Of the following types of files within an index bucket, which file type may consume the most disk?
Correct Answer: A
Of the following types of files within an index bucket, the rawdata file type may consume the most disk. The rawdata file type contains the compressed and encrypted raw data that Splunk has ingested. The rawdata file type is usually the largest file type in a bucket, because it stores the original data without any filtering or extraction. The bloom filter file type contains a probabilistic data structure that is used to determine if a bucket contains events that match a given search. The bloom filter file type is usually very small, because it only stores a bit array of hashes. The metadata (.data) file type contains information about the bucket properties, such as the earliest and latest event timestamps, the number of events, and the size of the bucket. The metadata file type is also usually very small, because it only stores a few lines of text. The inverted index (.tsidx) file type contains the time-series index that maps the timestamps and event IDs of the raw data. The inverted index file type can vary in size depending on the number and frequency of events, but it is usually smaller than the rawdata file type
Question 122
When using ingest-based licensing, what Splunk role requires the license manager to scale?
Correct Answer: C
When using ingest-based licensing, there are no Splunk roles that require the license manager to scale, because the license manager does not need to handle any additional load or complexity. Ingest-based licensing is a new licensing model that allows customers to pay for the data they ingest into Splunk, regardless of the data source, volume, or use case. Ingest-based licensing simplifies the licensing process and eliminates the need for license pools, license stacks, license slaves, and license warnings. The license manager is still responsible for enforcing the license quota and generating license usage reports, but it does not need to communicate with any other Splunk instances or monitor their license usage. Therefore, option C is the correct answer. Option A is incorrect because search peers are indexers that participate in a distributed search. They do not affect the license manager's scalability, because they do not report their license usage to the license manager. Option B is incorrect because search heads are Splunk instances that coordinate searches across multiple indexers. They do not affect the license manager's scalability, because they do not report their license usage to the license manager. Option D is incorrect because deployment clients are Splunk instances that receive configuration updates and apps from a deployment server. They do not affect the license manager's scalability, because they do not report their license usage to the license manager12 1: https://docs.splunk.com/Documentation/Splunk/9.1.2/Admin/AboutSplunklicensing 2: https://docs.splunk.com/Documentation/Splunk/9.1.2/Admin/HowSplunklicensingworks
Question 123
A Splunk architect has inherited the Splunk deployment at Buttercup Games and end users are complaining that the events are inconsistently formatted for a web source. Further investigation reveals that not all weblogs flow through the same infrastructure: some of the data goes through heavy forwarders and some of the forwarders are managed by another department. Which of the following items might be the cause of this issue?
Correct Answer: C
Explanation The indexers may have different configurations than the heavy forwarders, which might cause the issue of inconsistently formatted events for a web sourcetype. The heavy forwarders perform parsing and indexing on the data before sending it to the indexers. If the indexers have different configurations than the heavy forwarders, such as different props.conf or transforms.conf settings, the data may be parsed or indexed differently on the indexers, resulting in inconsistent events. The search head configurations do not affect the event formatting, as the search head does not parse or index the data. The data inputs configurations on the forwarders do not affect the event formatting, as the data inputs only determine what data to collect and how to monitor it. The forwarder version does not affect the event formatting, as long as the forwarder is compatible with the indexer. For more information, see [Heavy forwarder versus indexer] and [Configure event processing] in the Splunk documentation.
Question 124
The guidance Splunk gives for estimating size on for syslog data is 50% of original data size. How does this divide between files in the index?
Correct Answer: A
Question 125
In which phase of the Splunk Enterprise data pipeline are indexed extraction configurations processed?