.large_message_store.key_id = <string> * Currently not supported. This setting is related to a feature that is still under development. * The ID for the primary key that KMS uses to generate a data key pair. The primary key is stored in AWS. * This setting is required if 'large_message_store.encryption_scheme' is set to sse-c. * Examples: alias/sqsssekeytrial, 23456789-abcd-1234-11aa-c50f99011223 * No default. remote_queue.sqs_smartbus.large_message_store.key_refresh_interval = <string> * Currently not supported. This setting is related to a feature that is still under development. * The time interval to refresh primary key. * Default: 24h
Remote File System (RFS) Output
[rfs:<name>] * This section explains the configuration settings for the Ingest Actions feature to send data to a remote file system, such as Amazon S3. * Each rfs stanza represents an individually configured location. * The "name" is a unique identifier for the remote storage, and is shown as a routing destination when using the Ingest Actions UI. * Only one remote stanza configuration is supported. * The only supported remote storage scheme is S3: "rfs:s3". All others are currently not supported. dropEventsOnUploadError = <boolean> * Whether or not the Ingest Actions feature drops events if it encounters an error when uploading events to remote storage. * A value of "true" means that, if there is an error writing to a remote file system, the error will be logged, and the events in that batch dropped. Ingest will not be blocked, but data might be lost. * A value of "false" means, if there is an error writing to a remote file system, the error will be logged, and events will NOT be dropped. splunkd will continually attempt to write the batch. Because events are not dropped, this might cause queues to become blocked, and data ingestion to stop. * This setting is optional. * Default: false batchSizeThresholdKB = <integer> * The size, in kilobytes, of the events in the RfsOutputProcessor send buffer. * RfsOutputProcessor batches events before flushing them to S3. * If the current buffer size is greater than 'batchSizeThresholdKB' kilobytes, then * the data will be written to S3 immediately. * If you increase this setting, you may also want to increase the value of server.conf/[queue:rfsQueue]/maxSize. * Default: 2048 batchTimeout = <integer> * RfsOutputProcessor batches events before flushing to S3. * If a batch has not hit any other criteria for being flushed to S3, and the batch is at least this many seconds old, flush the batch to S3. * Default = 30 compression = none|gzip|lz4|zstd * Sets the algorithm to use for compression when writing to S3. * The RfsOutputProcessor writes files to S3 with the appropriate extension for the compression algorithm, for example, .zst for zstd, .gz for gzip and .lz4 for lz4. * Default: zstd compressionLevel = <integer> * Sets compression level for the specified compression algorithm, when RfsOutputProcessor writes files to S3. Must be between 0 and 10. * Default: 3 #### # "rfs" stanzas, in addition to RfsOutputConfiguration, can take many storage # provider-specific settings, for example, for Amazon S3, GCP, or Azure. Refer to # "Volume settings" in indexes.conf for all settings. The below are a list of # common settings. #### path = <string> * Required. * This setting points to the location on local file system or remote storage location where indexes reside. * The format for local file system is: file://<some_mount_point/path> * The format for remote storage location is: <scheme>://<remote-location-specifier> * The "scheme" identifies a supported external storage system type. * The "remote-location-specifier" is an external system-specific string for identifying a location inside the storage system. * For Google Cloud Storage, this is specified as "gs://<bucket-name>/path/to/rfsoutput" * For Microsoft Azure Blob storage, this is specified as "azure://<container-name>/path/to/rfsoutput" Note that "<container-name>" is needed here only if 'remote.azure.container_name' is not set. * For Amazon S3 storage, this is specified as "s3://<bucket-name>/<path-to-rfs-output>" description = <string> * Optional. * A general description to explain the configuration settings for the Ingest Actions feature to send data to a remote file system. * No default. remote.