A curated collection of awesome apps, visualizations, and resources for the Splunk data platform.
Awesome Splunk is a curated directory of resources for the Splunk data platform, which captures, indexes, and correlates real-time data for analysis. It compiles apps, visualizations, documentation, and community tools to help users monitor IT services, security, and compliance. The list serves as a starting point for both newcomers and experienced Splunk practitioners.
Splunk administrators, developers, security analysts, and IT operations teams who use Splunk for log analysis, monitoring, and data visualization. It's also valuable for those evaluating or learning the Splunk ecosystem.
It saves time by aggregating vetted, high-quality resources in one place, following the trusted "awesome list" format. Unlike scattered web searches, it provides a community-maintained, focused directory specifically for the Splunk platform.
A collection of awesome resources for Splunk
Open-Awesome is built by the community, for the community. Submit a project, suggest an awesome list, or help improve the catalog on GitHub.
Aggregates high-quality official and community resources in one place, saving time on scattered web searches. Evidence: Includes basics like Splunk Docs, blogs, and development tools.
Highlights essential Splunk apps like Enterprise Security and IT Service Intelligence with direct links to documentation. Evidence: Separate sections with home pages, Splunkbase entries, and dedicated awesome lists.
Lists custom visualization add-ons from SplunkBase, such as Event Timeline Viz and Sankey Diagram. Evidence: Specific visualizations with Splunkbase links and brief descriptions.
Provides links to conferences, user groups, and Slack channels for connecting with other Splunk users. Evidence: Includes .Conf, UserGroups, and Splunk UserGroups Slack.
Connects to searchable databases of Splunk Processing Language queries for various use-cases. Evidence: Mentions GoSplunk and other SPL repositories in the Unofficial Resources section.
As a community-maintained list, it may not be updated regularly, missing the latest apps or resources. Evidence: Relies on contributions, and some linked personal blogs are noted as infrequently updated.
Serves as a directory without in-depth explanations or tutorials, requiring users to navigate external sites for details. Evidence: Lists resources like apps and visualizations but doesn't provide comprehensive guides or reviews.
Includes many unofficial blogs and repositories, which may have varying quality, accuracy, and maintenance levels. Evidence: Unofficial Resources section links to personal home pages with inconsistent update frequencies.