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Applying an Input Time Filter to a Data Retrieval Session

Prior to loading data into Message Analyzer from a specified message collection that you configure in a Data Retrieval Session, you can also configure a window of time in which to view data by using a Time Filter. This is particularly useful if you have one or more very large data files that contain trace or log data that was collected over a significant period of time and you want to narrow the scope of the data to be viewed. The UI configuration of the Time Filter feature is shown in the figure of the topic Configuring a Data Retrieval Session.

Most logs and file types are supported by the Time Filter feature; however, you may need to select the Use Start Filter and Use End Filter check boxes and specify start and end times in the corresponding text boxes for certain types of logs and traces in which the data format prevented Message Analyzer from retrieving this information. See Manually Specifying Time Formats for more information.

For example, the following table lists the different trace or log file types for which Message Analyzer can determine the start times and end times, along with those that it cannot.

Table 10. Estimated Start and End Times vs Trace File Types

Trace Type Estimated Start Time Estimated End Time Total Messages/Filtered Messages
.aztable* N/A N/A N/A
.blg No No No
.cap** Yes Yes Yes
.csv No No No
.dmp No No No
.etl Yes No No
.evtx No No No
.json No No No
.log Yes Yes Yes
.matp Yes Yes Yes
.matu Yes Yes Yes
.oms* NA NA NA
.pcap No No No
.pcapng No No No
.pmlcsv No No No
.pmlxml No No No
.ps1 No No No
.saz No No Yes
.sqltable* N/A N/A N/A
.trc No No No
.tsv No No No
.xml No No No

Caution

*Message Analyzer supports these input file types with separate user interface (UI) features, as described in Retrieving Azure Storage Table Data, Loading SQL Data, and Loading OMS Log Data. However, the UI for these features does not provide start and end time information, as described in the previous table.

Note

**When loading data from a .cap file that was not previously saved by Message Analyzer, the start and end time values for the message data is unknown. In cases where Message Analyzer has some information, any displayed values for these files are only estimates. For text logs in .log file format, the start and end time values of messages will be known only after the parsing process, or if you specified the time stamp format in an OPN configuration file for the text log.

You should also be aware that estimated start and end times for some supported file types, as indicated in the Start Time and End Time text boxes in the Time Filter pane of your Data Retrieval Session configuration, may not match the Start Time and End Time text box values in the Time Filter panel on the Filtering toolbar in an Analysis Session. This is because the start and end times indicated in a Data Retrieval Session for certain file types is only an estimate, while the Start Time and End Time indicated in the Time Filter panel on the Filtering toolbar are known values that are determined in the parsing process. Moreover, this is the case because the start and end time estimations in the Time Filter pane are calculated before the data is retrieved, whereas the start and end time indications that appear on the Filtering toolbar are calculated after the data is retrieved.

Input File Details

After you add a supported input data file to your Data Retrieval Session and select it in the files list on the Files tab of the New Session dialog, Message Analyzer estimates the start and end times of the events in the trace or log files and displays these values, respectively, on each side of the adjustable time-window slider controls in the Time Filter pane of the Data Retrieval Session configuration. The start and end times are also displayed in the Start Time and End Time text boxes just above the Time Filter pane. In addition, an estimate of the total number of messages in the trace or log time frame is displayed in the Total Messages text box and the number of selected files in the files list is indicated in the Selected Files text box. Other file attribute information is also included, such as the file Name, Size, File Type, and Message Count; which all display in the columns just below the toolbar on the Files tab of the New Session dialog.

Note

If you are loading multiple data sources in a Data Retrieval Session and any of those sources are among the ones listed in the previous table with a “No” in the estimated start time or estimated end time columns, the corresponding start or end times for the entire input file configuration will not display in the Time Filter section of the Data Retrieval Session configuration of the New Session dialog.

Configuring a Time Filter

To configure a Time Filter, you can adjust the time-window slider controls to zoom into a particular time slot in which you want to view data. Before you adjust the time slider controls, you should enable Filtered Messages tracking by selecting the Use Start Filter and Use End Filter check boxes. Thereafter, as you adjust the slider controls, a text box below the Use Start Filter check box displays the start time and a text box below the Use End Filter check box displays the end time in the Time Filter pane of the New Session dialog. The corresponding new start and end time values define the selected time window in which you are choosing to view data, while the parenthetical Filtered Messages label displays the estimated number of messages that are contained in the time slot that you specify. However, the overall start and end times of the trace or log persist in the Start Time and End Time text boxes above the Time Filter pane.

Note

Selecting data with a Time Filter produces a subset of the total messages contained in the selected input file/s. Once you apply a Time Filter that reduces message count in your Data Retrieval Session results, you will need to remove the Time Filter and rerun the Data Retrieval Session if you want to display the original message set in its entirety.

To do this or to specify a different window of time, open the Edit Session dialog either by clicking the Edit Session icon on the global Message Analyzer toolbar or by selecting the Edit Session item from the Message Analyzer Session menu. After you open the Edit Session dialog, you will need to click the Full Edit button to enable the Time Filter controls. From the Edit Session dialog, you can then remove the previous Time Filter configuration altogether by moving the time slider controls all the way to the left and right side default positions, or you can reconfigure the original Data Retrieval Session with a new Time Filter. To apply the changes that you make to the Time Filter configuration, click Apply in the Edit Session dialog.

Manually Specifying Time Formats

To enable manual entry of time window boundaries in a specific format, select the Use Start Filter and Use End Filter check boxes. These selections make the corresponding time boundary text boxes writeable, so that you can specify time values in a format that is suitable for the displayed data. Thereafter, as you adjust the time slider controls, the changing time window boundary values match the time stamp format of the displayed data. This feature accommodates for message data that may have time stamps in a format that Message Analyzer cannot adequately determine, as indicated in the previous table.

The Time Filter configuration that you specify is then applied by Message Analyzer when you start the Data Retrieval Session with a click the Start button of the New Session dialog.


More Information
To learn more about reconfiguring a Data Retrieval Session and re-running it, see Editing Existing Sessions.
To learn more about creating an OPN configuration file for text logs with a proprietary format, the OPN Configuration File for Text Log Adapter document is available as a TechNet download.