Deployment Architecture

Skipped scheduler searches :Your maximum number of concurrent searches has been reached. usage=3104 quota=3000 user=admin.

ankithnageshshe
Path Finder

Hello All,

Lately I see a lot of skipped scheduler searches in my search head cluster (3) with the reason "Your maximum number of concurrent searches has been reached. usage=3104 quota=3000 user=admin".

If I view from DMC console, I see not more than 200 searches run for each search head summing up to almost 600~700 searches for admin user in the last 4 hours.

I do not see any active running searches neither in the search head job manager nor on the Scheduler activity in the DMC.
However I see a lot of deferred jobs for one of the search head in DMC console.

Do you think rolling restart of search heads will help here as I do not see any search related issue here.

Regards,
Ankith

Tags (1)
0 Karma
1 Solution

ankithnageshshe
Path Finder

Hi All,

Rolling restart of the SHC fixed the issue. Brought down the deferred jobs from 90K to 2K after the rolling restart.

But I'am trying to understand the difference between concurrency search quota for user( admin) and the historical system wide search quota. How this will impact my SHC performance?

Regards,
Ankith

View solution in original post

0 Karma

ankithnageshshe
Path Finder

Hi All,

Rolling restart of the SHC fixed the issue. Brought down the deferred jobs from 90K to 2K after the rolling restart.

But I'am trying to understand the difference between concurrency search quota for user( admin) and the historical system wide search quota. How this will impact my SHC performance?

Regards,
Ankith

0 Karma
Get Updates on the Splunk Community!

Observe and Secure All Apps with Splunk

  Join Us for Our Next Tech Talk: Observe and Secure All Apps with SplunkAs organizations continue to innovate ...

Splunk Decoded: Business Transactions vs Business IQ

It’s the morning of Black Friday, and your e-commerce site is handling 10x normal traffic. Orders are flowing, ...

Fastest way to demo Observability

I’ve been having a lot of fun learning about Kubernetes and Observability. I set myself an interesting ...