Splunk® Enterprise

Search Reference

Splunk Enterprise version 8.0 is no longer supported as of October 22, 2021. See the Splunk Software Support Policy for details. For information about upgrading to a supported version, see How to upgrade Splunk Enterprise.

Multivalue eval functions

The following list contains the functions that you can use on multivalue fields or to return multivalue fields.

You can also use the statistical eval functions, max and min, on multivalue fields. See Statistical eval functions.

For information about using string and numeric fields in functions, and nesting functions, see Evaluation functions.

commands(<value>)

Description

This function takes a search string, or field that contains a search string, and returns a multivalued field containing a list of the commands used in <value>.

Usage

This function is generally not recommended for use except for analysis of audit.log events.

You can use this function with the eval, fieldformat, and where commands, and as part of eval expressions.

Basic example

The following example returns a multivalued field called x, that contains the commands search, stats, and sort which are the commands used in the search string specified.

... | eval x=commands("search foo | stats count | sort count")

mvappend(<values>)

Description

This function takes one or more arguments and returns a single multivalue result that contains all of the values. The arguments can be strings, multivalue fields or single value fields.

Usage

You can use this function with the eval, fieldformat, and where commands, and as part of eval expressions.

Basic examples

This example shows how to append two values, localhost is a literal string value and srcip is a field name.

... | eval fullName=mvappend("localhost", srcip)

The following example shows how to use nested mvappend functions.

  • The inner mvappend function contains two values: localhost is a literal string value and srcip is a field name.
  • The outer mvappend function contains three values: the inner mvappend function, destip is a field name, and 192.168.1.1 which is a literal IP address.

The results are placed in a new field called ipaddresses, which contains the array ["localhost", <values_in_scrip>, <values_in_destip>, "192.168.1.1"].

... | eval ipaddresses=mvappend(mvappend("localhost", srcip), destip, "192.168.1.1")

Note that the previous example generates the same results as the following example, which does not use a nested mvappend function:

| makeresults | eval ipaddresses=mvappend("localhost", srcip, destip, "192.168.1.1")

The results look something like this:

time ipaddresses
2020-11-19 16:43:31 localhost
192.168.1.1

mvcount(<mv>)

Description

This function takes a field and returns a count of the values in that field for each result. If the field is a multivalue field, returns the number of values in that field. If the field contains a single value, this function returns 1 . If the field has no values, this function returns NULL.

Usage

You can use this function with the eval, fieldformat, and where commands, and as part of eval expressions.

Basic example

... | eval n=mvcount(multifield)

Extended example

In the following example, the mvcount() function returns the number of email addresses in the To, From, and Cc fields and saves the addresses in the specified "_count" fields.

eventtype="sendmail" | eval To_count=mvcount(split(To,"@"))-1 | eval From_count=mvcount(From) | eval Cc_count= mvcount(split(Cc,"@"))-1

This search takes the values in the To field and uses the split function to separate the email address on the @ symbol. The split function is also used on the Cc field for the same purpose.

If only a single email address exists in the From field, as you would expect, mvcount(From) returns 1. If there is no Cc address, the Cc field might not exist for the event. In that situation mvcount(cc) returns NULL.

mvdedup(<mv>)

Description

This function takes a multivalue field and returns a multivalue field with its duplicate values removed.

Usage

You can use this function with the eval, fieldformat, and where commands, and as part of eval expressions.

Basic example

... | eval s=mvdedup(mvfield)

mvfilter(<predicate>)

Description

This function filters a multivalue field based on an arbitrary Boolean expression. The Boolean expression can reference ONLY ONE field at a time.

Usage

This function will return NULL values of the field as well. If you do not want the NULL values, use one of the following expressions:

  • mvfilter(!isnull(<value>))
  • mvfilter(isnotnull(<value>))

You can use this function with the eval, fieldformat, and where commands, and as part of eval expressions.

Basic example

The following example returns all of the values in field email that end in .net or .org.

... | eval n=mvfilter(match(email, "\.net$") OR match(email, "\.org$"))

mvfind(<mv>,<regex>)

Description

This function tries to find a value in the multivalue field that matches the regular expression. If a match exists, the index of the first matching value is returned (beginning with zero). If no values match, NULL is returned.

Usage

You can use this function with the eval, fieldformat, and where commands, and as part of eval expressions.

Basic example

... | eval n=mvfind(mymvfield, "err\d+")

mvindex(<mv>,<start>,<end>)

Description

This function returns a subset of the multivalue field using the start and end index values.