* = <string> * Optional. * This section explains possible settings for configuring a remote output. * With remote outputs, the splunk indexer might require additional configuration, specific to the type of remote storage. You can pass configuration information to the splunk indexer by specifying the settings through the following schema: remote_queue.<scheme>.<config-variable> = <value>. For example: remote.s3.access_key = ACCESS_KEY Refer to "Volume settings" in indexes.conf for all settings. * This setting is optional. * No default. remote.s3.encryption = sse-s3 | sse-kms | sse-c | cse | none * The encryption scheme to use for data buckets that are currently being stored (data at rest). * sse-s3: Search for "Protecting Data Using Server-Side Encryption with Amazon S3-Managed Encryption Keys" on the Amazon Web Services documentation site. * sse-kms: Search for "Protecting Data Using Server-Side Encryption with CMKs Stored in AWS Key Management Service (SSE-KMS)" on the Amazon Web Services documentation site. * sse-c: Search for "Protecting Data Using Server-Side Encryption with Customer-Provided Encryption Keys (SSE-C)" on the Amazon Web Services documentation site. Currently not supported. This setting is related to a feature that is still under development. * cse: Search for "SmartStore client-side encryption" on the Splunk Enterprise documentation site, and "Protecting Data Using Server-Side Encryption with Customer-Provided Encryption Keys (SSE-C)" on the Amazon Web Services documentation site. Currently not supported. This setting is related to a feature that is still under development. * Optional. * Default: none remote.s3.access_key = <string> * Specifies the access key to use when authenticating with the remote storage system supporting the S3 API. * If not specified, the indexer will look for these environment variables: AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID or AWS_ACCESS_KEY (in that order). * If the environment variables are not set and the indexer is running on EC2, the indexer attempts to use the access key from the IAM role. * Optional. * No default. remote.s3.secret_key = <string> * Specifies the secret key to use when authenticating with the remote storage system supporting the S3 API. * If not specified, the indexer will look for these environment variables: AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY or AWS_SECRET_KEY (in that order). * If the environment variables are not set and the indexer is running on EC2, the indexer attempts to use the secret key from the IAM role. * Optional. * No default. remote.s3.signature_version = v2|v4 * The signature version to use when authenticating with the remote storage system supporting the S3 API. * For 'sse-kms' and 'sse-c' server-side encryption schemes, and for 'cse' client-side encryption scheme, you must use signature_version=v4. * For signature_version=v2 you must set url_version=v1. * Optional. * Default: v4 remote.s3.url_version = v1|v2 * Specifies which url version to use, both for parsing the endpoint/path, and * for communicating with the remote storage. This value only needs to be * specified when running on non-AWS S3-compatible storage that has been configured * to use v2 urls. * In v1 the bucket is the first element of the path. * Example: mydomain.com/bucketname/rest/of/path * In v2 the bucket is the outermost subdomain in the endpoint. * Exmaple: bucketname.mydomain.com/rest/of/path * Default: v1 remote.s3.supports_versioning = <boolean> * Specifies whether the remote storage supports versioning. * Versioning is a means of keeping multiple variants of an object in the same bucket on the remote storage. * This setting determines how splunkd removes data from remote storage. If set to true, splunkd will delete all versions of objects at time of data removal. Otherwise, if