ECS fieldsedit
ECS Fields.
-
@timestamp
-
type: date
example: 2016-05-23T08:05:34.853Z
required: True
Date/time when the event originated. This is the date/time extracted from the event, typically representing when the event was generated by the source. If the event source has no original timestamp, this value is typically populated by the first time the event was received by the pipeline. Required field for all events.
-
labels
-
type: object
example: {application: foo-bar, env: production}
Custom key/value pairs. Can be used to add meta information to events. Should not contain nested objects. All values are stored as keyword. Example:
docker
andk8s
labels. -
message
-
type: text
example: Hello World
For log events the message field contains the log message, optimized for viewing in a log viewer. For structured logs without an original message field, other fields can be concatenated to form a human-readable summary of the event. If multiple messages exist, they can be combined into one message.
-
tags
-
type: keyword
example: ["production", "env2"]
List of keywords used to tag each event.
agent fieldsedit
The agent fields contain the data about the software entity, if any, that collects, detects, or observes events on a host, or takes measurements on a host. Examples include Beats. Agents may also run on observers. ECS agent.* fields shall be populated with details of the agent running on the host or observer where the event happened or the measurement was taken.
-
agent.ephemeral_id
-
type: keyword
example: 8a4f500f
Ephemeral identifier of this agent (if one exists). This id normally changes across restarts, but
agent.id
does not. -
agent.id
-
type: keyword
example: 8a4f500d
Unique identifier of this agent (if one exists). Example: For Beats this would be beat.id.
-
agent.name
-
type: keyword
example: foo
Custom name of the agent. This is a name that can be given to an agent. This can be helpful if for example two Filebeat instances are running on the same host but a human readable separation is needed on which Filebeat instance data is coming from. If no name is given, the name is often left empty.
-
agent.type
-
type: keyword
example: filebeat
Type of the agent. The agent type stays always the same and should be given by the agent used. In case of Filebeat the agent would always be Filebeat also if two Filebeat instances are run on the same machine.
-
agent.version
-
type: keyword
example: 6.0.0-rc2
Version of the agent.
client fieldsedit
A client is defined as the initiator of a network connection for events regarding sessions, connections, or bidirectional flow records. For TCP events, the client is the initiator of the TCP connection that sends the SYN packet(s). For other protocols, the client is generally the initiator or requestor in the network transaction. Some systems use the term "originator" to refer the client in TCP connections. The client fields describe details about the system acting as the client in the network event. Client fields are usually populated in conjunction with server fields. Client fields are generally not populated for packet-level events. Client / server representations can add semantic context to an exchange, which is helpful to visualize the data in certain situations. If your context falls in that category, you should still ensure that source and destination are filled appropriately.
-
client.address
-
type: keyword
Some event client addresses are defined ambiguously. The event will sometimes list an IP, a domain or a unix socket. You should always store the raw address in the
.address
field. Then it should be duplicated to.ip
or.domain
, depending on which one it is. -
client.bytes
-
type: long
example: 184
format: bytes
Bytes sent from the client to the server.
-
client.domain
-
type: keyword
Client domain.
-
client.geo.city_name
-
type: keyword
example: Montreal
City name.
-
client.geo.continent_name
-
type: keyword
example: North America
Name of the continent.
-
client.geo.country_iso_code
-
type: keyword
example: CA
Country ISO code.
-
client.geo.country_name
-
type: keyword
example: Canada
Country name.
-
client.geo.location
-
type: geo_point
example: { "lon": -73.614830, "lat": 45.505918 }
Longitude and latitude.
-
client.geo.name
-
type: keyword
example: boston-dc
User-defined description of a location, at the level of granularity they care about. Could be the name of their data centers, the floor number, if this describes a local physical entity, city names. Not typically used in automated geolocation.
-
client.geo.region_iso_code
-
type: keyword
example: CA-QC
Region ISO code.
-
client.geo.region_name
-
type: keyword
example: Quebec
Region name.
-
client.ip
-
type: ip
IP address of the client. Can be one or multiple IPv4 or IPv6 addresses.
-
client.mac
-
type: keyword
MAC address of the client.
-
client.packets
-
type: long
example: 12
Packets sent from the client to the server.
-
client.port
-
type: long
Port of the client.
-
client.user.email
-
type: keyword
User email address.
-
client.user.full_name
-
type: keyword
example: Albert Einstein
User’s full name, if available.
-
client.user.group.id
-
type: keyword
Unique identifier for the group on the system/platform.
-
client.user.group.name
-
type: keyword
Name of the group.
-
client.user.hash
-
type: keyword
Unique user hash to correlate information for a user in anonymized form. Useful if
user.id
oruser.name
contain confidential information and cannot be used. -
client.user.id
-
type: keyword
One or multiple unique identifiers of the user.
