Splunk metrics

This page describes StackState version 4.0.

The StackState 4.0 version range is End of Life (EOL) and no longer supported. We encourage customers still running the 4.0 version range to upgrade to a more recent release.

Go to the documentation for the latest StackState release.

Overview

The StackState Agent can be configured to execute Splunk saved searches and provide the results as metrics to the StackState receiver API. It will dispatch the saved searches periodically, specifying last metric timestamp to start with up until now.

The StackState Agent expects the results of the saved searches to contain certain fields, as described below in the Metric Query Format. If there are other fields present in the result, they will be mapped to tags, where the column name is the key, and the content the value. The Agent will filter out Splunk default fields (except _time), like e.g. _raw, see the Splunk documentation for more information about default fields.

The agent check prevents sending duplicate metrics over multiple check runs. The received saved search records have to be uniquely identified for comparison. By default, a record's identity is composed of Splunk's default fields _bkt and _cd. The default behavior can be changed for each saved search by setting the unique_key_fields in the check's configuration. Please note that the specified unique_key_fields fields become mandatory for each record. In case the records can not be uniquely identified by a combination of fields then the whole record can be used by setting unique_key_fields to [], i.e. empty list.

Metric Query Format

All these fields are required.

_time

long

Data collection timestamp, millis since epoch

metric%

string

Name of the metric

value%

numeric

The value of the metric

\% The name of the field is configurable in the configuration file

Example

Example Splunk query:

index=vms MetricId=cpu.usage.average
| table _time VMName Value    
| eval VMName = upper(VMName)
| rename VMName as metricCpuUsageAverage, Value as valueCpuUsageAverage
| eval type = "CpuUsageAverage"

Authentication

The Splunk integration provides various authentication mechanisms to connect to your Splunk instance.

HTTP Basic Authentication

With HTTP basic authentication, the username and password specified in the splunk_metric.yaml can be used to connect to Splunk. These parameters are available in basic_auth parameter under the authentication section. Credentials under the root of the configuration file are deprecated and credentials provided in the new basic_auth section will override the root credentials.

As an example, see the below config :

instances:
    - url: "https://localhost:8089"

    # username: "admin" ## deprecated; use basic_auth.username under authentication section
    # password: "admin" ## deprecated; use basic_auth.password under authentication section

    # verify_ssl_certificate: false

    ## Integration supports either basic authentication or token based authentication.
    ## Token based authentication is preferred before basic authentication.
    authentication:
      basic_auth:
        username: "admin"
        password: "admin"

Token-based Authentication

Token-based authentication mechanism supports Splunk authentication tokens. An initial Splunk token is provided to the integration with a short expiration date. The integration's authentication mechanism will request a new token before expiration, respecting the renewal_days setting, with an expiration of token_expiration_days days.

Token-based authentication information overrides basic authentication in case both are configured.

The following new parameters are available:

  • name - Name of the user who will be using this token.

  • initial_token - First initial valid token which will be exchanged with new generated token in the integration..

  • audience - JWT audience name which is purpose of token.

  • token_expiration_days - Validity of the newly requested token after first initial token and by default it's 90 days.

  • renewal_days - Number of days before when token should refresh, by default it's 10 days.

As an example, see the below config :

instances:
    - url: "https://localhost:8089"

    # username: "admin" ## deprecated; use basic_auth.username under authentication section
    # password: "admin" ## deprecated; use basic_auth.password under authentication section

    # verify_ssl_certificate: false

    ## Integration supports either basic authentication or token based authentication.
    ## Token based authentication is preferred before basic authentication.
    authentication:
      # basic_auth:
        # username: "admin"
        # password: "admin"

      token_auth:
        ## Token for the user who will be using it
        name: "api-user"

        ## The initial valid token which will be exchanged with new generated token as soon as the check starts
        ## first time and in case of restart, this token will not be used anymore
        initial_token: "my-initial-token-hash"

        ## JWT audience used for purpose of token
        audience: "search"

        ## When a token is about to expire, a new token is requested from Splunk. The validity of the newly requested
        ## token is requested to be `token_expiration_days` days. After `renewal_days` days the token will be renewed
        ## for another `token_expiration_days` days.
        token_expiration_days: 90

        ## the number of days before when token should refresh, by default it's 10 days.
        renewal_days: 10

The above authentication configuration are part of the conf.d/splunk_metric.yaml file.

Configuration

  1. Edit your conf.d/splunk_metric.yaml file.

  2. Restart the agent

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