Usage

The <mv> argument must be a multivalue field. The <start> and <end> indexes must be numbers.

The <mv> and <start> arguments are required. The <end> argument is optional.

You can use this function with the eval, fieldformat, and where commands, and as part of eval expressions.

Specifying the start and end indexes

  • Indexes start at zero. If you have 5 values in the multivalue field, the first value has an index of 0. The second value has an index of 1, and so on.
  • If only the <start> argument is specified, only that value is included in the results.
  • When the <end> argument is specified, the range of values from <start> to <end> are included in the results.
  • Both the <start> and <end> arguments can be negative. An index of -1 is used to specify the last value in the list.
  • If the indexes are out of range or invalid, the result is NULL.

Examples

Consider the following values in a multivalue field called names:

names alex celestino claudia david ikraam nyah rutherford wei
index number 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7

Because indexes start at zero, the following example returns the value claudia:

... | eval my_names=mvindex(names,2)

To return a range of values, specify both a <start> and <end> value. For example, the following search returns the first 4 values in the field. The start value is 0 and the end value is 3.

... | eval my_names=mvindex(names,0,3)

The results look like this:

my_names
alex,celestino,claudia,david

Extended examples

Consider the following values in a multivalue field:

ponies
buttercup, dash, flutter, honey, ivory, minty, pinky, rarity

To return a value from the end of the list of values, the index numbers start with -1. The negative symbol indicates that the indexing starts from the last value. For example:

Pony name buttercup dash flutter honey ivory minty pinky rarity
index number -8 -7 -6 -5 -4 -3 -2 -1


To return the last value in the list, you specify -1, which indicates to start at the end of the list and return only one value. For example:

... | eval my_ponies=mvindex(ponies,-1)

The results look like this:

my_ponies
rarity

To return the 3rd value from the end, you would specify the index number -3. For example:

... | eval my_ponies=mvindex(ponies,-3)

The results look like this:

my_ponies
minty

To return a range of values, specify both a <start> and <end> value. For example, the following search returns the last 3 values in the field. The start value is -3 and the end value is -1.

... | eval my_ponies=mvindex(ponies, -3, -1)

The results look like this:

my_ponies
minty,pinky,rarity

mvjoin(<mv>,<delim>)

Description

This function takes two arguments, a multivalue field and a string delimiter. The function concatenates the individual values within <mv> using the value of <delim> as a separator.

Usage

You can use this function with the eval, fieldformat, and where commands, and as part of eval expressions.

Basic examples

You have a multivalue field called "base" that contains the values "1" "2" "3" "4" "5". The values are separated by a space. You want to create a single value field instead, with OR as the delimiter. For example "1 OR 2 OR 3 OR 4 OR 5".

The following search creates the base field with the values. The search then creates the joined field by using the result of the mvjoin function.

... | eval base=mvrange(1,6), joined=mvjoin('base'," OR ")

The following example joins together the individual values of "myfield" using a semicolon as the delimiter:

... | eval n=mvjoin(myfield, ";")


mvmap(<mv>,<expression>)

Description

This function iterates over the values of a multivalue field, performs an operation using the <expression> on each value, and returns a multivalue field with the list of results.

Usage

You can use this function with the eval, fieldformat, and where commands, and as part of eval expressions.

Basic examples

The following example multiplies each value in the results field by 10.

... | eval n=mvmap(results, results*10)


The following example multiplies each value in the results field by threshold, where threshold is a single-valued field.

... | eval n=mvmap(results, results*threshold)


The following example multiplies the 2nd and 3rd values in the results field by threshold, where threshold is a single-valued field. This example uses the mvindex function to identify specific values in the results field.

... | eval n=mvmap(mvindex(results, 1,2), results*threshold)

mvrange(<start>,<end>,<step>)

Description

This function creates a multivalue field for a range of numbers. This function can contain up to three arguments: a starting number, an ending number (which is excluded from the field), and an optional step increment. If the increment is a timespan such as 7d, the starting and ending numbers are treated as UNIX time.

Usage

You can use this function with the eval, fieldformat, and where commands, and as part of eval expressions.

The step increment is optional. If the <step> increment is a timespan such as 7d, the starting and ending numbers are treated as UNIX time.

The <end> number is not included from the multivalue field that is created.

Basic examples

The following example returns a multivalue field with the values 1, 3, 5, 7, 9.

