The correlation search feature that is used to throttle the creation of notable events is the window duration. The window duration is the time period during which a correlation search will not create a new notable event for the same issue. For example, if the window duration is set to 1 day, and a correlation search triggers a notable event for a certain condition, such as a brute force attack from a source IP address, the correlation search will not create another notable event for the same condition within the next 24 hours. This prevents the correlation search from generating too many alerts for the same issue, which can reduce the alert fatigue and noise. The window duration can be configured in the correlation search settings, under the Throttling section12. References = 1: Create a correlation search - Splunk Documentation - Throttling. 2: Throttle alerts - Splunk Documentation.
Contribute your Thoughts:
Chosen Answer:
This is a voting comment (?). You can switch to a simple comment. It is better to Upvote an existing comment if you don't have anything to add.
Submit