Hello Splunk community,
My team is tasked with creating alerts for standard server monitoring metrics (CPU, memory, etc.) and separating each alert by a list of prod hosts and non-prod hosts. In other words, a high CPU alert for prod hosts to trigger anytime 24/7, and a high CPU alert for non-prod hosts to only trigger between 7AM and 7PM.
Here is an example of how we're attempting to use lookup tables to narrow the alert to non-prod hosts for the 7AM to 7PM time window:
index=perfmon [| inputlookup ServerNonProd-NoSQL.csv | rename ServerHost as host ] sourcetype="Perfmon:CPU Load" counter="% Processor Time" earliest=-5m latest=now | stats avg(Value) as metric by host | where metric >= 80 | eval metric= round(metric, 2) | table host,metric
My question: Is this the most effective way to accomplish this task (through separate lookup tables), or is there a more efficient or advisable way of accomplishing this task?
Thank you for any pointers!
for starters you can just use one lookup table that has both prod and non-prod hosts, just have an "environment" field in it that says prod or nonprod. whether this is the best way depends on how many hosts you have in your lookup table and how often that changes. If it is a significant amount of hosts (tens of thousands'ish) and they update frequently you may want to move to a KVSTORE.
other than that you could also create a new index extracted field that add that metadata to the events at index time with prod or nonprod. From there you could just do "index=perfmon env::prod....."
for starters you can just use one lookup table that has both prod and non-prod hosts, just have an "environment" field in it that says prod or nonprod. whether this is the best way depends on how many hosts you have in your lookup table and how often that changes. If it is a significant amount of hosts (tens of thousands'ish) and they update frequently you may want to move to a KVSTORE.
other than that you could also create a new index extracted field that add that metadata to the events at index time with prod or nonprod. From there you could just do "index=perfmon env::prod....."
Thank you for your response. I will give this a shot.