Use the stats command and functions (2025)

This topic discusses how to use the statistical functions with the transforming commands chart, timechart, stats, eventstats, and streamstats.

  • For more information about the stat command and syntax, see the "stats" command in the Search Reference.
  • For the list of stats functions, see "Statistical and charting functions" in the Search Reference.

About the stats commands and functions

The stats, streamstats, and eventstats commands each enable you to calculate summary statistics on the results of a search or the events retrieved from an index. The stats command works on the search results as a whole. The streamstats command calculates statistics for each event at the time the event is seen, in a streaming manner. The eventstats command calculates statistics on all search results and adds the aggregation inline to each event for which it is relevant. See more about the differences between these commands in the next section.

The chart command returns your results in a data structure that supports visualization as a chart (such as a column, line, area, and pie chart). You can decide what field is tracked on the x-axis of the chart. The timechart command returns your results formatted as a time-series chart, where your data is plotted against an x-axis that is always a time field. Read more about visualization features and options in the Visualization Reference of the Data Visualization Manual.

The stats, chart, and timechart commands (and their related commands eventstats and streamstats) are designed to work in conjunction with statistical functions. The list of statistical functions lets you count the occurrence of a field and calculate sums, averages, ranges, and so on, of the field values.

For the list of statistical functions and how they're used, see "Statistical and charting functions" in the Search Reference.

Stats, eventstats, and streamstats

The eventstats and streamstats commands are variations on the stats command.

The stats command works on the search results as a whole and returns only the fields that you specify. For example, the following search returns a table with two columns (and 10 rows).

sourcetype=access_* | head 10 | stats sum(bytes) as ASumOfBytes by clientip

The ASumOfBytes and clientip fields are the only fields that exist after the stats command. For example, the following search returns empty cells in the bytes column because it is not a result field.

sourcetype=access_* | head 10 | stats sum(bytes) as ASumOfBytes by clientip | table bytes, ASumOfBytes, clientip

To see more fields other than ASumOfBytes and clientip in the results, you need to include them in the stats command. Also, if you want to perform calculations on any of the original fields in your raw events, you need to do that before the stats command.

The eventstats command computes the same statistics as the stats command, but it also aggregates the results to the original raw data. When you run the following search, it returns an events list instead of a results table, because the eventstats command does not change the raw data.

sourcetype=access_* | head 10 | eventstats sum(bytes) as ASumOfBytes by clientip

You can use the table command to format the results as a table that displays the fields you want. Now, you can also view the values of bytes (or any of the original fields in your raw events) in your results.

sourcetype=access_* | head 10 | eventstats sum(bytes) as ASumOfBytes by clientip | table bytes, ASumOfBytes, clientip

The streamstats command also aggregates the calculated statistics to the original raw event, but it does this at the time the event is seen. To demonstrate this, include the _time field in the earlier search and use streamstats.

sourcetype=access_* | head 10 | sort _time | streamstats sum(bytes) as ASumOfBytes by clientip | table _time, clientip, bytes, ASumOfBytes

Instead of a total sum for each clientip (as returned by stats and eventstats), this search calculates a sum for each event based on the time that it is seen. The streamstats command is useful for reporting on events at a known time range.

Examples

Example 1

This example creates a chart of how many new users go online each hour of the day.

... | sort _time | streamstats dc(userid) as dcusers | delta dcusers as deltadcusers | timechart sum(deltadcusers)

The dc (or distinct_count) function returns a count of the unique values of userid and renames the resulting field dcusers.

If you don't rename the function, for example "dc(userid) as dcusers", the resulting calculation is automatically saved to the function call, such as "dc(userid)".

The delta command is used to find the difference between the current and previous dcusers value. Then, the sum of this delta is charted over time.

Example 2

This example calculates the median for a field, then charts the count of events where the field has a value less than the median.

... | eventstats median(bytes) as medbytes | eval snap=if(bytes>=medbytes, bytes, "smaller") | timechart count by snap

Eventstats is used to calculate the median for all the values of bytes from the previous search.

Example 3

This example calculates the standard deviation and variance of calculated fields.

sourcetype=log4j ERROR earliest=-7d@d latest=@d | eval warns=errorGroup+"-"+errorNum | stats count as Date_Warns_Count by date_mday,warns | stats stdev(Date_Warns_Count), var(Date_Warns_Count) by warns

This search returns errors from the last 7 days and creates the new field, warns, from extracted fields errorGroup and errorNum. The stats command is used twice. First, it calculates the daily count of warns for each day. Then, it calculates the standard deviation and variance of that count per warns.

