Splunk Search

Convert TimeFormat

hartfoml
Motivator

I have an event field called `LastBootUpTime=20120119121719.125000-360'

I am trying to convert this to a more readable format by using this convert command

| convert timeformat="%m-%d-%Y %H:%M:%S" ctime(LastBootUpTime) AS BootTime

this is not working. What am I missing??

Tags (2)
0 Karma
1 Solution

bojanz
Communicator

If I'm not wrong, convert needs epoch time for ctime().
So use strptime to convert to epoch time this first:

| eval temp=strptime(LastBootUpTime,"%Y%m%d%H%M%S") | convert timeformat="%m-%d-%Y %H:%M:%S" ctime(temp) AS BootTime

This will return BootTime in a human readable format, as specified in the timeformat parameter.

View solution in original post

bojanz
Communicator

If I'm not wrong, convert needs epoch time for ctime().
So use strptime to convert to epoch time this first:

| eval temp=strptime(LastBootUpTime,"%Y%m%d%H%M%S") | convert timeformat="%m-%d-%Y %H:%M:%S" ctime(temp) AS BootTime

This will return BootTime in a human readable format, as specified in the timeformat parameter.

hartfoml
Motivator

That was the answer... howd you get so smart 🙂

0 Karma
Got questions? Get answers!

Join the Splunk Community Slack to learn, troubleshoot, and make connections with fellow Splunk practitioners in real time!

Meet up IRL or virtually!

Join Splunk User Groups to connect and learn in-person by region or remotely by topic or industry.

Get Updates on the Splunk Community!

Quick connection discovery mode for forwarders

When a Splunk forwarder loses connectivity to its indexers, it does not always reconnect immediately. In many ...

Build and Launch AI Agents from Your Splunk Workflows

  Register We’ve all been there: juggling alerts, runbooks, and endless manual searches. What if you could ...

Splunk Cloud Application Management in Terraform

Register   On Tuesday, August 4 at 11AM PDT / 2PM EDT, we’re diving into how you can bring Infrastructure as ...