Splunk® Enterprise

Admin Manual

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

workload_rules.conf

The following are the spec and example files for workload_rules.conf.

workload_rules.conf.spec

#   Version 9.1.7
#

OVERVIEW


# This file contains descriptions of the settings that you can use to
# configure workloads classification rules for splunk.
#
# There is a workload_rules.conf file in the $SPLUNK_HOME/etc/system/default/ directory.
# Never change or copy the configuration files in the default directory.
# The files in the default directory must remain intact and in their original
# location.
#
# To set custom configurations, create a new file with the name workload_rules.conf in
# the $SPLUNK_HOME/etc/system/local/ directory. Then add the specific settings
# that you want to customize to the local configuration file.
# For examples, see workload_rules.conf.example. You do not need to restart the Splunk instance
# to enable workload_rules.conf configuration changes.
#
# To learn more about configuration files (including file precedence) see the
# documentation located at
# http://docs.splunk.com/Documentation/Splunk/latest/Admin/Aboutconfigurationfiles
#

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 takes precedence.
#   * If a setting is defined at both the global level and in a specific
#     stanza, the value in the specific stanza takes precedence.
#
# CAUTION: Do not alter the settings in the workload_rules.conf file unless you know
#     what you are doing.  Improperly configured workload rules might result in
#     splunkd crashes, memory overuse, or both.

[workload_rule:<rule_name>]

predicate = <string>
* Specifies the predicate of this workload classification rule.
* The format is logical expression with predicate as <type>=<value>.
* For example, "app=search AND (NOT role=power)".
* The valid <type> are "app", "role", "user", "index",
  "search_type", "search_mode", "search_time_range", and "runtime".
  The <value> is the exact value of the <type>.
* For "app" type, the value is the name of the app. For example, "app=search".
* For "role" type, the value is the name of the role. For example, "role=admin".
* For "index" type, the value is the name of the index. For example,
  "index=_internal". Note that the value can refer to an internal or public index.
* For "user" type, the value is the name of any valid user. For example,
  "user=bob". Note that the reserved internal user "noboby" is invalid; the
  reserved internal user "splunk-system-user" is valid.
* For "search_type" type, the value is the type of the search. Valid search 
  types include "adhoc", "scheduled", "datamodel_acceleration", 
  "report_acceleration" and "summary_index".
* For "search_mode" type, the value is the mode of the search. Valid modes 
  include "realtime" and "historical".
* For "search_time_range" type, the value is the time range of the search. 
  For now, value can only be "alltime".
* For "runtime" type, the value is the amount of time a search must run in a 
  workload pool to trigger a specified action, such as alert, move or abort.
  Valid units for runtime values include s, second, seconds, m, minute, minutes,
  and h, hour, hours.
* Required.

workload_pool = <string>
* Specifies the name of the workload pool, for example "pool1".
* The pool name that you specify must already be defined in the
  [workload_pool:<pool_name>] stanza in workload_pools.conf.

action = alert | move | abort
* Specifies the action to take when a search exceeds the specified runtime value.
* The action "alert" sends a notification message to Splunk Web that indicates
  the runtime of the search.
* The action "move" moves the search from the original workload pool to a
  designated alternate workload pool, and sends a notification message to
  Splunk Web.
* The action "abort" kills the search, and sends a notification message to
  Splunk Web.
* Optional.

schedule = always_on | time_range | every_day | every_week | every_month
* Specifies whether the rule is always on or has a valid time range that
  expires.
* Optional. If it's empty, it means the rule is always on.

start_time = <string>
* This setting is required when 'schedule' is set to: "time_range",
 "every_week", "every_month", or "every_day".
* The time format for 'start_time' is HH:00.
* If 'schedule' is set to "time_range", the 'start_time' specifies the 
 exact time that the valid time range starts, including 'start_date', 'end_date',
  time, and time zone.
* If 'schedule' is set to "every_week" or "every_month", the 'start_time' 
 specifies the start hour.
* If 'schedule' is set to "every_day", the 'start_time' is set to 0.
* Default 0.

