Splunk Search

About warnings when dividing multiple multi-value data using mvexpand.

yutaka1005
Builder

In the following search I divide data with multiple multi-value fields into one line at a time.

See this answer ↓
https://answers.splunk.com/answers/25653/mvexpand-multiple-multi-value-fields.html

| eval reading=mvzip(multi_value_field1, multi_value_field2) | eval reading=mvzip(reading, multi_value_field3) | eval reading=mvzip(reading, multi_value_field4) | mvexpand reading | makemv reading delim="," | eval field1=mvindex(reading, 0) | eval field2=mvindex(reading, 1) | eval field3=mvindex(reading, 2) | eval field4=mvindex(reading, 3) | ...

The result is OK with this search, but somehow the warning "Field 'reading' does not exist in the data." Is displayed.
Is there a way to avoid this warning?

my splunk ver : 6.5.3

0 Karma
1 Solution

DalJeanis
Legend

Okay, assuming you have the same number of values for each multivalue field, there is a simpler method. And I'm annoyed that it's taken me six months to figure it out, all the while doing that complicated mvzip two-step.

Do this instead...

| eval myFan=mvrange(0,mvcount(field1))
| mvexpand myFan
| eval field1=mvindex(field1,myFan)
| eval field2=mvindex(field2,myFan)
| eval field3=mvindex(field3,myFan)
| eval field4=mvindex(field4,myFan)

View solution in original post

0 Karma

DalJeanis
Legend

Okay, assuming you have the same number of values for each multivalue field, there is a simpler method. And I'm annoyed that it's taken me six months to figure it out, all the while doing that complicated mvzip two-step.

Do this instead...

| eval myFan=mvrange(0,mvcount(field1))
| mvexpand myFan
| eval field1=mvindex(field1,myFan)
| eval field2=mvindex(field2,myFan)
| eval field3=mvindex(field3,myFan)
| eval field4=mvindex(field4,myFan)
0 Karma

gsrivastava
Explorer

@DalJeanis Are you assuming here that all the events have just 4 values in a multi-valued field? What if , each event has different no. of values?

0 Karma

DalJeanis
Legend

@gsrivastava - The number 4 comes from the fact that there were four fields that were mvzipped together in @yutaka1005's example. The only assumption is that each of the four fields has the same number of values... although if not, then a backstop is that field1 is the field with the MOST values.

0 Karma

gsrivastava
Explorer

Facing the same issue @yutaka1005 . Did you find any solution?

0 Karma
Get Updates on the Splunk Community!

Detecting Remote Code Executions With the Splunk Threat Research Team

WATCH NOWRemote code execution (RCE) vulnerabilities pose a significant risk to organizations. If exploited, ...

Enter the Splunk Community Dashboard Challenge for Your Chance to Win!

The Splunk Community Dashboard Challenge is underway! This is your chance to showcase your skills in creating ...

.conf24 | Session Scheduler is Live!!

.conf24 is happening June 11 - 14 in Las Vegas, and we are thrilled to announce that the conference catalog ...