macOS DSN Configuration
This section shows how to set up ODBC connectivity and configure DSNs on macOS.
Minimum macOS Version
The CData ODBC Driver for Splunk driver requires macOS Sierra (10.12) or above.
Licensing the Driver
In a terminal, run the following commands to license the driver. To activate a trial, omit the <key> input.
cd "/Applications/CData ODBC Driver for Splunk/bin"
sudo ./install-license.sh <key>
You'll be prompted for a name and password. These refer to your name and your machine's password.
Connecting to Splunk APIs
You must specify the URL to a valid Splunk server. By default the driver makes requests on port 8089.
By default, the driver attempts to negotiate TLS/SSL with the server. For more information on TLS/SSL configuration, see SSL Configuration.
Authenticating to Splunk
There are two ways to authenticate to Splunk data: logging in with Splunk credentials, or using a Splunk authentication token.
Splunk Credentials
To authenticate with Splunk credentials, set User and Password to your login credentials.
Splunk Token
When you access Splunk via an authentication token, you can access the Splunk platform using Representational State Transfer (REST) calls. On Splunk Enterprise, you can also use the CLI. Both of these methods enable you to access the instance and make requests without having to authenticate via credentials.
Note: Unless you are accessing a search head cluster (where you can use the same token to access all available head clusters), you must have a separate token for each instance being accessed.
To authenticate with a Splunk token:
- In the Splunk UI, navigate to Users and Authentication > Tokens to access your assigned authentication token. If you do not have one, request one from the administrator of the instance you want to access.
- Set the AuthScheme to AccessToken; and the AccessToken property to your Splunk token.
Uninstalling the Driver
The easiest way to uninstall the driver is to open a terminal and run the included uninstall.sh script, located in the installation directory. For example:
cd "/Applications/CData ODBC Driver for Splunk" sudo ./uninstall.sh
Note: The script needs to be run from the installation directory.