Splunk Search

How to explicitly count an occurrence of a string when another similar string exists

WyldeRhoads
Engager

I am trying to count the occurrence of some specific strings in a field value. The below query works for counting occurences, but there are some strings that have similar names, and because of this the values can be inflated.

The results field is not formatted, and can contain the string BikeNew, BikeOld, and just Bike. The problem here is that searching for %Bike% will return counts for all 3, and therefor the new value "currentBikes" will count all 3 different bike variables. Is there a way to explicitly search for only Bike ?

index=foo source=bar
| eval newBikes = = if(like(resultsField,"%BikeNEW%"),1,0)
| eval currentBikes = = if(like(resultsField,"%Bike%"),1,0)
| eval oldBikes = = if(like(resultsField,"%BikeOLD%"),1,0)
| stats sum(currentBikes) AS currentBikeCount, sum(oldBikes) as oldBikeCount, sum(newBikes) as newBikeCount
0 Karma

yannK
Splunk Employee
Splunk Employee

As a first method, if your string "Bike" is surrounded by spaces, you can use
eval currentBikes = = if(like(resultsField,"% Bike %"),1,0)

but a proper method could be to use a regex instead of a like.

| rex field= resultsField "(?<bike_type>(Bike[^NO]|BikeNEW|BikeOLD)" 
| stats count by bike_type
0 Karma

micahkemp
Champion

rex "(?<plain_bike>Bike(?![ON]))"

That will create a field plain_bike when the word Bike is not followed by O or N.

Or, this will create a field you can use to count by bike:

rex "(?<bike>Bike(NEW|OLD)?)"

0 Karma
Get Updates on the Splunk Community!

Leveraging Detections from the Splunk Threat Research Team & Cisco Talos

  Now On Demand  Stay ahead of today’s evolving threats with the combined power of the Splunk Threat Research ...

New in Splunk Observability Cloud: Automated Archiving for Unused Metrics

Automated Archival is a new capability within Metrics Management; which is a robust usage & cost optimization ...

Calling All Security Pros: Ready to Race Through Boston?

Hey Splunkers, .conf25 is heading to Boston and we’re kicking things off with something bold, competitive, and ...