All DSP releases prior to DSP 1.4.0 use Gravity, a Kubernetes orchestrator, which has been announced end-of-life. We have replaced Gravity with an alternative component in DSP 1.4.0. Therefore, we will no longer provide support for versions of DSP prior to DSP 1.4.0 after July 1, 2023. We advise all of our customers to upgrade to DSP 1.4.0 in order to continue to receive full product support from Splunk.
String manipulation
concat(values)
Combines string values. This function accepts a variable number of arguments.
- Function Input
- values: collection<string>
- Function Output
- string
1. SPL2 example
Returns Jane A Smith in the host
field.
When working in the SPL View, you can write the function by using the following syntax.
...| eval host=concat("Jane", " ", "A", " ", "Smith");
2. SPL2 example
Prepends "asa_" to the value of "source_type".
When working in the SPL View, you can write the function by using the following syntax.
...| eval source_type=concat("asa_", "source_type");
3. SPL2 example
Alternatively, you can use named arguments.
...| eval host=concat(values: ["Jane", " ", "A", " ", "Smith"]);
extract_grok(input, pattern)
Extracts matching groups with a Grok-compatible pattern and returns a map of group names to matching groups when the pattern is matched against the input. It returns null if the input is null or the pattern is invalid.
- Function Input
- input: string
- pattern: string
- Function Output
- map<string, string>
SPL2 examples
Returns "IPV4": "10.10.10.10" in ip_address
.
When working in the SPL View, you can write the function by using the following syntax.
... | eval ip_address=extract_grok("FOO 10.10.10.10 BAR", "%{IPV4}");
Alternatively, you can use named arguments to list the arguments in any order.
... | eval ip_address=extract_grok(pattern: "%{IPV4}", input: "FOO 10.10.10.10 BAR");
extract_key_value(input, key_value_delimiter, pair_delimiter)
Extracts the key-value pairs and returns a map of the key-value pairs. The keys and values are separated with a key value delimiter, and pairs are separated with a pair delimiter. It returns null if the input is null or the key value delimiter is null or empty.
- Function Input
- input: string
- key_value_delimiter: string
- pair_delimiter: string
- Function Output
- map<string, string>
1. SPL2 example
Returns {"key1":"value1","key2":"value2","key3":"value3"}.
When working in the SPL View, you can write the function by using the following syntax.
| eval n=extract_key_value("key1=value1;key2=value2;key3=value3", "=", ";");
2. SPL2 example
Extracts key-value pairs from body.
When working in the SPL View, you can write the function by using the following syntax.
...| eval extracted_body=extract_key_value(cast(body, "string"), "=", " ");
3. SPL2 example
Alternatively, you can use named arguments to list the arguments in any order.
| eval n=extract_key_value(key_value_delimiter: "=", pair_delimiter: ";", input: "key1=value1;key2=value2;key3=value3");
extract_regex(input, pattern)
Extracts capturing groups from inputs with regular expressions and returns a map of all extracted, matched fields in the format: {"capture_group_1": "matching_expression_1", "capture_group_N":"matching_expression_N"}
. If you do not name the capturing group, the group names are returned as "1", "2", "3", "N", etc. For example, extract_regex with the regex (?<host>[^\.]+)
returns a map with the key host whose value is the value of the extracted capture group. For a non-named capture group, extract_regex with the regex ([^\.]+)
will return a map with key 1 whose value is the value of the extracted capture group.
To name your capturing group, start your regular expression pattern with ?<capturing-group-name>
, as shown in the SPL2 examples. Use this function if you want your extracted data to be nested in a single field.
- Function Input
- input: string
- pattern: regular expression pattern
- Function Output
- map<string, string>
1. SPL2 example
Extracts ASA-x-xxxxxx values from the body field using a named capturing group.
When working in the SPL View, you can write the function by using the following syntax.
...| eval asa=extract_regex(cast(body, "string"), /(?<ASA>ASA-\d-\d{6})/i);
2. SPL2 example
Extracts a six digit number from value
and places that value in the field numbers
.
When working in the SPL View, you can write the function by using the following syntax.
...| select extract_regex(to_string(value), /\d{6}/) AS numbers;
3. SPL2 example
Alternatively, you can use named arguments to list the arguments in any order.
...| eval asa=extract_regex(pattern: /(?<ASA>ASA-\d-\d{6})/i, input: cast(body, "string"));
len(str)
Returns the character length of a string str
.
- Function Input
- str: string
- Function Output
- integer
SPL2 examples
Filters records by source
character limit.
When working in the SPL View, you can write the function by using the following syntax.
...| where 6=len(source);
Alternatively, you can use named arguments.
...| where 6=len(str: source);
lower(str)
Converts a string to lowercase.
