Splunk Search

Splitting event by column

davewood
Explorer

Hi,

At search time, is there any way of splitting a tabular event into multiple events by column rather than row as multikv does.
For example:

node                       node0     node1
numa_hit              1021798456    123456
numa_miss                      0        10
numa_foreign                   0         0
interleave_hit             14348       123
local_node            1021798456    123446
other_node                     0         0

I'd like this to be split into two events - one per node so I can do things like:
stats max(numa_miss) by node

There could be many tens of columns so using "rex" isn't really an option.

0 Karma
1 Solution

martin_mueller
SplunkTrust
SplunkTrust

You could do this:

... | multikv | where node="numa_miss" | stats max(node*) by node

That will generate this for your sample event:

    node        max(node0)   max(node1)
1   numa_miss            0           10

It's not quite what a stats max(numa_miss) would produce, but it might work for you.

View solution in original post

martin_mueller
SplunkTrust
SplunkTrust

You could do this:

... | multikv | where node="numa_miss" | stats max(node*) by node

That will generate this for your sample event:

    node        max(node0)   max(node1)
1   numa_miss            0           10

It's not quite what a stats max(numa_miss) would produce, but it might work for you.

martin_mueller
SplunkTrust
SplunkTrust

Reformatting the output is the best choice, especially if the number of nodes were to grow. Having a thousand rows is easy to handle, a thousand columns are annoying though.

0 Karma

davewood
Explorer

Thanks. That's actually pretty close to what I need. If it was just one report I think I'd just live with it, but because I have quite a few reports to base on this data, I ended up changing the script wrapper to reformat the output though.

0 Karma

MuS
SplunkTrust
SplunkTrust

Hi davewood,

have a look at transpose, this will return the specified number of rows (search results) as columns which can be used for further Splunk searches.

cheers, MuS

davewood
Explorer

Thanks. Yes, I took a look at transpose but there was a bit too much subsequent tidying of data required for my purposes.
I ended up changing the script wrapper to reformat the output. 😞

0 Karma
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