Getting Data In

How can I index the same file to different indexes?

Simeon
Splunk Employee
Splunk Employee

I have a file that I need to index twice. Specifically, I need it sent/indexed to two different indexes. How could I have a single file get indexed to two separate indexes?

Tags (1)
1 Solution

Simeon
Splunk Employee
Splunk Employee

You can use the combination of crcSalt and a symlink. Consider the following example:

I have two indexes, index1 and index2. The file I want to index is called error_log and resides in /var/log/httpd/.

By symlinking log_file to another location, and using crcSalt, Splunk will be able to index this file twice and send it to another index. First, symbolically link the error_log file to another location:

>cd /var/log/httpd/dir
>ln -s /var/log/httpd/error_log .

The previous commands will create a soft link pointing to /var/log/httpd/dir/error_log. Here is the exact configuration in inputs.conf:

[monitor:///var/log/httpd/error_log]
index=index1
sourcetype=apache_error
crcSalt = <SOURCE>

[monitor:///var/log/httpd/dir/error_log]
index=index2
sourcetype=apache_error
crcSalt = <SOURCE>

View solution in original post

Simeon
Splunk Employee
Splunk Employee

Let us consider that you have a very common log file (/var/log/messages) that gets indexed to an index called operations. Your environment has hundreds of machines that send this information to Splunk via a common forwarder configuration. Now, what if I have a few machines where I want this log to be shared with another group that should not have access to the operations index. Well, I could create a role filter for this other group and grant access to this index. For my case, I don't want multiple filters and would like to silo my data.

0 Karma

jrodman
Splunk Employee
Splunk Employee

There's a few use cases: apps that overlap in the data they want but are developed entirely independently; multi-tenant environments where you want different splunk groups to operate relatively independently; a case similar to summary indexing where you want sparse data in a special index, but you also want it available in a general, easily accessible index.

0 Karma

Simeon
Splunk Employee
Splunk Employee

You can use the combination of crcSalt and a symlink. Consider the following example:

I have two indexes, index1 and index2. The file I want to index is called error_log and resides in /var/log/httpd/.

By symlinking log_file to another location, and using crcSalt, Splunk will be able to index this file twice and send it to another index. First, symbolically link the error_log file to another location:

>cd /var/log/httpd/dir
>ln -s /var/log/httpd/error_log .

The previous commands will create a soft link pointing to /var/log/httpd/dir/error_log. Here is the exact configuration in inputs.conf:

[monitor:///var/log/httpd/error_log]
index=index1
sourcetype=apache_error
crcSalt = <SOURCE>

[monitor:///var/log/httpd/dir/error_log]
index=index2
sourcetype=apache_error
crcSalt = <SOURCE>

hulahoop
Splunk Employee
Splunk Employee

I'm interested in understanding why you would like to do this. 🙂

0 Karma
Get Updates on the Splunk Community!

Routing logs with Splunk OTel Collector for Kubernetes

The Splunk Distribution of the OpenTelemetry (OTel) Collector is a product that provides a way to ingest ...

Welcome to the Splunk Community!

(view in My Videos) We're so glad you're here! The Splunk Community is place to connect, learn, give back, and ...

Tech Talk | Elevating Digital Service Excellence: The Synergy of Splunk RUM & APM

Elevating Digital Service Excellence: The Synergy of Real User Monitoring and Application Performance ...