... | eval mv=mvrange(1,11,2)

The following example takes the UNIX timestamp for 1/1/2018 as the start date and the UNIX timestamp for 4/19/2018 as an end date and uses the increment of 7 days.

| makeresults | eval mv=mvrange(1514834731,1524134919,"7d")

This example returns a multivalue field with the UNIX timestamps. The results appear on the Statistics tab and look something like this:

_time mv
2018-04-10 12:31:03

1514834731
1515439531
1516044331
1516649131
1517253931
1517858731
1518463531
1519068331
1519673131
1520277931
1520879131
1521483931
1522088731
1522693531
1523298331
1523903131

mvreverse(<value>)

Description

The mvreverse command reverses the order of the values in a multivalue field.

Usage

You must first construct a multivalue field in order to use the mvreverse function on that field. The following two examples show how to build a valid multivalue field using the split and mvappend eval functions.

| makeresults | eval a=mvreverse(split("1,2,3", ","))

| makeresults | eval b = mvappend("1","2","3"), a=mvreverse(b)

Examples

The following example reverses the order of the values in the multivalue field myfield.

| makeresults | eval myfield="one,two,three" | makemv tokenizer="([^,]+),?" myfield | eval new_myfield=mvreverse(myfield)

The following example reverses the order of the values in the multivalue field myfield by changing "1", "2", "3" to "3", "2", "1".

| makeresults | eval myfield= mvreverse(mvappend("1", "2", "3"))

The following example reverses the order of the values in multivalue field myfield from "1","2","3" to "3", "2", "1" in multivalue field new_myfield.

| makeresults | eval myfield = mvappend("1","2","3"), new_myfield=mvreverse(myfield)

mvsort(<mv>)

Description

This function uses a multivalue field and returns a multivalue field with the values sorted lexicographically.

Usage

You can use this function with the eval, fieldformat, and where commands, and as part of eval expressions.

Lexicographical order sorts items based on the values used to encode the items in computer memory. In Splunk software, this is almost always UTF-8 encoding, which is a superset of ASCII.

  • Numbers are sorted before letters. Numbers are sorted based on the first digit. For example, the numbers 10, 9, 70, 100 are sorted lexicographically as 10, 100, 70, 9.
  • Uppercase letters are sorted before lowercase letters.
  • Symbols are not standard. Some symbols are sorted before numeric values. Other symbols are sorted before or after letters.

Basic example

... | eval s=mvsort(mvfield)

mvzip(<mv_left>,<mv_right>,<delim>)

Description

This function combines the values in two multivalue fields. The delimiter is used to specify a delimiting character to join the two values.

Usage

This is similar to the Python zip command.

You can use this function with the eval, fieldformat, and where commands, and as part of eval expressions.

The values are stitched together combining the first value of <mv_left> with the first value of field <mv_right>, then the second with the second, and so on.

The delimiter is optional, but when specified must be enclosed in quotation marks. The default delimiter is a comma ( , ).

Basic example

... | eval nserver=mvzip(hosts,ports)

Extended example

You can nest several mvzip functions together to create a single multivalued field three_fields from three separate fields. The pipe ( | ) character is used as the separator between the field values.

...| eval three_fields=mvzip(mvzip(field1,field2,"|"),field3,"|")

(Thanks to Splunk user cmerriman for this example.)

mv_to_json_array(<field>, <infer_types>)

This function maps the elements of a multivalue field to a JSON array.

Usage

You can use this function with the eval and where commands, and as part of evaluation expressions with other commands.

Because the elements of JSON arrays can have many data types (such as string, numeric, Boolean, and null), the mv_to_json_array function lets you specify how it should map the contents of multivalue fields into JSON arrays. You can have the field values simply written to arrays as string data types, or you can have the function infer different JSON data types.

Use the <infer_types> input to specify that the mv_to_json_array function should attempt to infer JSON data types when it converts field values into array elements. The <infer_types> input defaults to false.

Syntax Description
mv_to_json_array(<field>, false()) or
mv_to_json_array(<field>)
By default, or when you explicitly set it to false(), the mv_to_json_array function maps all values in the multivalued field to the JSON array as string data types, whether they are numeric, strings, Boolean values, or any other JSON data type. The mv_to_json_array function effectively splits the multivalue field on the comma and writes each quote-enclosed value to the array as an element with the string data type.
mv_to_json_array(<field>, true()) When you set the mv_to_json_array function to true(), the function removes one set of bracketing quote characters from each value it transfers into the JSON array. If the function does not recognize the resulting array element as a proper JSON data type (such as string, numeric, Boolean, or null), the function turns the element into a null data type.

