Splunk Search

Is the usage of multiple eval calculations in one pipe a feature or an unsupported hack?

HeinzWaescher
Motivator

Hi,

I did not know that it is possible:

| makeresults
| eval fieldA=123, fieldB=456, fieldC=789

I assume that this is better for search performance than

| makeresults
| eval fieldA=123
| eval fieldB=456
| eval fieldC=789

Is the first example a feature or an unsupported hack that should not be used? I've never seen it before.

Cheers

0 Karma
1 Solution

rjthibod
Champion

The first example was supported starting in version 6.4 of Splunk.

I have never heard of there being a performance gain by using the first method over the second method, so I always stick to the second method for backwards compatibility and readability.

View solution in original post

woodcock
Esteemed Legend

I am unaware of any performance difference but both are value. I think the latter is generally more readable because the Right-Hand-Side tends to be long and busy and people don't expect other evals to be "over there".

woodcock
Esteemed Legend

I am unaware of any performance difference but both are value. I think the latter is generally more readable because the Right-Hand-Side tends to be long and busy and people don't expect other evals to be "over there".

rjthibod
Champion

The first example was supported starting in version 6.4 of Splunk.

I have never heard of there being a performance gain by using the first method over the second method, so I always stick to the second method for backwards compatibility and readability.

cmerriman
Super Champion

though, if you do have a lot of evals that are doing the same thing, i believe that foreach has a performance gain.

0 Karma

HeinzWaescher
Motivator

Readability is definitely the point why I would to stick to the second method as well. So I'm happy that there is no performance boost of the the other approach 🙂

Thanks

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!

Data Persistence in the OpenTelemetry Collector

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

Introducing Splunk 10.0: Smarter, Faster, and More Powerful Than Ever

Now On Demand Whether you're managing complex deployments or looking to future-proof your data ...

Community Content Calendar, September edition

Welcome to another insightful post from our Community Content Calendar! We're thrilled to continue bringing ...