Getting Data In

Deployment Server and Universal Forwarder- Which file is being monitored?

phularah
Communicator

I saw a question on the internet while searching for answers for a separate question and a few comments below regarding the correct answer for that. Now, I am confused as to what  should have been the correct answer. This was the question.


This file has been manually created on a universal forwarder:

/opt/splunkforwarder/etc/apps/my_TA/local/inputs.conf
[monitor:///var/log/messages]
sourcetype=syslog
index=syslog

A new Splunk admin comes in and connects the universal forwarders to a deployment server and deploys the same app with a new inputs.conf file:

/opt/splunk/etc/deployment-apps/my_TA/local/inputs.conf
[monitor:///var/log/maillog]
sourcetype=maillog
index=syslog

Which file is now monitored?
/var/log/maillog or both /var/log/maillog and /var/log/messages

Labels (2)
0 Karma
1 Solution

gcusello
SplunkTrust
SplunkTrust

Hi @phularah,

when you connect a client to a Deployment Server, all the local apps will be removed and the apps for the ServerClass containing that client will be deployed.

So if the local inputs.conf is in an app (as it seems from your information), it will be removed.

If you want to monitor both the folders, you have to insert the local stanza in the deployed app.

Ciao.

Giuseppe

View solution in original post

gcusello
SplunkTrust
SplunkTrust

Hi @phularah,

when you connect a client to a Deployment Server, all the local apps will be removed and the apps for the ServerClass containing that client will be deployed.

So if the local inputs.conf is in an app (as it seems from your information), it will be removed.

If you want to monitor both the folders, you have to insert the local stanza in the deployed app.

Ciao.

Giuseppe

isoutamo
SplunkTrust
SplunkTrust

Hi

it's just like @gcusello said. When the app name is same (installed into same path) then DS win. You could also check it with btool on UF side. Just 

splunk btool inputs list monitor:///var/log --debug

and then look the output which shows all monitored files under /var/log

r. Ismo

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!

[Puzzles] Solve, Learn, Repeat: Matching cron expressions

This puzzle (first published here) is based on matching timestamps to cron expressions.All the timestamps ...

Design, Compete, Win: Submit Your Best Splunk Dashboards for a .conf26 Pass

Hello Splunkers,  We’re excited to kick off a Splunk Dashboard contest! We know that dashboards are a primary ...

May 2026 Splunk Expert Sessions: Security & Observability

Level Up Your Operations: May 2026 Splunk Expert Sessions Whether you are refining your security posture or ...