end_time = <string>
* This setting is required when 'schedule' is set to: "time_range",
 "every_week", "every_month", or "every_day".
* The time format for 'end_time' is HH:00.
* If 'schedule' is set to "time_range", the 'end_time' specifies the 
 exact time that the valid time range ends, including 'start_date', 'end_date',
  time, and time zone.
* If 'schedule' is set to "every_week" or "every_month", the 'end_time' 
 specifies the end hour.
* If 'schedule' is set to "every_day", the 'end_time' is set to 0.
* Default 0.

every_week_days = <string>
* This setting is required when 'schedule' is set to "every_week".
* Specifies recurring days of the week.
* Supports comma separated numbers from 0 to 6, where 0 represents 
 Sunday.
* No default.

every_month_days = <string>
* This setting is required when 'schedule' is set to "every_month".
* Specifies recurring days of the month.
* Supports comma separated numbers from 1 to 31, where 1 represents 
 the 1st day of the month.
* No default.

start_date = <string>
* This setting is required when 'schedule' is set to "time_range".
* The date format is YYYY-MM-DD.
* Default (in SplunkWeb): the current date.
* Default (manual configuration): none.

end_date = <string>
* This setting is required when 'schedule' is set to "time_range".
* The date format is YYYY-MM-DD
* Default (in SplunkWeb): the current date.
* Default (manual configuration): none.

user_message = <string>
* Specifies the message shown in the search job inspector if the rule is
  applied to a search.
* Cannot exceed 140 characters.
* Optional.

disabled = <boolean>
* Toggles a workload rule off and on.
* Set to "true" to disable a rule.
* Default: false

[workload_rules_order]

rules = <string>
* List of all workload classification rules.
* The format of the "string" is comma separated items, "rule1,rule2,...".
* The rules listed are defined in [workload_rule:<rule_name>] stanza.
* The order of the rule name in the list determines the priorities of that rule.
  For example, in "rule1,rule2", rule1 has higher priority than rule2.
* The default value for this property is empty, meaning there is no rule defined.

[search_filter_rule:<rule_name>]

predicate = <string>
* Specifies the predicate of this workload classification rule.
* The format is logical expression with predicate as <type>=<value>.
* For example, "app=search AND (NOT role=power)".
* The valid <type> are "app", "role", "user", "index",
  "search_type", "search_mode", "search_time_range", and "adhoc_search_percentage".
  The <value> is the exact value of the <type>.
* For "app" type, the value is the name of the app. For example, "app=search".
* For "role" type, the value is the name of the role. For example, "role=admin".
* For "index" type, the value is the name of the index. For example,
  "index=_internal". Note that the value can refer to an internal or public index.
* For "user" type, the value is the name of any valid user. For example,
  "user=bob". Note that the reserved internal user "noboby" is invalid; the
  reserved internal user "splunk-system-user" is valid.
* For "search_type" type, the value is the type of the search. Valid search 
  types include "adhoc", "scheduled", "datamodel_acceleration", 
  "report_acceleration" and "summary_index".
* For "search_mode" type, the value is the mode of the search. Valid modes 
  include "realtime" and "historical".
* For "search_time_range" type, the value is the time range of the search. 
  For now, value can only be "alltime".
* For "adhoc_search_percentage" type, the value is an integer in the range [0,100]
  indicating the percentage of total concurrent searches that adhoc searches can
  consume before being filtered or queued. If specified, predicate must also include
  "search_type=adhoc".
* Required.

action = filter | queue
* Specifies the action to take when a search meets the rule criteria.
* The action "filter" is defined for search filter rules. If a search meets the rule
  criteria, the search is not executed.
* The action "queue" is only defined for search filter rules with "adhoc_search_percentage"
  specified in the predicate. If an ad hoc search meets the rule criteria, it will be
  queued and attempted later. A search meeting criteria for both "filter" and "queue"
  actions will be filtered.
* Required.