- Function Input
- str: string
- Function Output
- string
SPL2 examples
Filters records by source bar
.
When working in the SPL View, you can write the function by using the following syntax.
...| where source=lower("BAR");
Alternatively, you can use named arguments.
...| where source=lower(str: "BAR");
ltrim(str, strip_chars)
This function takes two arguments. The required argument is str
, a string. This function also takes an optional argument strip_chars
, also a string. This function returns either str
with whitespaces removed from the left side or str
with the characters in strip_chars
trimmed from the left side.
- Function Input
- str: string
- (Optional) strip_chars: string
- Function Output
- string
1. SPL2 example
Returns "abcZZ ".
When working in the SPL View, you can write the function by using the following syntax.
...| eval n=ltrim(" ZZZZabcZZ ", " Z");
2. SPL2 example
Returns "abc ".
When working in the SPL View, you can write the function by using the following syntax.
...| eval n=ltrim(" abc ");
3. SPL2 example
Alternatively, you can use named arguments to list the arguments in any order.
...| eval n=ltrim(strip_chars: " Z", str: " ZZZZabcZZ ");
match_regex(input, pattern)
Checks if a string field contains a specified string using a regular expression pattern. Since this function takes a regular expression as input, you need to enclose the pattern argument in /
. Returns true if the regular expression finds a match in the input string, otherwise returns false.
If you want to do a string match and your input contains a lot of special characters that require special escaping, consider using the match_wildcard function instead.
The match_regex
function does a substring match by default. In order to do a full string match, you must use the regular expression anchors ^
and $
.
- Function Input
- input: string
- pattern: regular expression
- Function Output
- boolean
1. SPL2 example
Filters records that contain an ASA number in body
.
When working in the SPL View, you can write the function by using the following syntax.
...| where match_regex(cast(body, "string"), /%ASA-\d-\d{6}/);
Alternatively, you can use named arguments to list the arguments in any order.
...| where match_regex(pattern: /%ASA-\d-\d{6}/, input: cast(body, "string"));
2. SPL2 example
Assume that your data contains abc
and abbbbbc
. Returns true for abc
but not abbbbc
.
When working in the SPL View, you can write the function by using the following syntax.
...| eval n = match_regex(cast(body, "string"), /a.c/);
3. SPL2 example
Returns true.
When working in the SPL View, you can write the function by using the following syntax.
... | eval n = match_regex("myPay", /Pay/);
4. SPL2 example
Returns false.
When working in the SPL View, you can write the function by using the following syntax.
... | eval n = match_regex("myPay", /^Pay/);
match_wildcard(input, pattern)
Checks if a string field contains a specified substring without using regular expressions, except for the wildcard character *
. Returns true if the substring has been found, otherwise returns false.
The match_wildcard
function is a convenience function for the commonly used regular expression pattern .*
. When you use match_wildcard
, characters aside from *
that are normally considered to be special characters in a regular expression are automatically escaped. Therefore, use match_wildcard
when your input has a large number of special characters that would normally need special escaping.
The match_wildcard
function always does a substring match. If you want to do a full string match, use match_regex
with anchors instead.
- Function Input
- input: string
- pattern: string
- Function Output
- boolean
1. SPL2 example
Returns true in sensitive_info
when Credit
is anywhere in the body
field.
When working in the SPL View, you can write the function by using the following syntax.
...| eval sensitive_info=match_wildcard(cast(body, "string"), "Credit");
Alternatively, you can use named arguments to list the arguments in any order.
...| eval sensitive_info=match_wildcard(pattern: "Credit", input: cast(body, "string"));
2. SPL2 example
Assume that your data contains abc
and abbbbbc
. Returns true for both abc
and abbbbc
.
When working in the SPL View, you can write the function by using the following syntax.
... | eval n=match_wildcard(cast(body, "string"), a*c);
3. SPL2 example
Returns true when the strings switched from...to...
are found in the body
field.
When working in the SPL View, you can write the function by using the following syntax.
...| eval n=match_wildcard(cast(body, "string"), "switched from * to *");
4. SPL2 example
Returns false, because the anchor ^
and pattern \\d
are treated as the literal string characters ^
and \d
. Note that the backslash character \
is a special character in SPL2, and therefore needs to be explicitly escaped in order for the pipeline to validate.
When working in the SPL View, you can write the function by using the following syntax.
... | eval n=match_wildcard("event5", "^event\\d");
replace(str, pattern, rep)
This function returns a string formed by substituting string rep
for every occurrence of regex string pattern
in string str
. The third argument rep
can also reference groups that are matched in the regex.
- Function Input
- str: string
- pattern: regular expression pattern
- rep: string
- Function Output
- string
1. SPL2 example
Returns the body
field with phone numbers redacted.
