NAME
App::ElasticSearch::Utilities::QueryString::FileExpansion - Build a terms query from unique values in a column of a file
VERSION
version 7.1
SYNOPSIS
App::ElasticSearch::Utilities::QueryString::FileExpansion
If the match ends in .dat, .txt, .csv, or .json then we attempt to read a file with that name and OR the condition:
$ cat test.dat
50 1.2.3.4
40 1.2.3.5
30 1.2.3.6
20 1.2.3.7
Or
$ cat test.csv
50,1.2.3.4
40,1.2.3.5
30,1.2.3.6
20,1.2.3.7
Or
$ cat test.txt
1.2.3.4
1.2.3.5
1.2.3.6
1.2.3.7
Or
$ cat test.json
{ "ip": "1.2.3.4" }
{ "ip": "1.2.3.5" }
{ "ip": "1.2.3.6" }
{ "ip": "1.2.3.7" }
We can source that file:
src_ip:test.dat => src_ip:(1.2.3.4 1.2.3.5 1.2.3.6 1.2.3.7)
src_ip:test.json[ip] => src_ip:(1.2.3.4 1.2.3.5 1.2.3.6 1.2.3.7)
This make it simple to use the --data-file output options and build queries based off previous queries. For .txt and .dat file, the delimiter for columns in the file must be either a tab or a null. For files ending in .csv, Text::CSV_XS is used to accurate parsing of the file format. Files ending in .json are considered to be newline-delimited JSON.
You can also specify the column of the data file to use, the default being the last column or (-1). Columns are zero-based indexing. This means the first column is index 0, second is 1, .. The previous example can be rewritten as:
src_ip:test.dat[1]
or: src_ip:test.dat[-1]
For newline delimited JSON files, you need to specify the key path you want to extract from the file. If we have a JSON source file with:
{ "first": { "second": { "third": [ "bob", "alice" ] } } }
{ "first": { "second": { "third": "ginger" } } }
{ "first": { "second": { "nope": "fred" } } }
We could search using:
actor:test.json[first.second.third]
Which would expand to:
{ "terms": { "actor": [ "alice", "bob", "ginger" ] } }
This option will iterate through the whole file and unique the elements of the list. They will then be transformed into an appropriate terms query.
AUTHOR
Brad Lhotsky <brad@divisionbyzero.net>
COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
This software is Copyright (c) 2019 by Brad Lhotsky.
This is free software, licensed under:
The (three-clause) BSD License