thebaumblog: change management

New Splunk Apps Launch at Interop and MMS

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This week we were rolling in Las Vegas with Interop at one end of the strip and the Microsoft Management Summit at the other end.

At Interop we launched the Splunk for Change Management app. And at MMS the Splunk for Windows Management app made it’s debut.

Both apps make use of the Splunk Platform which provides a common set of services and APIs making it easy to create and integrate applications that leverage vast amounts of IT data. These are the second and third applications in a series of new releases we’ll be doing this year.
Splunk for PCI was the first app launched last quarter.

Splunk for Change Management App

Splunk for Change Management takes advantage of the fact that we index not just logs but configurations and file system changes as well. It also leverages a little known (but I think soon to be much more popular) Splunk search command called diff. Diff lets you easily compare two search results and returns a single result that is the different between the two. You can compare values of specific fields of results as well as every line of multi line events and files. This makes it really easy to compare configurations across lots of locations. Splunk for Change Management leverages these capabilities and brings integrated change audit, change detection and change validation.

Now your can detect unauthorized changes by indexing your trouble tickets and ticketing system logs together with your service, device and application events and configurations. We use Jira internally and find indexing our Jira tickets enables us to immediately know if a change was authorized or not. No more jumping between redundant and siloed consoles searching for the answer or writing all kinds of complicated data transformation scripts to compare the output of different management systems.

And for the first time we introduce to the industry the concept of Change Validation. Today many of us have the ability to blast out patches to hundreds of servers and device automatically. But how do we know that the changes had the desired effect? By observing the state and events generated by the actual patched systems we can now compare the before and after actual behavior. Splunk brings change audit events and configuration data together with activity and error logs so you can connect change with actual system and user behavior.

The app includes:

  • Out-of-the-box dashboards with over 40 reports showing changes across all datacenter components including applications, servers and network devices.
  • Predefined alerts that detect unauthorized change on the basis of configuration variances and correlation with service desk systems.
  • Predefined searches to help identify service-impacting changes quickly.
  • Integration with service desk systems to close the loop on change management by validating the effect of change on system behavior.

Splunk for Windows Management App

This new app integrates Microsoft’s System Center Operations Manager’s command-and-control view of a Windows infrastructure with Splunk’s IT Search. The latest version of Splunk now indexes all IT data generated by Windows servers and applications — event logs, registry keys, performance metrics and application log files. Everything is searchable from a single place to resolve service-impacting incidents faster, enhance monitoring coverage, and validate service levels.

What’s really cool is Splunk searches can be launched through Tasks in the System Center Operations Manager Console on any aspect of the infrastructure being monitored, and can be expanded to include far-flung elements of the IT infrastructure for additional context – regardless of platform or technology. Its super fast to identify information across the Windows Event Log, the Windows

The Splunk Platform Has Launched

Without a doubt the past week has been the most amazing week in Splunk history. The crazy coast to coast multi-city launch left us all exhausted and electrified. A few of the things that stick in my mind…

First Splunk 3.2 including Splunk for Windows went live on our download page last Saturday and more than 40% of our downloads in the past week have been for our new Windows version. Then Nick Selby of 451 Group wrote an analyst brief on us. He said, “Splunk is awesome: it’s multiplatform, easy to install and easy to use. And with an abstraction layer of logs, configuration files and system messages, traps and alerts, it’s seriously useful.” 451 has a reputation for ripping vendors, so we’re flattered.

Dana Gardner, analyst with Interarbor wrote a very eloquent analysis of our platform launch on ZD Net. “Splunk has created the means to offer developers easy access to that data and the powerful inferences gleaned from comprehensive IT search. That means the data can go places no log file has gone before,” says Dana. Developers are certainly doing some way cool things with Splunk.

I’ve seen a couple of neat visualization applications including this one called Replay. It shows you a live or time lapsed view of your event streams. Here you can see the replay application hooked up to our internal wiki showing who’s doing what over a 24 hour period. Click on the image for the movie.

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As for our own applications, the Splunk for PCI app drew tremendous interest at our series of Splunk Live events this past week. It’s just one example of how a business person with domain knowledge can package their own Splunk configuration as an application. If you haven’t seen Raffy’s video on the PCI Application, check it out here.

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We also showed the Splunk for Change Management application as well. Seeing someone touch a file and watching the Splunk dashboard update instantaneously is an awesome display of how flexible Splunk has become. Check out the developer program for yourself and get your goods up on SplunkBase so we can all check em out.

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