-
client.user.name
-
type: keyword
example: albert
Short name or login of the user.
cloud fieldsedit
Fields related to the cloud or infrastructure the events are coming from.
-
cloud.account.id
-
type: keyword
example: 666777888999
The cloud account or organization id used to identify different entities in a multi-tenant environment. Examples: AWS account id, Google Cloud ORG Id, or other unique identifier.
-
cloud.availability_zone
-
type: keyword
example: us-east-1c
Availability zone in which this host is running.
-
cloud.instance.id
-
type: keyword
example: i-1234567890abcdef0
Instance ID of the host machine.
-
cloud.instance.name
-
type: keyword
Instance name of the host machine.
-
cloud.machine.type
-
type: keyword
example: t2.medium
Machine type of the host machine.
-
cloud.provider
-
type: keyword
example: aws
Name of the cloud provider. Example values are aws, azure, gcp, or digitalocean.
-
cloud.region
-
type: keyword
example: us-east-1
Region in which this host is running.
container fieldsedit
Container fields are used for meta information about the specific container that is the source of information. These fields help correlate data based containers from any runtime.
-
container.id
-
type: keyword
Unique container id.
-
container.image.name
-
type: keyword
Name of the image the container was built on.
-
container.image.tag
-
type: keyword
Container image tag.
-
container.labels
-
type: object
Image labels.
-
container.name
-
type: keyword
Container name.
-
container.runtime
-
type: keyword
example: docker
Runtime managing this container.
destination fieldsedit
Destination fields describe details about the destination of a packet/event. Destination fields are usually populated in conjunction with source fields.
-
destination.address
-
type: keyword
Some event destination addresses are defined ambiguously. The event will sometimes list an IP, a domain or a unix socket. You should always store the raw address in the
.address
field. Then it should be duplicated to.ip
or.domain
, depending on which one it is. -
destination.bytes
-
type: long
example: 184
format: bytes
Bytes sent from the destination to the source.
-
destination.domain
-
type: keyword
Destination domain.
-
destination.geo.city_name
-
type: keyword
example: Montreal
City name.
-
destination.geo.continent_name
-
type: keyword
example: North America
Name of the continent.
-
destination.geo.country_iso_code
-
type: keyword
example: CA
Country ISO code.
-
destination.geo.country_name
-
type: keyword
example: Canada
Country name.
-
destination.geo.location
-
type: geo_point
example: { "lon": -73.614830, "lat": 45.505918 }
Longitude and latitude.
-
destination.geo.name
-
type: keyword
example: boston-dc
User-defined description of a location, at the level of granularity they care about. Could be the name of their data centers, the floor number, if this describes a local physical entity, city names. Not typically used in automated geolocation.
-
destination.geo.region_iso_code
-
type: keyword
example: CA-QC
Region ISO code.
-
destination.geo.region_name
-
type: keyword
example: Quebec
Region name.
-
destination.ip
-
type: ip
IP address of the destination. Can be one or multiple IPv4 or IPv6 addresses.
-
destination.mac
-
type: keyword
MAC address of the destination.
-
destination.packets
-
type: long
example: 12
Packets sent from the destination to the source.
-
destination.port
-
type: long
Port of the destination.
-
destination.user.email
-
type: keyword
User email address.
-
destination.user.full_name
-
type: keyword
example: Albert Einstein
User’s full name, if available.
-
destination.user.group.id
-
type: keyword
Unique identifier for the group on the system/platform.
-
destination.user.group.name
-
type: keyword
Name of the group.
-
destination.user.hash
-
type: keyword
Unique user hash to correlate information for a user in anonymized form. Useful if
user.id
oruser.name
contain confidential information and cannot be used. -
destination.user.id
-
type: keyword
One or multiple unique identifiers of the user.
-
destination.user.name
-
type: keyword
example: albert
Short name or login of the user.
ecs fieldsedit
Meta-information specific to ECS.
-
ecs.version
-
type: keyword
example: 1.0.0
required: True
ECS version this event conforms to.
ecs.version
is a required field and must exist in all events. When querying across multiple indices — which may conform to slightly different ECS versions — this field lets integrations adjust to the schema version of the events.
error fieldsedit
These fields can represent errors of any kind. Use them for errors that happen while fetching events or in cases where the event itself contains an error.
-
error.code
-
type: keyword
Error code describing the error.
-
error.id
-
type: keyword
Unique identifier for the error.
-
error.message
-
type: text
Error message.
event fieldsedit
The event fields are used for context information about the log or metric event itself. A log is defined as an event containing details of something that happened. Log events must include the time at which the thing happened. Examples of log events include a process starting on a host, a network packet being sent from a source to a destination, or a network connection between a client and a server being initiated or closed. A metric is defined as an event containing one or more numerical or categorical measurements and the time at which the measurement was taken. Examples of metric events include memory pressure measured on a host, or vulnerabilities measured on a scanned host.