When working in the SPL View, you can write the function by using the following syntax.
...| eval body=replace(cast(body, "string"), /[0-9]{3}[-.][0-9]{3}[-.][0-9]{4}/, "<redacted>");
2. SPL2 example
This example uses a capture group to format the replacement string. The result "foobar" is placed in a new top-level field called newfield
.
When working in the SPL View, you can write the function by using the following syntax.
... | eval newfield=replace("bar", /(bar)/, "foo$1");
3. SPL2 example
Alternatively, you can use named arguments to list the arguments in any order.
...| eval body=replace(str: cast(body, "string"), rep: "<redacted>", pattern: /[0-9]{3}[-.][0-9]{3}[-.][0-9]{4}/);
rtrim(str, strip_chars)
This function takes two arguments. The required argument is str
, a string. This function also takes an optional argument strip_chars
, also a string. This function returns either str
with whitespaces removed from the right side or str
with the characters in strip_chars
trimmed from the right side.
- Function Input
- str: string
- (Optional) strip-chars: string
- Function Output
- string
1. SPL2 example
Returns " ZZZZabc".
When working in the SPL View, you can write the function by using the following syntax.
... | eval n=rtrim(" ZZZZabcZZ", " Z");
2. SPL2 example
Returns " abc".
When working in the SPL View, you can write the function by using the following syntax.
... | eval n= rtrim(" abc ");
3. SPL2 example
Alternatively, you can use named arguments to list the arguments in any order.
... | eval n=rtrim(strip_chars: " Z", str: " ZZZZabcZZ");
spath(input, path)
For documentation on the spath function, see spath.
substr(str, start, length)
This function takes three arguments. The required arguments are str
, a string, and start
, an integer. This function also takes an optional argument length
, also an integer. This function returns a substring of str
, starting at the index specified by start
with the number of characters specified by length
.
- Function Input
- str: string
- start: integer
- (Optional) length: integer
- Function Output
- string
SPL2 examples
Returns "foo".
When working in the SPL View, you can write the function by using the following syntax.
...| eval n=substr("foobar", 1, 3);
Alternatively, you can use named arguments to list the arguments in any order.
...| eval n=substr(str: "foobar", length: 3, start: 1);
trim(str, strip_chars)
This function takes two arguments. The required argument is str
, a string. This function also takes an optional argument strip_chars
, also a string. This function returns either str
with whitespaces removed from both sides or str
with the characters in strip_chars
trimmed from both sides.
- Function Input
- str: string
- (Optional) strip_chars: string
- Function Output
- string
1. SPL2 example
Returns "abc".
When working in the SPL View, you can write the function by using the following syntax.
...| eval n=trim(" ZZZZabcZZ ", " Z");
2. SPL2 example
Returns "abc".
When working in the SPL View, you can write the function by using the following syntax.
...| eval n=trim(" abc ");
3. SPL2 example
Alternatively, you can use named arguments to list the arguments in any order.
...| eval n=trim(strip_chars: "Z", str: " ZZZZabcZZ ");
upper(str)
Converts a string to uppercase.
- Function Input
- str: string
- Function Output
- string
SPL2 examples
Returns USERNAME.
When working in the SPL View, you can write the function by using the following syntax.
...| eval n=upper(username);
Alternatively, you can use named arguments.
...| eval n=upper(str: username);
url_decode(str)
Takes a URL string and returns the unescaped or decoded URL string.
- Function Input
- str: string
- Function Output
- string
SPL2 examples
Returns http://www.splunk.com/download?r=header.
When working in the SPL View, you can write the function by using the following syntax.
url_decode("http%3A%2F%2Fwww.splunk.com%2Fdownload%3Fr%3Dheader");
Alternatively, you can use named arguments.
...| eval n=url_decode(str: "http%3A%2F%2Fwww.splunk.com%2Fdownload%3Fr%3Dheader");
url_encode(str)
Encodes a string for the query string parameters in a URL. Use this function when you want to include user-supplied string data in a URL.
- Function Input
- str: string
- Function Output
- string
SPL2 examples
Filters records by Jane+A+Smith.
When working in the SPL View, you can write the function by using the following syntax.
| where "Jane+A+Smith"=url_encode("Jane A Smith");
Alternatively, you can use named arguments.
| where "Jane+A+Smith"=url_encode(str: "Jane A Smith");
Mathematical | Overview of stats scalar functions |
This documentation applies to the following versions of Splunk® Data Stream Processor: 1.2.0, 1.2.1-patch02, 1.2.1, 1.2.2-patch02, 1.2.4, 1.2.5, 1.3.0, 1.3.1, 1.4.0, 1.4.1, 1.4.2, 1.4.3, 1.4.4, 1.4.5, 1.4.6
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