We were one of the first customers when Cribl launched. Around 10% to 20% of Cribl had already been implemented when I joined. My role involved expanding it to 100% of our incoming logs being processed through Cribl. Our primary use case was to collect logs from various cloud sources. We also planned to migrate and optimize our usage, as we now handle a significant volume, about 15 TB, with enterprise licensing.
Cribl played a crucial role in reducing costs and improving efficiency, though we’re still fully realizing those benefits. We have now implemented Cribl as our primary log collection endpoint. We use it alongside Splunk, aiming to reduce licensing costs while taking advantage of Cribl's streamlined log collection features.
Once Cribl is fully integrated, we plan to segregate data—moving less critical logs, like test and non-production logs, to open-source solutions to further reduce licensing costs. In our hybrid environment, with enterprise and open-source tools, Cribl has simplified the process. We've successfully used it to migrate our enterprise logs to the cloud, and this migration is ongoing. Cribl has been instrumental in ensuring that these changes do not disrupt our production systems and has made the migration between different log management tools, including Splunk and others like Microsoft Sentinel or Datadog, much smoother.