-
event.action
-
type: keyword
example: user-password-change
The action captured by the event. This describes the information in the event. It is more specific than
event.category
. Examples aregroup-add
,process-started
,file-created
. The value is normally defined by the implementer. -
event.category
-
type: keyword
example: user-management
Event category. This contains high-level information about the contents of the event. It is more generic than
event.action
, in the sense that typically a category contains multiple actions. Warning: In future versions of ECS, we plan to provide a list of acceptable values for this field, please use with caution. -
event.created
-
type: date
event.created contains the date/time when the event was first read by an agent, or by your pipeline. This field is distinct from @timestamp in that @timestamp typically contain the time extracted from the original event. In most situations, these two timestamps will be slightly different. The difference can be used to calculate the delay between your source generating an event, and the time when your agent first processed it. This can be used to monitor your agent’s or pipeline’s ability to keep up with your event source. In case the two timestamps are identical, @timestamp should be used.
-
event.dataset
-
type: keyword
example: stats
Name of the dataset. The concept of a
dataset
(fileset / metricset) is used in Beats as a subset of modules. It contains the information which is currently stored in metricset.name and metricset.module or fileset.name. -
event.duration
-
type: long
format: duration
Duration of the event in nanoseconds. If event.start and event.end are known this value should be the difference between the end and start time.
-
event.end
-
type: date
event.end contains the date when the event ended or when the activity was last observed.
-
event.hash
-
type: keyword
example: 123456789012345678901234567890ABCD
Hash (perhaps logstash fingerprint) of raw field to be able to demonstrate log integrity.
-
event.id
-
type: keyword
example: 8a4f500d
Unique ID to describe the event.
-
event.kind
-
type: keyword
example: state
The kind of the event. This gives information about what type of information the event contains, without being specific to the contents of the event. Examples are
event
,state
,alarm
. Warning: In future versions of ECS, we plan to provide a list of acceptable values for this field, please use with caution. -
event.module
-
type: keyword
example: mysql
Name of the module this data is coming from. This information is coming from the modules used in Beats or Logstash.
-
event.original
-
type: keyword
example: Sep 19 08:26:10 host CEF:0|Security| threatmanager|1.0|100| worm successfully stopped|10|src=10.0.0.1 dst=2.1.2.2spt=1232
Raw text message of entire event. Used to demonstrate log integrity. This field is not indexed and doc_values are disabled. It cannot be searched, but it can be retrieved from
_source
. -
event.outcome
-
type: keyword
example: success
The outcome of the event. If the event describes an action, this fields contains the outcome of that action. Examples outcomes are
success
andfailure
. Warning: In future versions of ECS, we plan to provide a list of acceptable values for this field, please use with caution. -
event.risk_score
-
type: float
Risk score or priority of the event (e.g. security solutions). Use your system’s original value here.
-
event.risk_score_norm
-
type: float
Normalized risk score or priority of the event, on a scale of 0 to 100. This is mainly useful if you use more than one system that assigns risk scores, and you want to see a normalized value across all systems.
-
event.severity
-
type: long
example: 7
Severity describes the original severity of the event. What the different severity values mean can very different between use cases. It’s up to the implementer to make sure severities are consistent across events.
-
event.start
-
type: date
event.start contains the date when the event started or when the activity was first observed.
-
event.timezone
-
type: keyword
This field should be populated when the event’s timestamp does not include timezone information already (e.g. default Syslog timestamps). It’s optional otherwise. Acceptable timezone formats are: a canonical ID (e.g. "Europe/Amsterdam"), abbreviated (e.g. "EST") or an HH:mm differential (e.g. "-05:00").
-
event.type
-
type: keyword
Reserved for future usage. Please avoid using this field for user data.
file fieldsedit
A file is defined as a set of information that has been created on, or has existed on a filesystem. File objects can be associated with host events, network events, and/or file events (e.g., those produced by File Integrity Monitoring [FIM] products or services). File fields provide details about the affected file associated with the event or metric.
-
file.ctime
-
type: date
Last time file metadata changed.
-
file.device
-
type: keyword
Device that is the source of the file.
-
file.extension
-
type: keyword
example: png
File extension. This should allow easy filtering by file extensions.
-
file.gid
-
type: keyword
Primary group ID (GID) of the file.
-
file.group
-
type: keyword
Primary group name of the file.
-
file.inode
-
type: keyword
Inode representing the file in the filesystem.
-
file.mode
-
type: keyword
example: 416
Mode of the file in octal representation.
-
file.mtime
-
type: date
Last time file content was modified.
-
file.owner
-
type: keyword
File owner’s username.
-
file.path
-
type: keyword
Path to the file.
-
file.size
-
type: long
File size in bytes (field is only added when
type
isfile
). -
file.target_path
-
type: keyword
Target path for symlinks.
