249 lines
10 KiB
Plaintext
249 lines
10 KiB
Plaintext
[[input-http]]
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=== HTTP Input
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Use the `http` input to submit a request to an HTTP endpoint and load the
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response into the watch execution context when the watch is triggered. See
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<<http-input-attributes, Input Attributes>> for all of the supported attributes.
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With the `http` input, you can:
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* Query external Elasticsearch clusters. The `http` input provides a way
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to submit search requests to clusters other than the one {watcher} is running
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on. This is useful when you're running a dedicated {watcher} cluster or if you
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need to search clusters that are running different Elasticsearch versions.
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* Query Elasticsearch APIs other than the search API. For example, you might want
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to load data from the {ref}/cluster-nodes-stats.html[Nodes Stats],
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{ref}/cluster-health.html[Cluster Health] or {ref}/cluster-state.html[Cluster
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State] APIs.
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* Query external web services. The `http` input enables you to load data from
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any service that exposes an HTTP endpoint. This provides a bridge
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between Elasticsearch clusters and other systems.
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==== Querying External Elasticsearch Clusters
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To query an external Elasticsearch cluster, you specify the cluster's
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`host` and `port` attributes and the index's search endpoint as the `path`.
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If you omit the search body, the request returns all documents in the specified
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index:
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[source,js]
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--------------------------------------------------
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"input" : {
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"http" : {
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"request" : {
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"host" : "example.com",
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"port" : 9200,
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"path" : "/idx/_search"
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}
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}
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}
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--------------------------------------------------
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You can use the full Elasticsearch {ref}/query-dsl.html[Query DSL] to perform
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more sophisticated searches. For example, the following `http` input retrieves
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all documents that contain `event` in the `category` field:
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[source,js]
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--------------------------------------------------
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"input" : {
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"http" : {
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"request" : {
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"host" : "host.domain",
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"port" : 9200,
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"path" : "/idx/_search",
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"body" : "{\"query\" : { \"match\" : { \"category\" : \"event\"}}}"
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}
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}
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}
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--------------------------------------------------
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==== Calling Elasticsearch APIs
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To load the data from other Elasticsearch APIs, specify the API
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endpoint as the `path` attribute. Use the `params` attribute to specify
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query string parameters. For example, the following `http` input
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calls the {ref}/cluster-stats.html[Cluster
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Stats] API and enables the `human` attribute:
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[source,js]
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--------------------------------------------------
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"input" : {
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"http" : {
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"request" : {
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"host" : "host.domain",
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"port" : 9200,
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"path" : "/_cluster/stats",
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"params" : {
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"human" : "true" <1>
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}
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}
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}
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}
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--------------------------------------------------
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<1> Enabling this attribute returns the `bytes` values in the response in human
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readable format.
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[[input-http-auth-basic-example]]
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==== Calling External Web Services
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You can use `http` input to get data from any external web service. The `http`
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input supports basic authentication. For example, the following input provides
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a username and password to access `myservice`:
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[source,js]
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--------------------------------------------------
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"input" : {
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"http" : {
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"request" : {
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"host" : "host.domain",
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"port" : 9200,
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"path" : "/myservice",
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"auth" : {
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"basic" : {
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"username" : "user",
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"password" : "pass"
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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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You can also pass in service-specific API keys and other information
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through the `params` attribute. For example, the following `http`
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input loads the current weather forecast for Amsterdam from the
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http://openweathermap.org/appid[OpenWeatherMap] service:
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[source,js]
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--------------------------------------------------
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"input" : {
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"http" : {
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"request" : {
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"url" : "http://api.openweathermap.org/data/2.5/weather",
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"params" : {
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"lat" : "52.374031",
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"lon" : "4.88969",
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"appid" : "<your openweathermap appid>"
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}
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}
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}
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}
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--------------------------------------------------
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==== Using Templates
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The `http` input supports templating. You can use <<templates, templates>> when
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specifying the `path`, `body`, header values, and parameter values.
