1096 lines
44 KiB
Plaintext
1096 lines
44 KiB
Plaintext
tag::aggregations[]
|
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If set, the {dfeed} performs aggregation searches. Support for aggregations is
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limited and should only be used with low cardinality data. For more information,
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see
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{ml-docs}/ml-configuring-aggregation.html[Aggregating data for faster performance].
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end::aggregations[]
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tag::allow-lazy-open[]
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Advanced configuration option. Specifies whether this job can open when there is
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insufficient {ml} node capacity for it to be immediately assigned to a node. The
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default value is `false`; if a {ml} node with capacity to run the job cannot
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immediately be found, the <<ml-open-job,open {anomaly-jobs} API>> returns an
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error. However, this is also subject to the cluster-wide
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`xpack.ml.max_lazy_ml_nodes` setting; see <<advanced-ml-settings>>. If this
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option is set to `true`, the <<ml-open-job,open {anomaly-jobs} API>> does not
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return an error and the job waits in the `opening` state until sufficient {ml}
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node capacity is available.
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end::allow-lazy-open[]
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tag::allow-lazy-start[]
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Whether this job should be allowed to start when there is insufficient {ml} node
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capacity for it to be immediately assigned to a node. The default is `false`,
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which means that the <<start-dfanalytics>> will return an error if a {ml} node
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with capacity to run the job cannot immediately be found. (However, this is also
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subject to the cluster-wide `xpack.ml.max_lazy_ml_nodes` setting - see
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<<advanced-ml-settings>>.) If this option is set to `true` then the
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<<start-dfanalytics>> will not return an error, and the job will wait in the
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`starting` state until sufficient {ml} node capacity is available.
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end::allow-lazy-start[]
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tag::allow-no-datafeeds[]
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Specifies what to do when the request:
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+
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--
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* Contains wildcard expressions and there are no {dfeeds} that match.
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* Contains the `_all` string or no identifiers and there are no matches.
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* Contains wildcard expressions and there are only partial matches.
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The default value is `true`, which returns an empty `datafeeds` array when
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there are no matches and the subset of results when there are partial matches.
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If this parameter is `false`, the request returns a `404` status code when there
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are no matches or only partial matches.
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--
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end::allow-no-datafeeds[]
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tag::allow-no-jobs[]
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Specifies what to do when the request:
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+
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--
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* Contains wildcard expressions and there are no jobs that match.
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* Contains the `_all` string or no identifiers and there are no matches.
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* Contains wildcard expressions and there are only partial matches.
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The default value is `true`, which returns an empty `jobs` array
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when there are no matches and the subset of results when there are partial
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matches. If this parameter is `false`, the request returns a `404` status code
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when there are no matches or only partial matches.
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--
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end::allow-no-jobs[]
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tag::allow-no-match[]
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Specifies what to do when the request:
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+
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--
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* Contains wildcard expressions and there are no {dfanalytics-jobs} that match.
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* Contains the `_all` string or no identifiers and there are no matches.
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* Contains wildcard expressions and there are only partial matches.
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The default value is `true`, which returns an empty `data_frame_analytics` array
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when there are no matches and the subset of results when there are partial
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matches. If this parameter is `false`, the request returns a `404` status code
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when there are no matches or only partial matches.
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--
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end::allow-no-match[]
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tag::analysis[]
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Defines the type of {dfanalytics} you want to perform on your source index. For
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example: `outlier_detection`. See <<ml-dfa-analysis-objects>>.
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end::analysis[]
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tag::analysis-config[]
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The analysis configuration, which specifies how to analyze the data. After you
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create a job, you cannot change the analysis configuration; all the properties
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are informational.
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end::analysis-config[]
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tag::analysis-limits[]
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Limits can be applied for the resources required to hold the mathematical models
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in memory. These limits are approximate and can be set per job. They do not
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control the memory used by other processes, for example the {es} Java processes.
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If necessary, you can increase the limits after the job is created.
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end::analysis-limits[]
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tag::analyzed-fields[]
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Specify `includes` and/or `excludes` patterns to select which fields will be
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included in the analysis.
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+
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--
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The supported fields for each type of analysis are as follows:
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* {oldetection-cap} requires numeric or boolean data to analyze. The algorithms
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don't support missing values therefore fields that have data types other than
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numeric or boolean are ignored. Documents where included fields contain missing
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values, null values, or an array are also ignored. Therefore the `dest` index
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may contain documents that don't have an {olscore}.
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* {regression-cap} supports fields that are numeric, `boolean`, `text`,
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`keyword`, and `ip`. It is also tolerant of missing values. Fields that are
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supported are included in the analysis, other fields are ignored. Documents
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where included fields contain an array with two or more values are also
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ignored. Documents in the `dest` index that don’t contain a results field are
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not included in the {reganalysis}.
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* {classification-cap} supports fields that are numeric, `boolean`, `text`,
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`keyword`, and `ip`. It is also tolerant of missing values. Fields that are
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supported are included in the analysis, other fields are ignored. Documents
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where included fields contain an array with two or more values are also ignored.
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Documents in the `dest` index that don’t contain a results field are not
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included in the {classanalysis}. {classanalysis-cap} can be improved by mapping
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ordinal variable values to a single number. For example, in case of age ranges,
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you can model the values as "0-14" = 0, "15-24" = 1, "25-34" = 2, and so on.
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If `analyzed_fields` is not set, only the relevant fields will be included. For
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example, all the numeric fields for {oldetection}. For more information about
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field selection, see <<explain-dfanalytics>>.
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--
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end::analyzed-fields[]
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tag::analyzed-fields-excludes[]
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An array of strings that defines the fields that will be excluded from the
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analysis. You do not need to add fields with unsupported data types to
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`excludes`, these fields are excluded from the analysis automatically.
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end::analyzed-fields-excludes[]
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tag::analyzed-fields-includes[]
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An array of strings that defines the fields that will be included in the analysis.