-
file.type
-
type: keyword
File type (file, dir, or symlink).
-
file.uid
-
type: keyword
The user ID (UID) or security identifier (SID) of the file owner.
geo fieldsedit
Geo fields can carry data about a specific location related to an event. This geolocation information can be derived from techniques such as Geo IP, or be user-supplied.
-
geo.city_name
-
type: keyword
example: Montreal
City name.
-
geo.continent_name
-
type: keyword
example: North America
Name of the continent.
-
geo.country_iso_code
-
type: keyword
example: CA
Country ISO code.
-
geo.country_name
-
type: keyword
example: Canada
Country name.
-
geo.location
-
type: geo_point
example: { "lon": -73.614830, "lat": 45.505918 }
Longitude and latitude.
-
geo.name
-
type: keyword
example: boston-dc
User-defined description of a location, at the level of granularity they care about. Could be the name of their data centers, the floor number, if this describes a local physical entity, city names. Not typically used in automated geolocation.
-
geo.region_iso_code
-
type: keyword
example: CA-QC
Region ISO code.
-
geo.region_name
-
type: keyword
example: Quebec
Region name.
group fieldsedit
The group fields are meant to represent groups that are relevant to the event.
-
group.id
-
type: keyword
Unique identifier for the group on the system/platform.
-
group.name
-
type: keyword
Name of the group.
host fieldsedit
A host is defined as a general computing instance. ECS host.* fields should be populated with details about the host on which the event happened, or from which the measurement was taken. Host types include hardware, virtual machines, Docker containers, and Kubernetes nodes.
-
host.architecture
-
type: keyword
example: x86_64
Operating system architecture.
-
host.geo.city_name
-
type: keyword
example: Montreal
City name.
-
host.geo.continent_name
-
type: keyword
example: North America
Name of the continent.
-
host.geo.country_iso_code
-
type: keyword
example: CA
Country ISO code.
-
host.geo.country_name
-
type: keyword
example: Canada
Country name.
-
host.geo.location
-
type: geo_point
example: { "lon": -73.614830, "lat": 45.505918 }
Longitude and latitude.
-
host.geo.name
-
type: keyword
example: boston-dc
User-defined description of a location, at the level of granularity they care about. Could be the name of their data centers, the floor number, if this describes a local physical entity, city names. Not typically used in automated geolocation.
-
host.geo.region_iso_code
-
type: keyword
example: CA-QC
Region ISO code.
-
host.geo.region_name
-
type: keyword
example: Quebec
Region name.
-
host.hostname
-
type: keyword
Hostname of the host. It normally contains what the
hostname
command returns on the host machine. -
host.id
-
type: keyword
Unique host id. As hostname is not always unique, use values that are meaningful in your environment. Example: The current usage of
beat.name
. -
host.ip
-
type: ip
Host ip address.
-
host.mac
-
type: keyword
Host mac address.
-
host.name
-
type: keyword
Name of the host. It can contain what
hostname
returns on Unix systems, the fully qualified domain name, or a name specified by the user. The sender decides which value to use. -
host.os.family
-
type: keyword
example: debian
OS family (such as redhat, debian, freebsd, windows).
-
host.os.full
-
type: keyword
example: Mac OS Mojave
Operating system name, including the version or code name.
-
host.os.kernel
-
type: keyword
example: 4.4.0-112-generic
Operating system kernel version as a raw string.
-
host.os.name
-
type: keyword
example: Mac OS X
Operating system name, without the version.
-
host.os.platform
-
type: keyword
example: darwin
Operating system platform (such centos, ubuntu, windows).
-
host.os.version
-
type: keyword
example: 10.14.1
Operating system version as a raw string.
-
host.type
-
type: keyword
Type of host. For Cloud providers this can be the machine type like
t2.medium
. If vm, this could be the container, for example, or other information meaningful in your environment. -
host.user.email
-
type: keyword
User email address.
-
host.user.full_name
-
type: keyword
example: Albert Einstein
User’s full name, if available.
-
host.user.group.id
-
type: keyword
Unique identifier for the group on the system/platform.
-
host.user.group.name
-
type: keyword
Name of the group.
-
host.user.hash
-
type: keyword
Unique user hash to correlate information for a user in anonymized form. Useful if
user.id
oruser.name
contain confidential information and cannot be used. -
host.user.id
-
type: keyword
One or multiple unique identifiers of the user.
-
host.user.name
-
type: keyword
example: albert
Short name or login of the user.
http fieldsedit
Fields related to HTTP activity. Use the url
field set to store the url of the request.
-
http.request.body.bytes
-
type: long
example: 887
format: bytes
Size in bytes of the request body.
-
http.request.body.content
-
type: keyword
example: Hello world
The full HTTP request body.
-
http.request.bytes
-
type: long
example: 1437
format: bytes
Total size in bytes of the request (body and headers).
