Knowledge Manager Manual

 


Configure index-time custom field extraction

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Configure index-time custom field extraction

We do not recommend that you add custom fields to the set of default fields that Splunk extracts and indexes at index time, such as timestamp, punct, host, source, and sourcetype. Adding to this list of fields can negatively impact indexing performance and search times, because each indexed field increases the size of the searchable index. Indexed fields are also less flexible--whenever you make changes to your set of indexed fields, you must reindex your entire dataset.

With those caveats, there are times when you may find a need to change or add to your indexed fields. For example, you may have situations where certain search-time field extractions noticeably impact search performance. This can happen, for example, if you commonly search a large event set with expressions like foo!=bar or NOT foo=bar, and the field foo nearly always takes on the value bar.

Conversely, you may want to add an indexed field if the value of a search-time extracted field exists outside of the field more often than not. For example, if you commonly search only for foo=1, but 1 occurs in many events that do not have foo=1, you may want to add foo to the list of fields extracted by Splunk at index time.

For more information about index-time and search-time, see "Index time versus search time" in this manual.

Define additional indexed fields

Define additional indexed fields by editing props.conf, transforms.conf and fields.conf.

Edit these files in $SPLUNK_HOME/etc/system/local/, or your own custom application directory in $SPLUNK_HOME/etc/apps/. For more information on configuration files in general, see "About configuration files" in the Admin manual.

Splunk only accepts field names that contain alpha-numeric characters or an underscore:

Add a regex stanza for the new field to transforms.conf

Add the following lines to transforms.conf:

[<unique_stanza_name>]
REGEX = <your_regex>
FORMAT = <your_custom_field_name>::"$1"
WRITE_META = true

Note: For a primer on regular expression syntax and usage, see Regular-Expressions.info. You can test regexes by using them in searches with the rex search command. Splunk also maintains a list of useful third-party tools for writing and testing regular expressions.

Note: The capturing groups in your regex must identify field names that use ASCII characters (a-zA-Z0-9_-.). International characters will not work.

Link the new field to props.conf

To props.conf, add the following lines:

[<spec>]
TRANSFORMS-<value> = <unique_stanza_name>

Note: For index-time field extraction, props.conf uses TRANSFORMS-<class>, as opposed to EXTRACT-<value>, which is used for configuring search-time field extraction.

Add an entry to fields.conf for the new field

Add an entry to fields.conf for the new indexed field:

[<your_custom_field_name>]
INDEXED=true

Note: If a field of the same name is extracted at search time, you must set INDEXED=false for the field. In addition, you must also set INDEXED_VALUE=false if events exist that have values of that field that are not pulled out at index time, but which are extracted at search time.

For example, say you're performing a simple <field>::1234 extraction at index time. This could work, but you would have problems if you also implement a search-time field extraction based on a regex like A(\d+)B, where the string A1234B yields a value for that field of 1234. This would turn up events for 1234 at search time that Splunk would be unable to locate at index time with the <field>::1234 extraction.

Restart Splunk for your changes to take effect

Changes to configuration files such as props.conf and transforms.conf won't take effect until you shut down and restart Splunk.

How Splunk builds indexed fields

Splunk builds indexed fields by writing to _meta. Here's how it works:

Note: Indexed fields with regex-extracted values containing quotation marks will generally not work, and backslashes may also have problems. Fields extracted at search time do not have these limitations.

Here's an example of a set of index-time extractions involving quotation marks and backslashes to disable quotation marks and backslashes.

WRITE_META = true
FORMAT = field1::value field2::"value 2" field3::"a field with a \" quotation mark" field4::"a field which 
ends with a backslash\\"

When Splunk creates field names

When Splunk creates field names, it applies the following rules to all extracted fields, whether they are extracted at index-time or search-time, by default or through a custom configuration:

1. All characters that are not in a-z,A-Z, and 0-9 ranges are replaced with an underscore (_).

2. All leading underscores are removed (because in Splunk, leading underscores are reserved for internal variables).

Index-time field extraction examples

Here are a set of examples of configuration file setups for custom index-time field extractions.

Define a new indexed field

This example creates an indexed field called err_code.

transforms.conf

In transforms.conf add:

[netscreen-error]
REGEX =  device_id=\[w+\](?<err_code>[^:]+)
FORMAT = err_code::"$1"
WRITE_META = true

This stanza takes device_id= followed with a word within brackets and a text string terminating with a colon. The source type of the events is testlog.

Comments:

props.conf

Add the following lines to props.conf:

[testlog]
TRANSFORMS-netscreen = netscreen-error

fields.conf

Add the following lines to fields.conf:

[err_code]
INDEXED=true

Define two new indexed fields with one regex

This example creates two indexed fields called username and login_result.

transforms.conf

In transforms.conf add:

[ftpd-login]
REGEX = Attempt to login by user: (.*): login (.*)\.
FORMAT = username::"$1" login_result::"$2"
WRITE_META = true

This stanza finds the literal text Attempt to login by user:, extracts a username followed by a colon, and then the result, which is followed by a period. A line might look like:

2008-10-30 14:15:21 mightyhost awesomeftpd INFO Attempt to login by user: root: login FAILED.

props.conf

Add the following lines to props.conf:

[ftpd-log]
TRANSFORMS-login = ftpd-login

fields.conf

Add the following lines to fields.conf:

[username]
INDEXED=true

[login_result]
INDEXED=true

This documentation applies to the following versions of Splunk: 4.0 , 4.0.1 , 4.0.2 , 4.0.3 , 4.0.4 , 4.0.5 , 4.0.6 , 4.0.7 , 4.0.8 , 4.0.9 , 4.0.10 , 4.0.11 View the Article History for its revisions.


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