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end::analyzed-fields-includes[]
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tag::background-persist-interval[]
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Advanced configuration option. The time between each periodic persistence of the
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model. The default value is a randomized value between 3 to 4 hours, which
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avoids all jobs persisting at exactly the same time. The smallest allowed value
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is 1 hour.
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+
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--
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TIP: For very large models (several GB), persistence could take 10-20 minutes,
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so do not set the `background_persist_interval` value too low.
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--
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end::background-persist-interval[]
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tag::bucket-span[]
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The size of the interval that the analysis is aggregated into, typically between
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`5m` and `1h`. The default value is `5m`. For more information about time units,
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see <<time-units>>.
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end::bucket-span[]
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tag::bucket-span-results[]
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The length of the bucket in seconds. This value matches the `bucket_span`
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that is specified in the job.
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end::bucket-span-results[]
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tag::by-field-name[]
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The field used to split the data. In particular, this property is used for
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analyzing the splits with respect to their own history. It is used for finding
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unusual values in the context of the split.
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end::by-field-name[]
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tag::calendar-id[]
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A string that uniquely identifies a calendar.
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end::calendar-id[]
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tag::categorization-analyzer[]
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If `categorization_field_name` is specified, you can also define the analyzer
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that is used to interpret the categorization field. This property cannot be used
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at the same time as `categorization_filters`. The categorization analyzer
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specifies how the categorization field is interpreted by the categorization
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process. The syntax is very similar to that used to define the `analyzer` in the
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<<indices-analyze,Analyze endpoint>>. For more information, see
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{ml-docs}/ml-configuring-categories.html[Categorizing log messages].
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+
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--
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The `categorization_analyzer` field can be specified either as a string or as an
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object. If it is a string it must refer to a
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<<analysis-analyzers,built-in analyzer>> or one added by another plugin. If it
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is an object it has the following properties:
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--
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`analysis_config`.`categorization_analyzer`.`char_filter`::::
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(array of strings or objects)
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include::{docdir}/ml/ml-shared.asciidoc[tag=char-filter]
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`analysis_config`.`categorization_analyzer`.`tokenizer`::::
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(string or object)
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include::{docdir}/ml/ml-shared.asciidoc[tag=tokenizer]
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`analysis_config`.`categorization_analyzer`.`filter`::::
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(array of strings or objects)
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include::{docdir}/ml/ml-shared.asciidoc[tag=filter]
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end::categorization-analyzer[]
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tag::categorization-examples-limit[]
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The maximum number of examples stored per category in memory and in the results
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data store. The default value is `4`. If you increase this value, more examples
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are available, however it requires that you have more storage available. If you
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set this value to `0`, no examples are stored.
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+
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--
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NOTE: The `categorization_examples_limit` only applies to analysis that uses
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categorization. For more information, see
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{ml-docs}/ml-configuring-categories.html[Categorizing log messages].
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--
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end::categorization-examples-limit[]
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tag::categorization-field-name[]
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If this property is specified, the values of the specified field will be
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categorized. The resulting categories must be used in a detector by setting
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`by_field_name`, `over_field_name`, or `partition_field_name` to the keyword
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`mlcategory`. For more information, see
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{ml-docs}/ml-configuring-categories.html[Categorizing log messages].
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end::categorization-field-name[]
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tag::categorization-filters[]
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If `categorization_field_name` is specified, you can also define optional
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filters. This property expects an array of regular expressions. The expressions
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are used to filter out matching sequences from the categorization field values.
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You can use this functionality to fine tune the categorization by excluding
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sequences from consideration when categories are defined. For example, you can
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exclude SQL statements that appear in your log files. For more information, see
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{ml-docs}/ml-configuring-categories.html[Categorizing log messages]. This
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property cannot be used at the same time as `categorization_analyzer`. If you
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only want to define simple regular expression filters that are applied prior to
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tokenization, setting this property is the easiest method. If you also want to
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customize the tokenizer or post-tokenization filtering, use the
|
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`categorization_analyzer` property instead and include the filters as
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`pattern_replace` character filters. The effect is exactly the same.
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end::categorization-filters[]
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tag::char-filter[]
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One or more <<analysis-charfilters,character filters>>. In addition to the
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built-in character filters, other plugins can provide more character filters.
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This property is optional. If it is not specified, no character filters are
|
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applied prior to categorization. If you are customizing some other aspect of the
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analyzer and you need to achieve the equivalent of `categorization_filters`
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(which are not permitted when some other aspect of the analyzer is customized),
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add them here as
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<<analysis-pattern-replace-charfilter,pattern replace character filters>>.
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end::char-filter[]
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tag::chunking-config[]
|
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{dfeeds-cap} might be required to search over long time periods, for several months
|
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or years. This search is split into time chunks in order to ensure the load
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on {es} is managed. Chunking configuration controls how the size of these time
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chunks are calculated and is an advanced configuration option.
|
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A chunking configuration object has the following properties:
|
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`chunking_config`.`mode`:::
|
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(string)
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include::{docdir}/ml/ml-shared.asciidoc[tag=mode]
|
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|
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`chunking_config`.`time_span`:::
|
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(<<time-units,time units>>)
|
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include::{docdir}/ml/ml-shared.asciidoc[tag=time-span]
|
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end::chunking-config[]
|
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|
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tag::compute-feature-influence[]
|
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If `true`, the feature influence calculation is enabled. Defaults to `true`.
|
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end::compute-feature-influence[]
|
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|
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tag::custom-rules[]
|
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An array of custom rule objects, which enable you to customize the way detectors
|
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operate. For example, a rule may dictate to the detector conditions under which
|
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results should be skipped. For more examples, see
|
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{ml-docs}/ml-configuring-detector-custom-rules.html[Customizing detectors with custom rules].
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end::custom-rules[]
|
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tag::custom-rules-actions[]
|
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The set of actions to be triggered when the rule applies. If
|
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more than one action is specified the effects of all actions are combined. The
|
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available actions include:
|
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|
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* `skip_result`: The result will not be created. This is the default value.
|
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Unless you also specify `skip_model_update`, the model will be updated as usual
|
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with the corresponding series value.
|
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* `skip_model_update`: The value for that series will not be used to update the
|
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model. Unless you also specify `skip_result`, the results will be created as
|
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usual. This action is suitable when certain values are expected to be
|
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consistently anomalous and they affect the model in a way that negatively
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impacts the rest of the results.
