@placement search-head # Version 20170103 # # # This file contain descriptions of stanzas and attribute/value pairs for # configuring search-assistant via searchbnf.conf # # There is a searchbnf.conf in $SPLUNK_HOME/etc/system/default/. It should # not be modified. If your application has its own custom python search # commands, your application can include its own searchbnf.conf to describe # the commands to the search-assistant. # # To learn more about configuration files (including precedence) please see # the documentation located at # http://docs.splunk.com/Documentation/Splunk/latest/Admin/Aboutconfigurationfiles # GLOBAL SETTINGS # Use the [default] stanza to define any global settings. # * You can also define global settings outside of any stanza, at the top # of the file. # * Each conf file should have at most one default stanza. If there are # multiple default stanzas, attributes are combined. In the case of # multiple definitions of the same attribute, the last definition in the # file wins. # * If an attribute is defined at both the global level and in a specific # stanza, the value in the specific stanza takes precedence. [-command] * This stanza enables properties for a given . * A searchbnf.conf file can contain multiple stanzas for any number of commands. * Follow this stanza name with any number of the following attribute/value pairs. * If you do not set an attribute for a given , the default is used. The default values are empty. * An example stanza name might be "geocode-command", for a "geocode" command. * Search command stanzas can refer to definitions defined in others stanzas, and they do not require "-command", appended to them. For example: [geocode-command] syntax = geocode * ... [geocode-option] syntax = (maxcount=) | (maxhops=) ... #****************************************************************************** # The possible attributes/value pairs for searchbnf.conf #****************************************************************************** syntax = * Describes the syntax of the search command. See the head of searchbnf.conf for details. * Required simplesyntax = * Optional simpler version of the syntax to make it easier to understand at the expense of completeness. Typically it removes rarely used options or alternate ways of saying the same thing. * For example, a search command might accept values such as "m|min|mins|minute|minutes", but that would unnecessarily clutter the syntax description for the user. In this can, the simplesyntax can just pick the one (e.g., "minute"). alias = * Alternative names for the search command. This further cleans up the syntax so the user does not have to know that 'savedsearch' can also be called by 'macro' or 'savedsplunk'. description = * Detailed text description of search command. Description can continue on the next line if the line ends in "\" * Required shortdesc = * A short description of the search command. The full DESCRIPTION may take up too much screen real-estate for the search assistant. * Required example = comment = * 'example' should list out a helpful example of using the search command, and 'comment' should describe that example. * 'example' and 'comment' can be appended with matching indexes to allow multiple examples and corresponding comments. * For example: example2 = geocode maxcount=4 command2 = run geocode on up to four values example3 = geocode maxcount=-1 comment3 = run geocode on all values usage = public|private|deprecated * Determines if a command is public, private, depreciated. The search assistant only operates on public commands. * Required tags = * List of tags that describe this search command. Used to find commands when the use enters a synonym (e.g. "graph" -> "chart") related = * List of related commands to help user when using one command to learn about others. #****************************************************************************** # Optional attributes primarily used internally at Splunk #****************************************************************************** appears-in = category = maintainer = note = optout-in = supports-multivalue =