Splunk Enterprise

migrating to new hardware

KulvinderSingh
Path Finder

Splunk offline --enforce-count or data rebalance which one is better in case of migrating to new hardware and do i have to add peer to manual detention in indexer cluster before running a data rebalance or splunkoffline?

 

Labels (1)
0 Karma
1 Solution

richgalloway
SplunkTrust
SplunkTrust

Use splunk offline --enforce-count to migrate to new hardware.  A rebalance will shuffle buckets around, but won't remove the old indexer.  If you're only replacing a single indexer then manual detention is not necessary.  However, if this is one of many migrations than consider setting manual detention on each old indexer so they don't receive buckets from the others that are taken down.  It will spare the system from potentially moving the same bucket multiple times.

---
If this reply helps you, Karma would be appreciated.

View solution in original post

richgalloway
SplunkTrust
SplunkTrust

Use splunk offline --enforce-count to migrate to new hardware.  A rebalance will shuffle buckets around, but won't remove the old indexer.  If you're only replacing a single indexer then manual detention is not necessary.  However, if this is one of many migrations than consider setting manual detention on each old indexer so they don't receive buckets from the others that are taken down.  It will spare the system from potentially moving the same bucket multiple times.

---
If this reply helps you, Karma would be appreciated.
Get Updates on the Splunk Community!

Enter the Dashboard Challenge and Watch the .conf24 Global Broadcast!

The Splunk Community Dashboard Challenge is still happening, and it's not too late to enter for the week of ...

Join Us at the Builder Bar at .conf24 – Empowering Innovation and Collaboration

What is the Builder Bar? The Builder Bar is more than just a place; it's a hub of creativity, collaboration, ...

Combine Multiline Logs into a Single Event with SOCK - a Guide for Advanced Users

This article is the continuation of the “Combine multiline logs into a single event with SOCK - a step-by-step ...