Deployment Architecture

indexing portions of a string

kcarlin0407
New Member

given this portion of a log record...

0000029200000004A2460570312310/01/1380689725o4 2.0 0140200002100121552538 (...)   
................============................==.......========............

I need a way to index the portions of the log record that are above the equal-signs shown below the record. Thus far, I've seen that Splunk is adept at indexing things that are on word boundaries, unfortunately, these aren't.

Tags (2)
0 Karma

bwooden
Splunk Employee
Splunk Employee

It is possible to use a sed command (SEDCMD) in props.conf to manipulate records before indexing. Similarly, it is relatively easy to manipulate records prior to indexing by stitching together capture groups in transforms.conf.

While those options are available they should be used sparingly. The reason is that extracting fields at search time provides much greater flexibility. Instead of baking your decisions in while indexing, Splunk allows you to extract fields at search time without re-starting services or re-indexing data. This is hugely beneficial if you discover you needed another field or piece of data a month later -- or if the format changes upstream from your area of influence.

kristian_kolb
Ultra Champion
0000029200000004A2460570312310/01/1380689725o4 2.0 0140200002100121552538 (...)   
................============................==.......========............

As lukejadamec points out, this is going to be a regex based extraction. Assumptions;

1) fixed length of what to skip, and what to extract
2) this is the start of the event
3) single line event

in props.conf

[your_source_or_sourcetype]
EXTRACT-blah = ^.{16}(?<field1>.{12}).{16}(?<field2>..)\s+\S+\s+..(?<field3>.{8})

I'm not sure, but you may have to make an addition to fields.conf as well. See;

http://docs.splunk.com/Documentation/Splunk/6.0/Knowledge/Createandmaintainsearch-timefieldextractio...

Hope this helps,

K

lukejadamec
Super Champion

Actually, splunk is adept at finding things that can be recognized with regex. In other words, If you can tell splunk what makes what you want to keep unique, then it will find it for you.

0 Karma
Get Updates on the Splunk Community!

Observe and Secure All Apps with Splunk

  Join Us for Our Next Tech Talk: Observe and Secure All Apps with SplunkAs organizations continue to innovate ...

Splunk Decoded: Business Transactions vs Business IQ

It’s the morning of Black Friday, and your e-commerce site is handling 10x normal traffic. Orders are flowing, ...

Fastest way to demo Observability

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