schedule = always_on | time_range | every_day | every_week | every_month
* Specifies whether the rule is always on or has a valid time range that
  expires.
* Optional. If it's empty, it means the rule is always on.

start_time = <string>
* This setting is required when 'schedule' is set to: "time_range",
 "every_week", "every_month", or "every_day".
* The time format for 'start_time' is HH:00.
* If 'schedule' is set to "time_range", the 'start_time' specifies the 
 exact time that the valid time range starts, including 'start_date', 'end_date',
  time, and time zone.
* If 'schedule' is set to "every_week" or "every_month", the 'start_time' 
 specifies the start hour.
* If 'schedule' is set to "every_day", the 'start_time' is set to 0.
* Default 0.

end_time = <string>
* This setting is required when 'schedule' is set to: "time_range",
 "every_week", "every_month", or "every_day".
* The time format for 'end_time' is HH:00.
* If 'schedule' is set to "time_range", the 'end_time' specifies the 
 exact time that the valid time range ends, including 'start_date', 'end_date',
  time, and time zone.
* If 'schedule' is set to "every_week" or "every_month", the 'end_time' 
 specifies the end hour.
* If 'schedule' is set to "every_day", the 'end_time' is set to 0.
* Default 0.

every_week_days = <string>
* This setting is required when 'schedule' is set to "every_week".
* Specifies recurring days of the week.
* Supports comma separated numbers from 0 to 6, where 0 represents 
 Sunday.
* No default.

every_month_days = <string>
* This setting is required when 'schedule' is set to "every_month".
* Specifies recurring days of the month.
* Supports comma separated numbers from 1 to 31, where 1 represents 
 the 1st day of the month.
* No default.

start_date = <string>
* This setting is required when 'schedule' is set to "time_range".
* The date format is YYYY-MM-DD.
* Default (in SplunkWeb): the current date.
* Default (manual configuration): none.

end_date = <string>
* This setting is required when 'schedule' is set to "time_range".
* The date format is YYYY-MM-DD
* Default (in SplunkWeb): the current date.
* Default (manual configuration): none.

user_message = <string>
* Specifies the message when a search is filtered out by this rule.
* Cannot exceed 140 characters.
* Optional.

disabled = <boolean>
* Toggles a search filter rule off and on.
* Set to "true" to disable a rule.
* Default: false

workload_rules.conf.example

[workload_rules_order]
rules = my_analyst_rule,my_app_rule,my_user_rule,my_index_rule

[workload_rule:my_app_rule]
predicate = app=search
workload_pool = my_app_pool

[workload_rule:my_analyst_rule]
predicate = role=analyst
workload_pool = my_analyst_pool
schedule = always_on

[workload_rule:my_user_rule]
predicate = user=admin
workload_pool = my_user_pool
schedule = always_on

[workload_rule:my_index_rule]
predicate = index=_internal
workload_pool = my_index_pool
schedule = time_range
start_time = 2019-01-01T04:00:00-08:00
end_time = 2019-01-05T04:00:00-08:00

[workload_rule:my_search_type_rule]
predicate = search_type=adhoc
workload_pool = my_adhoc_pool
schedule = every_day
start_time = 10
end_time = 15

[workload_rule:my_logical_rule_1]
predicate = app=search AND (NOT index=_internal)
workload_pool = my_logical_pool_1
schedule = every_week
start_time = 10
end_time = 23
every_week_days = [0,4,6]

[workload_rule:my_logical_rule_2]
predicate = NOT role=power OR user=admin
workload_pool = my_logical_pool_2
schedule = every_month
start_time = 1
end_time = 2
every_month_days = [1,5,16,31]


Last modified on 06 November, 2024
workload_pools.conf  

This documentation applies to the following versions of Splunk® Enterprise: 9.1.7


Was this topic useful?







You must be logged into splunk.com in order to post comments. Log in now.

Please try to keep this discussion focused on the content covered in this documentation topic. If you have a more general question about Splunk functionality or are experiencing a difficulty with Splunk, consider posting a question to Splunkbase Answers.

0 out of 1000 Characters