Example

This example shows you how the mv_to_json_array function can validate JSON as it generates JSON arrays.

This search creates a multivalue field named ponies.

... | eval ponies = mvappend("\"Buttercup\"", "\"Fluttershy\"", "\"Rarity\"", "true", "null"),

The array that is created from these values depends on the <infer_types> input.

Without inferring data types

When <infer_types> is set to false or omitted, the mv_to_json_array function converts the field values into array elements without changing the values.

... | eval my_sweet_ponies = mv_to_json_array(ponies, false())

The resulting array looks like this:

["\"Buttercup\"","\"Fluttershy\"","\"Rarity\"","true","null"]

With inferring data types

When you run this search with infer_values set to true(), the mv_to_json_array function removes the extra quote and backslash escape characters from the field values when the values are converted into array elements.

... | eval my_sweet_ponies = mv_to_json_array(ponies, true())

The resulting array looks like this:

["Buttercup","Fluttershy","Rarity",true,null]


split(<str>,<delim>)

Description

This function splits the string values on the delimiter and returns the string values as a multivalue field.

Usage

You can use this function with the eval, fieldformat, and where commands, and as part of eval expressions.

Use an empty string ("") to split the original string into one value per character. For example, the following search splits the string into a, b, c, and d.

|makeresults |eval test="abcd" |eval results=split(test,"")

Basic example

To illustrate how the split function works, the following search creates an event with a test field that contains a list of string values separated by semicolon characters ( ; ).

| makeresults | eval test="buttercup;rarity;tenderhoof;dash;mcintosh;fleetfoot;mistmane"

The results look like this:

_time test
2022-09-20 17:39:56 buttercup;rarity;tenderhoof;dash;mcintosh;fleetfoot;mistmane

To split up each of the names in the event into a multivalue field using the semicolon delimiter, you could run a search like this:

| makeresults | eval test="buttercup;rarity;tenderhoof;dash;mcintosh;fleetfoot;mistmane" | eval ponies=split(test,";")


Now each of the pony names in the test event is a field in a multivalue field. The results look something like this:

_time ponies test
2022-09-20 18:22:03 buttercup

rarity
tenderhoof
dash
mcintosh
fleetfoot
mistmane

buttercup;rarity;tenderhoof;dash;mcintosh;fleetfoot;mistmane

You can also use a string of contiguous characters in your search like this, which splits the string on "def".

|makeresults |eval test="1a2b3c4def567890" |eval results=split(test,"def")

The results look something like this.

_time results test
2023-01-23 12:18:11 1a2b3c4

567890

1a2b3c4def567890

Extended example

The following search is useful for building equivalents to string functions like Oracle INSTR.

| makeresults |eval test="name::value"|eval results=split(test,"::")

The results look something like this. The length of the first entry (mvindex=0) is the position of the "::" string, plus or minus one.

_time results test
2023-01-23 12:18:11 name

value

name::value

See also

See the following multivalue commands:

Last modified on 13 November, 2024
Mathematical functions   Statistical eval functions

This documentation applies to the following versions of Splunk® Enterprise: 8.0.0, 8.0.1, 8.0.2, 8.0.3, 8.0.4, 8.0.5, 8.0.6, 8.0.7, 8.0.8, 8.0.9, 8.0.10, 8.1.0, 8.1.1, 8.1.2, 8.1.3, 8.1.4, 8.1.5, 8.1.6, 8.1.7, 8.1.8, 8.1.9, 8.1.10, 8.1.11, 8.1.12, 8.1.13, 8.1.14, 8.2.0, 8.2.1, 8.2.2, 8.2.3, 8.2.4, 8.2.5, 8.2.6, 8.2.7, 8.2.8, 8.2.9, 8.2.10, 8.2.11, 8.2.12, 9.0.0, 9.0.1, 9.0.2, 9.0.3, 9.0.4, 9.0.5, 9.0.6, 9.0.7, 9.0.8, 9.0.9, 9.0.10, 9.1.0, 9.1.1, 9.1.2, 9.1.3, 9.1.4, 9.1.5, 9.1.6, 9.1.7, 9.2.0, 9.2.1, 9.2.2, 9.2.3, 9.2.4, 9.3.0, 9.3.1, 9.3.2


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