-
http.request.method
-
type: keyword
example: get, post, put
HTTP request method. The field value must be normalized to lowercase for querying. See the documentation section "Implementing ECS".
-
http.request.referrer
-
type: keyword
example: https://blog.example.com/
Referrer for this HTTP request.
-
http.response.body.bytes
-
type: long
example: 887
format: bytes
Size in bytes of the response body.
-
http.response.body.content
-
type: keyword
example: Hello world
The full HTTP response body.
-
http.response.bytes
-
type: long
example: 1437
format: bytes
Total size in bytes of the response (body and headers).
-
http.response.status_code
-
type: long
example: 404
HTTP response status code.
-
http.version
-
type: keyword
example: 1.1
HTTP version.
log fieldsedit
Fields which are specific to log events.
-
log.level
-
type: keyword
example: err
Original log level of the log event. Some examples are
warn
,error
,i
. -
log.original
-
type: keyword
example: Sep 19 08:26:10 localhost My log
This is the original log message and contains the full log message before splitting it up in multiple parts. In contrast to the
message
field which can contain an extracted part of the log message, this field contains the original, full log message. It can have already some modifications applied like encoding or new lines removed to clean up the log message. This field is not indexed and doc_values are disabled so it can’t be queried but the value can be retrieved from_source
.
network fieldsedit
The network is defined as the communication path over which a host or network event happens. The network.* fields should be populated with details about the network activity associated with an event.
-
network.application
-
type: keyword
example: aim
A name given to an application level protocol. This can be arbitrarily assigned for things like microservices, but also apply to things like skype, icq, facebook, twitter. This would be used in situations where the vendor or service can be decoded such as from the source/dest IP owners, ports, or wire format. The field value must be normalized to lowercase for querying. See the documentation section "Implementing ECS".
-
network.bytes
-
type: long
example: 368
format: bytes
Total bytes transferred in both directions. If
source.bytes
anddestination.bytes
are known,network.bytes
is their sum. -
network.community_id
-
type: keyword
example: 1:hO+sN4H+MG5MY/8hIrXPqc4ZQz0=
A hash of source and destination IPs and ports, as well as the protocol used in a communication. This is a tool-agnostic standard to identify flows. Learn more at https://github.com/corelight/community-id-spec.
-
network.direction
-
type: keyword
example: inbound
Direction of the network traffic. Recommended values are: * inbound * outbound * internal * external * unknown
When mapping events from a host-based monitoring context, populate this field from the host’s point of view. When mapping events from a network or perimeter-based monitoring context, populate this field from the point of view of your network perimeter.
-
network.forwarded_ip
-
type: ip
example: 192.1.1.2
Host IP address when the source IP address is the proxy.
-
network.iana_number
-
type: keyword
example: 6
IANA Protocol Number (https://www.iana.org/assignments/protocol-numbers/protocol-numbers.xhtml). Standardized list of protocols. This aligns well with NetFlow and sFlow related logs which use the IANA Protocol Number.
-
network.name
-
type: keyword
example: Guest Wifi
Name given by operators to sections of their network.
-
network.packets
-
type: long
example: 24
Total packets transferred in both directions. If
source.packets
anddestination.packets
are known,network.packets
is their sum. -
network.protocol
-
type: keyword
example: http
L7 Network protocol name. ex. http, lumberjack, transport protocol. The field value must be normalized to lowercase for querying. See the documentation section "Implementing ECS".
-
network.transport
-
type: keyword
example: tcp
Same as network.iana_number, but instead using the Keyword name of the transport layer (udp, tcp, ipv6-icmp, etc.) The field value must be normalized to lowercase for querying. See the documentation section "Implementing ECS".
-
network.type
-
type: keyword
example: ipv4
In the OSI Model this would be the Network Layer. ipv4, ipv6, ipsec, pim, etc The field value must be normalized to lowercase for querying. See the documentation section "Implementing ECS".
observer fieldsedit
An observer is defined as a special network, security, or application device used to detect, observe, or create network, security, or application-related events and metrics. This could be a custom hardware appliance or a server that has been configured to run special network, security, or application software. Examples include firewalls, intrusion detection/prevention systems, network monitoring sensors, web application firewalls, data loss prevention systems, and APM servers. The observer.* fields shall be populated with details of the system, if any, that detects, observes and/or creates a network, security, or application event or metric. Message queues and ETL components used in processing events or metrics are not considered observers in ECS.
-
observer.geo.city_name
-
type: keyword
example: Montreal
City name.
-
observer.geo.continent_name
-
type: keyword
example: North America
Name of the continent.
-
observer.geo.country_iso_code
-
type: keyword
example: CA
Country ISO code.
-
observer.geo.country_name
-
type: keyword
example: Canada
Country name.