set to false, splunkd will use a simple DELETE (See https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AmazonS3/latest/dev/DeletingObjectVersions.html). * Optional. * Default: true remote.s3.endpoint = <URL> * The URL of the remote storage system supporting the S3 API. * The scheme, http or https, can be used to enable or disable SSL connectivity with the endpoint. * If not specified and the indexer is running on EC2, the endpoint will be constructed automatically based on the EC2 region of the instance where the indexer is running, as follows: https://<bucketname>.s3-<region>.amazonaws.com * Example: https://<bucketname>.s3-us-west-2.amazonaws.com * Optional. remote.s3.encryption = sse-s3 | sse-kms | none * The encryption scheme to use for output to remote storage for data stored (data at rest). * sse-s3: Search for "Protecting Data Using Server-Side Encryption with Amazon S3-Managed Encryption Keys" on the Amazon Web Services documentation site. * sse-kms: Search for "Protecting Data Using Server-Side Encryption with CMKs Stored in AWS Key Management Service (SSE-KMS)" on the Amazon Web Services documentation site. * Note: sse-c is not supported for RfsOutputProcessor * Optional. * No default. remote.s3.retry_policy = max_count * Sets the retry policy to use for remote file operations. * A retry policy specifies whether and how to retry file operations that fail for those failures that might be intermittent. * Retry policies: + "max_count": Imposes a maximum number of times a file operation will be retried upon intermittent failure both for individual parts of a multipart download or upload and for files as a whole. * Optional. * Default: max_count remote.s3.sslVerifyServerCert = <boolean> * If this is set to true, Splunk verifies certificate presented by S3 server and checks that the common name/alternate name matches the ones specified in 'remote.s3.sslCommonNameToCheck' and 'remote.s3.sslAltNameToCheck'. * Optional * Default: false remote.s3.sslVersions = <versions_list> * Comma-separated list of SSL versions to connect to 'remote.s3.endpoint'. * The versions available are "ssl3", "tls1.0", "tls1.1", and "tls1.2". * The special version "*" selects all supported versions. The version "tls" selects all versions tls1.0 or newer. * If a version is prefixed with "-" it is removed from the list. * SSLv2 is always disabled; "-ssl2" is accepted in the version list but does nothing. * When configured in FIPS mode, ssl3 is always disabled regardless of this configuration. * Optional. * Default: tls1.2 remote.s3.sslCommonNameToCheck = <commonName1>, <commonName2>, .. * If this value is set, and 'remote.s3.sslVerifyServerCert' is set to true, splunkd checks the common name of the certificate presented by the remote server (specified in 'remote.s3.endpoint') against this list of common names. * Default: not set remote.s3.sslAltNameToCheck = <alternateName1>, <alternateName2>, .. * If this value is set, and 'remote.s3.sslVerifyServerCert' is set to true, splunkd checks the alternate name(s) of the certificate presented by the remote server (specified in 'remote.s3.endpoint') against this list of subject alternate names. * No default. remote.s3.sslRootCAPath = <path> * Full path to the Certificate Authority (CA) certificate PEM format file containing one or more certificates concatenated together. S3 certificate will be validated against the CAs present in this file. * Optional. * Default: The value of '[sslConfig]/caCertFile' in server.conf remote.s3.cipherSuite = <cipher suite string> * If set, uses the specified cipher string for the SSL connection. * If not set, uses the default cipher string. * Must specify 'dhFile' to enable any Diffie-Hellman ciphers. * Optional. * Default: TLSv1+HIGH:TLSv1.2+HIGH:@STRENGTH remote.s3.ecdhCurves = <comma-separated list> * ECDH curves to use for ECDH key negotiation. * The curves should be specified in the order of preference. * The client sends these curves as a part of Client Hello. * Splunk software only supports named curves specified by their SHORT names. * The list of