Splunk Enterprise

tsidxWritingLevel field is empty when calling Splunk REST API

Dominik_K
Loves-to-Learn Lots

Splunk version: 8.1.1
OS: CentOS 7.9

My indexes.conf file looks like this:

 

[default]
tsidxWritingLevel = 4

[mynewindex]
coldPath = $SPLUNK_DB/mynewindex/colddb
enableDataIntegrityControl = 0
enableTsidxReduction = 0
homePath = $SPLUNK_DB/mynewindex/db
maxTotalDataSizeMB = 512000
thawedPath = $SPLUNK_DB/mynewindex/thaweddb
tsidxWritingLevel = 4

 

 

 

What is my goal?
I want to ensure that tsidxWritingLevel = 4 is actually set up and is working.

So I ran an API query in Splunk:

 

| rest /services/data/indexes

 


But tsidxWritingLevel field is empty all the way down. Why is that? How can check that Splunk is actually using tsidxWritingLevel = 4?

Output from btool:

 

[root@localhost local]# /opt/splunk/bin/splunk btool indexes list --debug | grep local
/opt/splunk/etc/system/local/indexes.conf      journalCompression = zstd
/opt/splunk/etc/system/local/indexes.conf      tsidxWritingLevel = 4
/opt/splunk/etc/system/local/indexes.conf      [_internal]
/opt/splunk/etc/system/local/indexes.conf      journalCompression = zstd
/opt/splunk/etc/system/local/indexes.conf      tsidxWritingLevel = 4
/opt/splunk/etc/system/local/indexes.conf      journalCompression = zstd
/opt/splunk/etc/system/local/indexes.conf      tsidxWritingLevel = 4
/opt/splunk/etc/system/local/indexes.conf      journalCompression = zstd
/opt/splunk/etc/system/local/indexes.conf      tsidxWritingLevel = 4
/opt/splunk/etc/system/local/indexes.conf      journalCompression = zstd
/opt/splunk/etc/system/local/indexes.conf      tsidxWritingLevel = 4
/opt/splunk/etc/system/local/indexes.conf      journalCompression = zstd
/opt/splunk/etc/system/local/indexes.conf      tsidxWritingLevel = 4
/opt/splunk/etc/system/local/indexes.conf      journalCompression = zstd
/opt/splunk/etc/system/local/indexes.conf      tsidxWritingLevel = 4
/opt/splunk/etc/system/local/indexes.conf      [default]
/opt/splunk/etc/system/local/indexes.conf      journalCompression = zstd
/opt/splunk/etc/system/local/indexes.conf      tsidxWritingLevel = 4
/opt/splunk/etc/system/local/indexes.conf      journalCompression = zstd
/opt/splunk/etc/system/local/indexes.conf      tsidxWritingLevel = 4
/opt/splunk/etc/system/local/indexes.conf      journalCompression = zstd
/opt/splunk/etc/system/local/indexes.conf      tsidxWritingLevel = 4
/opt/splunk/etc/apps/search/local/indexes.conf [mynewindex]
/opt/splunk/etc/apps/search/local/indexes.conf coldPath = $SPLUNK_DB/mynewindex/colddb
/opt/splunk/etc/apps/search/local/indexes.conf enableDataIntegrityControl = 0
/opt/splunk/etc/apps/search/local/indexes.conf enableTsidxReduction = 0
/opt/splunk/etc/apps/search/local/indexes.conf homePath = $SPLUNK_DB/mynewindex/db
/opt/splunk/etc/system/local/indexes.conf      journalCompression = zstd
/opt/splunk/etc/apps/search/local/indexes.conf maxTotalDataSizeMB = 512000
/opt/splunk/etc/apps/search/local/indexes.conf thawedPath = $SPLUNK_DB/mynewindex/thaweddb
/opt/splunk/etc/apps/search/local/indexes.conf tsidxWritingLevel = 4
/opt/splunk/etc/system/local/indexes.conf      journalCompression = zstd
/opt/splunk/etc/system/local/indexes.conf      tsidxWritingLevel = 4
/opt/splunk/etc/system/local/indexes.conf      journalCompression = zstd
/opt/splunk/etc/system/local/indexes.conf      tsidxWritingLevel = 4
/opt/splunk/etc/system/local/indexes.conf      journalCompression = zstd
/opt/splunk/etc/system/local/indexes.conf      tsidxWritingLevel = 4

 

 

Labels (1)
0 Karma

Dominik_K
Loves-to-Learn Lots

I tried to run different API call in Splunk

| rest /services/configs/conf-indexes

 And this one is actually returning tsidxWritingLevel field showing value 4.

0 Karma
Career Survey
First 500 qualified respondents will receive a $20 gift card! Tell us about your professional Splunk journey.
Get Updates on the Splunk Community!

Thanks for the Memories! Splunk University, .conf25, and our Community

Thank you to everyone in the Splunk Community who joined us for .conf25, which kicked off with our iconic ...

Data Persistence in the OpenTelemetry Collector

This blog post is part of an ongoing series on OpenTelemetry. What happens if the OpenTelemetry collector ...

Introducing Splunk 10.0: Smarter, Faster, and More Powerful Than Ever

Now On Demand Whether you're managing complex deployments or looking to future-proof your data ...