xml

edit

XML filter. Takes a field that contains XML and expands it into an actual datastructure.

 

Synopsis

edit

This plugin supports the following configuration options:

Required configuration options:

xml {
    source => ...
}

Available configuration options:

Setting Input type Required Default value

add_field

hash

No

{}

add_tag

array

No

[]

periodic_flush

boolean

No

false

remove_field

array

No

[]

remove_namespaces

boolean

No

false

remove_tag

array

No

[]

source

string

Yes

store_xml

boolean

No

true

target

string

No

xpath

hash

No

{}

Details

edit

 

add_field

edit
  • Value type is hash
  • Default value is {}

If this filter is successful, add any arbitrary fields to this event. Field names can be dynamic and include parts of the event using the %{field}.

Example:

    filter {
      xml {
        add_field => { "foo_%{somefield}" => "Hello world, from %{host}" }
      }
    }
[source,ruby]
    # You can also add multiple fields at once:
    filter {
      xml {
        add_field => {
          "foo_%{somefield}" => "Hello world, from %{host}"
          "new_field" => "new_static_value"
        }
      }
    }

If the event has field "somefield" == "hello" this filter, on success, would add field foo_hello if it is present, with the value above and the %{host} piece replaced with that value from the event. The second example would also add a hardcoded field.

add_tag

edit
  • Value type is array
  • Default value is []

If this filter is successful, add arbitrary tags to the event. Tags can be dynamic and include parts of the event using the %{field} syntax.

Example:

    filter {
      xml {
        add_tag => [ "foo_%{somefield}" ]
      }
    }
[source,ruby]
    # You can also add multiple tags at once:
    filter {
      xml {
        add_tag => [ "foo_%{somefield}", "taggedy_tag"]
      }
    }

If the event has field "somefield" == "hello" this filter, on success, would add a tag foo_hello (and the second example would of course add a taggedy_tag tag).

periodic_flush

edit
  • Value type is boolean
  • Default value is false

Call the filter flush method at regular interval. Optional.

remove_field

edit
  • Value type is array
  • Default value is []

If this filter is successful, remove arbitrary fields from this event. Fields names can be dynamic and include parts of the event using the %{field} Example:

    filter {
      xml {
        remove_field => [ "foo_%{somefield}" ]
      }
    }
[source,ruby]
    # You can also remove multiple fields at once:
    filter {
      xml {
        remove_field => [ "foo_%{somefield}", "my_extraneous_field" ]
      }
    }

If the event has field "somefield" == "hello" this filter, on success, would remove the field with name foo_hello if it is present. The second example would remove an additional, non-dynamic field.

remove_namespaces

edit
  • Value type is boolean
  • Default value is false

Remove all namespaces from all nodes in the document. Of course, if the document had nodes with the same names but different namespaces, they will now be ambiguous.

remove_tag

edit
  • Value type is array
  • Default value is []

If this filter is successful, remove arbitrary tags from the event. Tags can be dynamic and include parts of the event using the %{field} syntax.

Example:

    filter {
      xml {
        remove_tag => [ "foo_%{somefield}" ]
      }
    }
[source,ruby]
    # You can also remove multiple tags at once:
    filter {
      xml {
        remove_tag => [ "foo_%{somefield}", "sad_unwanted_tag"]
      }
    }

If the event has field "somefield" == "hello" this filter, on success, would remove the tag foo_hello if it is present. The second example would remove a sad, unwanted tag as well.

source

edit
  • This is a required setting.
  • Value type is string
  • There is no default value for this setting.

Config for xml to hash is:

    source => source_field

For example, if you have the whole XML document in your message field:

    filter {
      xml {
        source => "message"
      }
    }

The above would parse the XML from the message field.

store_xml

edit
  • Value type is boolean
  • Default value is true

By default the filter will store the whole parsed XML in the destination field as described above. Setting this to false will prevent that.

target

edit
  • Value type is string
  • There is no default value for this setting.

Define target for placing the data

For example if you want the data to be put in the doc field:

    filter {
      xml {
        target => "doc"
      }
    }

XML in the value of the source field will be expanded into a datastructure in the target field. Note: if the target field already exists, it will be overridden. Required if store_xml is true (which is the default).

xpath

edit
  • Value type is hash
  • Default value is {}

xpath will additionally select string values (non-strings will be converted to strings with Ruby’s to_s function) from parsed XML (using each source field defined using the method above) and place those values in the destination fields. Configuration:

xpath => [ "xpath-syntax", "destination-field" ]

Values returned by XPath parsing from xpath-syntax will be put in the destination field. Multiple values returned will be pushed onto the destination field as an array. As such, multiple matches across multiple source fields will produce duplicate entries in the field.

More on XPath: http://www.w3schools.com/xml/xml_xpath.asp

The XPath functions are particularly powerful: http://www.w3schools.com/xsl/xsl_functions.asp