valid named curves by their short/long names can be obtained by executing this command: $SPLUNK_HOME/bin/splunk cmd openssl ecparam -list_curves * e.g. ecdhCurves = prime256v1,secp384r1,secp521r1 * Optional. * No default. remote.s3.kms.auth_region = <string> * Required if 'remote.s3.auth_region' is unset and Splunk can not automatically extract this information. * Similar to 'remote.s3.auth_region'. * If not specified, KMS access uses 'remote.s3.auth_region'. * No default. remote.s3.kms.key_id = <string> * Required if remote.s3.encryption = sse-c | sse-kms | cse * Specifies the identifier for Customer Master Key (CMK) on KMS. It can be the unique key ID or the Amazon Resource Name (ARN) of the CMK or the alias name or ARN of an alias that refers to the CMK. * Examples: Unique key ID: 1234abcd-12ab-34cd-56ef-1234567890ab CMK ARN: arn:aws:kms:us-east-2:111122223333:key/1234abcd-12ab-34cd-56ef-1234567890ab Alias name: alias/ExampleAlias Alias ARN: arn:aws:kms:us-east-2:111122223333:alias/ExampleAlias * No default. remote.s3.kms.<ssl_settings> = <...> * Optional. * See the descriptions of the SSL settings for remote.s3.<ssl_settings> above. e.g. remote.s3.sslVerifyServerCert. * Valid ssl_settings are sslVerifyServerCert, sslVersions, sslRootCAPath, sslAltNameToCheck, sslCommonNameToCheck, cipherSuite, ecdhCurves, and dhFile. * All of these settings are optional. * All of these settings have the same defaults as 'remote.s3.<ssl_settings>'. remote.s3.metadata_max_attempts = <integer> * Imposes a maximum number of times an operation will be retried upon failing to retrieve credentials from EC2 metadata service endpoint. * This value must be between 1 and 10. * Default: 10 authMethod = <string> * The authentication method used to access the remote destination. * Optional. * Do not configure this setting in outputs.conf. The system populates * this setting when you choose an Authentication Method in the New or Edit * Destination setup window in Splunk Web. * Choosing "Access key and Secret key" in Splunk Web sets this * setting to "basic". * Choosing "IAM role" in Splunk Web sets this setting to "iam". * No default.
outputs.conf.example
# Version 9.0.1 # # This file contains an example outputs.conf. Use this file to configure # forwarding in a distributed set up. # # To use one or more of these configurations, copy the configuration block into # outputs.conf in $SPLUNK_HOME/etc/system/local/. You must restart Splunk to # enable configurations. # # To learn more about configuration files (including precedence) please see the # documentation located at # http://docs.splunk.com/Documentation/Splunk/latest/Admin/Aboutconfigurationfiles # Specify a target group for an IP:PORT which consists of a single receiver. # This is the simplest possible configuration; it sends data to the host at # 10.1.1.197 on port 9997. [tcpout:group1] server=10.1.1.197:9997 # Specify a target group for a hostname which consists of a single receiver. [tcpout:group2] server=myhost.Splunk.com:9997 # Specify a target group made up of two receivers. In this case, the data will # be distributed using AutoLB between these two receivers. You can specify as # many receivers as you wish here. You can combine host name and IP if you # wish. # NOTE: Do not use this configuration with SplunkLightForwarder. [tcpout:group3] server=myhost.Splunk.com:9997,10.1.1.197:6666 # You can override any of the global configuration values on a per-target group # basis. All target groups that do not override a global config will inherit # the global config. # Send every event to a receiver at foo.Splunk.com:9997 with a maximum queue # size of 100,500 events. [tcpout:group4] server=foo.Splunk.com:9997 heartbeatFrequency=45 maxQueueSize=100500 # Send data to a receiving system that controls access by tokens. # NOTE: token value is encrypted. Encryption is done by REST endpoint while saving. [tcpout:group4] server=foo.Splunk.com:9997 token=$1$/fRSBT+2APNAyCB7tlcgOyLnAtqAQFC8NI4TGA2wX4JHfN5d9g== # Clone events to groups indexer1 and indexer2. Also, index all this data # locally