Splunk® Enterprise

Admin Manual

Splunk Enterprise version 7.1 is no longer supported as of October 31, 2020. See the Splunk Software Support Policy for details. For information about upgrading to a supported version, see How to upgrade Splunk Enterprise.
This documentation does not apply to the most recent version of Splunk® Enterprise. For documentation on the most recent version, go to the latest release.

multikv.conf

The following are the spec and example files for multikv.conf.

multikv.conf.spec

#   Version 7.1.3
#
# This file contains possible attribute and value pairs for creating multikv
# rules.  Multikv is the process of extracting events from table-like events,
# such as the output of top, ps, ls, netstat, etc.
#
# There is NO DEFAULT multikv.conf.  To set custom configurations, place a
# multikv.conf in $SPLUNK_HOME/etc/system/local/. For examples, see
# multikv.conf.example.  You must restart Splunk to enable configurations.
#
# To learn more about configuration files (including precedence) see the
# documentation located at
# http://docs.splunk.com/Documentation/Splunk/latest/Admin/Aboutconfigurationfiles
#
# NOTE: Only configure multikv.conf if Splunk's default multikv behavior does
# not meet your needs.

# A table-like event includes a table consisting of four sections:
#

Section Name | Description

# pre          | optional: info/description (for example: the system summary output in top)
# header       | optional: if not defined, fields are named Column_N
# body         | required: the body of the table from which child events are constructed
# post         | optional: info/description
#---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

# NOTE: Each section must have a definition and a processing component. See
# below.

[<multikv_config_name>]
* Name of the stanza to use with the multikv search command, for example:
       '| multikv conf=<multikv_config_name> rmorig=f | ....'
* Follow this stanza name with any number of the following attribute/value pairs.

Section Definition

# Define where each section begins and ends.

<Section Name>.start = <regex>
* A line matching this regex denotes the start of this section (inclusive).

OR

<Section Name>.start_offset = <int>
* Line offset from the start of an event or the end of the previous section
  (inclusive).
* Use this if you cannot define a regex for the start of the section.

<Section Name>.member = <regex>
* A line membership test.
* Member if lines match the regex.

<Section Name>.end = <regex>
* A line matching this regex denotes the end of this section (exclusive).

OR

<Section Name>.linecount = <int>
* Specify the number of lines in this section.
* Use this if you cannot specify a regex for the end of the section.

Section processing

# Set processing for each section.

<Section Name>.ignore = [_all_|_none_|_regex_ <regex-list>]
* Determines which member lines will be ignored and not processed further.

<Section Name>.replace = <quoted-str> = <quoted-str>, <quoted-str> = <quoted-str>,...
* List of the form: "toReplace" = "replaceWith".
* Can have any number of quoted string pairs.
* For example: "%" = "_", "#" = "_"

<Section Name>.tokens = [<chopper>|<tokenizer>|<aligner>|<token-list>]
* See below for definitions of each possible token: chopper, tokenizer, aligner,
  token-list.

<chopper> = _chop_, <int-list>
* Transform each string into a list of tokens specified by <int-list>.
* <int-list> is a list of (offset, length) tuples.

<tokenizer> = _tokenize_ <max_tokens (int)> <delims> (<consume-delims>)?
* Tokenize the string using the delim characters.
* This generates at most max_tokens number of tokens.
* Set max_tokens to:
  * -1 for complete tokenization.
  * 0 to inherit from previous section (usually header).
  * A non-zero number for a specific token count.
* If tokenization is limited by the max_tokens, the rest of the string is added
  onto the last token.
* <delims> is a comma-separated list of delimiting chars.
* <consume-delims> - boolean, whether to consume consecutive delimiters. Set to
                     false/0 if you want consecutive delimiters to be treated
                     as empty values. Defaults to true.

<aligner> = _align_, <header_string>, <side>, <max_width>
* Generates tokens by extracting text aligned to the specified header fields.
* header_string: a complete or partial header field value the columns are aligned with.
* side: either L or R (for left or right align, respectively).
* max_width: the maximum width of the extracted field.
  * Set max_width to -1 for automatic width. This expands the field until any
    of the following delimiters are found: " ", "\t"

<token_list> = _token_list_ <comma-separated list>
* Defines a list of static tokens in a section.
* This is useful for tables with no header, for example: the output of 'ls -lah'
  which misses a header altogether.

multikv.conf.example

#   Version 7.1.3
#
# This file contains example multi key/value extraction configurations.
#
# To use one or more of these configurations, copy the configuration block into
# multikv.conf in $SPLUNK_HOME/etc/system/local/. You must restart Splunk to
# enable configurations.
#
# To learn more about configuration files (including precedence) please see the
# documentation located at
# http://docs.splunk.com/Documentation/Splunk/latest/Admin/Aboutconfigurationfiles


# This example breaks up the output from top:

# Sample output:

# Processes: 56 total, 2 running, 54 sleeping... 221 threads 10:14:07
#.....
#
#   PID COMMAND  %CPU TIME     #TH #PRTS #MREGS RPRVT RSHRD RSIZE  VSIZE
# 29960 mdimport 0.0%  0:00.29  3    60    50  1.10M  2.55M 3.54M  38.7M
# 29905 pickup   0.0%  0:00.01  1    16    17   164K   832K  764K  26.7M
#....

[top_mkv]
# pre table starts at "Process..." and ends at line containing "PID"
pre.start = "Process"
pre.end = "PID"
pre.ignore = _all_

# specify table header location and processing
header.start = "PID"
header.linecount = 1
header.replace = "%" = "_", "#" = "_"
header.tokens = _tokenize_, -1," "

# table body ends at the next "Process" line (ie start of another top) tokenize
# and inherit the number of tokens from previous section (header)
body.end = "Process"
body.tokens  = _tokenize_,  0, " "



## This example handles the output of 'ls -lah' command:
#
# total 2150528
# drwxr-xr-x 88 john john 2K   Jan 30 07:56 .
# drwxr-xr-x 15 john john 510B Jan 30 07:49 ..
# -rw------- 1  john john 2K   Jan 28 11:25 .hiden_file
# drwxr-xr-x 20 john john 680B Jan 30 07:49 my_dir
# -r--r--r-- 1  john john 3K   Jan 11 09:00 my_file.txt


[ls-lah-cpp]
pre.start     = "total"
pre.linecount = 1

# the header is missing, so list the column names
header.tokens = _token_list_, mode, links, user, group, size, date, name

# The ends when we have a line starting with a space
body.end     = "^\s*$"
# This filters so that only lines that contain with .cpp are used
body.member  = "\.cpp"
# concatenates the date into a single unbreakable item
body.replace = "(\w{3})\s+(\d{1,2})\s+(\d{2}:\d{2})" ="\1_\2_\3"

# ignore dirs
body.ignore = _regex_ "^drwx.*",
body.tokens  = _tokenize_, 0, " "


Last modified on 31 August, 2018
messages.conf   outputs.conf

This documentation applies to the following versions of Splunk® Enterprise: 7.1.3


Was this topic useful?







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

Please try to keep this discussion focused on the content covered in this documentation topic. If you have a more general question about Splunk functionality or are experiencing a difficulty with Splunk, consider posting a question to Splunkbase Answers.

0 out of 1000 Characters