Alerting

Alert History

spiced
New Member

How can I get an alert history? We have some alerts configured and currently there are many false positives. In order to reduce them we will fine tune the alerts. But we would like to have a history of the tuning. Is it possible to see how the alerts have changed over time?

0 Karma

dindu
Contributor

Hi,

You could get some information from the Splunk internal logs.

Use the below query to fetch the details.

     index=_internal source="/opt/splunk/var/log/splunk/scheduler.log" savedsearch_name="your_search_name".

If it does not return any result - remove the conditions and try searching again like below.

  index=_internal "your_search_name"

The details you will get depends on the retention of the saved search logs.
Please let us know whether this helped.

0 Karma

richgalloway
SplunkTrust
SplunkTrust

You can go to Activity->Triggered Alerts to see the when alerts fired. There is not, however, a history of how the alerts were defined in the past. You'll have to do that yourself, perhaps using something like git.

---
If this reply helps you, Karma would be appreciated.
0 Karma

amanthri
Engager

@richgalloway  Is there a way to get the list of list of created in last month  and who created it  along with alert history?

0 Karma

richgalloway
SplunkTrust
SplunkTrust

Alerts do not record when they were created or updated.  You should be able to get that information from the _configtracker index, however.

---
If this reply helps you, Karma would be appreciated.
0 Karma
Get Updates on the Splunk Community!

Index This | Why did the turkey cross the road?

November 2025 Edition  Hayyy Splunk Education Enthusiasts and the Eternally Curious!   We’re back with this ...

Enter the Agentic Era with Splunk AI Assistant for SPL 1.4

  🚀 Your data just got a serious AI upgrade — are you ready? Say hello to the Agentic Era with the ...

Feel the Splunk Love: Real Stories from Real Customers

Hello Splunk Community,    What’s the best part of hearing how our customers use Splunk? Easy: the positive ...