Dashboards & Visualizations

In a Simple XML dashboard, is it possible to set a token when a user clicks the submit button?

drewski3420
New Member

In a Simple XML dashboard, is it possible to set a token when a user clicks the submit button?

I'm setting a token in the init block. Then, I'd like to change it, potentially, based on the values of multiple inputs. After they've all been filled out (or not), and the user has pressed Submit to run the search.

As an example:

<form>
  <init>
    <set token="query">| makeresults | eval x= "Yes" | table x</set>
  </init>
  <fieldset submitButton="true" autoRun="false">
    <input type="dropdown" token="Input1">
      <label>Input1</label>
      <choice value="A">A</choice>
      <choice value="B">B</choice>
    </input>
    <input type="dropdown" token="Input2">
      <label>Input2</label>
      <choice value="C">C</choice>
      <choice value="D">D</choice>
    </input>
  </fieldset>

  <-- Here's where I'd like to set the new $query$, after submit
    if $Input1$ == "A" and $Input2$ == "C" then $query$ = "| makeresults | eval x= "No" | table x"
  -->
  <row>
    <panel>
      <table>
        <search>
          <query>$query$</query>

Obviously this is not the search I'm trying to modify, just an example.

0 Karma
1 Solution

dmarling
Builder

This can be accomplished by having a search in the background process your inputs to generate the query token based on the results of that search. Here's a run anywhere example using the exact same concept you originally posted:

<dashboard>
  <init>
    <set token="query">| makeresults count=1 | eval x= "Yes" | table x</set>
  </init>
  <label>demodash</label>
  <fieldset submitButton="true" autoRun="false">
    <input type="dropdown" token="Input1">
      <label>Input1</label>
      <choice value="A">A</choice>
      <choice value="B">B</choice>
    </input>
    <input type="dropdown" token="Input2">
      <label>Input2</label>
      <choice value="C">C</choice>
      <choice value="D">D</choice>
    </input>
  </fieldset>
  <search>
    <query>| makeresults count=1 
| eval search=if("A"=$Input1|s$ AND "C"=$Input2|s$,  "| makeresults | eval x=\"No\" | table x", "| makeresults | eval x=\"Yes\" | table x")
| table search</query>
    <done>
      <condition match="$job.doneProgress$=1">
        <set token="query">$result.search$</set>
      </condition>
    </done>
  </search>
  <row>
    <panel>
      <table>
        <search>
          <query>$query$</query>
        </search>
      </table>
    </panel>
  </row>
</dashboard>

I added a second part to the if statement so it would fall back to the query you had in your init section if Input1 does not equal A and Input2 does not equal C. Let me know if you have any questions.

If this comment/answer was helpful, please up vote it. Thank you.

View solution in original post

dmarling
Builder

This can be accomplished by having a search in the background process your inputs to generate the query token based on the results of that search. Here's a run anywhere example using the exact same concept you originally posted:

<dashboard>
  <init>
    <set token="query">| makeresults count=1 | eval x= "Yes" | table x</set>
  </init>
  <label>demodash</label>
  <fieldset submitButton="true" autoRun="false">
    <input type="dropdown" token="Input1">
      <label>Input1</label>
      <choice value="A">A</choice>
      <choice value="B">B</choice>
    </input>
    <input type="dropdown" token="Input2">
      <label>Input2</label>
      <choice value="C">C</choice>
      <choice value="D">D</choice>
    </input>
  </fieldset>
  <search>
    <query>| makeresults count=1 
| eval search=if("A"=$Input1|s$ AND "C"=$Input2|s$,  "| makeresults | eval x=\"No\" | table x", "| makeresults | eval x=\"Yes\" | table x")
| table search</query>
    <done>
      <condition match="$job.doneProgress$=1">
        <set token="query">$result.search$</set>
      </condition>
    </done>
  </search>
  <row>
    <panel>
      <table>
        <search>
          <query>$query$</query>
        </search>
      </table>
    </panel>
  </row>
</dashboard>

I added a second part to the if statement so it would fall back to the query you had in your init section if Input1 does not equal A and Input2 does not equal C. Let me know if you have any questions.

If this comment/answer was helpful, please up vote it. Thank you.
Get Updates on the Splunk Community!

Fastest way to demo Observability

I’ve been having a lot of fun learning about Kubernetes and Observability. I set myself an interesting ...

September Community Champions: A Shoutout to Our Contributors!

As we close the books on another fantastic month, we want to take a moment to celebrate the people who are the ...

Splunk Decoded: Service Maps vs Service Analyzer Tree View vs Flow Maps

It’s Monday morning, and your phone is buzzing with alert escalations – your customer-facing portal is running ...