When designing the number and size of indexes, which of the following considerations should be applied?
Correct Answer: D
When designing the number and size of indexes, the following considerations should be applied: * Expected daily ingest volumes: This is the amount of data that will be ingested and indexed by the Splunk platform per day. This affects the storage capacity, the indexing performance, and the license usage of the Splunk deployment. The number and size of indexes should be planned according to the expected daily ingest volumes, as well as the peak ingest volumes, to ensure that the Splunk deployment can handle the data load and meet the business requirements12. * Data retention time policies: This is the duration for which the data will be stored and searchable by the Splunk platform. This affects the storage capacity, the data availability, and the data compliance of the Splunk deployment. The number and size of indexes should be planned according to the data retention time policies, as well as the data lifecycle, to ensure that the Splunk deployment can retain the data for the desired period and meet the legal or regulatory obligations13. * Access controls: This is the mechanism for granting or restricting access to the data by the Splunk users or roles. This affects the data security, the data privacy, and the data governance of the Splunk deployment. The number and size of indexes should be planned according to the access controls, as well as the data sensitivity, to ensure that the Splunk deployment can protect the data from unauthorized or inappropriate access and meet the ethical or organizational standards14. Option D is the correct answer because it reflects the most relevant and important considerations for designing the number and size of indexes. Option A is incorrect because the number of concurrent users is not a direct factor for designing the number and size of indexes, but rather a factor for designing the search head capacity and the search head clustering configuration5. Option B is incorrect because the number of installed apps is not a direct factor for designing the number and size of indexes, but rather a factor for designing the app compatibility and the app performance. Option C is incorrect because it omits the expected daily ingest volumes, which is a crucial factor for designing the number and size of indexes. References: 1: Splunk Validated Architectures 2: [Indexer capacity planning] 3: [Set a retirement and archiving policy for your indexes] 4: [About securing Splunk Enterprise] 5: [Search head capacity planning] : [App installation and management overview]
Question 137
Which command is used for thawing the archive bucket?
Correct Answer: C
Explanation The splunk rebuild command is used for thawing the archive bucket. Thawing is the process of restoring frozen data back to Splunk for searching. Frozen data is data that has been archived or deleted from Splunk after reaching the end of its retention period. To thaw a bucket, the user needs to copy the bucket from the archive location to the thaweddb directory under SPLUNK_HOME/var/lib/splunk and run the splunk rebuild command to rebuild the .tsidx files for the bucket. The splunk collect command is used for collecting diagnostic data from a Splunk instance. The splunk convert command is used for converting configuration files from one format to another. The splunk dbinspect command is used for inspecting the status and properties of the buckets in an index.
Question 138
If .delta replication fails during knowledge bundle replication, what is the fall-back method for Splunk?
Correct Answer: C
This is the fall-back method for Splunk if .delta replication fails during knowledge bundle replication. Knowledge bundle replication is the process of distributing the knowledge objects, such as lookups, macros, and field extractions, from the search head cluster to the indexer cluster1. Splunk uses two methods of knowledge bundle replication: .delta replication and .bundle replication1. .Delta replication is the default and preferred method, as it only replicates the changes or updates to the knowledge objects, which reduces the network traffic and disk space usage1. However, if .delta replication fails for some reason, such as corrupted files or network errors, Splunk automatically switches to .bundle replication, which replicates the entire knowledge bundle, regardless of the changes or updates1. This ensures that the knowledge objects are always synchronized between the search head cluster and the indexer cluster, but it also consumes more network bandwidth and disk space1. The other options are not valid fall-back methods for Splunk. Option A, restarting splunkd, is not a method of knowledge bundle replication, but a way to restart the Splunk daemon on a node2. This may or may not fix the .delta replication failure, but it does not guarantee the synchronization of the knowledge objects. Option B, .delta replication, is not a fall-back method, but the primary method of knowledge bundle replication, which is assumed to have failed in the question1. Option D, restarting mongod, is not a method of knowledge bundle replication, but a way to restart the MongoDB daemon on a node3. This is not related to the knowledge bundle replication, but to the KV store replication, which is a different process3. Therefore, option C is the correct answer, and options A, B, and D are incorrect. 1: How knowledge bundle replication works 2: Start and stop Splunk Enterprise 3: Restart the KV store
Question 139
What does setting site=site0on all Search Head Cluster members do in a multi-site indexer cluster?
In search head clustering, which of the following methods can you use to transfer captaincy to a different member? (Select all that apply.)
Correct Answer: B,C
Explanation In search head clustering, there are two methods to transfer captaincy to a different member. One method is to use the Search Head Clustering settings menu from Splunk Web on any member. This method allows the user to select a specific member to become the new captain, or to let Splunk choose the best candidate. The other method is to run the splunk transfer shcluster-captain command from the member that the user wants to become the new captain. This method requires the user to know the name of the target member and to have access to the CLI of that member. Using the Monitoring Console is not a method to transfer captaincy, because the Monitoring Console does not have the option to change the captain. Running the splunk transfer shcluster-captain command from the current captain is not a method to transfer captaincy, because this command will fail with an error message