Splunk Stream

Installation and Configuration Manual

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This documentation does not apply to the most recent version of Splunk Stream. For documentation on the most recent version, go to the latest release.
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Configure Stream forwarder

You must configure the following for the Stream forwarder:

  • Edit inputs.conf to provide Splunk_TA_stream/local with the location (URI) of your splunk_app_stream installation. The streamfwd binary uses this location to retrieve the specific stream capture configurations (protocols, fields, aggregation types, and so on) that you define in the Configure Streams UI. For more information, see Configure Streams in the Splunk Stream User Manual.
  • Edit streamfwd.conf to specify system-level data capture parameters for the streamfwd binary. For more information, see Configure streamfwd.conf on this page.

Specify location of splunk_app_stream in inputs.conf

Before you set up stream data capture using the Configure Streams UI, make sure that Splunk_TA_stream/local/inputs.conf is configured to communicate with splunk_app_stream:

  1. Open $SPLUNK_HOME/etc/apps/Splunk_TA_stream/local/inputs.conf.
  2. Confirm that the [streamfwd://streamfwd] stanza contains the correct location (URI) of your splunk_app_stream installation. For search head clusters, the address for this can be a single URL that is either a load balancer with sticky sessions or a single member of the search head cluster.
    [streamfwd://streamfwd]
    splunk_stream_app_location = https://localhost:8000/en-us/custom/splunk_app_stream/
    disabled = 0
    

For more information, see How Splunk_TA_stream communicates with splunk_app_stream in this manual.

Note: The splunk_app_stream URI supports http and https protocols. If you enable SSL for the streamfwd binary, you must change the URI path to specify https. If you change the http port, you must change the URI path to specify the new port.

Configure Stream forwarder identifier

If you are using a deployment server, when you set or modify the stream_forwarder_id of a specific Stream forwarder while a streamfwd process is running, you must restart the universal forwarder for the changes to apply to the stream_forwarder_id.

You can use the stream_forwarder_id to manage distributed stream forwarder instances. For more information, see Distributed forwarder management.

Configure parameters for streamfwd.conf

The streamfwd.conf configuration file lets you specify system-level parameters for the streamfwd binary. You can configure streamfwd.conf to listen on specific IP addresses and ports, enable SSL, redirect log files, collect network events, and specify network interfaces.

The streamfwd.conf configuration file comes with both Splunk_TA_stream and independent Stream forwarder, and is located in $SPLUNK_HOME/etc/apps/Splunk_TA_stream/default/ and /opt/streamfwd/default/, respectively.

Caution: Do not change or copy the streamfwd.conf file located in the default directory. To modify the streamfwd.conf file, create a new version of streamfwd.conf in the local directory. For more information, see Configuration file directories in the Splunk Enterprise Admin Manual.

Enable loopback capture

Stream forwarder does not capture local loopback traffic by default. To capture loopback traffic, add the appropriate streamfwdcapture parameter to streamfwd.conf, as shown in streamfwdcapture Example 1 on this page.

Streamfwd.conf parameters

streamfwd.conf configuration file accepts these parameters.

