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Splunk Best Practices

Splunk Best Practices

By : Travis Marlette
4.8 (5)
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Splunk Best Practices

Splunk Best Practices

4.8 (5)
By: Travis Marlette

Overview of this book

This book will give you an edge over others through insights that will help you in day-to-day instances. When you're working with data from various sources in Splunk and performing analysis on this data, it can be a bit tricky. With this book, you will learn the best practices of working with Splunk. You'll learn about tools and techniques that will ease your life with Splunk, and will ultimately save you time. In some cases, it will adjust your thinking of what Splunk is, and what it can and cannot do. To start with, you'll get to know the best practices to get data into Splunk, analyze data, and package apps for distribution. Next, you'll discover the best practices in logging, operations, knowledge management, searching, and reporting. To finish off, we will teach you how to troubleshoot Splunk searches, as well as deployment, testing, and development with Splunk.
Table of Contents (11 chapters)
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Tokens

Tokens are at the heart of searching and passing data from one module to another, or one page to another. These are the objects within Splunk that allow you to pass values of a field or result set to another module. These are often represented by the symbol $foo$ in the documentation. Something to keep in mind is that for each module the tokens are often different. This is also where we reach into the development world to understand how these work.

For now, I am going to focus on the tokens of the contextual and dynamic drill-down, in order to give context to what we will be learning in this chapter.

There are far too many tokens within Splunk to list, however they are all necessary. This is basically how they work. A token is set as part of an input, which is then passed to a search in order to filter data to the visualization as represented through the following screenshot:

Tokens

Once set, this token can be used by other searches downstream with the use of the $<token>$ characters...

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