Splunk Search

replace one backslash by double backslash

ryastrebov
Communicator

Hello!
I need to provide search only in earliest source in my sourcetype.
I use this search request for this purposes:
sourcetype="mysourcetype" | stats earliest(source) as firstsource | search source=firstsource
But I get error "No results found".
I found that the firstsource of returns in the form of D:\MyFolder\Mysourcename.gz while for a successful search must have a value as D:\\MyFolder\\Mysourcename.gz
How can I replace \ to \\?

Tags (1)
1 Solution

kristian_kolb
Ultra Champion
sourcetype="mysourcetype" | stats earliest(source) as firstsource | rex field=firstsource mode=sed "s/\\/\\\\/g" | search source=firstsource

I think this will work. Note that you'll probably need to escape the backslashes within the rex statement, like above.


UPDATE:

There seems to some issues with backslashes and sed, apparently. Perhaps this can give some guidance.

http://splunk-base.splunk.com/answers/24026/sedcmd-special-requirement-for-backslash

/K

View solution in original post

manan_amin
Explorer

eval new_path = replace( old_path ,"(\\\\)","\\\\\1")

 

 

cphair
Builder

There's something wacky about how the Splunk regex parser interprets backslashes. As a rule of thumb, to match a literal backslash you need one more than you think you do. This should work:

rex mode=sed field=foo "s/(\\\)/\1\1/g"

splunkreal
Influencer

Hello, I tried adding this in CLI search job script using curl and getting no result, any idea? Thanks 🙂

* If this helps, please upvote or accept solution if it solved *
0 Karma

splunkreal
Influencer
SOLVED : needed to escape again : "s/(\\\\\)/\1\1/g"
* If this helps, please upvote or accept solution if it solved *
0 Karma

kristian_kolb
Ultra Champion
sourcetype="mysourcetype" | stats earliest(source) as firstsource | rex field=firstsource mode=sed "s/\\/\\\\/g" | search source=firstsource

I think this will work. Note that you'll probably need to escape the backslashes within the rex statement, like above.


UPDATE:

There seems to some issues with backslashes and sed, apparently. Perhaps this can give some guidance.

http://splunk-base.splunk.com/answers/24026/sedcmd-special-requirement-for-backslash

/K

ryastrebov
Communicator

I get error "Error in 'rex' command: Failed to initialize sed. Failed to parse the regex to replace."

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!

Index This | What travels the world but is also stuck in place?

April 2026 Edition  Hayyy Splunk Education Enthusiasts and the Eternally Curious!   We’re back with this ...

Discover New Use Cases: Unlock Greater Value from Your Existing Splunk Data

Realizing the full potential of your Splunk investment requires more than just understanding current usage; it ...

Continue Your Journey: Join Session 2 of the Data Management and Federation Bootcamp ...

As data volumes continue to grow and environments become more distributed, managing and optimizing data ...