-
observer.geo.location
-
type: geo_point
example: { "lon": -73.614830, "lat": 45.505918 }
Longitude and latitude.
-
observer.geo.name
-
type: keyword
example: boston-dc
User-defined description of a location, at the level of granularity they care about. Could be the name of their data centers, the floor number, if this describes a local physical entity, city names. Not typically used in automated geolocation.
-
observer.geo.region_iso_code
-
type: keyword
example: CA-QC
Region ISO code.
-
observer.geo.region_name
-
type: keyword
example: Quebec
Region name.
-
observer.hostname
-
type: keyword
Hostname of the observer.
-
observer.ip
-
type: ip
IP address of the observer.
-
observer.mac
-
type: keyword
MAC address of the observer
-
observer.os.family
-
type: keyword
example: debian
OS family (such as redhat, debian, freebsd, windows).
-
observer.os.full
-
type: keyword
example: Mac OS Mojave
Operating system name, including the version or code name.
-
observer.os.kernel
-
type: keyword
example: 4.4.0-112-generic
Operating system kernel version as a raw string.
-
observer.os.name
-
type: keyword
example: Mac OS X
Operating system name, without the version.
-
observer.os.platform
-
type: keyword
example: darwin
Operating system platform (such centos, ubuntu, windows).
-
observer.os.version
-
type: keyword
example: 10.14.1
Operating system version as a raw string.
-
observer.serial_number
-
type: keyword
Observer serial number.
-
observer.type
-
type: keyword
example: firewall
The type of the observer the data is coming from. There is no predefined list of observer types. Some examples are
forwarder
,firewall
,ids
,ips
,proxy
,poller
,sensor
,APM server
. -
observer.vendor
-
type: keyword
observer vendor information.
-
observer.version
-
type: keyword
Observer version.
organization fieldsedit
The organization fields enrich data with information about the company or entity the data is associated with. These fields help you arrange or filter data stored in an index by one or multiple organizations.
-
organization.id
-
type: keyword
Unique identifier for the organization.
-
organization.name
-
type: keyword
Organization name.
os fieldsedit
The OS fields contain information about the operating system.
-
os.family
-
type: keyword
example: debian
OS family (such as redhat, debian, freebsd, windows).
-
os.full
-
type: keyword
example: Mac OS Mojave
Operating system name, including the version or code name.
-
os.kernel
-
type: keyword
example: 4.4.0-112-generic
Operating system kernel version as a raw string.
-
os.name
-
type: keyword
example: Mac OS X
Operating system name, without the version.
-
os.platform
-
type: keyword
example: darwin
Operating system platform (such centos, ubuntu, windows).
-
os.version
-
type: keyword
example: 10.14.1
Operating system version as a raw string.
process fieldsedit
These fields contain information about a process.
These fields can help you correlate metrics information with a process id/name from a log message. The process.pid
often stays in the metric itself and is copied to the global field for correlation.
-
process.args
-
type: keyword
example: [ssh, -l, user, 10.0.0.16]
Array of process arguments. May be filtered to protect sensitive information.
-
process.executable
-
type: keyword
example: /usr/bin/ssh
Absolute path to the process executable.
-
process.name
-
type: keyword
example: ssh
Process name. Sometimes called program name or similar.
-
process.pid
-
type: long
Process id.
-
process.ppid
-
type: long
Process parent id.
-
process.start
-
type: date
example: 2016-05-23T08:05:34.853Z
The time the process started.
-
process.thread.id
-
type: long
example: 4242
Thread ID.
-
process.title
-
type: keyword
Process title. The proctitle, some times the same as process name. Can also be different: for example a browser setting its title to the web page currently opened.
-
process.working_directory
-
type: keyword
example: /home/alice
The working directory of the process.
related fieldsedit
This field set is meant to facilitate pivoting around a piece of data.
Some pieces of information can be seen in many places in an ECS event. To facilitate searching for them, store an array of all seen values to their corresponding field in related.
.
A concrete example is IP addresses, which can be under host, observer, source, destination, client, server, and network.forwarded_ip. If you append all IPs to related.ip
, you can then search for a given IP trivially, no matter where it appeared, by querying related.ip:a.b.c.d
.
-
related.ip
-
type: ip
All of the IPs seen on your event.
server fieldsedit
A Server is defined as the responder in a network connection for events regarding sessions, connections, or bidirectional flow records. For TCP events, the server is the receiver of the initial SYN packet(s) of the TCP connection. For other protocols, the server is generally the responder in the network transaction. Some systems actually use the term "responder" to refer the server in TCP connections. The server fields describe details about the system acting as the server in the network event. Server fields are usually populated in conjunction with client fields. Server fields are generally not populated for packet-level events. Client / server representations can add semantic context to an exchange, which is helpful to visualize the data in certain situations. If your context falls in that category, you should still ensure that source and destination are filled appropriately.