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end::custom-rules-actions[]
|
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|
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tag::custom-rules-scope[]
|
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An optional scope of series where the rule applies. A rule must either
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have a non-empty scope or at least one condition. By default, the scope includes
|
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all series. Scoping is allowed for any of the fields that are also specified in
|
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`by_field_name`, `over_field_name`, or `partition_field_name`. To add a scope
|
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for a field, add the field name as a key in the scope object and set its value
|
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to an object with the following properties:
|
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end::custom-rules-scope[]
|
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|
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tag::custom-rules-scope-filter-id[]
|
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The id of the filter to be used.
|
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end::custom-rules-scope-filter-id[]
|
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|
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tag::custom-rules-scope-filter-type[]
|
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Either `include` (the rule applies for values in the filter) or `exclude` (the
|
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rule applies for values not in the filter). Defaults to `include`.
|
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end::custom-rules-scope-filter-type[]
|
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|
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tag::custom-rules-conditions[]
|
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An optional array of numeric conditions when the rule applies. A rule must
|
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either have a non-empty scope or at least one condition. Multiple conditions are
|
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combined together with a logical `AND`. A condition has the following properties:
|
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end::custom-rules-conditions[]
|
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|
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tag::custom-rules-conditions-applies-to[]
|
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Specifies the result property to which the condition applies. The available
|
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options are `actual`, `typical`, `diff_from_typical`, `time`. If your detector
|
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uses `lat_long`, `metric`, `rare`, or `freq_rare` functions, you can only
|
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specify conditions that apply to `time`.
|
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end::custom-rules-conditions-applies-to[]
|
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|
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tag::custom-rules-conditions-operator[]
|
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Specifies the condition operator. The available options are `gt` (greater than),
|
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`gte` (greater than or equals), `lt` (less than) and `lte` (less than or equals).
|
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end::custom-rules-conditions-operator[]
|
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|
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tag::custom-rules-conditions-value[]
|
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The value that is compared against the `applies_to` field using the `operator`.
|
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end::custom-rules-conditions-value[]
|
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|
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tag::custom-settings[]
|
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Advanced configuration option. Contains custom meta data about the job. For
|
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example, it can contain custom URL information as shown in
|
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{ml-docs}/ml-configuring-url.html[Adding custom URLs to {ml} results].
|
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end::custom-settings[]
|
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|
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tag::data-description[]
|
||
The data description defines the format of the input data when you send data to
|
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the job by using the <<ml-post-data,post data>> API. Note that when configure
|
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a {dfeed}, these properties are automatically set.
|
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+
|
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--
|
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When data is received via the <<ml-post-data,post data>> API, it is not stored
|
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in {es}. Only the results for {anomaly-detect} are retained.
|
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|
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`data_description`.`format`:::
|
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(string) Only `JSON` format is supported at this time.
|
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|
||
`data_description`.`time_field`:::
|
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(string) The name of the field that contains the timestamp.
|
||
The default value is `time`.
|
||
|
||
`data_description`.`time_format`:::
|
||
(string)
|
||
include::{docdir}/ml/ml-shared.asciidoc[tag=time-format]
|
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--
|
||
end::data-description[]
|
||
|
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tag::data-frame-analytics[]
|
||
An array of {dfanalytics-job} resources, which are sorted by the `id` value in
|
||
ascending order.
|
||
|
||
`id`:::
|
||
(string) The unique identifier of the {dfanalytics-job}.
|
||
|
||
`source`:::
|
||
(object) The configuration of how the analysis data is sourced. It has an
|
||
`index` parameter and optionally a `query` and a `_source`.
|
||
|
||
`index`::::
|
||
(array) Index or indices on which to perform the analysis. It can be a single
|
||
index or index pattern as well as an array of indices or patterns.
|
||
|
||
`query`::::
|
||
(object) The query that has been specified for the {dfanalytics-job}. The {es}
|
||
query domain-specific language (<<query-dsl,DSL>>). This value corresponds to
|
||
the query object in an {es} search POST body. By default, this property has the
|
||
following value: `{"match_all": {}}`.
|
||
|
||
`_source`::::
|
||
(object) Contains the specified `includes` and/or `excludes` patterns that
|
||
select which fields are present in the destination. Fields that are excluded
|
||
cannot be included in the analysis.
|
||
|
||
`includes`:::::
|
||
(array) An array of strings that defines the fields that are included in the
|
||
destination.
|
||
|
||
`excludes`:::::
|
||
(array) An array of strings that defines the fields that are excluded from the
|
||
destination.
|
||
|
||
`dest`:::
|
||
(string) The destination configuration of the analysis.
|
||
|
||
`index`::::
|
||
(string) The _destination index_ that stores the results of the
|
||
{dfanalytics-job}.
|
||
|
||
`results_field`::::
|
||
(string) The name of the field that stores the results of the analysis. Defaults
|
||
to `ml`.
|
||
|
||
`analysis`:::
|
||
(object) The type of analysis that is performed on the `source`.
|
||
|
||
`analyzed_fields`:::
|
||
(object) Contains `includes` and/or `excludes` patterns that select which fields
|
||
are included in the analysis.
|
||
|
||
`includes`::::
|
||
(Optional, array) An array of strings that defines the fields that are included
|
||
in the analysis.
|
||
|
||
`excludes`::::
|
||
(Optional, array) An array of strings that defines the fields that are excluded
|
||
from the analysis.
|
||
|
||
`model_memory_limit`:::
|
||
(string) The `model_memory_limit` that has been set to the {dfanalytics-job}.
|
||
end::data-frame-analytics[]
|
||
|
||
tag::data-frame-analytics-stats[]
|
||
An array of statistics objects for {dfanalytics-jobs}, which are
|
||
sorted by the `id` value in ascending order.
|
||
|
||
`id`:::
|
||
(string) The unique identifier of the {dfanalytics-job}.
