All Apps and Add-ons

uberAgent: Why don't I see any disk utilization parameter being reported?

stanwin
Contributor

HI

For my uberAgent setup, I don't see any Disk utilization parameter being reported. By utilization, I mean % free or used space on Disks .

I see on the Uberagent website:

Machine
The following metrics are collected per machine:

  • Disk utilization in percent

However, I don't see it under Uberagent's own related Splunk Events listing:

Source type:
uberAgent:System:SystemPerformanceSummary
Field list:
CPUUsagePercent, RAMUsagePercent, RAMUsageGB, IOPSRead, IOPSWrite, IOCountRead, IOCountWrite, IOMBRead, IOMBWrite, IOLatencyMsRead, IOLatencyMsWrite, IOPercentDiskTime, NetUtilizationPercent, KernelPagedMB, KernelNonPagedMB, HandleCount, ThreadCount
0 Karma
1 Solution

helge
Builder

uberAgent does not collect information about disk space usage. That is available via Splunk's Universal Forwarder.

When the documentation talks about "disk utilization" it refers to the disk's performance, i.e. how much of the time the disk is busy. The underlying field is called IOPercentDiskTime.

View solution in original post

helge
Builder

uberAgent does not collect information about disk space usage. That is available via Splunk's Universal Forwarder.

When the documentation talks about "disk utilization" it refers to the disk's performance, i.e. how much of the time the disk is busy. The underlying field is called IOPercentDiskTime.

stanwin
Contributor

Right thanks helge!

Since we already have uberagent, didnt want to add single perfmon input for the same.

Thanks for the confirmation!

Get Updates on the Splunk Community!

Splunk Observability for AI

Don’t miss out on an exciting Tech Talk on Splunk Observability for AI!Discover how Splunk’s agentic AI ...

Splunk Enterprise Security 8.x: The Essential Upgrade for Threat Detection, ...

Watch On Demand the Tech Talk on November 6 at 11AM PT, and empower your SOC to reach new heights! Duration: ...

Splunk Observability as Code: From Zero to Dashboard

For the details on what Self-Service Observability and Observability as Code is, we have some awesome content ...