-
server.address
-
type: keyword
Some event server addresses are defined ambiguously. The event will sometimes list an IP, a domain or a unix socket. You should always store the raw address in the
.address
field. Then it should be duplicated to.ip
or.domain
, depending on which one it is. -
server.bytes
-
type: long
example: 184
format: bytes
Bytes sent from the server to the client.
-
server.domain
-
type: keyword
Server domain.
-
server.geo.city_name
-
type: keyword
example: Montreal
City name.
-
server.geo.continent_name
-
type: keyword
example: North America
Name of the continent.
-
server.geo.country_iso_code
-
type: keyword
example: CA
Country ISO code.
-
server.geo.country_name
-
type: keyword
example: Canada
Country name.
-
server.geo.location
-
type: geo_point
example: { "lon": -73.614830, "lat": 45.505918 }
Longitude and latitude.
-
server.geo.name
-
type: keyword
example: boston-dc
User-defined description of a location, at the level of granularity they care about. Could be the name of their data centers, the floor number, if this describes a local physical entity, city names. Not typically used in automated geolocation.
-
server.geo.region_iso_code
-
type: keyword
example: CA-QC
Region ISO code.
-
server.geo.region_name
-
type: keyword
example: Quebec
Region name.
-
server.ip
-
type: ip
IP address of the server. Can be one or multiple IPv4 or IPv6 addresses.
-
server.mac
-
type: keyword
MAC address of the server.
-
server.packets
-
type: long
example: 12
Packets sent from the server to the client.
-
server.port
-
type: long
Port of the server.
-
server.user.email
-
type: keyword
User email address.
-
server.user.full_name
-
type: keyword
example: Albert Einstein
User’s full name, if available.
-
server.user.group.id
-
type: keyword
Unique identifier for the group on the system/platform.
-
server.user.group.name
-
type: keyword
Name of the group.
-
server.user.hash
-
type: keyword
Unique user hash to correlate information for a user in anonymized form. Useful if
user.id
oruser.name
contain confidential information and cannot be used. -
server.user.id
-
type: keyword
One or multiple unique identifiers of the user.
-
server.user.name
-
type: keyword
example: albert
Short name or login of the user.
service fieldsedit
The service fields describe the service for or from which the data was collected. These fields help you find and correlate logs for a specific service and version.
-
service.ephemeral_id
-
type: keyword
example: 8a4f500f
Ephemeral identifier of this service (if one exists). This id normally changes across restarts, but
service.id
does not. -
service.id
-
type: keyword
example: d37e5ebfe0ae6c4972dbe9f0174a1637bb8247f6
Unique identifier of the running service. This id should uniquely identify this service. This makes it possible to correlate logs and metrics for one specific service. Example: If you are experiencing issues with one redis instance, you can filter on that id to see metrics and logs for that single instance.
-
service.name
-
type: keyword
example: elasticsearch-metrics
Name of the service data is collected from. The name of the service is normally user given. This allows if two instances of the same service are running on the same machine they can be differentiated by the
service.name
. Also it allows for distributed services that run on multiple hosts to correlate the related instances based on the name. In the case of Elasticsearch the service.name could contain the cluster name. For Beats the service.name is by default a copy of theservice.type
field if no name is specified. -
service.state
-
type: keyword
Current state of the service.
-
service.type
-
type: keyword
example: elasticsearch
The type of the service data is collected from. The type can be used to group and correlate logs and metrics from one service type. Example: If logs or metrics are collected from Elasticsearch,
service.type
would beelasticsearch
. -
service.version
-
type: keyword
example: 3.2.4
Version of the service the data was collected from. This allows to look at a data set only for a specific version of a service.
source fieldsedit
Source fields describe details about the source of a packet/event. Source fields are usually populated in conjunction with destination fields.
-
source.address
-
type: keyword
Some event source addresses are defined ambiguously. The event will sometimes list an IP, a domain or a unix socket. You should always store the raw address in the
.address
field. Then it should be duplicated to.ip
or.domain
, depending on which one it is. -
source.bytes
-
type: long
example: 184
format: bytes
Bytes sent from the source to the destination.
-
source.domain
-
type: keyword
Source domain.
-
source.geo.city_name
-
type: keyword
example: Montreal
City name.
-
source.geo.continent_name
-
type: keyword
example: North America
Name of the continent.
-
source.geo.country_iso_code
-
type: keyword
example: CA
Country ISO code.
-
source.geo.country_name
-
type: keyword
example: Canada
Country name.
-
source.geo.location
-
type: geo_point
example: { "lon": -73.614830, "lat": 45.505918 }
Longitude and latitude.
-
source.geo.name
-
type: keyword
example: boston-dc
User-defined description of a location, at the level of granularity they care about. Could be the name of their data centers, the floor number, if this describes a local physical entity, city names. Not typically used in automated geolocation.