|
||
|
||
`state`:::
|
||
(string) Current state of the {dfanalytics-job}.
|
||
|
||
`progress`:::
|
||
(array) The progress report of the {dfanalytics-job} by phase.
|
||
|
||
`phase`:::
|
||
(string) Defines the phase of the {dfanalytics-job}. Possible phases:
|
||
`reindexing`, `loading_data`, `analyzing`, and `writing_results`.
|
||
|
||
`progress_percent`:::
|
||
(integer) The progress that the {dfanalytics-job} has made expressed in
|
||
percentage.
|
||
end::data-frame-analytics-stats[]
|
||
|
||
tag::datafeed-id[]
|
||
A numerical character string that uniquely identifies the
|
||
{dfeed}. This identifier can contain lowercase alphanumeric characters (a-z
|
||
and 0-9), hyphens, and underscores. It must start and end with alphanumeric
|
||
characters.
|
||
end::datafeed-id[]
|
||
|
||
tag::datafeed-id-wildcard[]
|
||
Identifier for the {dfeed}. It can be a {dfeed} identifier or a wildcard
|
||
expression.
|
||
end::datafeed-id-wildcard[]
|
||
|
||
tag::decompress-definition[]
|
||
Specifies whether the included model definition should be returned as a JSON map
|
||
(`true`) or in a custom compressed format (`false`). Defaults to `true`.
|
||
end::decompress-definition[]
|
||
|
||
tag::delayed-data-check-config[]
|
||
Specifies whether the {dfeed} checks for missing data and the size of the
|
||
window. For example: `{"enabled": true, "check_window": "1h"}`.
|
||
+
|
||
--
|
||
The {dfeed} can optionally search over indices that have already been read in
|
||
an effort to determine whether any data has subsequently been added to the index.
|
||
If missing data is found, it is a good indication that the `query_delay` option
|
||
is set too low and the data is being indexed after the {dfeed} has passed that
|
||
moment in time. See
|
||
{ml-docs}/ml-delayed-data-detection.html[Working with delayed data].
|
||
|
||
This check runs only on real-time {dfeeds}.
|
||
|
||
`delayed_data_check_config`.`enabled`::
|
||
(boolean) Specifies whether the {dfeed} periodically checks for delayed data.
|
||
Defaults to `true`.
|
||
|
||
`delayed_data_check_config`.`check_window`::
|
||
(<<time-units,time units>>) The window of time that is searched for late data.
|
||
This window of time ends with the latest finalized bucket. It defaults to
|
||
`null`, which causes an appropriate `check_window` to be calculated when the
|
||
real-time {dfeed} runs. In particular, the default `check_window` span
|
||
calculation is based on the maximum of `2h` or `8 * bucket_span`.
|
||
--
|
||
end::delayed-data-check-config[]
|
||
|
||
tag::dependent-variable[]
|
||
Defines which field of the document is to be predicted.
|
||
This parameter is supplied by field name and must match one of the fields in
|
||
the index being used to train. If this field is missing from a document, then
|
||
that document will not be used for training, but a prediction with the trained
|
||
model will be generated for it. It is also known as continuous target variable.
|
||
end::dependent-variable[]
|
||
|
||
tag::desc-results[]
|
||
If true, the results are sorted in descending order.
|
||
end::desc-results[]
|
||
|
||
tag::description-dfa[]
|
||
A description of the job.
|
||
end::description-dfa[]
|
||
|
||
tag::dest[]
|
||
The destination configuration, consisting of `index` and
|
||
optionally `results_field` (`ml` by default).
|
||
|
||
`index`:::
|
||
(Required, string) Defines the _destination index_ to store the results of
|
||
the {dfanalytics-job}.
|
||
|
||
`results_field`:::
|
||
(Optional, string) Defines the name of the field in which to store the
|
||
results of the analysis. Default to `ml`.
|
||
end::dest[]
|
||
|
||
tag::detector-description[]
|
||
A description of the detector. For example, `Low event rate`.
|
||
end::detector-description[]
|
||
|
||
tag::detector-field-name[]
|
||
The field that the detector uses in the function. If you use an event rate
|
||
function such as `count` or `rare`, do not specify this field.
|
||
+
|
||
--
|
||
NOTE: The `field_name` cannot contain double quotes or backslashes.
|
||
|
||
--
|
||
end::detector-field-name[]
|
||
|
||
tag::detector-index[]
|
||
A unique identifier for the detector. This identifier is based on the order of
|
||
the detectors in the `analysis_config`, starting at zero.
|
||
end::detector-index[]
|
||
|
||
tag::eta[]
|
||
Advanced configuration option. The shrinkage applied to the weights. Smaller
|
||
values result in larger forests which have better generalization error. However,
|
||
the smaller the value the longer the training will take. For more information,
|
||
about shrinkage, see
|
||
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gradient_boosting#Shrinkage[this wiki article].
|
||
end::eta[]
|
||
|
||
tag::exclude-frequent[]
|
||
Contains one of the following values: `all`, `none`, `by`, or `over`. If set,
|
||
frequent entities are excluded from influencing the anomaly results. Entities
|
||
can be considered frequent over time or frequent in a population. If you are
|
||
working with both over and by fields, then you can set `exclude_frequent` to
|
||
`all` for both fields, or to `by` or `over` for those specific fields.
|
||
end::exclude-frequent[]
|
||
|
||
tag::exclude-interim-results[]
|
||
If `true`, the output excludes interim results. By default, interim results are
|
||
included.
|
||
end::exclude-interim-results[]
|
||
|
||
tag::feature-bag-fraction[]
|
||
Advanced configuration option. Defines the fraction of features that will be
|
||
used when selecting a random bag for each candidate split.
|
||
end::feature-bag-fraction[]
|
||
|
||
tag::feature-influence-threshold[]
|
||
The minimum {olscore} that a document needs to have in order to calculate its
|
||
{fiscore}. Value range: 0-1 (`0.1` by default).
