Getting Data In

Memory Usage by streamfwd.exe

ashajambagi
Communicator

Hi All,

I have recently deployed Splunk TA Stream on universal forwarder to collect DNS data. Stream App is configured on heavy Forwarder. The universal forwarder is forwarding the data to indexer cluster.

The streamfwd.exe service on DNS server is consuming 1GB of memory. Is it a normal behavior of streamfwd.exe service to use memory in GB?

UF host details : Windows 2012 R2 , Memory : 32 GB , 64bit

Below configurations on Universal Forwarder:

limits.conf

 

 

maxKbps = 4096

 

 

inputs.conf

[streamfwd://streamfwd]
splunk_stream_app_location = https://<HF_IP>:8000/en-us/custom/splunk_app_stream/
disabled = 0
stream_forwarder_id =
sslVerifyServerCert = false

 

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1 Solution

Richfez
SplunkTrust
SplunkTrust

How busy is your DNS server?

Also, you've limited the maxKbps of the UF to 4 Mb.  If during busy times the DNS entries exceed 4 Mb, then it just buffers it all, and that would use a lot of memory.

If I were you, I'd raise those limits WAY up higher, or remove then completely, and see what change that makes.  Try it at 'maxKbps=0'  (Which is unlimited)

You can always set it back to something less than unlimited after testing proves this solves it or does not solve it.  Frankly, I'd just leave it set to unlimited and build out indexer ingestion if you have to.  The only reasons I can think of to leave it limited is to not fill a small pipe, like a WAN connection that's underprovisioned for what's needed.

 

Happy Splunking,

Rich

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0 Karma

Richfez
SplunkTrust
SplunkTrust

How busy is your DNS server?

Also, you've limited the maxKbps of the UF to 4 Mb.  If during busy times the DNS entries exceed 4 Mb, then it just buffers it all, and that would use a lot of memory.

If I were you, I'd raise those limits WAY up higher, or remove then completely, and see what change that makes.  Try it at 'maxKbps=0'  (Which is unlimited)

You can always set it back to something less than unlimited after testing proves this solves it or does not solve it.  Frankly, I'd just leave it set to unlimited and build out indexer ingestion if you have to.  The only reasons I can think of to leave it limited is to not fill a small pipe, like a WAN connection that's underprovisioned for what's needed.

 

Happy Splunking,

Rich

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