I have installed Splunk 6.0.4 as a root user on Linux 64bit RH 6.4. However, now I would like to change the user Splunk runs as to a non-root user. Is this possible and how would it be done?
-Thanks!
There are two basic things that need to happen here
1) Change the ownership, recursively, of the splunk_home to the new user : chown -R newuser:newgroup /opt/splunk
2) Change the user Splunk starts as. You can do this by editing the launch.conf, or more easily with
$splunk_home$/bin/splunk enable boot-start -user newuser
Change newuser to the new username.
I eventually used strace to figure out how Splunk was determining the user to run as. Have a look in $SPLUNK_HOME/etc/splunk-launch.conf
- there's a SPLUNK_OS_USER=
configuration option, which you'll probably want to set to the user that owns the files.
This is documented in the Installation Manual topic, Run Splunk Enterprise as a different or non-root user.
Yes. Documentation says, "before you start Splunk Enterprise for the first time, change the ownership of the $SPLUNK_HOME directory to the desired user."
But Splunk was started as root-user and has been running as root-user. So will the "chown" command work after Splunk was started and running as root-user?
Hi!
What has worked for me, especially when I would run into permission issues early in my splunking career, is to follow the steps listed above, but then add the following touches (assuming splunk is the user you want to use):
sudo $SPLUNK_HOME/bin/splunk stop (no need to have splunkd cling to files/process that retain the previous ownership)
sudo su splunk
sudo chown -R splunk:splunk /opt/splunk(or where ever splunk is installed)
sudo $SPLUNK_HOME/bin/splunk start
Let splunk run through it's initialization process and BAM! Splunk is running as the new user, all of the ownership should be changed recursively throughout the file structure, and you've removed the need to reindex data or run chown multiple times. Hopefully this works with the same magical flair for you as it has for me. But you have shout "Bam!" with an exaggerated motion or else you break the magic. 🙂 happy splunking, my friend.
Hi, this particular stipulation predates my time here.
The fast fix is to reinstall Splunk and reindex.
That said, I have performed chown
s on existing Splunk installations that have initially been started and run as root without issue.
You might need to perform the chown
multiple times before it takes, and it's possible that a chown -R
from the top of the directory won't always take. I think this is why the stipulation exists.
Thank you all for your input.
You can use:
chown -R group:user SPLUNK_HOME