|
||
end::feature-influence-threshold[]
|
||
|
||
tag::field-selection[]
|
||
An array of objects that explain selection for each field, sorted by
|
||
the field names. Each object in the array has the following properties:
|
||
|
||
`name`:::
|
||
(string) The field name.
|
||
|
||
`mapping_types`:::
|
||
(string) The mapping types of the field.
|
||
|
||
`is_included`:::
|
||
(boolean) Whether the field is selected to be included in the analysis.
|
||
|
||
`is_required`:::
|
||
(boolean) Whether the field is required.
|
||
|
||
`feature_type`:::
|
||
(string) The feature type of this field for the analysis. May be `categorical`
|
||
or `numerical`.
|
||
|
||
`reason`:::
|
||
(string) The reason a field is not selected to be included in the analysis.
|
||
end::field-selection[]
|
||
|
||
tag::filter[]
|
||
One or more <<analysis-tokenfilters,token filters>>. In addition to the built-in
|
||
token filters, other plugins can provide more token filters. This property is
|
||
optional. If it is not specified, no token filters are applied prior to
|
||
categorization.
|
||
end::filter[]
|
||
|
||
tag::filter-id[]
|
||
A string that uniquely identifies a filter.
|
||
end::filter-id[]
|
||
|
||
tag::frequency[]
|
||
The interval at which scheduled queries are made while the {dfeed} runs in real
|
||
time. The default value is either the bucket span for short bucket spans, or,
|
||
for longer bucket spans, a sensible fraction of the bucket span. For example:
|
||
`150s`.
|
||
end::frequency[]
|
||
|
||
tag::from[]
|
||
Skips the specified number of {dfanalytics-jobs}. The default value is `0`.
|
||
end::from[]
|
||
|
||
tag::function[]
|
||
The analysis function that is used. For example, `count`, `rare`, `mean`, `min`,
|
||
`max`, and `sum`. For more information, see
|
||
{ml-docs}/ml-functions.html[Function reference].
|
||
end::function[]
|
||
|
||
tag::gamma[]
|
||
Advanced configuration option. Regularization parameter to prevent overfitting
|
||
on the training dataset. Multiplies a linear penalty associated with the size of
|
||
individual trees in the forest. The higher the value the more training will
|
||
prefer smaller trees. The smaller this parameter the larger individual trees
|
||
will be and the longer train will take.
|
||
end::gamma[]
|
||
|
||
tag::groups[]
|
||
A list of job groups. A job can belong to no groups or many.
|
||
end::groups[]
|
||
|
||
tag::include-model-definition[]
|
||
Specifies if the model definition should be returned in the response. Defaults
|
||
to `false`. When `true`, only a single model must match the ID patterns
|
||
provided, otherwise a bad request is returned.
|
||
end::include-model-definition[]
|
||
|
||
tag::indices[]
|
||
An array of index names. Wildcards are supported. For example:
|
||
`["it_ops_metrics", "server*"]`.
|
||
+
|
||
--
|
||
NOTE: If any indices are in remote clusters then `cluster.remote.connect` must
|
||
not be set to `false` on any {ml} nodes.
|
||
|
||
--
|
||
end::indices[]
|
||
|
||
tag::influencers[]
|
||
A comma separated list of influencer field names. Typically these can be the by,
|
||
over, or partition fields that are used in the detector configuration. You might
|
||
also want to use a field name that is not specifically named in a detector, but
|
||
is available as part of the input data. When you use multiple detectors, the use
|
||
of influencers is recommended as it aggregates results for each influencer entity.
|
||
end::influencers[]
|
||
|
||
tag::is-interim[]
|
||
If `true`, this is an interim result. In other words, the results are calculated
|
||
based on partial input data.
|
||
end::is-interim[]
|
||
|
||
tag::job-id-anomaly-detection[]
|
||
Identifier for the {anomaly-job}.
|
||
end::job-id-anomaly-detection[]
|
||
|
||
tag::job-id-anomaly-detection-default[]
|
||
Identifier for the {anomaly-job}. It can be a job identifier, a group name, or a
|
||
wildcard expression. If you do not specify one of these options, the API returns
|
||
information for all {anomaly-jobs}.
|
||
end::job-id-anomaly-detection-default[]
|
||
|
||
tag::job-id-anomaly-detection-define[]
|
||
Identifier for the {anomaly-job}. This identifier can contain lowercase
|
||
alphanumeric characters (a-z and 0-9), hyphens, and underscores. It must start
|
||
and end with alphanumeric characters.
|
||
end::job-id-anomaly-detection-define[]
|
||
|
||
tag::job-id-anomaly-detection-list[]
|
||
An identifier for the {anomaly-jobs}. It can be a job
|
||
identifier, a group name, or a comma-separated list of jobs or groups.
|
||
end::job-id-anomaly-detection-list[]
|
||
|
||
tag::job-id-anomaly-detection-wildcard[]
|
||
Identifier for the {anomaly-job}. It can be a job identifier, a group name, or a
|
||
wildcard expression.
|
||
end::job-id-anomaly-detection-wildcard[]
|
||
|
||
tag::job-id-anomaly-detection-wildcard-list[]
|
||
Identifier for the {anomaly-job}. It can be a job identifier, a group name, a
|
||
comma-separated list of jobs or groups, or a wildcard expression.
|
||
end::job-id-anomaly-detection-wildcard-list[]
|
||
|
||
tag::job-id-data-frame-analytics[]
|
||
Identifier for the {dfanalytics-job}.
|
||
end::job-id-data-frame-analytics[]
|
||
|
||
tag::job-id-data-frame-analytics-default[]
|
||
Identifier for the {dfanalytics-job}. If you do not specify this option, the API
|
||
returns information for the first hundred {dfanalytics-jobs}.
|
||
end::job-id-data-frame-analytics-default[]
|
||
|
||
tag::job-id-data-frame-analytics-define[]
|
||
Identifier for the {dfanalytics-job}. This identifier can contain lowercase
|
||
alphanumeric characters (a-z and 0-9), hyphens, and underscores. It must start
|
||
and end with alphanumeric characters.
