327 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
327 lines
11 KiB
Plaintext
[[grok-processor]]
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=== Grok Processor
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Extracts structured fields out of a single text field within a document. You choose which field to
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extract matched fields from, as well as the grok pattern you expect will match. A grok pattern is like a regular
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expression that supports aliased expressions that can be reused.
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This tool is perfect for syslog logs, apache and other webserver logs, mysql logs, and in general, any log format
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that is generally written for humans and not computer consumption.
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This processor comes packaged with many
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https://github.com/elastic/elasticsearch/blob/{branch}/libs/grok/src/main/resources/patterns[reusable patterns].
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If you need help building patterns to match your logs, you will find the {kibana-ref}/xpack-grokdebugger.html[Grok Debugger] tool quite useful! The Grok Debugger is an {xpack} feature under the Basic License and is therefore *free to use*. The Grok Constructor at <http://grokconstructor.appspot.com/> is also a useful tool.
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[[grok-basics]]
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==== Grok Basics
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Grok sits on top of regular expressions, so any regular expressions are valid in grok as well.
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The regular expression library is Oniguruma, and you can see the full supported regexp syntax
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https://github.com/kkos/oniguruma/blob/master/doc/RE[on the Oniguruma site].
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Grok works by leveraging this regular expression language to allow naming existing patterns and combining them into more
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complex patterns that match your fields.
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The syntax for reusing a grok pattern comes in three forms: `%{SYNTAX:SEMANTIC}`, `%{SYNTAX}`, `%{SYNTAX:SEMANTIC:TYPE}`.
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The `SYNTAX` is the name of the pattern that will match your text. For example, `3.44` will be matched by the `NUMBER`
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pattern and `55.3.244.1` will be matched by the `IP` pattern. The syntax is how you match. `NUMBER` and `IP` are both
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patterns that are provided within the default patterns set.
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The `SEMANTIC` is the identifier you give to the piece of text being matched. For example, `3.44` could be the
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duration of an event, so you could call it simply `duration`. Further, a string `55.3.244.1` might identify
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the `client` making a request.
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The `TYPE` is the type you wish to cast your named field. `int`, `long`, `double`, `float` and `boolean` are supported types for coercion.
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For example, you might want to match the following text:
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[source,txt]
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--------------------------------------------------
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3.44 55.3.244.1
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--------------------------------------------------
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You may know that the message in the example is a number followed by an IP address. You can match this text by using the following
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Grok expression.
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[source,txt]
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--------------------------------------------------
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%{NUMBER:duration} %{IP:client}
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--------------------------------------------------
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[[using-grok]]
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==== Using the Grok Processor in a Pipeline
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[[grok-options]]
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.Grok Options
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[options="header"]
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|======
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| Name | Required | Default | Description
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| `field` | yes | - | The field to use for grok expression parsing
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| `patterns` | yes | - | An ordered list of grok expression to match and extract named captures with. Returns on the first expression in the list that matches.
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| `pattern_definitions` | no | - | A map of pattern-name and pattern tuples defining custom patterns to be used by the current processor. Patterns matching existing names will override the pre-existing definition.
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| `trace_match` | no | false | when true, `_ingest._grok_match_index` will be inserted into your matched document's metadata with the index into the pattern found in `patterns` that matched.
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| `ignore_missing` | no | false | If `true` and `field` does not exist or is `null`, the processor quietly exits without modifying the document
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include::common-options.asciidoc[]
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|======
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Here is an example of using the provided patterns to extract out and name structured fields from a string field in
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a document.
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[source,console]
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--------------------------------------------------
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POST _ingest/pipeline/_simulate
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{
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"pipeline": {
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"description" : "...",
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"processors": [
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{
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"grok": {
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"field": "message",
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"patterns": ["%{IP:client} %{WORD:method} %{URIPATHPARAM:request} %{NUMBER:bytes:int} %{NUMBER:duration:double}"]
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}
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}
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]
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},
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"docs":[
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{
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"_source": {
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"message": "55.3.244.1 GET /index.html 15824 0.043"
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}
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}
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]
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}
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--------------------------------------------------
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This pipeline will insert these named captures as new fields within the document, like so:
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[source,console-result]
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--------------------------------------------------
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{
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"docs": [
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{
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"doc": {
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"_index": "_index",
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"_type": "_doc",
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"_id": "_id",
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"_source" : {
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"duration" : 0.043,
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"request" : "/index.html",
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"method" : "GET",
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"bytes" : 15824,
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"client" : "55.3.244.1",
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"message" : "55.3.244.1 GET /index.html 15824 0.043"
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},
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"_ingest": {
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"timestamp": "2016-11-08T19:43:03.850+0000"
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}
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}
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}
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]
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}
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--------------------------------------------------
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// TESTRESPONSE[s/2016-11-08T19:43:03.850\+0000/$body.docs.0.doc._ingest.timestamp/]
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[[custom-patterns]]
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==== Custom Patterns
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The Grok processor comes pre-packaged with a base set of patterns. These patterns may not always have
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what you are looking for. Patterns have a very basic format. Each entry has a name and the pattern itself.
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You can add your own patterns to a processor definition under the `pattern_definitions` option.