-
source.geo.region_iso_code
-
type: keyword
example: CA-QC
Region ISO code.
-
source.geo.region_name
-
type: keyword
example: Quebec
Region name.
-
source.ip
-
type: ip
IP address of the source. Can be one or multiple IPv4 or IPv6 addresses.
-
source.mac
-
type: keyword
MAC address of the source.
-
source.packets
-
type: long
example: 12
Packets sent from the source to the destination.
-
source.port
-
type: long
Port of the source.
-
source.user.email
-
type: keyword
User email address.
-
source.user.full_name
-
type: keyword
example: Albert Einstein
User’s full name, if available.
-
source.user.group.id
-
type: keyword
Unique identifier for the group on the system/platform.
-
source.user.group.name
-
type: keyword
Name of the group.
-
source.user.hash
-
type: keyword
Unique user hash to correlate information for a user in anonymized form. Useful if
user.id
oruser.name
contain confidential information and cannot be used. -
source.user.id
-
type: keyword
One or multiple unique identifiers of the user.
-
source.user.name
-
type: keyword
example: albert
Short name or login of the user.
url fieldsedit
URL fields provide support for complete or partial URLs, and supports the breaking down into scheme, domain, path, and so on.
-
url.domain
-
type: keyword
example: www.elastic.co
Domain of the url, such as "www.elastic.co". In some cases a URL may refer to an IP and/or port directly, without a domain name. In this case, the IP address would go to the
domain
field. -
url.fragment
-
type: keyword
Portion of the url after the
#
, such as "top". The#
is not part of the fragment. -
url.full
-
type: keyword
example: https://www.elastic.co:443/search?q=elasticsearch#top
If full URLs are important to your use case, they should be stored in
url.full
, whether this field is reconstructed or present in the event source. -
url.original
-
type: keyword
example: https://www.elastic.co:443/search?q=elasticsearch#top or /search?q=elasticsearch
Unmodified original url as seen in the event source. Note that in network monitoring, the observed URL may be a full URL, whereas in access logs, the URL is often just represented as a path. This field is meant to represent the URL as it was observed, complete or not.
-
url.password
-
type: keyword
Password of the request.
-
url.path
-
type: keyword
Path of the request, such as "/search".
-
url.port
-
type: long
example: 443
Port of the request, such as 443.
-
url.query
-
type: keyword
The query field describes the query string of the request, such as "q=elasticsearch". The
?
is excluded from the query string. If a URL contains no?
, there is no query field. If there is a?
but no query, the query field exists with an empty string. Theexists
query can be used to differentiate between the two cases. -
url.scheme
-
type: keyword
example: https
Scheme of the request, such as "https". Note: The
:
is not part of the scheme. -
url.username
-
type: keyword
Username of the request.
user fieldsedit
The user fields describe information about the user that is relevant to the event. Fields can have one entry or multiple entries. If a user has more than one id, provide an array that includes all of them.
-
user.email
-
type: keyword
User email address.
-
user.full_name
-
type: keyword
example: Albert Einstein
User’s full name, if available.
-
user.group.id
-
type: keyword
Unique identifier for the group on the system/platform.
-
user.group.name
-
type: keyword
Name of the group.
-
user.hash
-
type: keyword
Unique user hash to correlate information for a user in anonymized form. Useful if
user.id
oruser.name
contain confidential information and cannot be used. -
user.id
-
type: keyword
One or multiple unique identifiers of the user.
-
user.name
-
type: keyword
example: albert
Short name or login of the user.
user_agent fieldsedit
The user_agent fields normally come from a browser request. They often show up in web service logs coming from the parsed user agent string.
-
user_agent.device.name
-
type: keyword
example: iPhone
Name of the device.
-
user_agent.name
-
type: keyword
example: Safari
Name of the user agent.
-
user_agent.original
-
type: keyword
example: Mozilla/5.0 (iPhone; CPU iPhone OS 12_1 like Mac OS X) AppleWebKit/605.1.15 (KHTML, like Gecko) Version/12.0 Mobile/15E148 Safari/604.1
Unparsed version of the user_agent.
-
user_agent.os.family
-
type: keyword
example: debian
OS family (such as redhat, debian, freebsd, windows).
-
user_agent.os.full
-
type: keyword
example: Mac OS Mojave
Operating system name, including the version or code name.
-
user_agent.os.kernel
-
type: keyword
example: 4.4.0-112-generic
Operating system kernel version as a raw string.
-
user_agent.os.name
-
type: keyword
example: Mac OS X
Operating system name, without the version.
-
user_agent.os.platform
-
type: keyword
example: darwin
Operating system platform (such centos, ubuntu, windows).
-
user_agent.os.version
-
type: keyword
example: 10.14.1
Operating system version as a raw string.
-
user_agent.version
-
type: keyword
example: 12.0
Version of the user agent.