|
||
end::job-id-data-frame-analytics-define[]
|
||
|
||
tag::job-id-datafeed[]
|
||
The unique identifier for the job to which the {dfeed} sends data.
|
||
end::job-id-datafeed[]
|
||
|
||
tag::jobs-stats-anomaly-detection[]
|
||
An array of {anomaly-job} statistics objects.
|
||
For more information, see <<ml-jobstats>>.
|
||
end::jobs-stats-anomaly-detection[]
|
||
|
||
tag::lambda[]
|
||
Advanced configuration option. Regularization parameter to prevent overfitting
|
||
on the training dataset. Multiplies an L2 regularisation term which applies to
|
||
leaf weights of the individual trees in the forest. The higher the value the
|
||
more training will attempt to keep leaf weights small. This makes the prediction
|
||
function smoother at the expense of potentially not being able to capture
|
||
relevant relationships between the features and the {depvar}. The smaller this
|
||
parameter the larger individual trees will be and the longer train will take.
|
||
end::lambda[]
|
||
|
||
tag::latency[]
|
||
The size of the window in which to expect data that is out of time order. The
|
||
default value is 0 (no latency). If you specify a non-zero value, it must be
|
||
greater than or equal to one second. For more information about time units, see
|
||
<<time-units>>.
|
||
+
|
||
--
|
||
NOTE: Latency is only applicable when you send data by using
|
||
the <<ml-post-data,post data>> API.
|
||
|
||
--
|
||
end::latency[]
|
||
|
||
tag::max-empty-searches[]
|
||
If a real-time {dfeed} has never seen any data (including during any initial
|
||
training period) then it will automatically stop itself and close its associated
|
||
job after this many real-time searches that return no documents. In other words,
|
||
it will stop after `frequency` times `max_empty_searches` of real-time operation.
|
||
If not set then a {dfeed} with no end time that sees no data will remain started
|
||
until it is explicitly stopped. By default this setting is not set.
|
||
end::max-empty-searches[]
|
||
|
||
tag::maximum-number-trees[]
|
||
Advanced configuration option. Defines the maximum number of trees the forest is
|
||
allowed to contain. The maximum value is 2000.
|
||
end::maximum-number-trees[]
|
||
|
||
tag::memory-estimation[]
|
||
An object containing the memory estimates. The object has the
|
||
following properties:
|
||
|
||
`expected_memory_without_disk`:::
|
||
(string) Estimated memory usage under the assumption that the whole
|
||
{dfanalytics} should happen in memory (i.e. without overflowing to disk).
|
||
|
||
`expected_memory_with_disk`:::
|
||
(string) Estimated memory usage under the assumption that overflowing to disk is
|
||
allowed during {dfanalytics}. `expected_memory_with_disk` is usually smaller
|
||
than `expected_memory_without_disk` as using disk allows to limit the main
|
||
memory needed to perform {dfanalytics}.
|
||
end::memory-estimation[]
|
||
|
||
tag::method[]
|
||
Sets the method that {oldetection} uses. If the method is not set {oldetection}
|
||
uses an ensemble of different methods and normalises and combines their
|
||
individual {olscores} to obtain the overall {olscore}. We recommend to use the
|
||
ensemble method. Available methods are `lof`, `ldof`, `distance_kth_nn`,
|
||
`distance_knn`.
|
||
end::method[]
|
||
|
||
tag::mode[]
|
||
There are three available modes:
|
||
+
|
||
--
|
||
* `auto`: The chunk size is dynamically calculated. This is the default and
|
||
recommended value.
|
||
* `manual`: Chunking is applied according to the specified `time_span`.
|
||
* `off`: No chunking is applied.
|
||
--
|
||
end::mode[]
|
||
|
||
tag::model-id[]
|
||
The unique identifier of the trained {infer} model.
|
||
end::model-id[]
|
||
|
||
tag::model-memory-limit[]
|
||
The approximate maximum amount of memory resources that are required for
|
||
analytical processing. Once this limit is approached, data pruning becomes
|
||
more aggressive. Upon exceeding this limit, new entities are not modeled. The
|
||
default value for jobs created in version 6.1 and later is `1024mb`.
|
||
This value will need to be increased for jobs that are expected to analyze high
|
||
cardinality fields, but the default is set to a relatively small size to ensure
|
||
that high resource usage is a conscious decision. The default value for jobs
|
||
created in versions earlier than 6.1 is `4096mb`.
|
||
+
|
||
--
|
||
If you specify a number instead of a string, the units are assumed to be MiB.
|
||
Specifying a string is recommended for clarity. If you specify a byte size unit
|
||
of `b` or `kb` and the number does not equate to a discrete number of megabytes,
|
||
it is rounded down to the closest MiB. The minimum valid value is 1 MiB. If you
|
||
specify a value less than 1 MiB, an error occurs. For more information about
|
||
supported byte size units, see <<byte-units>>.
|
||
|
||
If your `elasticsearch.yml` file contains an `xpack.ml.max_model_memory_limit`
|
||
setting, an error occurs when you try to create jobs that have
|
||
`model_memory_limit` values greater than that setting. For more information,
|
||
see <<ml-settings>>.
|
||
--
|
||
end::model-memory-limit[]
|
||
|
||
tag::model-memory-limit-dfa[]
|
||
The approximate maximum amount of memory resources that are permitted for
|
||
analytical processing. The default value for {dfanalytics-jobs} is `1gb`. If
|
||
your `elasticsearch.yml` file contains an `xpack.ml.max_model_memory_limit`
|
||
setting, an error occurs when you try to create {dfanalytics-jobs} that have
|
||
`model_memory_limit` values greater than that setting. For more information, see
|
||
<<ml-settings>>.
|
||
end::model-memory-limit-dfa[]
|
||
|
||
tag::model-plot-config[]
|
||
This advanced configuration option stores model information along with the
|
||
results. It provides a more detailed view into {anomaly-detect}.
|
||
+
|
||
--
|
||
WARNING: If you enable model plot it can add considerable overhead to the
|
||
performance of the system; it is not feasible for jobs with many entities.