as well. [tcpout] indexAndForward=true [tcpout:indexer1] server=Y.Y.Y.Y:9997 [tcpout:indexer2] server=X.X.X.X:6666 # Clone events between two data balanced groups. [tcpout:indexer1] server=A.A.A.A:1111, B.B.B.B:2222 [tcpout:indexer2] server=C.C.C.C:3333, D.D.D.D:4444 # Syslout output configuration # This example sends only events generated by the splunk daemon to a remote # syslog host in syslog-compliant format: [syslog:syslog-out1] disabled = false server = X.X.X.X:9099 type = tcp priority = <34> timestampformat = %b %e %H:%M:%S # Auto Load Balancing # This example balances output between two indexers listening on # port 4433: 192.0.2.100:4433 and 192.0.2.101:4433. # To achieve this you'd create a DNS entry for 'splunkLB' pointing # to the two IP addresses of your indexers: # # $ORIGIN example.com. # splunkLB A 192.0.2.100 # splunkLB A 192.0.2.101 [tcpout] defaultGroup = lb [tcpout:lb] server = splunkLB.example.com:4433 # Alternatively, you can use autoLB directly without DNS: [tcpout] defaultGroup = lb [tcpout:lb] server = 192.0.2.100:4433, 192.0.2.101:4433 # Compression # # This example sends compressed events to the remote indexer. # If set to "true", you do not need to set the 'compressed' setting to "true" in the inputs.conf file on the receiver for compression of data to occur. # This setting applies to non-SSL forwarding only. For SSL forwarding with compression, Splunk software uses the 'useClientSSLCompression' setting. [tcpout] server = splunkServer.example.com:4433 compressed = true # SSL # # This example sends events to an indexer via SSL using splunk's # self signed cert: [tcpout] server = splunkServer.example.com:4433 sslPassword = password clientCert = $SPLUNK_HOME/etc/auth/server.pem # # The following example shows how to route events to syslog server # This is similar to tcpout routing, but DEST_KEY is set to _SYSLOG_ROUTING # # 1. Edit $SPLUNK_HOME/etc/system/local/props.conf and set a TRANSFORMS-routing # attribute: [default] TRANSFORMS-routing=errorRouting [syslog] TRANSFORMS-routing=syslogRouting # 2. Edit $SPLUNK_HOME/etc/system/local/transforms.conf and set errorRouting # and syslogRouting rules: [errorRouting] REGEX=error DEST_KEY=_SYSLOG_ROUTING FORMAT=errorGroup [syslogRouting] REGEX=. DEST_KEY=_SYSLOG_ROUTING FORMAT=syslogGroup # 3. Edit $SPLUNK_HOME/etc/system/local/outputs.conf and set which syslog # outputs go to with servers or groups: [syslog] defaultGroup=everythingElseGroup [syslog:syslogGroup] server = 10.1.1.197:9997 [syslog:errorGroup] server=10.1.1.200:9999 [syslog:everythingElseGroup] server=10.1.1.250:6666 # # Perform selective indexing and forwarding # # Using a heavy forwarder, you can index and store data locally, and # forward the data out to a receiving indexer. In the example, by # setting the defaultGroup to a non-existent group named "noforward", # the forwarder only forwards data that has been routed using explicit # target groups defined in the inputs.conf # 1. In outputs.conf: [tcpout] defaultGroup = noforward [indexAndForward] index=true selectiveIndexing=true [tcpout:indexers] server = 10.1.1.197:9997, 10.1.1.200:9997 # 2. In inputs.conf, add _INDEX_AND_FORWARD_ROUTING to the input stanza for any data that you want to index locally, or _TCP_ROUTING=<target_group> for data to be forwarded. [monitor:///var/log/messages/] _INDEX_AND_FORWARD_ROUTING=local [monitor:///var/log/httpd/] _TCP_ROUTING=indexers # Output to S3 for Ingest Actions # For example, sending to an AWS bucket "buttercup-bucket", with a prefix # in front of all paths "some-prefix", along with encryption using AWS # SSE-S3 to the us-west-2 region: [rfs:s3] path = s3://buttercup-bucket/some-prefix remote.s3.encryption = sse-s3 remote.s3.endpoint = https://s3.us-west-2.amazonaws.com remote.s3.signature_version = v4 remote.s3.supports_versioning = false remote.s3.access_key = <access key here> remote.s3.secret_key = <secret key here>
multikv.conf | passwords.conf |
This documentation applies to the following versions of Splunk® Enterprise: 9.0.1
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