Splunk Search

visualization of discrete events

jgc94131
Explorer

I'd like to visualize some continuous time series data like 'response time' while displaying discrete events, like a deployment of code, on the same chart.

What is the best way to do this?

What is the best way to get discrete events into Splunk?

example:

http://etsycodeascraft.files.wordpress.com/2010/12/circles_launch3.png?w=500&h=322

Tags (1)
0 Karma
1 Solution

martin_mueller
SplunkTrust
SplunkTrust

I think this should be possible. Something like this for the search:

sourcetype=deployment OR sourcetype=response_time | timechart count(eval(sourcetype="deployment")) as Deployment avg(response_time) as "Response Time"

That's assuming your deployment ends up as a single event in the corresponding sourcetype, and that the other sourcetype has a field response_time to chart. Data sources could be different, for example using inputlookup on a CSV file of deployments.

The key part becomes the charting. Select a column chart, and through the formatting options tell Splunk to display the Response Time as an overlay with its own y-axis scale. Then you get vertical lines for each deployment and a line for your response time. Here's an example of how it would look using native Splunk 6.1 visualization:

alt text

(Open Image in another tab to view full size)

Query generating dummy data plus the timechart from above:

| gentimes start=-1 increment=30m | eval response_time = random()%100 + 50 | append [gentimes start=-1 increment=6h | eval sourcetype="deployment"] | rename starttime as _time | timechart count(eval(sourcetype="deployment")) as Deployment avg(response_time) as "Response Time"

View solution in original post

martin_mueller
SplunkTrust
SplunkTrust

I think this should be possible. Something like this for the search:

sourcetype=deployment OR sourcetype=response_time | timechart count(eval(sourcetype="deployment")) as Deployment avg(response_time) as "Response Time"

That's assuming your deployment ends up as a single event in the corresponding sourcetype, and that the other sourcetype has a field response_time to chart. Data sources could be different, for example using inputlookup on a CSV file of deployments.

The key part becomes the charting. Select a column chart, and through the formatting options tell Splunk to display the Response Time as an overlay with its own y-axis scale. Then you get vertical lines for each deployment and a line for your response time. Here's an example of how it would look using native Splunk 6.1 visualization:

alt text

(Open Image in another tab to view full size)

Query generating dummy data plus the timechart from above:

| gentimes start=-1 increment=30m | eval response_time = random()%100 + 50 | append [gentimes start=-1 increment=6h | eval sourcetype="deployment"] | rename starttime as _time | timechart count(eval(sourcetype="deployment")) as Deployment avg(response_time) as "Response Time"

lguinn2
Legend

AFAIK, you can't make a chart like this in "regular" Splunk - i.e., using simple XML or the built-in charting capabilities. I assume that you could do almost anything by converting a dashboard to HTML and using JavaScript (and the many graphics libraries) to get what you want.

Here is how I would get discrete or "marker" events into Splunk:

Option 1:

Create a text file and have Splunk monitor it like any other log file. I suggest that you format events in the file something like this:

2014-Jun-28 11:19:00 UTC label=SoftwareRelease version=4.3.2 product=WonderfulCode entered production

Option 2:

Create a CSV file and use it as a lookup. Here is a sample format:

timestamp,label,version,product,description
2014-Jun-28 11:19:00 UTC,SoftwareRelease,4.3.2,WonderfulCode,entered production
0 Karma
Get Updates on the Splunk Community!

Announcing Scheduled Export GA for Dashboard Studio

We're excited to announce the general availability of Scheduled Export for Dashboard Studio. Starting in ...

Extending Observability Content to Splunk Cloud

Watch Now!   In this Extending Observability Content to Splunk Cloud Tech Talk, you'll see how to leverage ...

More Control Over Your Monitoring Costs with Archived Metrics GA in US-AWS!

What if there was a way you could keep all the metrics data you need while saving on storage costs?This is now ...