Administrative CLI commands
This topic discusses the administrative CLI commands, which are the commands used to manage or configure your Splunk server and distributed deployment.
For information about accessing the CLI and what is covered in the CLI help, see the previous topic, Get help with the CLI. If you're looking for details about how to run searches from the CLI, see About CLI searches in the Search Reference.
Your Splunk role configuration dictates what actions (commands) you can execute. Most actions require you to have Splunk admin privileges. Read more about setting up and managing Splunk users and roles in the About users and roles topic in the Admin Manual.
Splunk CLI command syntax
The general syntax for a CLI command is this:
./splunk <command> [<object>] [[-<parameter>] <value>]...
Note the following:
- Some commands don't require an object or parameters.
- Some commands have a default parameter that can be specified by its value alone.
- Some commands can take extra parameters like
-uri
or-auth
. See the "Universal parameters" section of Get help with the CLI.
Commands, objects, and examples
A command is an action that you can perform. An object is something you perform an action on.
Most administrative CLI commands are offered as an alternative interface to the Splunk Enterprise REST API without the need for the curl
command. If you're looking for additional uses or options for a CLI command object, review the REST API Reference Manual and search for the object name.
Command | Objects | Examples |
---|---|---|
add | exec, forward-server, index, licenser-pools, licenses, manager, monitor, oneshot, saved-search, search-server, tcp, udp, user | 1. Adds monitor directory and file inputs to source /var/log .
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2. Adds another indexer cluster manager node to the list of instances the search head searches across.
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anonymize | source | 1. Replaces identifying data, such as usernames and IP addresses, in the file located at /tmp/messages .
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2. Anonymizes Mynames.txt using name-terms, a file containing a list of common English personal names.
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apply | cluster-bundle, shcluster-bundle | 1. Makes validated bundle active on peers.
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2. Skip-validation is an optional argument to skip bundle validation on the indexer cluster manager and peers.
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3. For shcluster-bundle examples, see Deploy a configuration bundle in the Distributed Search manual.
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check-integrity | NONE | 1. Verifies the integrity of an index with the optional parameter verbose .
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2. Verifies the integrity of a bucket with the optional parameter verbose .
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clean | all, eventdata, globaldata, inputdata, userdata, kvstore | 1. Removes data from Splunk installation. eventdata refers to exported events indexed as raw log files.
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2. globaldata refers to host tags and source type aliases.
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cluster-manager-redundancy | NONE | 1. Shows status of all the cluster managers in redundancy mode.
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2. Switches HA mode of a cluster manager from standby to active.
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3. Switches HA mode of a cluster manager from active to standby. Consequently, another, currently standby cluster manager gets switched to active automatically.
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cmd | btprobe, classify, locktest, locktool, pcregextest, searchtest, signtool, toCsv, toSrs, tsidxprobe, walklex | 1. Displays the contents in the $SPLUNK_HOME/bin directory.
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2. Runs the chosen command from the $SPLUNK_HOME/bin directory with the environment variables set. Run splunk envvars to see which environment variables are set.
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create | app | 1. Builds myNewApp from a template.
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createssl | NONE | |
diag | NONE | |
disable | app, boot-start, deploy-client, deploy-server, dist-search, index, listen, local-index, maintenance-mode, perfmon, webserver, web-ssl, wmi | 1. Disables the maintenance mode on peers in indexer clustering. Must be invoked on the manager node.
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2. Disables the logs1 collection.
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display | app, boot-start, deploy-client, deploy-server, dist-search, jobs, listen, local-index | 1. Displays status information, such as enabled/disabled, for all apps.
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2. Displays status information for the unix app.
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edit | app, cluster-config, shcluster-config, exec, index, licenser-localpeer, licenser-groups, monitor, saved-search, search-server, tcp, udp, user | 1. Edits the current clustering configuration.
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2. Edits monitored directory inputs in /var/log and only reads from the end of this file.
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enable | app, boot-start, deploy-client, deploy-server, dist-search, index, listen, local-index, maintenance-mode, perfmon, webserver, web-ssl, wmi | 1. Sets the maintenance mode on peers in indexer clustering. Must be invoked on the manager node.
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2. Enables the col1 collection.
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export | eventdata, user data | 1. Exports data out of your Splunk server into /tmp/apache_raw_404_logs .
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fsck | repair, scan, clear-bloomfilter | |
help | NONE | |
import | userdata | 1. Imports user accounts data from directory /tmp/export.dat .
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install | app | 1. Installs the app from foo.tar to the local Splunk server.
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2. Installs the app from foo.tgz to the local Splunk server.
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list | cluster-buckets, cluster-config, cluster-generation, cluster-peers, deploy-clients, excess-buckets, exec, forward-server, index, inputstatus, licenser-groups, licenser-localpeer, licenser-messages, licenser-pools, licenser-peers, licenser-stacks, licenses, jobs, manager-info, monitor, peer-info, peer-buckets, perfmon, saved-search, search-server, tcp, udp, user, wmi | 1. Lists all active monitored directory and file inputs. This displays files and directories currently or recently monitored by splunkd for change.