Parameter Description Value type Default value
clientIpSslHashBytes Defines number of client IP octets to use for SSL processor thread hash algorithm. (min value = 0; max value = 4) Applies only if you have _disabled_ useGlobalSSLSessionKeyCache client IP octets 2
dedicatedCaptureMode Enables dedicated capture mode, which provides support for 10Gbps capture on compatible network interfaces. To enable dedicated capture mode, add dedicatedCaptureMode = 1 to streamfwd.conf. boolean 0 (false)
duplicatePacketWindow Defines number of packets cached in memory (using a rolling window) to detect duplicate packets. Set this to a value greater than zero to enable automatic deduplication of network packets. packets cached in-memory 0
hideCreditCardNumbers Masks credit card numbers. Set to false to show all credit card numbers. boolean true
mapSslServers Set to false to disable automatic caching of SSL server certificates to corresponding servers's IP addresses. boolean true
maxEventQueueSize Defines maximum number of events queued for delivery to Splunk. events 10000
maxFieldSize Defines maximum size of content field. bytes 10240
maxPacketQueueSize Defines maximum size for each processing threads' packet queue. Must be a power of 2 for dedicated capture mode. packets 262144
maxTcpReassemblyPacketCount Defines maximum number of TCP packets in reassembly queue per processing thread. TCP packets 500000
maxTcpSessionCount Defines maximum number of concurrent TCP/UDP flows per processing thread. TCP/UDP flows 50000
pcapBufferSize Defines buffer size for each network device. Increase the number of bytes if you see dropped packets. bytes 33554432
pingInterval Modifies the ping server interval. seconds 5
processingThreads Defines number of threads to use for processing network traffic. threads 2
sessionKeyTimeout Indicates idle time before SSL session keys expire. seconds 3600
sslServer Allows directly specify IP addresses/ports targeted for SSL decryption.
streamfwdcapture Restricts data capture to specified network interfaces
tcpConnectionTimeout Indicates idle time before TCP/UDP flows expire. seconds 180
tcpServer Defines endpoints for TCP servers
useGlobalSSLSessionKeyCache Enables sharing of SSL cache across processing threads. Set to true to share. boolean false
usePacketMemoryPool When set to true, Stream forwarder uses a pool allocator to allot memory for storing network packets. Because the pool allocator does not release unused memory back to the operating system, setting this parameter to true may result in high memory usage. Set to true only when Stream forwarder is running on a dedicated capture server that processes large traffic volumes. boolean false

Note: For a complete list of streamfwd.conf parameters, see streamfwd.conf.spec in $SPLUNK_HOME/etc/apps/Splunk_TA_stream/README.

Use tcpServer to specify endpoints

Stream forwarder automatically detects the client and server endpoints when it captures the beginnings of TCP connections. If it starts capturing traffic after establishing a TCP connection, Stream forwarder normally assumes that the sender of the first packet it sees is the client.

You can modify this behavior by using the tcpServer parameter to define the endpoints of specific TCP servers. If the sender of a packet matches the endpoint, Stream forwarder correctly categorizes it as a server response packet.

tcpServer examples

Example 1: Single HTTP server endpoint

tcpServer.N.address = 192.168.1.102
tcpServer.N.port = 80

Example 2: Wildcard endpoint

tcpServer.<N>.address = 192.168.1.0
tcpServer.<N>.addressWildCard = 255.255.255.0
tcpServer.<N>.port = 80

Use sslServer to specify encrypted/decrypted traffic

Stream forwarder detects endpoint encryption, and attempts to decrypt SSL sessions using the available private keys. Optionally, you can explicitly define the traffic as encrypted by adding sslServer parameters.

sslServer.<N>.address = 192.168.1.102
sslServer.<N>.port = 443

Use streamfwdcapture to specify network interfaces

By default streamfwd.conf listens for traffic on all available network interfaces. Use the streamfwdcapture parameter to restrict data capture to specific interfaces.

The streamfwdcapture parameter supports the following options:

Parameter Description
streamfwdcapture.<N>.interface Specify a network interface name or a path to a pcap file
streamfwdcapture.<N>.interfaceRegex Specify a regular expression to match multiple network interfaces
streamfwdcapture.<N>.offline True means use pcap, false means <Interface> is a network device name. The default value is "false".
streamfwdcapture.<N>.filter Lets you set a BPF (Berkeley Packet Filter) for kernel-level packet filtering. The value of this tag must comply with BPF syntax. Only one Filter variable per streamfwdcapture parameter is supported.
streamfwdcapture.<N>.repeat True means to play back the pcap file repeatedly for continuous load
streamfwdcapture.<N>.sysTime True means to use the system time for packet timestamps instead of actual time timestamps from pcap file.
streamfwdcapture.<N>.bitsPerSecond Rate limiter that defaults to 10 Mbps if undefined and <Repeat> is true.

