Deployment Architecture

Can you use both mounted and shared bundles with the same index cluster?

ckurtz
Path Finder

I have a dedicated search pool using mounted bundles to talk to our index cluster.

Can I also have a standalone search head using normal shared bundles talk to the same clustered indexers?

I'm currently using Splunk 5, upgrades to 6 are a few months out.

0 Karma
1 Solution

yannK
Splunk Employee
Splunk Employee

seems possible.

http://docs.splunk.com/Documentation/Splunk/5.0.4/Indexer/Howclusteredsearchworks

As with a non-clustered distributed search, you can have multiple search heads, and the search heads can function as a single unit, known as a search head pool. And, just like non-clustered distributed searches, you can use mounted bundles to reduce the amount of data that gets passed from the search head to the peers.

View solution in original post

0 Karma

yannK
Splunk Employee
Splunk Employee

seems possible.

http://docs.splunk.com/Documentation/Splunk/5.0.4/Indexer/Howclusteredsearchworks

As with a non-clustered distributed search, you can have multiple search heads, and the search heads can function as a single unit, known as a search head pool. And, just like non-clustered distributed searches, you can use mounted bundles to reduce the amount of data that gets passed from the search head to the peers.

0 Karma

ckurtz
Path Finder

Yann is correct. If search heads aren't configured to use mounted bundles they default to the normal method (sending the bundle over the wire to the indexer.)

0 Karma
Get Updates on the Splunk Community!

Message Parsing in SOCK

Introduction This blog post is part of an ongoing series on SOCK enablement. In this blog post, I will write ...

Exploring the OpenTelemetry Collector’s Kubernetes annotation-based discovery

We’ve already explored a few topics around observability in a Kubernetes environment -- Common Failures in a ...

Use ‘em or lose ‘em | Splunk training units do expire

Whether it’s hummus, a ham sandwich, or a human, almost everything in this world has an expiration date. And, ...