Splunk Search

How to get multiple values from xml using xpath and spath?

ritesh14
Explorer

I am trying to get multiple values from xml as shows below

I have tried xpath and spath and both shows nothing

I am looking for ResponseCode, SimpleResponseCode and nResponseCode

here is the sample xml for reference

 

 

 

 

 

| makeresults 
| eval _raw="<?xml version=\"1.0\" encoding=\"utf-8\"?>
<soapenv:Envelope xmlns:soapenv=\"http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/envelope/\">
    <soapenv:Body>
        <ns3:LogResponse xmlns:ns2=\"http://randomurl.com/sample1\"
                            xmlns:ns3=\"http://randomurl.com/sample2\">
            <ResponseCode>OK</ResponseCode>
            <State>Simple</State>
            <Transactions>
                <TransactionName>CHANGED</TransactionName>
            </Transactions>
            <Transactions>
                <TransactionData>CHANGE_SIMPLE</TransactionData>
            </Transactions>
            <ServerTime>1649691711637</ServerTime>
            <SimpleResponseCode>OK</SimpleResponseCode>
            <nResponseCode>
                <nResponseCode>OK</nResponseCode>
            </nResponseCode>
            <USELESS>VALUES</USELESS>
            <MORE_USELESS>false</MORE_USELESS>
        </ns3:LogResponse>
    </soapenv:Body>
</soapenv:Envelope>" 
| xpath outfield=

 

 

 

 

 

Labels (2)
Tags (2)
0 Karma
1 Solution

ITWhisperer
SplunkTrust
SplunkTrust
| makeresults 
| eval _raw="<?xml version=\"1.0\" encoding=\"utf-8\"?>
<soapenv:Envelope xmlns:soapenv=\"http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/envelope/\">
    <soapenv:Body>
        <ns3:LogResponse xmlns:ns2=\"http://randomurl.com/sample1\"
                            xmlns:ns3=\"http://randomurl.com/sample2\">
            <ResponseCode>OK</ResponseCode>
            <State>Simple</State>
            <Transactions>
                <TransactionName>CHANGED</TransactionName>
            </Transactions>
            <Transactions>
                <TransactionData>CHANGE_SIMPLE</TransactionData>
            </Transactions>
            <ServerTime>1649691711637</ServerTime>
            <SimpleResponseCode>OK</SimpleResponseCode>
            <nResponseCode>
                <nResponseCode>OK</nResponseCode>
            </nResponseCode>
            <USELESS>VALUES</USELESS>
            <MORE_USELESS>false</MORE_USELESS>
        </ns3:LogResponse>
    </soapenv:Body>
</soapenv:Envelope>"
| spath soapenv:Envelope.soapenv:Body.ns3:LogResponse.ResponseCode output=ResponseCode
| spath soapenv:Envelope.soapenv:Body.ns3:LogResponse.SimpleResponseCode output=SimpleResponseCode
| spath soapenv:Envelope.soapenv:Body.ns3:LogResponse.nResponseCode.nResponseCode output=nResponseCode

View solution in original post

0 Karma

yeahnah
Motivator

Just wanted to put add a xpath command solution that also works, simply as a future reference for users that can go with the spath command solution.

| makeresults
| eval _raw="<?xml version=\"1.0\" encoding=\"utf-8\"?>
<soapenv:Envelope xmlns:soapenv=\"http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/envelope/\">
    <soapenv:Body>
      <ns3:LogResponse xmlns:ns2=\"http://randomurl.com/sample1\"
                       xmlns:ns3=\"http://randomurl.com/sample2\">
        <LogResponse >
            <ResponseCode>OK</ResponseCode>
            <State>Simple</State>
            <Transactions>
                <TransactionName>CHANGED</TransactionName>
            </Transactions>
            <Transactions>
                <TransactionData>CHANGE_SIMPLE</TransactionData>
            </Transactions>
            <ServerTime>1649691711637</ServerTime>
            <SimpleResponseCode>OK</SimpleResponseCode>
            <nResponseCode>
                <nResponseCode>OK</nResponseCode>
            </nResponseCode>
            <USELESS>VALUES</USELESS>
            <MORE_USELESS>false</MORE_USELESS>
        </LogResponse>
      </ns3:LogResponse>
    </soapenv:Body>
</soapenv:Envelope>"
| eval xml=replace(_raw, "^<\?xml.+\?>[\r\n]*", "")   ``` xpath does not like ?xml encoding version and text declaration, so remove```  
| xpath field=xml outfield=ResponseCode "//*[local-name()='ResponseCode']"   ``` use *[local-name()='<value>' to ignore namespace declarations, i.e. xmlns='smomething' ]  ```
| xpath field=xml outfield=SimpleResponseCode "//*[local-name()='SimpleResponseCode']"
| xpath field=xml outfield=nResponseCode "//*[local-name()='nResponseCode']/nResponseCode"

 

ITWhisperer
SplunkTrust
SplunkTrust
| makeresults 
| eval _raw="<?xml version=\"1.0\" encoding=\"utf-8\"?>
<soapenv:Envelope xmlns:soapenv=\"http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/envelope/\">
    <soapenv:Body>
        <ns3:LogResponse xmlns:ns2=\"http://randomurl.com/sample1\"
                            xmlns:ns3=\"http://randomurl.com/sample2\">
            <ResponseCode>OK</ResponseCode>
            <State>Simple</State>
            <Transactions>
                <TransactionName>CHANGED</TransactionName>
            </Transactions>
            <Transactions>
                <TransactionData>CHANGE_SIMPLE</TransactionData>
            </Transactions>
            <ServerTime>1649691711637</ServerTime>
            <SimpleResponseCode>OK</SimpleResponseCode>
            <nResponseCode>
                <nResponseCode>OK</nResponseCode>
            </nResponseCode>
            <USELESS>VALUES</USELESS>
            <MORE_USELESS>false</MORE_USELESS>
        </ns3:LogResponse>
    </soapenv:Body>
</soapenv:Envelope>"
| spath soapenv:Envelope.soapenv:Body.ns3:LogResponse.ResponseCode output=ResponseCode
| spath soapenv:Envelope.soapenv:Body.ns3:LogResponse.SimpleResponseCode output=SimpleResponseCode
| spath soapenv:Envelope.soapenv:Body.ns3:LogResponse.nResponseCode.nResponseCode output=nResponseCode
0 Karma
Career Survey
First 500 qualified respondents will receive a $20 gift card! Tell us about your professional Splunk journey.
Get Updates on the Splunk Community!

Splunk AI Assistant for SPL vs. ChatGPT: Which One is Better?

In the age of AI, every tool promises to make our lives easier. From summarizing content to writing code, ...

Data Persistence in the OpenTelemetry Collector

This blog post is part of an ongoing series on OpenTelemetry. What happens if the OpenTelemetry collector ...

Thanks for the Memories! Splunk University, .conf25, and our Community

Thank you to everyone in the Splunk Community who joined us for .conf25, which kicked off with our iconic ...