[role="xpack"] [testenv="basic"] [[eql-syntax]] == EQL syntax reference experimental::[] [IMPORTANT] ==== {es} supports a subset of EQL syntax. ==== [discrete] [[eql-basic-syntax]] === Basic syntax EQL queries require an event type and a matching condition. The `where` keyword connects them. [source,eql] ---- event_type where condition ---- For example, the following EQL query matches `process` events with a `process.name` field value of `svchost.exe`: [source,eql] ---- process where process.name == "svchost.exe" ---- [discrete] [[eql-syntax-conditions]] ==== Conditions A condition consists of one or more criteria an event must match. You can specify and combine these criteria using the following operators: [discrete] [[eql-syntax-comparison-operators]] ===== Comparison operators [source,eql] ---- < <= == != >= > ---- .*Definitions* [%collapsible] ==== `<` (less than):: Returns `true` if the value to the left of the operator is less than the value to the right. Otherwise returns `false`. `<=` (less than or equal) :: Returns `true` if the value to the left of the operator is less than or equal to the value to the right. Otherwise returns `false`. `==` (equal):: Returns `true` if the values to the left and right of the operator are equal. Otherwise returns `false`. `!=` (not equal):: Returns `true` if the values to the left and right of the operator are not equal. Otherwise returns `false`. `>=` (greater than or equal) :: Returns `true` if the value to the left of the operator is greater than or equal to the value to the right. Otherwise returns `false`. `>` (greater than):: Returns `true` if the value to the left of the operator is greater than the value to the right. Otherwise returns `false`. ==== [discrete] [[eql-syntax-logical-operators]] ===== Logical operators [source,eql] ---- and or not ---- .*Definitions* [%collapsible] ==== `and`:: Returns `true` only if the condition to the left and right _both_ return `true`. Otherwise returns `false. `or`:: Returns `true` if one of the conditions to the left or right `true`. Otherwise returns `false. `not`:: Returns `true` if the condition to the right is `false`. ==== [discrete] [[eql-syntax-lookup-operators]] ===== Lookup operators [source,eql] ---- user.name in ("Administrator", "SYSTEM", "NETWORK SERVICE") user.name not in ("Administrator", "SYSTEM", "NETWORK SERVICE") ---- .*Definitions* [%collapsible] ==== `in`:: Returns `true` if the value is contained in the provided list. `not in`:: Returns `true` if the value is not contained in the provided list. ==== [discrete] [[eql-syntax-math-operators]] ===== Math operators [source,eql] ---- + - * / % ---- .*Definitions* [%collapsible] ==== `+` (add):: Adds the values to the left and right of the operator. `-` (Subtract):: Subtracts the value to the right of the operator from the value to the left. `*` (Subtract):: Multiplies the values to the left and right of the operator. `/` (Divide):: Divides the value to the left of the operator by the value to the right. `%` (modulo):: Divides the value to the left of the operator by the value to the right. Returns only the remainder. ==== [discrete] [[eql-syntax-strings]] ==== Strings Strings are enclosed with double quotes (`"`) or single quotes (`'`). [source,eql] ---- "hello world" "hello world with 'substring'" ---- [discrete] [[eql-syntax-wildcards]] ===== Wildcards You can use the wildcard operator (`*`) within a string to match specific patterns. You can use wildcards with the `==` (equal) or `!=` (not equal) operators: [source,eql] ---- field == "example*wildcard" field != "example*wildcard" ---- [discrete] [[eql-syntax-escaped-characters]] ===== Escaped characters When used within a string, special characters, such as a carriage return or double quote (`"`), must be escaped with a preceding backslash (`\`). [source,eql] ---- "example \t of \n escaped \r characters" ---- .*Escape sequences* [%collapsible] ==== [options="header"] |==== | Escape sequence | Literal character |`\n` | A newline (linefeed) character |`\r` | A carriage return character |`\t` | A tab character |`\\` | A backslash (`\`) character |`\"` | A double quote (`"`) character |`\'` | A single quote (`'`) character |==== ==== [discrete] [[eql-syntax-raw-strings]] ===== Raw strings Raw strings are preceded by a question mark (`?`) and treat backslashes (`\`) as literal characters. [source,eql] ---- ?"String with a literal 'blackslash' \ character included" ---- You can escape single quotes (`'`) and double quotes (`"`) with a backslash, but the backslash remains in the resulting string. [source,eql] ---- ?"\"" ---- [NOTE] ==== Raw strings cannot contain only a single backslash. Additionally, raw strings cannot end in an odd number of backslashes. ==== [discrete] [[eql-syntax-non-alpha-field-names]] ==== Non-alphanumeric field names Field names containing non-alphanumeric characters, such as underscores (`_`), dots (`.`), hyphens (`-`), or spaces, must be escaped using backticks (+++`+++). [source,eql] ---- `my_field` `my.field` `my-field` `my field` ----