|
||
|
||
Model plot provides a simplified and indicative view of the model and its
|
||
bounds. It does not display complex features such as multivariate correlations
|
||
or multimodal data. As such, anomalies may occasionally be reported which cannot
|
||
be seen in the model plot.
|
||
|
||
Model plot config can be configured when the job is created or updated later. It
|
||
must be disabled if performance issues are experienced.
|
||
--
|
||
end::model-plot-config[]
|
||
|
||
tag::model-plot-config-enabled[]
|
||
If true, enables calculation and storage of the model bounds for each entity
|
||
that is being analyzed. By default, this is not enabled.
|
||
end::model-plot-config-enabled[]
|
||
|
||
tag::model-plot-config-terms[]
|
||
Limits data collection to this comma separated list of partition or by field
|
||
values. If terms are not specified or it is an empty string, no filtering is
|
||
applied. For example, "CPU,NetworkIn,DiskWrites". Wildcards are not supported.
|
||
Only the specified `terms` can be viewed when using the Single Metric Viewer.
|
||
end::model-plot-config-terms[]
|
||
|
||
tag::model-snapshot-retention-days[]
|
||
The time in days that model snapshots are retained for the job. Older snapshots
|
||
are deleted. The default value is `1`, which means snapshots are retained for
|
||
one day (twenty-four hours).
|
||
end::model-snapshot-retention-days[]
|
||
|
||
tag::multivariate-by-fields[]
|
||
This functionality is reserved for internal use. It is not supported for use in
|
||
customer environments and is not subject to the support SLA of official GA
|
||
features.
|
||
+
|
||
--
|
||
If set to `true`, the analysis will automatically find correlations between
|
||
metrics for a given `by` field value and report anomalies when those
|
||
correlations cease to hold. For example, suppose CPU and memory usage on host A
|
||
is usually highly correlated with the same metrics on host B. Perhaps this
|
||
correlation occurs because they are running a load-balanced application.
|
||
If you enable this property, then anomalies will be reported when, for example,
|
||
CPU usage on host A is high and the value of CPU usage on host B is low. That
|
||
is to say, you'll see an anomaly when the CPU of host A is unusual given
|
||
the CPU of host B.
|
||
|
||
NOTE: To use the `multivariate_by_fields` property, you must also specify
|
||
`by_field_name` in your detector.
|
||
|
||
--
|
||
end::multivariate-by-fields[]
|
||
|
||
tag::n-neighbors[]
|
||
Defines the value for how many nearest neighbors each method of
|
||
{oldetection} will use to calculate its {olscore}. When the value is not set,
|
||
different values will be used for different ensemble members. This helps
|
||
improve diversity in the ensemble. Therefore, only override this if you are
|
||
confident that the value you choose is appropriate for the data set.
|
||
end::n-neighbors[]
|
||
|
||
tag::num-top-classes[]
|
||
Defines the number of categories for which the predicted
|
||
probabilities are reported. It must be non-negative. If it is greater than the
|
||
total number of categories (in the {version} version of the {stack}, it's two)
|
||
to predict then we will report all category probabilities. Defaults to 2.
|
||
end::num-top-classes[]
|
||
|
||
tag::over-field-name[]
|
||
The field used to split the data. In particular, this property is used for
|
||
analyzing the splits with respect to the history of all splits. It is used for
|
||
finding unusual values in the population of all splits. For more information,
|
||
see {ml-docs}/ml-configuring-pop.html[Performing population analysis].
|
||
end::over-field-name[]
|
||
|
||
tag::outlier-fraction[]
|
||
Sets the proportion of the data set that is assumed to be outlying prior to
|
||
{oldetection}. For example, 0.05 means it is assumed that 5% of values are real
|
||
outliers and 95% are inliers.
|
||
end::outlier-fraction[]
|
||
|
||
tag::partition-field-name[]
|
||
The field used to segment the analysis. When you use this property, you have
|
||
completely independent baselines for each value of this field.
|
||
end::partition-field-name[]
|
||
|
||
tag::prediction-field-name[]
|
||
Defines the name of the prediction field in the results.
|
||
Defaults to `<dependent_variable>_prediction`.
|
||
end::prediction-field-name[]
|
||
|
||
tag::query[]
|
||
The {es} query domain-specific language (DSL). This value corresponds to the
|
||
query object in an {es} search POST body. All the options that are supported by
|
||
{es} can be used, as this object is passed verbatim to {es}. By default, this
|
||
property has the following value: `{"match_all": {"boost": 1}}`.
|
||
end::query[]
|
||
|
||
tag::query-delay[]
|
||
The number of seconds behind real time that data is queried. For example, if
|
||
data from 10:04 a.m. might not be searchable in {es} until 10:06 a.m., set this
|
||
property to 120 seconds. The default value is randomly selected between `60s`
|
||
and `120s`. This randomness improves the query performance when there are
|
||
multiple jobs running on the same node.
|
||
end::query-delay[]
|
||
|
||
tag::randomize-seed[]
|
||
Defines the seed to the random generator that is used to pick
|
||
which documents will be used for training. By default it is randomly generated.
|
||
Set it to a specific value to ensure the same documents are used for training
|
||
assuming other related parameters (e.g. `source`, `analyzed_fields`, etc.) are
|
||
the same.
|
||
end::randomize-seed[]
|
||
|
||
tag::renormalization-window-days[]
|
||
Advanced configuration option. The period over which adjustments to the score
|
||
are applied, as new data is seen. The default value is the longer of 30 days or
|
||
100 `bucket_spans`.
|
||
end::renormalization-window-days[]
|
||
|
||
tag::results-index-name[]
|
||
A text string that affects the name of the {ml} results index. The default value
|
||
is `shared`, which generates an index named `.ml-anomalies-shared`.
|
||
end::results-index-name[]
|
||
|
||
tag::results-retention-days[]
|
||
Advanced configuration option. The number of days for which job results are
|
||
retained. Once per day at 00:30 (server time), results older than this period
|
||
are deleted from {es}. The default value is null, which means results are
|
||
retained.