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Here is an example of a pipeline specifying custom pattern definitions:
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[source,js]
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--------------------------------------------------
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{
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"description" : "...",
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"processors": [
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{
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"grok": {
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"field": "message",
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"patterns": ["my %{FAVORITE_DOG:dog} is colored %{RGB:color}"],
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"pattern_definitions" : {
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"FAVORITE_DOG" : "beagle",
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"RGB" : "RED|GREEN|BLUE"
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}
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}
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}
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]
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}
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--------------------------------------------------
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// NOTCONSOLE
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[[trace-match]]
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==== Providing Multiple Match Patterns
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Sometimes one pattern is not enough to capture the potential structure of a field. Let's assume we
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want to match all messages that contain your favorite pet breeds of either cats or dogs. One way to accomplish
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this is to provide two distinct patterns that can be matched, instead of one really complicated expression capturing
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the same `or` behavior.
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Here is an example of such a configuration executed against the simulate API:
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[source,console]
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--------------------------------------------------
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POST _ingest/pipeline/_simulate
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{
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"pipeline": {
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"description" : "parse multiple patterns",
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"processors": [
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{
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"grok": {
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"field": "message",
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"patterns": ["%{FAVORITE_DOG:pet}", "%{FAVORITE_CAT:pet}"],
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"pattern_definitions" : {
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"FAVORITE_DOG" : "beagle",
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"FAVORITE_CAT" : "burmese"
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}
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}
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}
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]
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},
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"docs":[
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{
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"_source": {
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"message": "I love burmese cats!"
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}
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}
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]
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}
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--------------------------------------------------
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response:
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[source,console-result]
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--------------------------------------------------
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{
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"docs": [
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{
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"doc": {
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"_type": "_doc",
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"_index": "_index",
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"_id": "_id",
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"_source": {
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"message": "I love burmese cats!",
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"pet": "burmese"
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},
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"_ingest": {
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"timestamp": "2016-11-08T19:43:03.850+0000"
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}
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}
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}
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]
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}
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--------------------------------------------------
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// TESTRESPONSE[s/2016-11-08T19:43:03.850\+0000/$body.docs.0.doc._ingest.timestamp/]
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Both patterns will set the field `pet` with the appropriate match, but what if we want to trace which of our
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patterns matched and populated our fields? We can do this with the `trace_match` parameter. Here is the output of
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that same pipeline, but with `"trace_match": true` configured:
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////
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Hidden setup for example:
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[source,console]
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--------------------------------------------------
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POST _ingest/pipeline/_simulate
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{
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"pipeline": {
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"description" : "parse multiple patterns",
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"processors": [
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{
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"grok": {
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"field": "message",
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"patterns": ["%{FAVORITE_DOG:pet}", "%{FAVORITE_CAT:pet}"],
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"trace_match": true,
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"pattern_definitions" : {
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"FAVORITE_DOG" : "beagle",
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"FAVORITE_CAT" : "burmese"
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}
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}
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}
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]
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},
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"docs":[
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{
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"_source": {
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"message": "I love burmese cats!"
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}
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}
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]
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}
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--------------------------------------------------
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////
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[source,console-result]
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--------------------------------------------------
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{
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"docs": [
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{
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"doc": {
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"_type": "_doc",
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"_index": "_index",
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"_id": "_id",
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"_source": {
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"message": "I love burmese cats!",
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"pet": "burmese"
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},
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"_ingest": {
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"_grok_match_index": "1",
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"timestamp": "2016-11-08T19:43:03.850+0000"
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}
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}
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}
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]
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}
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--------------------------------------------------
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// TESTRESPONSE[s/2016-11-08T19:43:03.850\+0000/$body.docs.0.doc._ingest.timestamp/]
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In the above response, you can see that the index of the pattern that matched was `"1"`. This is to say that it was the
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second (index starts at zero) pattern in `patterns` to match.
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This trace metadata enables debugging which of the patterns matched. This information is stored in the ingest
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metadata and will not be indexed.
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[[grok-processor-rest-get]]
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==== Retrieving patterns from REST endpoint
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The Grok Processor comes packaged with its own REST endpoint for retrieving which patterns the processor is packaged with.
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[source,console]
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--------------------------------------------------
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GET _ingest/processor/grok
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--------------------------------------------------
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The above request will return a response body containing a key-value representation of the built-in patterns dictionary.
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[source,js]
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--------------------------------------------------
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{
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"patterns" : {
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"BACULA_CAPACITY" : "%{INT}{1,3}(,%{INT}{3})*",
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"PATH" : "(?:%{UNIXPATH}|%{WINPATH})",
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...
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}
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--------------------------------------------------
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// NOTCONSOLE
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This can be useful to reference as the built-in patterns change across versions.
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[[grok-watchdog]]
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==== Grok watchdog
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Grok expressions that take too long to execute are interrupted and
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the grok processor then fails with an exception. The grok
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processor has a watchdog thread that determines when evaluation of
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a grok expression takes too long and is controlled by the following
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settings:
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[[grok-watchdog-options]]
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.Grok watchdog settings
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[options="header"]
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|======
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| Name | Default | Description
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| `ingest.grok.watchdog.interval` | 1s | How often to check whether there are grok evaluations that take longer than the maximum allowed execution time.
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| `ingest.grok.watchdog.max_execution_time` | 1s | The maximum allowed execution of a grok expression evaluation.
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|======
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