Getting Data In

Which forwarder to use?

rahiparikh
Explorer

Hi,

I wish to tag basic information in source data before I send it to Indexer. I wish to tag the host, sourcetype and such similar basic information. What forwarder should I use?

( I tried to read the docs but it got me confused! 😞 )

Thanks!

0 Karma
1 Solution

IT_Bullgod
Splunk Employee
Splunk Employee

Based on the current version of Splunk, there are 3 types of Forwarder configuration:

The universal forwarder is a streamlined, dedicated version of Splunk that contains only the essential components needed to forward data to receivers.

A heavy forwarder is a full Splunk instance, with some features disabled to achieve a smaller footprint.

A light forwarder is also a full Splunk instance, with most features disabled to achieve as small a footprint as possible.

The lightweight forwarder type is typically used to support previous versions of Splunk, and likely should not be needed in new installations. Now you simply need to decide if you need a heavy or Universal forwarder, and that decision usually comes down to whether or not you need to filter or route data from the forwarder.

In your example above, tagging source and hostname are actually part of the Splunk metadata - these elements are typically attached to your event data by default. In this case, you can use the Universal Forwarder.

If you plan to route event data to multiple hosts, or if you want to limit (filter) the data from the Forwarder to the indexer, then you'll need a heavy forwarder.

View solution in original post

IT_Bullgod
Splunk Employee
Splunk Employee

Based on the current version of Splunk, there are 3 types of Forwarder configuration:

The universal forwarder is a streamlined, dedicated version of Splunk that contains only the essential components needed to forward data to receivers.

A heavy forwarder is a full Splunk instance, with some features disabled to achieve a smaller footprint.

A light forwarder is also a full Splunk instance, with most features disabled to achieve as small a footprint as possible.

The lightweight forwarder type is typically used to support previous versions of Splunk, and likely should not be needed in new installations. Now you simply need to decide if you need a heavy or Universal forwarder, and that decision usually comes down to whether or not you need to filter or route data from the forwarder.

In your example above, tagging source and hostname are actually part of the Splunk metadata - these elements are typically attached to your event data by default. In this case, you can use the Universal Forwarder.

If you plan to route event data to multiple hosts, or if you want to limit (filter) the data from the Forwarder to the indexer, then you'll need a heavy forwarder.

Get Updates on the Splunk Community!

Announcing Scheduled Export GA for Dashboard Studio

We're excited to announce the general availability of Scheduled Export for Dashboard Studio. Starting in ...

Extending Observability Content to Splunk Cloud

Watch Now!   In this Extending Observability Content to Splunk Cloud Tech Talk, you'll see how to leverage ...

More Control Over Your Monitoring Costs with Archived Metrics GA in US-AWS!

What if there was a way you could keep all the metrics data you need while saving on storage costs?This is now ...