Hi to everyone,
If I have this data, a lot of IPs, how can I extract multiple values for a field? (For a config file, not search) For example:
Ip_address=10.1.144.80, 10.1.148.183, etc.
{
                    10.1.144.80
                    10.1.148.183
                    10.20.213.111
                    10.26.154.46
                    10.26.158.154
                    10.26.158.176
                    10.70.39.4
                    10.26.158.177
                    10.76.0.60
                    10.76.0.71
                    10.1.144.58
                    10.76.22.69
                    10.76.0.58
                    10.26.194.100
                    10.76.0.44
                    10.76.0.56
                    10.76.24.118
}
I'll be grateful for your help
Regards
 
					
				
		
 
		
		
		
		
		
	
			
		
		
			
					
		Use MV_ADD=true. Read more here.
Or you could use fields.conf or check out this answer using props.conf & transforms.conf.
Just add this to your search:
... | rex "([[ipv4]])" | makemv ip
Or, if your ip is already extracted as Ip_address, you can make it multivalued with makemv:
... | makemv Ip_address
 
					
				
		
 
		
		
		
		
		
	
			
		
		
			
					
		Use MV_ADD=true. Read more here.
Or you could use fields.conf or check out this answer using props.conf & transforms.conf.
Just add this to your search:
... | rex "([[ipv4]])" | makemv ip
Or, if your ip is already extracted as Ip_address, you can make it multivalued with makemv:
... | makemv Ip_address
 
		
		
		
		
		
	
			
		
		
			
					
		Nitpicking: The "Permanently" approach is also search-time 😛
 
					
				
		
 
		
		
		
		
		
	
			
		
		
			
					
		You are right. Edited.
WOW i didn't know about
| rex "([[ipv4]])"
Is there a list somewhere with all other regexes that ship with splunk?
 
					
				
		
 
		
		
		
		
		
	
			
		
		
			
					
		@theeansible check transforms.conf
At the bottom, you'll see
###### BASIC MODULAR REGULAR EXPRESSIONS DEFINITION START ###########
🙂
Thanks you aljohnson, but i need it for a permanent extraction, not in the search.
 
					
				
		
 
		
		
		
		
		
	
			
		
		
			
					
		I see. I edited my answer to reference permanent extractions.
Thanks you very much
