Create custom fields at index time
Contents
- Define additional indexed fields
- Add a regex stanza for the new field to transforms.conf
- Link the new field to props.conf
- Add an entry to fields.conf for the new field
- Restart Splunk for your changes to take effect
- How Splunk builds indexed fields
- When Splunk creates field names
- Index-time field extraction examples
- Define a new indexed field
- Define two new indexed fields with one regex
- Concatenate field values from event segments at index time
Create custom fields at index time
Caution: We do not recommend that you add custom fields to the set of default fields that Splunk automatically 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 fields, you must re-index your entire dataset. For more information, see "Index time versus search time" in the Managing Indexers and Clusters manual.
With those caveats, there are times when you might find reason to add custom indexed fields. For example, you might have a situation where certain search-time field extractions are noticeably impacting 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 might 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 might want to add foo to the list of fields extracted by Splunk at index time.
In general, you should try to extract your fields at search time. For more information see "Create search-time field extractions" in the Knowledge Manager 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 in 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.
Field name syntax restrictions
Splunk only accepts field names that contain alpha-numeric characters or an underscore:
- Valid characters for field names are a-z, A-Z, 0-9, or _ .
- Field names cannot begin with 0-9 or _ . Leading underscores are reserved for Splunk's internal variables.
- International characters are not allowed.
Add a regex stanza for the new field to transforms.conf
Follow this format when you define an index-time field transform in transforms.conf (Note: Some of these attributes, such as LOOKAHEAD and DEST_KEY, are only required for certain use cases):
[<unique_transform_stanza_name>] REGEX = <regular_expression> FORMAT = <your_custom_field_name>::$1 WRITE_META = [true|false] DEST_KEY = <KEY> DEFAULT_VALUE = <string> SOURCE_KEY = <KEY> REPEAT_MATCH = [true|false] LOOKAHEAD = <integer>
Note the following:
- The
<unique_stanza_name>is required for all transforms, as is theREGEX.
-
REGEXis a regular expression that operates on your data to extract fields.- Name-capturing groups in the
REGEXare extracted directly to fields, which means that you don't have to specify aFORMATfor simple field extraction cases. - If the
REGEXextracts both the field name and its corresponding value, you can use the following special capturing groups to skip specifying the mapping in theFORMATattribute:
- Name-capturing groups in the
-
_KEY_<string>, _VAL_<string>
-
- For example, the following are equivalent:
- Using
FORMAT:
-
REGEX = ([a-z]+)=([a-z]+) -
FORMAT = $1::$2
-
- Not using
FORMAT:
-
REGEX = (?<_KEY_1>[a-z]+)=(?<_VAL_1>[a-z]+)
-
-
FORMATis optional. Use it to specify the format of the field/value pair(s) that you are extracting, including any field names or values that you want to add. You don't need to specify theFORMATif you have a simpleREGEXwith name-capturing groups. -
FORMATbehaves differently depending on whether the extraction takes place at search time or index time.- For index-time transforms, you use
$nto specify the output of eachREGEXmatch (for example,$1,$2, and so on). - If the
REGEXdoes not havengroups, the matching fails. -
FORMATdefaults to<unique_transform_stanza_name>::$1. - The special identifier
$0represents what was in theDEST_KEYbefore theREGEXwas performed (in the case of index-time field extractions theDEST_KEYis_meta). For more information, see "How Splunk builds indexed fields," below. - For index-time field extractions, you can set up
FORMATin several ways. It can be a<field-name>::<field-value>setup like:
- For index-time transforms, you use
-
FORMAT = field1::$1 field2::$2(where theREGEXextracts field values for captured groups "field1" and "field2")
-
- or:
-
FORMAT = $1::$2(where theREGEXextracts both the field name and the field value)
-
- However you can also set up index-time field extractions that create concatenated fields:
-
FORMAT = ipaddress::$1.$2.$3.$4
-
- When you create concatenated fields with
FORMAT, it's important to understand that$is the only special character. It is treated as a prefix for regex capturing groups only if it is followed by a number and only if that number applies to an existing capturing group.
- So if your regex has only one capturing group and its value is
bar, then:
-
FORMAT = foo$1would yieldfoobar -
FORMAT = foo$barwould yieldfoo$bar -
FORMAT = foo$1234would yieldfoo$1234 -
FORMAT = foo$1\$2would yieldfoobar\$2
-
-
WRITE_META = truewrites the extracted field name and value to_meta, which is where Splunk stores indexed fields. This attribute setting is required for all index-time field extractions, except for those whereDEST_KEY = _meta(see the discussion ofDEST_KEY, below).- For more information about
_metaand its role in indexed field creation, see "How Splunk builds indexed fields," below.
- For more information about
-
DEST_KEYis required for index-time field extractions whereWRITE_META = falseor is not set. It specifies where Splunk sends the results of theREGEX.- For index-time searches,
DEST_KEY = _meta, which is where Splunk stores indexed fields. For other possibleKEYvalues see thetransforms.confpage in this manual. - For more information about
_metaand its role in indexed field creation, see "How Splunk builds indexed fields," below. - When you use
DEST_KEY = _metayou should also add$0to the start of yourFORMATattribute.$0represents theDEST_KEYvalue before Splunk performs theREGEX(in other words,_meta. - Note: The
$0value is in no way derived from theREGEX.
- For index-time searches,
-
DEFAULT_VALUEis optional. The value for this attribute is written toDEST_KEYif theREGEXfails.- Defaults to empty.
