Getting Data In

How many wild cards (*) can I put in monitoring path?

melonman
Motivator

Hi

I have configured the monitor path of inputs.conf.

/nfsmount/log/log.d*_vd*hoge*/*/*/aaa_*_bb*-ccc*.log

My question is how many wildcard characters I can put in the path.
Is there any limitation of use of wildcard in monitor path?

I have checked the following articles, but still can not find the answer...

http://splunk-base.splunk.com/answers/13613/use-of-wild-card-character-in-monitor-path
http://www.splunk.com/base/Documentation/latest/Data/Specifyinputpathswithwildcards

Any thought?

Thank you in advance!

Tags (1)
1 Solution

dwaddle
SplunkTrust
SplunkTrust

I don't think there is a practical limit. Unless this has changed in newer versions, Splunk implements wildcards in the monitor stanza using whitelist and blacklist under the covers. So, your rule of

[monitor:///nfsmount/log/log.d*_vd*hoge*/*/*/aaa_*_bb*-ccc*.log]

Translates underneath to something like:

[monitor:///nfsmount/log]
whitelist=^/nfsmount/log/log\.d[^/]*_vd[^/]*hoge/[^/]*/[^/]*/aaa_[^/]*_bb_[^/]*-ccc[^/]*\.log$

NOTE: The regex above may not be exactly how Splunk handles this internally, but is meant to be representative of how Splunk might implement it. And I might have just gotten the regex wrong :).

On the one hand, you can implement this yourself (perhaps more easily) using whitelist/blacklist. But, on the other, I am concerned that either way you implement this it will deeply recurse through /nfsmount/log, which may not perform very well, depending on how many files exist in this tree.

View solution in original post

dwaddle
SplunkTrust
SplunkTrust

I don't think there is a practical limit. Unless this has changed in newer versions, Splunk implements wildcards in the monitor stanza using whitelist and blacklist under the covers. So, your rule of

[monitor:///nfsmount/log/log.d*_vd*hoge*/*/*/aaa_*_bb*-ccc*.log]

Translates underneath to something like:

[monitor:///nfsmount/log]
whitelist=^/nfsmount/log/log\.d[^/]*_vd[^/]*hoge/[^/]*/[^/]*/aaa_[^/]*_bb_[^/]*-ccc[^/]*\.log$

NOTE: The regex above may not be exactly how Splunk handles this internally, but is meant to be representative of how Splunk might implement it. And I might have just gotten the regex wrong :).

On the one hand, you can implement this yourself (perhaps more easily) using whitelist/blacklist. But, on the other, I am concerned that either way you implement this it will deeply recurse through /nfsmount/log, which may not perform very well, depending on how many files exist in this tree.

melonman
Motivator

Thans, dwaddle!

0 Karma

tskinnerivsec
Contributor

Does this example monitor stanza work? I'm trying to do something very similar:
[monitor:///var/log/syslog/sw]

and this didn't pull in any data.

0 Karma
Get Updates on the Splunk Community!

Index This | When is October more than just the tenth month?

October 2025 Edition  Hayyy Splunk Education Enthusiasts and the Eternally Curious!   We’re back with this ...

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 ...

What’s New & Next in Splunk SOAR

 Security teams today are dealing with more alerts, more tools, and more pressure than ever.  Join us for an ...