Splunk® Enterprise

Monitoring Splunk Enterprise

Search: Scheduler Activity

This topic is a reference for the Scheduler Activity dashboards in the Monitoring Console. See About the Monitoring Console.

What do these dashboards show?

The Scheduler activity: Deployment dashboard shows an overview of the search or report scheduler. The instance dashboard shows more detailed information about the scheduler on a particular instance.

These dashboards show activity and success rate of the scheduler. That is, of all the searches that attempted to run, how many succeeded? A scheduled search can fail because of concurrency problems or because of a search workload.

The panels in these dashboards qualify the type of failure. Skip ratio and execution latency quantify the scheduler's performance.

The scheduler activity dashboards are useful whether or not you are using search head clustering. If you have a search head cluster, you can also use the Search head clustering: Scheduler delegation dashboard, which deals with how the captain orchestrates scheduler jobs.

Interpret results in these dashboards

In the deployment dashboard, the Statistics panel describes how the scheduler is performing per instance, but including all instances in the deployment. For example, maximum is the maximum on any individual instance in the deployment.

What to look for in these dashboards

If your scheduler reaches the maximum allowed concurrent searches, you will run into problems scheduling additional or long-running searches. See Configure the priority of scheduled reports for more information.

The snapshot quantities skip ratio and average execution latency should both be low.

The following is an example Scheduler activity: Instance panel for a scheduler that is skipping reports.

Screen Shot 2016-03-04 at 3.01.42 PM.png

To find why the scheduler is skipping reports, scroll down to the panel labeled Count of skipped reports by name and reason.

Troubleshoot these dashboards

The scheduler activity dashboards require the monitored instances to be running Splunk Enterprise 6.3.0 or later.

Make sure you have completed all of the Monitoring Console setup steps.

Last modified on 25 February, 2019
Search: KV Store   Search: Distributed Search

This documentation applies to the following versions of Splunk® Enterprise: 7.0.0, 7.0.1, 7.0.2, 7.0.3, 7.0.4, 7.0.5, 7.0.6, 7.0.7, 7.0.8, 7.0.9, 7.0.10, 7.0.11, 7.0.13, 7.1.0, 7.1.1, 7.1.2, 7.1.3, 7.1.4, 7.1.5, 7.1.6, 7.1.7, 7.1.8, 7.1.9, 7.1.10, 7.2.0, 7.2.1, 7.2.2, 7.2.3, 7.2.4, 7.2.5, 7.2.6, 7.2.7, 7.2.8, 7.2.9, 7.2.10, 7.3.0, 7.3.1, 7.3.2, 7.3.3, 7.3.4, 7.3.5, 7.3.6, 7.3.7, 7.3.8, 7.3.9, 8.0.0, 8.0.1, 8.0.2, 8.0.3, 8.0.4, 8.0.5, 8.0.6, 8.0.7, 8.0.8, 8.0.9, 8.0.10, 8.1.0, 8.1.1, 8.1.2, 8.1.3, 8.1.4, 8.1.5, 8.1.6, 8.1.7, 8.1.8, 8.1.9, 8.1.10, 8.1.11, 8.1.12, 8.1.13, 8.1.14, 8.2.0, 8.2.1, 8.2.2, 8.2.3, 8.2.4, 8.2.5, 8.2.6, 8.2.7, 8.2.8, 8.2.9, 8.2.10, 8.2.11, 8.2.12, 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, 9.4.0


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