A repository search returns data wrapped in a polymorphic IUnknown interface, as described in Getting and Putting Data. To interpret the data as repository records, cast it as IBulkRecord2.
class MyObserver : IDisposable, REPOSITORYSERVICESLib.IObserver
{
public REPOSITORYSERVICESLib.ICookie m_cookie;
public MyObserver()
{
}
public void OnDone()
{
Console.WriteLine("Search done");
}
public void OnError(int hr, string description)
{
Console.WriteLine("Search error: {0}", description);
}
public void OnNext(object data)
{
if (data != null)
{
IBulkRecord2 bulk_record2 = (data as IBulkRecord2);
List<record2> records = bulk_record.GetRecords().Cast<record2>().ToList<record2>();
int record_count = 0;
foreach (record2 my_record in records)
{
++record_count;
}
}
System.Runtime.InteropServices.Marshal.FinalReleaseComObject(data);
}
}
For details about what repository records are, see Repository Record Data Structures.
A repository search returns data wrapped in a polymorphic IUnknown interface, as described in Getting and Putting Data. To interpret the data as event records, cast it as IBulkEventWithReadExtensions.
class MyObserver : IDisposable, REPOSITORYSERVICESLib.IObserver
{
public REPOSITORYSERVICESLib.ICookie m_cookie;
public MyObserver()
{
}
public void OnDone()
{
Console.WriteLine("Search done");
}
public void OnError(int hr, string description)
{
Console.WriteLine("Search error: {0}", description);
}
public void OnNext(object data)
{
if (data != null)
{
IBulkEventWithReadExtensions bulk_event = (data as IBulkEventWithReadExtensions);
List<event_with_read_extensions> events = bulk_event.GetEvents().Cast<event_with_read_extensions>().ToList<event_with_read_extensions>();
int event_count = 0;
foreach (event_with_read_extensions my_event in events)
{
++event_count;
}
}
System.Runtime.InteropServices.Marshal.FinalReleaseComObject(data);
}
}
For details about what event records are, see Event Record Data Structures.
REL is an expression language developed specifically for InTrust, and it is used for multiple purposes besides repository searching.
The following topics about REL in the InTrust Customization Kit contain information that is fully applicable to queries used for searching in repositories:
However, due to the specifics of how repositories operate, there are some limitations on what you can include in your queries and nuances that affect performance. These peculiarities have to do with the following:
Some characters, such as curly braces and the hyphen, are treated in a special way by the repository indexing engine. A query that includes these characters is automatically transformed during an indexed search, even though the query itself may be perfectly valid. The indexing engine splits the query into substrings at these characters and uses the substrings to make the clauses of an AND expression.
As a result, these characters are effectively removed from the index. This affects how well irrelevant data is filtered out and, consequently, how fast queries are evaluated. The following is a list of such characters:
- \ & { } ( ) [ ] < > , ! ? .
You can deal with this limitation in the following ways:
What you can do |
Comments |
---|---|
Do nothing; leave the characters where they are. |
Your query will be transformed automatically so that the indexing engine filters out as much of the repository as it can before running the search. However, punctuation characters are not part of the index, so the expected values may not be the only ones that match. A lot of similar but irrelevant matches can be present in the results. How fast your query runs and how relevant its results are depends on how many distinctive alphanumeric substrings it contains besides the punctuation:
|
Pick different fields to match by; ones that can contain only alphanumeric characters. |
You can achieve maximum search performance, but it can be difficult or impossible to find equally relevant fields. |
In a repository search, a query that uses "equals" semantics (the striequ REL function) is always evaluated faster than a similar query using "contains" semantics (the substr REL function). Queries with "does not equal" semantics are even slower.
Regular expressions (the regexp REL function) are slowest.
This topic lists the field names that you can use in your REL queries when you search for events or records in a repository using the IObservable and IObserver interfaces.
The results of a search are polymorphic and can be cast to events or records as necessary. In addition, you can treat the contents of the repository as either events or records and use either event field names or record field names. However, you cannot mix event and record field names in the same query.
For example, if your repository contains custom records with filled-in insertion strings, it is convenient to treat the records as events for easy access to insertion string contents (see Insertion Strings below).
Field |
Details |
---|---|
__AnyField |
Look for the specified pattern in all fields. |
Category |
A symbolic representation of the event category. Search pattern example: |
Computer |
The computer where the event was logged. |
Environment |
Internally, InTrust predefines two environment ID values:
Custom environment IDs can also occur. |
EventID |
|
PlatformID |
Internally, InTrust predefines the following platform ID values:
Custom platform IDs can also occur. |
Source |
The subsystem or service that the event is related to. For example, in forwarded Syslog events the source is "Syslog Device". |
SourceComputer |
The computer where the event originated; this can be different from the computer where it was logged. |
SourceDomain |
The domain of the computer where the event originated, if applicable. |
Time |
The timestamp in the event. Tip: Use filtering by date in your REL queries whenever the date range is known. This speeds up searches considerably. |
Type |
The predefined types are Information, Warning, Error, Failure Audit and Success Audit. |
UserDomain |
The domain of the user who produced the event. |
UserName |
The name of the user who produced the event. |
VersionMajor |
The major operating system version number of the computer on which the event occurred. For example, the major version of Windows 7 is 6. |
VersionMinor |
The minor operating system version number of the computer on which the event occurred. For example, the minor version of Windows 7 is 1. |
What |
A brief description of what the event is about. |
Where |
The computer where the event happened (had effect). |
Where_From |
The name or IP address of the computer from which the activity (such as a logon or configuration change) was performed. This is not necessarily the same computer as the one where the activity had effect. |
Who |
The plain user name of the account that caused the event. |
WhoDomain |
The Active Directory domain of the account that caused the event, where applicable. |
Whom | The user account that was affected by the event, where applicable. |
To look in insertion strings and resolved insertion strings, respectively, use the following field names:
where N is the number of the string.
Examples of REL expressions:
in( InsertionString10, "rei", "(\\b|\\W|^)is1608133597" );
striequ(ResolvedInsertionString2,"is");
Most of the fields defined in the record data structures (see Repository Record Data Structures) can be used in search queries:
Note that some fields contain integers and others strings.
Examples of REL expressions:
field_1 = 123;
striequ(directory_tag_1,"blue");
striequ(formatting_record_field,"green");
striequ(string_field_1,"cerise");
file_tag_1 = 5385;
© 2024 Quest Software Inc. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. 使用条款 隐私 Cookie Preference Center