103 lines
3.9 KiB
Plaintext
103 lines
3.9 KiB
Plaintext
[role="xpack"]
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[[ml-time-functions]]
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=== Time functions
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The time functions detect events that happen at unusual times, either of the day
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or of the week. These functions can be used to find unusual patterns of behavior,
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typically associated with suspicious user activity.
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The {ml-features} include the following time functions:
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* <<ml-time-of-day,`time_of_day`>>
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* <<ml-time-of-week,`time_of_week`>>
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[NOTE]
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====
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* NOTE: You cannot create forecasts for jobs that contain time functions.
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* The `time_of_day` function is not aware of the difference between days, for instance
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work days and weekends. When modeling different days, use the `time_of_week` function.
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In general, the `time_of_week` function is more suited to modeling the behavior of people
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rather than machines, as people vary their behavior according to the day of the week.
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* Shorter bucket spans (for example, 10 minutes) are recommended when performing a
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`time_of_day` or `time_of_week` analysis. The time of the events being modeled are not
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affected by the bucket span, but a shorter bucket span enables quicker alerting on unusual
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events.
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* Unusual events are flagged based on the previous pattern of the data, not on what we
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might think of as unusual based on human experience. So, if events typically occur
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between 3 a.m. and 5 a.m., and event occurring at 3 p.m. is be flagged as unusual.
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* When Daylight Saving Time starts or stops, regular events can be flagged as anomalous.
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This situation occurs because the actual time of the event (as measured against a UTC
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baseline) has changed. This situation is treated as a step change in behavior and the new
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times will be learned quickly.
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====
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[float]
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[[ml-time-of-day]]
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==== Time_of_day
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The `time_of_day` function detects when events occur that are outside normal
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usage patterns. For example, it detects unusual activity in the middle of the
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night.
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The function expects daily behavior to be similar. If you expect the behavior of
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your data to differ on Saturdays compared to Wednesdays, the `time_of_week`
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function is more appropriate.
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This function supports the following properties:
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* `by_field_name` (optional)
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* `over_field_name` (optional)
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* `partition_field_name` (optional)
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For more information about those properties, see
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{ref}/ml-job-resource.html#ml-detectorconfig[Detector Configuration Objects].
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.Example 1: Analyzing events with the time_of_day function
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[source,js]
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--------------------------------------------------
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{
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"function" : "time_of_day",
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"by_field_name" : "process"
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}
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--------------------------------------------------
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// NOTCONSOLE
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If you use this `time_of_day` function in a detector in your job, it
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models when events occur throughout a day for each process. It detects when an
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event occurs for a process that is at an unusual time in the day compared to
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its past behavior.
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[float]
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[[ml-time-of-week]]
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==== Time_of_week
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The `time_of_week` function detects when events occur that are outside normal
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usage patterns. For example, it detects login events on the weekend.
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This function supports the following properties:
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* `by_field_name` (optional)
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* `over_field_name` (optional)
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* `partition_field_name` (optional)
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For more information about those properties, see
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{ref}/ml-job-resource.html#ml-detectorconfig[Detector Configuration Objects].
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.Example 2: Analyzing events with the time_of_week function
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[source,js]
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--------------------------------------------------
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{
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"function" : "time_of_week",
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"by_field_name" : "eventcode",
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"over_field_name" : "workstation"
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}
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--------------------------------------------------
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// NOTCONSOLE
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If you use this `time_of_week` function in a detector in your job, it
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models when events occur throughout the week for each `eventcode`. It detects
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when a workstation event occurs at an unusual time during the week for that
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`eventcode` compared to other workstations. It detects events for a
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particular workstation that are outside the normal usage pattern.
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