Admin Manual

 


Configure timestamp recognition

This documentation does not apply to the most recent version of Splunk. Click here for the latest version.

Configure timestamp recognition

Splunk uses timestamps to correlate events by time, create the histogram in Splunk Web and to set time ranges for searches. Timestamps are assigned to events at index time.

Splunk assigns a timestamp to most events based on information in the raw event data. If an event doesn't contain timestamp information, Splunk attempts to assign a timestamp value to the event as it's indexed. Splunk stores timestamp values in the _time field (in UTC time format). con Most events don't require any special timestamp handling; you can just let Splunk handle it without any configuration.

Precedence rules for timestamp assignment

Splunk uses the following precedence to assign timestamps to events:

1. Look for a time or date in the event itself using an explicit TIME_FORMAT if provided.

Use positional timestamp extraction for events that have more than one timestamp value in the raw data.

2. If no TIME_FORMAT is provided, or no match is found, attempt to automatically identify a time or date in the event itself.

3. If an event doesn't have a time or date, use the timestamp from the most recent previous event of the same source.

4. If no events in a source have a time or date, look in the source (or file) name.

5. For file sources, if no time or date can be identified in the file name, use the modification time on the file.

6. If no other timestamp is found, set the timestamp to the current system time (the time at which the event is indexed by Splunk).

Configure timestamps

Most events don't require any special timestamp handling; you can just let Splunk handle it without any configuration.

For some sources and distributed deployments, you may have to configure timestamp formatting to extract timestamps from events. Configure Splunk's timestamp extraction processor by editing props.conf.

Configure how Splunk recognizes timestamps by editing props.conf. Splunk uses strptime() formatting to identify timestamp values in your events. Specify what Splunk recognizes as a timestamp by setting a strptime() format in the TIME_FORMAT= key.

Note: If your event has more than one timestamp, set Splunk to recognize the correct timestamp with positional timestamp extraction.

Use $SPLUNK_HOME/etc/system/README/props.conf.example as an example, or create your own props.conf. Make any configuration changes to a copy of props.conf in $SPLUNK_HOME/etc/system/local/, or your own custom application directory in $SPLUNK_HOME/etc/apps/.

Configure any of the following attributes in props.conf to set Splunk's timestamp recognition. Refer to $SPLUNK_HOME/etc/system/README/props.conf.spec for full specification of the keys.

[<spec>]
DATETIME_CONFIG = <filename relative to $SPLUNK_HOME>
MAX_TIMESTAMP_LOOKAHEAD = <integer>
TIME_PREFIX = <regular expression>
TIME_FORMAT = <strptime-style format>
TZ = <posix timezone string>
MAX_DAYS_AGO = <integer>
MAX_DAYS_HENCE = <integer>

[<spec>]

DATETIME_CONFIG = <filename relative to $SPLUNK_HOME>

TIME_PREFIX = <regular expression>

MAX_TIMESTAMP_LOOKAHEAD = <integer>

TIME_FORMAT = <strptime-style format>

TZ = <timezone identifier>

MAX_DAYS_AGO = <integer>

MAX_DAYS_HENCE = <integer>

Enhanced strptime() support

Configure timestamp parsing in props.conf with the TIME_FORMAT= key. Splunk implements an enhanced version of Unix strptime() that supports additional formats (allowing for microsecond, millisecond, any time width format, and some additional time formats for compatibility). See the table below for a list of the additionally supported strptime() formats.

In previous versions, Splunk parsed timestamps using only the standard Linux strptime() conversion specifications. Now, in addition to standard Unix strptime() formats, Splunk's strptime() implementation supports recognition of the following date-time formats:

 %N For GNU date-time nanoseconds. Specify any sub-second parsing by providing the width: %3N = milliseconds, %6N = microseconds, %9N = nanoseconds.
%Q,%q For milliseconds, microseconds for Apache Tomcat. %Q and %q can format any time resolution if the width is specified.
%I For hours on a 12-hour clock format. If %I appears after %S or %s (like "%H:%M:%S.%l") it takes on the log4cpp meaning of milliseconds.
%+ For standard UNIX date format timestamps.
 %v For BSD and OSX standard date format.
%z, %::z, %:::zGNU libc support.
%o For AIX timestamp support (%o used as an alias for %Y).
%p The locale's equivalent of AM or PM. (Note: there may be none.)

strptime() format expression examples

Below are some sample date formats with strptime() expressions that handle them.


1998-12-31  %Y-%m-%d
98-12-31  %y-%m-%d
1998 years, 312 days  %Y years, %j days
Jan 24, 2003  %b %d, %Y
January 24, 2003  %B %d, %Y
q|25 Feb '03 = 2003-02-25| q|%d %b '%y = %Y-%m-%d|

Examples

Your data might contain an easily recognizable timestamp to extract such as:

...FOR: 04/24/07 PAGE 01...

The entry in props.conf is:

[host::foo]
TIME_PREFIX = FOR: 
TIME_FORMAT = %m/%d/%y

Your data might contain other information that Splunk parses as timestamps, for example:

...1989/12/31 16:00:00 ed May 23 15:40:21 2007...

Splunk extracts the date as Dec 31, 1989, which is not useful. In this case, configure props.conf to extract the correct timestamp from events from host::foo:

[host::foo]
TIME_PREFIX = \d{4}/\d{2}/\d{2} \d{2}:\d{2}:\d{2} \w+\s
TIME_FORMAT = %b %d %H:%M:%S %Y

This configuration assumes that all timestamps from host::foo are in the same format. Configure your props.conf stanza to be as granular as possible to avoid potential timestamping errors.

You can also configure Splunk's timestamp extraction processor to:

Finally, train Splunk to recognize new timestamp formats.

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.


You must be logged into splunk.com in order to post comments. Log in now.

Was this documentation topic helpful?

If you'd like to hear back from us, please provide your email address:

We'd love to hear what you think about this topic or the documentation as a whole. Feedback you enter here will be delivered to the documentation team.

Feedback submitted, thanks!