To restrict data capture to specific network interfaces, you must insert a [streamfwd] stanza into streamfwd.conf. You can use streamfwdcatpure parameters to specify multiple network interfaces in a single streamfwd.conf file. For example, to specify two network interfaces - eth0 and eth1 - configured with different BPF filters on *nix:

[streamfwd]
streamfwdcapture.0.interface = eth0
streamfwdcapture.0.filter = tcp port 80
streamfwdcapture.1.interface = eth1
streamfwdcapture.1.filter = udp port 53

Specify a network interface on Windows

The following specifies a Windows network interface:

streamfwdcapture.0.interface = \Device\NPF_{D6995D00-B75C-48DB-99AA-69F0150126BC}
streamfwdcapture.0.offline = false
streamfwdcapture.0.filter = tcp port 80

On Windows, you can substitute the streamfwdcapture.<N>.interface or streamfwdcapture.<N>.InterfaceRegex name (such as \Device\NPF_{D6995D00-B75C-48DB-99AA-69F0150126BC}) with the <Alias> or <Description> value returned by the --iflist command line option.

For example, streamfwdcapture.<N>.interface = Local Area Connection 2 or streamfwdcapture.<N>.InterfaceRegex = Local Area.*.

For more information, see "List network interfaces on Windows and Linux" in this manual.

streamfwdcapture examples

Example 1: Configure streamfwd.conf to include local loopback capture

Stream forwarder by default does not capture traffic that originates and terminates on the same machine. You can enable capture of this "local loopback" traffic using the streamfwdcapture parameter in the configuration file:

   streamfwdcapture.<N>.interface = lo0

Note: you cannot use streamfwdcapture.<N>.interfaceRegex> parameter to specify local loopback interfaces.

Example 2: Configure streamfwd.conf for use across multiple systems

You might want to maintain a master copy of streamfwd.conf that you can reuse across multiple systems that have different network device names. The following streamfwd.conf configuration listens on all matching interfaces found (excluding local loopback interfaces).

streamfwdcapture.<N>.interfaceRegex = .*

Note that this configuration may generate startup warnings for any devices that do not support passive data capture.

Example 3: Capture data on specific network interfaces

In this example, on a system with eight network interfaces, streamfwd.conf would listen only for tcp port 80 traffic on only two of those interfaces (four and five):

streamfwdcapture.<N>.interfaceRegex = eth[45]
streamfwdcapture.<N>.offline = false
streamfwdcapture.<N>.filter = tcp port 80

Example 4: Use pcap file instead of network interface

You can also use a previously generated pcap file instead of an actual network interface, using this variation of the streamfwdcapture parameter.

streamfwdcapture.<N>.interface = /tmp/data.cap
streamfwdcapture.<N>.offline = true
streamfwdcapture.<N>.filter = tcp port 80
streamfwdcapture.<N>.repeat = true
streamfwdcapture.<N>.sysTime = true
streamfwdcapture.<N>.bitsPerSecond = 10000000

For more information on how to ingest pcap files using the streamfwdcapture parameter, see Ingest pcaps using streamfwd.conf in this manual.

Example 5: Add streamfwdcapture parameters to streamfwd.conf configuration file

You can add one or more streamfwdcapture parameters to a [streamfwd] stanza to define capture behavior for a particular network interface. For example:

[streamfwd]
streamfwdcapture.0.interfaceRegex = eth[45]
streamfwdcapture.0.offline = false
streamfwdcapture.0.filter = tcp port 80
streamfwdcapture.1.interface = eth0
streamfwdcapture.1.offline = false
streamfwdcapture.1.filter = udp port 53
Last modified on 14 September, 2020
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This documentation applies to the following versions of Splunk Stream: 7.1.2, 7.1.3, 7.2.0


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