|
||
end::results-retention-days[]
|
||
|
||
tag::retain[]
|
||
If `true`, this snapshot will not be deleted during automatic cleanup of
|
||
snapshots older than `model_snapshot_retention_days`. However, this snapshot
|
||
will be deleted when the job is deleted. The default value is `false`.
|
||
end::retain[]
|
||
|
||
tag::script-fields[]
|
||
Specifies scripts that evaluate custom expressions and returns script fields to
|
||
the {dfeed}. The detector configuration objects in a job can contain functions
|
||
that use these script fields. For more information, see
|
||
{ml-docs}/ml-configuring-transform.html[Transforming data with script fields]
|
||
and <<request-body-search-script-fields,Script fields>>.
|
||
end::script-fields[]
|
||
|
||
tag::scroll-size[]
|
||
The `size` parameter that is used in {es} searches. The default value is `1000`.
|
||
end::scroll-size[]
|
||
|
||
tag::size[]
|
||
Specifies the maximum number of {dfanalytics-jobs} to obtain. The default value
|
||
is `100`.
|
||
end::size[]
|
||
|
||
tag::snapshot-id[]
|
||
A numerical character string that uniquely identifies the model snapshot.
|
||
end::snapshot-id[]
|
||
|
||
tag::source-put-dfa[]
|
||
The configuration of how to source the analysis data. It requires an
|
||
`index`. Optionally, `query` and `_source` may be specified.
|
||
|
||
`index`:::
|
||
(Required, string or array) Index or indices on which to perform the
|
||
analysis. It can be a single index or index pattern as well as an array of
|
||
indices or patterns.
|
||
|
||
`query`:::
|
||
(Optional, object) The {es} query domain-specific language
|
||
(<<query-dsl,DSL>>). This value corresponds to the query object in an {es}
|
||
search POST body. All the options that are supported by {es} can be used,
|
||
as this object is passed verbatim to {es}. By default, this property has
|
||
the following value: `{"match_all": {}}`.
|
||
|
||
`_source`:::
|
||
(Optional, object) Specify `includes` and/or `excludes` patterns to select
|
||
which fields will be present in the destination. Fields that are excluded
|
||
cannot be included in the analysis.
|
||
|
||
`includes`::::
|
||
(array) An array of strings that defines the fields that will be
|
||
included in the destination.
|
||
|
||
`excludes`::::
|
||
(array) An array of strings that defines the fields that will be
|
||
excluded from the destination.
|
||
end::source-put-dfa[]
|
||
|
||
tag::standardization-enabled[]
|
||
If `true`, then the following operation is performed on the columns before
|
||
computing outlier scores: (x_i - mean(x_i)) / sd(x_i). Defaults to `true`. For
|
||
more information, see
|
||
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Feature_scaling#Standardization_(Z-score_Normalization)[this wiki page about standardization].
|
||
end::standardization-enabled[]
|
||
|
||
tag::summary-count-field-name[]
|
||
If this property is specified, the data that is fed to the job is expected to be
|
||
pre-summarized. This property value is the name of the field that contains the
|
||
count of raw data points that have been summarized. The same
|
||
`summary_count_field_name` applies to all detectors in the job.
|
||
+
|
||
--
|
||
NOTE: The `summary_count_field_name` property cannot be used with the `metric`
|
||
function.
|
||
|
||
--
|
||
end::summary-count-field-name[]
|
||
|
||
tag::time-format[]
|
||
The time format, which can be `epoch`, `epoch_ms`, or a custom pattern. The
|
||
default value is `epoch`, which refers to UNIX or Epoch time (the number of
|
||
seconds since 1 Jan 1970). The value `epoch_ms` indicates that time is measured
|
||
in milliseconds since the epoch. The `epoch` and `epoch_ms` time formats accept
|
||
either integer or real values. +
|
||
+
|
||
--
|
||
NOTE: Custom patterns must conform to the Java `DateTimeFormatter` class.
|
||
When you use date-time formatting patterns, it is recommended that you provide
|
||
the full date, time and time zone. For example: `yyyy-MM-dd'T'HH:mm:ssX`.
|
||
If the pattern that you specify is not sufficient to produce a complete
|
||
timestamp, job creation fails.
|
||
|
||
--
|
||
end::time-format[]
|
||
|
||
tag::time-span[]
|
||
The time span that each search will be querying. This setting is only applicable
|
||
when the mode is set to `manual`. For example: `3h`.
|
||
end::time-span[]
|
||
|
||
tag::timeout-start[]
|
||
Controls the amount of time to wait until the {dfanalytics-job} starts. Defaults
|
||
to 20 seconds.
|
||
end::timeout-start[]
|
||
|
||
tag::timeout-stop[]
|
||
Controls the amount of time to wait until the {dfanalytics-job} stops. Defaults
|
||
to 20 seconds.
|
||
end::timeout-stop[]
|
||
|
||
tag::timestamp-results[]
|
||
The start time of the bucket for which these results were calculated.
|
||
end::timestamp-results[]
|
||
|
||
tag::tokenizer[]
|
||
The name or definition of the <<analysis-tokenizers,tokenizer>> to use after
|
||
character filters are applied. This property is compulsory if
|
||
`categorization_analyzer` is specified as an object. Machine learning provides a
|
||
tokenizer called `ml_classic` that tokenizes in the same way as the
|
||
non-customizable tokenizer in older versions of the product. If you want to use
|
||
that tokenizer but change the character or token filters, specify
|
||
`"tokenizer": "ml_classic"` in your `categorization_analyzer`.
|
||
end::tokenizer[]
|
||
|
||
tag::training-percent[]
|
||
Defines what percentage of the eligible documents that will
|
||
be used for training. Documents that are ignored by the analysis (for example
|
||
those that contain arrays with more than one value) won’t be included in the
|
||
calculation for used percentage. Defaults to `100`.
|
||
end::training-percent[]
|
||
|
||
tag::use-null[]
|
||
Defines whether a new series is used as the null series when there is no value
|
||
for the by or partition fields. The default value is `false`.
|
||
end::use-null[]
|