Splunk Search

How could I look only at a defined time span in real-time-search?

Felix82
Explorer

Hi, 

 

I'm new in working with Splunk - I began to explore the program last monday...

I have the task to create a dashboard for visualizing the availibility of a machine. My working base: The machine data, additional  disorder reports by workers (implemented by tablets) and the knowledge about the working times (monday till friday, 5.30am till 10.30pm).

Now I want to use the daily data in timerange from 5.30am till 10.30pm because the availibility should only represents the disorder times in relation to real working time. How could I do that without a specified date?

 

Many Thanks and Greetings from Germany, 

Felix

0 Karma

Felix82
Explorer

Hi Michel,

 

thank you for sharing your experiences! It's so difficult and extensive to get an overview around all commands and functions... I will test your parameters then give you feedback.

 

Greetings, 

Felix

0 Karma

michel_wolf
Path Finder

Hi Felix,

you need to extract these requirements from your date field to filter it. You can perform your search for example like index=.... earliest=-7d@d latest=now to get all your data from the last 7 days.

Then you can add something like this

| eval day=strftime(_time,"%u")
| search day IN (1 2 3 4 5)

| eval timestampStart="05:30:00"
| eval timestampEnd="22:30:00"
| eval timestampDate = strftime(_time,"%H:%M:%S")

| where timestampDate >= timestampStart AND timestampDate <= timestampEnd

 

Michel

0 Karma
Get Updates on the Splunk Community!

Fun with Regular Expression - multiples of nine

Fun with Regular Expression - multiples of nineThis challenge was first posted on Slack #regex channel ...

[Live Demo] Watch SOC transformation in action with the reimagined Splunk Enterprise ...

Overwhelmed SOC? Splunk ES Has Your Back Tool sprawl, alert fatigue, and endless context switching are making ...

What’s New & Next in Splunk SOAR

Security teams today are dealing with more alerts, more tools, and more pressure than ever.  Join us on ...