Monitor the health of your Splunk SOAR (Cloud) system

Use the System Health page to view a summary of your Splunk SOAR (Cloud) instance. The System Health page includes the following information:

  • Running status of Splunk SOAR (Cloud) processes
  • Resource consumption
  • Health and status of critical processes

Use the System Health page as a starting point to begin troubleshooting issues. Splunk support might ask for the results of this page to start a troubleshooting investigation.

Perform the following tasks to get to the System Health page:

  1. From the main menu, select Administration.
  2. Select System Health > System Health.

This screen image shows the System Health page. The main elements on the page are described in the text immediately following this image.

The following image shows the System Health page for a standalone, non-clustered Splunk SOAR (Cloud) instance. Additional selections such as a selector for individual nodes and ClusterD statistics are available on the System Health page in a clustered deployment. A clustered deployment doesn't have the Database Disk Space panel since the database in a cluster lives on a different host.

The top row of graphs shows you the status of the following system-wide resources:

  • Memory usage
  • Load average
  • Disk usage

Each row after the top row represents the individual system processes important to Splunk SOAR (Cloud). Verify that each process has a green Running status icon. Click Restart if you need to restart any one of the individual processes.

Splunk SOAR (Cloud) runs on top of Linux, so these graphs can be interpreted as you might on any Linux system. On a fairly idle Splunk SOAR (Cloud) system, there might be a significant amount of free memory, unused swap, and a lower load compared to the number of allocated CPU cores. There might also be more free disk space for the database and files.

The Splunk SOAR (Cloud) processing daemons IngestD, DecideD, WorkflowD, and ActionD perform various scheduling, decision, and management functions as well as critical background functions. All four must be running in order for Splunk SOAR (Cloud) to work properly. Splunk SOAR (Cloud) also relies on HTTPD and Postgres, which is the database.