Splunk Search

How to use JSON subfields with the eval command?

gzak
Engager

My log entries consist of a single json object, like so:

{ Severity: "INFO", Message: { StatusCode: 200, Route: "/hello/world?x=1" } }
{ Severity: "WARN", Message: { StatusCode: 500, Route: "/hello/world?x=2" } }

Just as a test, I'm able to create the following panel in my dashboard:

index="my_index" | bucket span=10m _time | stats count(eval(Severity="WARN")) as warning by Message.Route, _time

This appears to work fine since the Severity property is at the root of the json object. However, if I switch to one of the subproperties of the object, it doesn't find any records:

index="my_index" | bucket span=10m _time | stats count(eval(Message.StatusCode="500")) as warning by Message.Route, _time

I should also point out that if I don't wrap the "500" in quotes, it gives me a typechecking error saying that the '==' operator is being applied to two different types of arguments (which doesn't make any sense, and might be contributing to this issue).

Please advise on how I can procede. This shouldn't be so difficult...

1 Solution

somesoni2
Revered Legend

Field names which contains special characters like spaces OR dot (.), should be enclosed within single quotes when referring in eval OR where command's expressions. So your second query should work with following syntax

 index="my_index" | bucket span=10m _time | stats count(eval('Message.StatusCode'="500")) as warning by Message.Route, _time

View solution in original post

somesoni2
Revered Legend

Field names which contains special characters like spaces OR dot (.), should be enclosed within single quotes when referring in eval OR where command's expressions. So your second query should work with following syntax

 index="my_index" | bucket span=10m _time | stats count(eval('Message.StatusCode'="500")) as warning by Message.Route, _time

gzak
Engager

I could have sworn I tried all sorts of combinations of single quotes yesterday before coming here, but today it worked on my first try. Anwyay, this is definitely the solution.

0 Karma
Got questions? Get answers!

Join the Splunk Community Slack to learn, troubleshoot, and make connections with fellow Splunk practitioners in real time!

Meet up IRL or virtually!

Join Splunk User Groups to connect and learn in-person by region or remotely by topic or industry.

Get Updates on the Splunk Community!

Monitoring AI Agents with Splunk Observability Cloud

Let’s say I’m running a travel planning AI app in production. A user asks for three concise hotel options in ...

[Puzzles] Solve, Learn, Repeat: Tiling

This puzzle (first published here) is based on finding groups of tessellated tiles (inspired by floor tiles I ...

SOK it to Me: Top 3 Benefits of Using Splunk Operator on Kubernetes that’ll Make ...

    Thursday, July 9, 2026  |  11:00AM–12:00PM PDT Duration: 1 hour (includes Q&A) Managing can feel like a ...