Example 4

You can use the calculated fields as filter parameters for your search.

sourcetype=access_* | eval URILen = len(useragent) | eventstats avg(URILen) as AvgURILen, stdev(URILen) as StdDevURILen| where URILen > AvgURILen+(2*StdDevURILen) | chart count by URILen span=10 cont=true

In this example, eventstats is used to calculate the average and standard deviation of the URI lengths from useragent. Then, these numbers are used as filters for the retrieved events.

Use the stats command and functions (2025)

FAQs

What is the function of the stats command? ›

The SPL2 stats command calculates aggregate statistics, such as average, count, and sum, over the incoming search results set. This is similar to SQL aggregation. If the stats command is used without a BY clause, only one row is returned, which is the aggregation over the entire incoming result set.

How to use the stats function in Splunk? ›

The stats command works on the search results as a whole. The streamstats command calculates statistics for each event at the time the event is seen, in a streaming manner. The eventstats command calculates statistics on all search results and adds the aggregation inline to each event for which it is relevant.

What is command in stats? ›

Use this command to provide summary statistics, optionally grouped by a field. The output for this query includes one field for each of the fields specified in the query, along with one field for each aggregation.

What is the eventstats command in Splunk? ›

The eventstats command

I like to think of eventstats as a method to calculate “grand totals” within a result set that can then be used to manipulate these totals to introspect the data set further.

What is a stat command? ›

The stat command prints details about files and file systems. The tool provides information on who the owner is, modification dates, access permission, size, type, etc.

What is the function of stats? ›

Statistics is an important field because it helps us understand the general trends and patterns in a given data set. Statistics can be used for analysing data and drawing conclusions from it. It can also be used for making predictions about future events and behaviours.

What is the function in Splunk? ›

Splunk Application Performance Monitoring

Full-fidelity tracing and always-on profiling to enhance app performance.

What is the difference between stats and transaction commands in Splunk? ›

Both the stats command and the transaction command are similar in that they enable you to aggregate individual events together based on field values. The stats command is meant to calculate statistics on events grouped by one or more fields and discard the events (unless you are using eventstats or streamstats).

What is a function command? ›

Function commands provide access to any system function from any screen and bypass the menu hierarchy. To issue a function command. Enter the command in the command line with an object-type parameter followed by parameters for selecting the object.

What is the stat function call? ›

The stat() system call returns data on the size and parameters associated with a file. The call is issued by the ls -l command and other similar functions.

What is command used for? ›

In computing, a command is a directive to a computer program to perform a specific task. It may be issued via a command-line interface or as input to a network service as part of a network protocol, or as an event triggered in a graphical user interface.

What is the 50000 limit in Splunk stats? ›

This means that you hit the number of the row with the limit, 50,000, in "chart" command. There were more than 50,000 different source IPs for the day in the search result. The chart command's limit can be changed by [stats] stanza. So, you can increase the number by [stats] stanza in limits.

How to use eval in stats Splunk? ›

This example uses eval expressions to specify the different field values for the stats command to count.
  1. The first clause uses the count() function to count the Web access events that contain the method field value GET . ...
  2. The second clause does the same for POST events.

What is the difference between stats and chart command in Splunk? ›

One important difference between the stats and chart commands is how many fields you can specify in the BY clause. For the chart command, you can specify at most two fields. One <row-split> field and one <column-split> field.

What is the function of attribute command? ›

Using the ATTRIB command, you can change a file`s read/write attribute or set the archive attribute. If you use this command to specify a file as read-only, the file can be accessed, but not altered or deleted. If a file has an attribute of -R, it can be both read from or written to (it is referred to as read/write).

What is the stat function? ›

The stat() function obtains information about the file or directory referenced in path. This information is placed in the structure located at the address indicated by buf. This function follows symbolic links and gives you information about the resulting file or directory.

What is the stats mode function? ›

The statistics. mode() method calculates the mode (central tendency) of the given numeric or nominal data set.

Why do we use stat command in Linux? ›

The 'stat' command is an invaluable tool in the Linux command suite, providing detailed statistics about files and file systems. It displays crucial information such as file size, permissions, ownership, and timestamps, making it an essential utility for system administrators and power users.

References

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