All Apps and Add-ons

Splunk App for Active Directory - ADMON

splunk68
Path Finder

Hello,

I'm implementing Splunk App for Active Directory with Universal Forwarders, and carefully enabling step by step (event logs, powershell scripts, perfmon, and so on...) without troubles so far except for one area: ADMON.

I'm looking for following hints about ADMON:

  • should it be activated on all Domain Controllers or is it enough on the master ? (to avoid too much traffic on WAN links)
  • is it performance consuming for the Domain Controller where it's enabled ?
  • which events/data are collected by ADMON ?

These are the information I'd rather know before activating it on productive domain controllers.
Any hint would greatly appreciated, thanks !

1 Solution

jbernt_splunk
Splunk Employee
Splunk Employee

ADmon should be enabled on all domain controllers forwarding in data.
The performance related to ADmon is negligible, unless you have thousands of events per second or more. The WMI calls in the PowerShell scripts consume more resources, but even then after the initial upload, these quiet down quit a bit as well.
The events and data that ADmon is collection, are changes to user, group, machine, and group policy objects. If these are not changing, then admon will be a fairly quiet input.

Thanks,
Jeff.

View solution in original post

jgigliotti
Engager

Hi, if ADMON collects changes only to ad as you have pointed out (changes to user, group, machine, and group policy objects) then these changes would be replicated throughout all other DC's in the domain so what would be the reason to have it running on all DC's?

Why I ask is that we had an issue on our Domain where we were recommended the following as per Adrian Hall’s Blog: http://blogs.splunk.com/2014/01/27/working-with-active-directory-on-splunk-universal-forwarders/

jbernt_splunk
Splunk Employee
Splunk Employee

ADmon should be enabled on all domain controllers forwarding in data.
The performance related to ADmon is negligible, unless you have thousands of events per second or more. The WMI calls in the PowerShell scripts consume more resources, but even then after the initial upload, these quiet down quit a bit as well.
The events and data that ADmon is collection, are changes to user, group, machine, and group policy objects. If these are not changing, then admon will be a fairly quiet input.

Thanks,
Jeff.

Got questions? Get answers!

Join the Splunk Community Slack to learn, troubleshoot, and make connections with fellow Splunk practitioners in real time!

Meet up IRL or virtually!

Join Splunk User Groups to connect and learn in-person by region or remotely by topic or industry.

Get Updates on the Splunk Community!

Build the Future of Agentic AI: Join the Splunk Agentic Ops Hackathon

AI is changing how teams investigate incidents, detect threats, automate workflows, and build intelligent ...

[Puzzles] Solve, Learn, Repeat: Character substitutions with Regular Expressions

This challenge was first posted on Slack #puzzles channelFor BORE at .conf23, we had a puzzle question which ...

Splunk Community Badges!

  Hey everyone! Ready to earn some serious bragging rights in the community? Along with our existing badges ...