Splunk Search

index retirement policies: size versus age

ualbanytech
Path Finder

Where index retirement policies are concerned, if you define both size and age I assume first policy type hit wins?

Tags (1)
0 Karma
1 Solution

jbsplunk
Splunk Employee
Splunk Employee

That is correct, if you hit the size first, it wins. If the data becomes aged beyond what you've specified, that would win.

View solution in original post

jbsplunk
Splunk Employee
Splunk Employee

That is correct, if you hit the size first, it wins. If the data becomes aged beyond what you've specified, that would win.

ualbanytech
Path Finder

@gkanapathy, for age, does that imply that deletion may not occur until events go to frozen?

I just found: http://www.splunk.com/base/Documentation/4.1.6/admin/HowSplunkstoresindexes

and skimming it quickly--probably a mistake--it sounds like I could have newer events being added to a bucket which do not exceed my age policy and this would prevent my events from getting deleted.

However it sounds like the situation you mention should only occur in the warm buckets?

0 Karma

jbsplunk
Splunk Employee
Splunk Employee

Thanks for the clarification.

0 Karma

gkanapathy
Splunk Employee
Splunk Employee

With the qualification that "age" is not an absolute for each item, but that items older than the specified retirement age may be deleted, as long as all items in the same bucket are also older than the retirement age.

Get Updates on the Splunk Community!

Detecting Remote Code Executions With the Splunk Threat Research Team

REGISTER NOWRemote code execution (RCE) vulnerabilities pose a significant risk to organizations. If ...

Observability | Use Synthetic Monitoring for Website Metadata Verification

If you are on Splunk Observability Cloud, you may already have Synthetic Monitoringin your observability ...

More Ways To Control Your Costs With Archived Metrics | Register for Tech Talk

Tuesday, May 14, 2024  |  11AM PT / 2PM ET Register to Attend Join us for this Tech Talk and learn how to ...