-
SOURCE_KEYis optional. You use it to identify a KEY whose values theREGEXshould be applied to.- By default,
SOURCE_KEY = _raw, which means it is applied to the entirety of all events. - Typically used in conjunction with
REPEAT_MATCH. - For other possible
KEYvalues see thetransforms.confpage in this manual.
- By default,
-
REPEAT_MATCHis optional. Set it totrueto run theREGEXmultiple times on theSOURCE_KEY.-
REPEAT_MATCHstarts wherever the last match stopped and continues until no more matches are found. Useful for situations where an unknown number of field/value matches are expected per event. - Defaults to
false.
-
-
LOOKAHEADis optional. Use it to specify how many characters to search into an event.- Defaults to 256. You might want to increase your
LOOKAHEADvalue if you have events with line lengths longer than 256 characters.
- Defaults to 256. You might want to increase your
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 follow field name syntax restrictions. They can only contain ASCII characters (a-z, A-Z, 0-9 or _.). International characters will not work.
Link the new field to props.conf
To props.conf, add the following lines:
[<spec>] TRANSFORMS-<class> = <unique_stanza_name>
Note the following:
-
<spec>can be:- <sourcetype>, the sourcetype of an event.
- host::<host>, where <host> is the host for an event.
- source::<source>, where <source> is the source for an event.
- Note: You can use regex-type syntax when setting the
<spec>. Also, source and source type stanzas match in a case-sensitive manner while host stanzas do not. For more information, see theprops.confspec file.
-
<class>is a unique literal string that identifies the namespace of the field (key) you are extracting. Note:<class>values do not have to follow field name syntax restrictions (see above). You can use characters other than a-z, A-Z, and 0-9, and spaces are allowed. -
<unique_stanza_name>is the name of your stanza fromtransforms.conf.
Note: For index-time field extraction, props.conf uses TRANSFORMS-<class>, as opposed to EXTRACT-<class>, 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 the following:
-
<your_custom_field_name>is the name of the custom field you set in the unique stanza that you added totransforms.conf. - Set
INDEXED=trueto indicate that the field is indexed.
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:
-
_metais modified by all matching transforms intransforms.confthat contain eitherDEST_KEY = _metaorWRITE_META = true. - Each matching transform can overwrite
_meta, so useWRITE_META = trueto append_meta.- If you don't use
WRITE_META, then start yourFORMATwith$0.
- If you don't use
- After
_metais fully built during parsing, Splunk interprets the text in the following way:- The text is broken into units; each unit is separated by whitespace.
- Quotation marks (" ") group characters into larger units, regardless of whitespace.
- Backslashes ( \ ) immediately preceding quotation marks disable the grouping properties of quotation marks.
- Backslashes preceding a backslash disable that backslash.
- Units of text that contain a double colon (::) are turned into extracted fields. The text on the left side of the double colon becomes the field name, and the right side becomes the value.
Note: Indexed fields with regex-extracted values containing quotation marks will generally not work, and backslashes might 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
Remember: When Splunk creates field names, it applies field name syntax restrictions to them.
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. In Splunk, leading underscores are reserved for internal fields.
Index-time field extraction examples
Here are a set of examples of configuration file setups for index-time field extractions.
Define a new indexed field
This basic 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:
- The
FORMAT =line contains the following values:-
err_code::is the name of the field. - $1 refers to the new field written to the index. It is the value extracted by
REGEX.
-
-
WRITE_META = trueis an instruction to write the content ofFORMATto the index.
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
Restart Splunk for your configuration file changes to take effect.
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
Restart Splunk for your configuration file changes to take effect.
Concatenate field values from event segments at index time
This example shows you how an index-time transform can be used to extract separate segments of an event and combine them to create a single field, using the FORMAT option.
Let's say you have the following event:
20100126 08:48:49 781 PACKET 078FCFD0 UDP Rcv 127.0.0.0 8226 R Q [0084 A NOERROR] A (4)www(8)google(3)com(0)
Now, what you want to do is get (4)www(8)google(3)com(0) extracted as a value of a field named dns_requestor. But you don't want those garbage parentheses and numerals, you just want something that looks like www.google.com. How do you achieve this?
transforms.conf
You would start by setting up a transform in transforms.conf named dnsRequest:
[dnsRequest] REGEX = UDP[^\(]+\(\d\)(\w+)\(\d\)(\w+)\(\d\)(\w+) FORMAT = dns_requestor::$1.$2.$3
This transform defines a custom field named dns_requestor. It uses its REGEX to pull out the three segments of the dns_requestor value. Then it uses FORMAT to order those segments with periods between them, like a proper URL.
Note: This method of concatenating event segments into a complete field value is something you can only perform with index-time extractions; search-time extractions have practical restrictions that prevent it. If you find that you must use FORMAT in this manner, you will have to create a new indexed field to do it.
props.conf
Then, the next step would be to define a field extraction in props.conf that references the dnsRequest transform and applies it to events coming from the server1 source type:
[server1] TRANSFORMS-dnsExtract = dnsRequest
fields.conf
Finally, you would enter the following stanza in fields.conf:
[dns_requestor] INDEXED = true
Restart Splunk for your configuration file changes to take effect.
This documentation applies to the following versions of Splunk: 5.0 , 5.0.1 , 5.0.2 , 5.0.3 View the Article History for its revisions.