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2. Lists all licenses across all stacks.
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login,logout | NONE | |
migrate | kvstore-storage-engine | 1. Migrates the KV store to the target storage engine.
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offline | NONE | 1. Used to shutdown the peer in a way that does not affect existing searches. The manager node rearranges the primary peers for buckets, and fixes up the cluster state in case the enforce-counts flag is set.
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2. Because the --enforce-counts flag is used, the cluster is completely fixed up before this peer is taken down.
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package | app | 1. Packages the app "stubby" and returns the package location.
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2. When packaging the app, merges local.meta to default.meta and packages the resulting default.meta.
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3. When packaging the app, excludes the local.meta from the app package.
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rebalance | cluster-data | 1. Rebalances data for all indexes.
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2. Rebalances data for a single index using the optional -index parameter.
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3. Rebalances data using the optional -max_runtime parameter to limit the rebalancing activity to 5 minutes.
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rebuild | NONE | |
reload | ad, auth, deploy-server, exec, index, listen, monitor, registry, tcp, udp, perfmon, wmi | 1. Reloads your deployment server, in entirety or by server class.
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2. Reloads my_serverclass.
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3. Reloads a specific index configuration. To reload all indexes, do not include an index name.
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remove | app, cluster-peers, cluster-manager, excess-buckets, exec, forward-server, index, jobs, licenser-pools, licenses, monitor, saved-search, search-server, tcp, udp, user | 1. Removes the cluster manager node from the list of instances the search head searches across. Uses testsecret as the secret/pass4SymmKey.
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2. Removes the Unix app.
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rollback | cluster-bundle | Rolls back your Splunk Web configuration bundle to your previous version. From the manager node, run this command:
|
rolling-restart | cluster-peers, shcluster-members | |
rtsearch | app, batch, detach, earliest_time, header, id, index_earliest, index_latest, max_time, maxout, output, preview, rt_id, timeout, uri, wrap | 1. Runs a real-time search that does not line-wrap for individual lines.
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2. Runs a real-time search. Use rtsearch exactly as you use the traditional search command.
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search | app, batch, detach, earliest_time, header, id, index_earliest, index_latest, latest_time, max_time, maxout, output, preview, timeout, uri, wrap | 1. Uses the wildcard as the search object. Triggers an asynchronous search and displays the job id and ttl for the search.
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2. Uses eventtype=webaccess error as the search object. Does not line wrap for individual lines that are longer than the terminal width.
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set | datastore-dir, deploy-poll, default-hostname, default-index, indexing-ready, minfreemb, servername, server-type, splunkd-port, web-port, kvstore-port | 1. Sets the force indexing ready bit.
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2. Sets bologna:1234 as the deployment server to poll updates from.
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show | config, cluster-bundle-status, datastore-dir, deploy-poll, default-hostname, default-index, jobs, minfreemb, servername, splunkd-port, web-port, kvstore-port, kvstore-status, shcluster-kvmigration-status | 1. Shows current logging levels.
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2. Shows which deployment server Splunk Enterprise is configured to poll from.
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spool | NONE | |
start-shcluster-migration | kvstore | 1. Migrate the KV store to the target storage engine in a clustered environment.
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2. Check to see if the KV store is ready to migrate to the target storage engine.
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start,stop,restart | splunkd, splunkweb | |
status | splunkd, splunkweb | |
validate | index, files, cluster-bundle | 1. Validates the main index and verifies the index paths specified in indexes.conf .
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2. For files examples, see Check the integrity of your Splunk software files.
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3. For cluster-bundle examples, see Update common peer configurations and apps in the Managing Indexers and Clusters of Indexers manual.
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version | NONE |
Exporting search results with the CLI
You can use the CLI to export large numbers of search results. For information about how to export search results with the CLI, as well as information about the other export methods offered by Splunk Enterprise, see Export search results in the Search Manual.
Troubleshooting with the CLI
The Splunk CLI also includes tools that help with troubleshooting. Invoke these tools using the CLI command cmd
:
./splunk cmd <tool>
For the list of CLI utilities, see Command line tools for use with Support in the Troubleshooting Manual.
Get help with the CLI | Use the CLI to administer a remote Splunk Enterprise instance |
This documentation applies to the following versions of Splunk® Enterprise: 9.0.0, 9.0.1, 9.0.2, 9.0.3, 9.0.4, 9.0.5, 9.0.6, 9.0.7, 9.0.8, 9.0.9, 9.0.10, 9.1.0, 9.1.1, 9.1.2, 9.1.3, 9.1.4, 9.1.5, 9.1.6, 9.1.7, 9.2.0, 9.2.1, 9.2.2, 9.2.3, 9.2.4, 9.3.0, 9.3.1, 9.3.2
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