Splunk Search

Extract fields of CSV data source in Upper case

rashi83
Path Finder

I have a CSV file with region , status , hostname as Columns - field extraction works and gives them as region , status and hostname. Instead I want extraction to work like "Region " "Hostname " Status".

Is there any setting in source type advance to achieve this?

Tags (1)
0 Karma
1 Solution

jnudell_2
Builder

Hi Rashi83,

I think it would help if you told us why you want to have the field names from the CSV in proper case. In the end, it's not really going to matter, because you can always rename the fields at search time: | rename region as Region, status as Status, hostname as Hostname

If you're only concerned about how it will appear in search results or a report, then use rename at search time.

View solution in original post

0 Karma

jnudell_2
Builder

Hi Rashi83,

I think it would help if you told us why you want to have the field names from the CSV in proper case. In the end, it's not really going to matter, because you can always rename the fields at search time: | rename region as Region, status as Status, hostname as Hostname

If you're only concerned about how it will appear in search results or a report, then use rename at search time.

0 Karma

somesoni2
Revered Legend

How have you extracted fields? Do you have control on changing the CSV headers?

0 Karma

rashi83
Path Finder

no I do not have control on CSV .

Field extraction was done automatically when I choose sourcetype = CSV

0 Karma
Get Updates on the Splunk Community!

Celebrating the Winners of the ‘Splunk Build-a-thon’ Hackathon!

We are thrilled to announce the winners of the Splunk Build-a-thon, our first-ever hackathon dedicated to ...

Why You Should Register for Splunk University at .conf25

Level up before .conf25 even begins Splunk University is back in Boston, September 6–8, and it’s your chance ...

Building Splunk proficiency is a marathon, not a sprint

Building Splunk skills is a lot like training for a marathon. It’s about consistent progress, celebrating ...