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Implementing Splunk: Big Data Reporting and Development for Operational Intelligence

You're reading from  Implementing Splunk: Big Data Reporting and Development for Operational Intelligence

Product type Book
Published in Jan 2013
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781849693288
Pages 448 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Concepts
Author (1):
VINCENT BUMGARNER VINCENT BUMGARNER
Profile icon VINCENT BUMGARNER

Table of Contents (19) Chapters

Implementing Splunk: Big Data Reporting and Development for Operational Intelligence
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
1. The Splunk Interface 2. Understanding Search 3. Tables, Charts, and Fields 4. Simple XML Dashboards 5. Advanced Search Examples 6. Extending Search 7. Working with Apps 8. Building Advanced Dashboards 9. Summary Indexes and CSV Files 10. Configuring Splunk 11. Advanced Deployments 12. Extending Splunk Index

Calculating top for a large time frame


One common problem is to find the top contributors out of some huge set of unique values. For instance, if you want to know what IP addresses are using the most bandwidth in a given day or week, you may have to keep track of the total of request sizes across millions of unique hosts to definitively answer this question. When using summary indexes, this means storing millions of events in the summary index, quickly defeating the point of summary indexes.

Just to illustrate, let's look at a simple set of data:

Time

1.1.1.1

2.2.2.2

3.3.3.3

4.4.4.4

5.5.5.5

6.6.6.6

12:00

99

100

100

100

  

13:00

99

 

100

100

100

 

14:00

99

100

 

101

100

 

15:00

99

 

99

100

100

 

16:00

99

100

  

100

100

total

495

300

299

401

400

100

If we only stored the top three IPs per hour, our data set would look like the following:

Time

1.1.1.1

2.2.2.2

3.3.3.3

4.4.4.4

5.5.5.5

6.6.6.6

12:00

 

100

100

100

  

13:00

  

100

100

100

 

14:00

 

100

 

101...

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