Getting Data In

Making splunk act like tail -f $file

dpaper
Explorer

Hi,

I'm trying to get Splunk to do the equivalent of a tail -f $file. Specifically what I'm trying to do is get the event output lines to be a lot more compressed and just show the raw text, no parsing, no field picker, no arrows, no splunk time stamps. I don't know how much of this is possible, but some of it might be.

Thanks.

Tags (3)

gkanapathy
Splunk Employee
Splunk Employee
  1. Create a search that shows the events you're interested in, e.g., maybe it's just source=/var/log/file.log, or source=*whatever.log | head 500. The search should have a real-time time range.

  2. From the actions menu, select "Add to dashboard". Add the search to a new dashboard.

  3. Edit the dashboard's View XML, using the event panel as a reference. You won't be able to remove the timestamp or change the spacing or typeface from here. Some things will require an edit of the CSS behind this view.

  4. If you prefer, use @Mackenzie's technique of picking out the _raw field and display the results with the <table> panel rather than the <event> panel. You can edit the prefs of this in the view XML as well.

Mackenzie
Engager

A simple solution that may achieve what you want is:

| fields _raw | eval event=_raw | table event

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!

Announcing Modern Navigation: A New Era of Splunk User Experience

We are excited to introduce the Modern Navigation feature in the Splunk Platform, available to both cloud and ...

Modernize your Splunk Apps – Introducing Python 3.13 in Splunk

We are excited to announce that the upcoming releases of Splunk Enterprise 10.2.x and Splunk Cloud Platform ...

Step into “Hunt the Insider: An Splunk ES Premier Mystery” to catch a cybercriminal ...

After a whole week of being on call, you fell asleep on your keyboard, and you hit a sequence of buttons that ...