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For example, the following snippet uses templates to specify what index to query
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and restrict the results to documents added within the last five minutes:
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[source,js]
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--------------------------------------------------
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"input" : {
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"http" : {
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"request" : {
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"host" : "host.domain",
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"port" : 9200,
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"path" : "/{{ctx.watch_id}}/_search",
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"body" : "{\"query\" : {\"range\": {\"@timestamp\" : {\"from\": \"{{ctx.trigger.triggered_time}}||-5m\",\"to\": \"{{ctx.trigger.triggered_time}}\"}}}}"
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}
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}
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}
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--------------------------------------------------
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==== Accessing the HTTP Response
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If the response body is formatted in JSON or YAML, it is parsed and loaded into
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the execution context. If the response body is not formatted in JSON or YAML, it
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is loaded into the payload's `_value` field.
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Conditions, transforms, and actions access the response data through the
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execution context. For example, if the response contains a `message`
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object, you can use `ctx.payload.message` to access the message data.
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In addition all the headers from the response can be accessed using the
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`ctx.payload._headers` field as well as the HTTP status code of the response using
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`ctx.payload._status_code`.
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[[http-input-attributes]]
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==== HTTP Input Attributes
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[cols=",^,^,", options="header"]
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|======
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| Name | Required | Default | Description
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| `request.scheme` | no | http | Url scheme. Valid values are: `http` or `https`.
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| `request.host` | yes | - | The host to connect to.
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| `request.port` | yes | - | The port the http service is listening on.
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| `request.path` | no | - | The URL path. The path can be static text or contain `mustache`
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<<templates, templates>>. URL query string parameters must be
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specified via the `request.params` attribute.
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| `request.method` | no | get | The HTTP method. Supported values are: `head`, `get`, `post`,
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`put` and `delete`.
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| `request.headers` | no | - | The HTTP request headers. The header values can be static text
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or include `mustache` <<templates, templates>>.
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| `request.params` | no | - | The URL query string parameters. The parameter values can be
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static text or contain `mustache` <<templates, templates>>.
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| `request.url` | no | - | Allows you to set `request.scheme`, `request.host`, `request.port`
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and `request.params` add once by specifying a real URL, like
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`https://www.example.org:1234/mypath?foo=bar`. May not be combined
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with on of those four parameters. As those parameters are set,
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specifying them individually might overwrite them.
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| `request.auth.basic.username` | no | - | HTTP basic authentication username
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| `request.auth.basic.password` | no | - | HTTP basic authentication password
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| `request.proxy.host` | no | - | The proxy host to use when connecting to the host.
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| `request.proxy.port` | no | - | The proxy port to use when connecting to the host.
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| `request.connection_timeout` | no | 10s | The timeout for setting up the http connection. If the connection
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could not be set up within this time, the input will timeout and
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fail.
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| `request.read_timeout` | no | 10s | The timeout for reading data from http connection. If no response
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was received within this time, the input will timeout and fail.
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| `request.body` | no | - | The HTTP request body. The body can be static text or include
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`mustache` <<templates, templates>>.
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| `extract` | no | - | A array of JSON keys to extract from the input response and
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use as payload. In cases when an input generates a large
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response this can be used to filter the relevant piece of
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the response to be used as payload.
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| `response_content_type` | no | json | The expected content type the response body will contain.
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Supported values are `json`, `yaml` and `text`. If the
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format is `text` the `extract` attribute cannot exist.
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Note that this overrides the header that is returned in the
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HTTP response. If this is set to `text` the body of the
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response will be assigned and accessible to/via the `_value`
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variable of the payload.
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|======
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You can reference the following variables in the execution context when
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specifying the `path`, `params`, `headers` and `body` values:
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[options="header"]
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|======
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| Name | Description
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| `ctx.watch_id` | The id of the watch that is currently executing.
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| `ctx.execution_time` | The time execution of this watch started.
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| `ctx.trigger.triggered_time` | The time this watch was triggered.
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| `ctx.trigger.scheduled_time` | The time this watch was supposed to be triggered.
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| `ctx.metadata.*` | Any metadata associated with the watch.
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|======
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