Versions Compared

Key

  • This line was added.
  • This line was removed.
  • Formatting was changed.

...

...

...

...

The feature Browse objects allows searching for CMDB resources that meet the specific criteria. Enable Visual Mode to search for objects using the list view builder UI.

Table of Contents

Start

Select the resource type in CMDB Navigator to open a list view (e.g. AWS AccountsEC2 Instances) in CMDB Navigator:

...

Click Browse Objects on the left. Select Visual Mode.

...

Note

Some fields have a list of related fields to drill down into (use > to select a related field):

Image Removed
Image Added

Image Modified

Click 'home' sign to go back to the general list of fields.

...

Based on the objects relationship, you can filter your search results by fields of a parent object:

...

Example: Here we refer to AWS Account which is This example refers to the object type AWS EC2 Instances. We select AWS Account, a master object for AWS EC2 Instance, and retrieve its related field 'Account Name'. Setting We can narrow the search scope by setting up a certain specific value or criteria, we can narrow the search scope, i.e. AWS accounts containing e.g., AWS accounts containing 'test' in their names will be excluded.  Having Having added the field' State Name' along with the operator 'equals' and the value set up as value 'running', we managed the search to display ,' we only search for all running instances only.


Field Type

Select By default, the type 'Standard' to see the list of all fields, except JSON fields.

...

Select is selected to display standard Cloudaware objects and their fields. To view the JSON data fields, select 'JSON field' type to filter the fields containing JSON data, pick the one under question and click Apply. You can also use

...

Use JSONPath expressions in the box 'Field JSON Path' to focus fine-tune your search.:

...

...

Anchor

 
Select one field (ex.1) or several ones (ex.2) for the search to refer to. JSON data will be parsed and shown in several columns below.

...

Example 1: Here we refer to the JSON field 'Tags JSON' and its related field 'Name', so that their values are displayed in separate columns in the list.

...

Example 2: Here we refer to the JSON field 'Policy Document JSON' first to evaluate all related fields available, and then we pull fields 'Statement' and 'Effect' to the list to see their values.

JSONPath
JSONPath

Note

JSONPath expressions start with $ and can contain the dot- (a) or the bracket-notation (b) for input paths:

a) $.Fieldname[0].Fieldname

b) $["fieldname"]["fieldname"][0]["fieldname"] - where [0] is the number of an element in the array.


The element number can be replaced by the wildcard symbol * to refer to all elements: $[“Fieldname with whitespaces”][*]


Logical Operators

equals

Use for an exact match

not equal 

Use for an exact match with a certain value excluded

greater than

Use when you want results that exceed the value you enter

greater or equal

Use for results that match or exceed the value you enter

less than

Use for results that are less than the value you enter

less or equal

Use for results that match or are less than the value you entered

contains

Use for fields that include your search string

not contains

Use to eliminate records that don’t contain the value you enter

like

Use to locate records that include the exact value you enter or type % to include a certain part of the value entered,

e.g. `Account`.`Account Name`

like test

like test will search for all account names containing test

not like

Use to locate records that exclude the exact value you enter or type % to exclude a certain part of the value entered,  

e.g. `Instance Name or ID`

not like %environ%

not like %environ% will search for all instance names and IDs, except the ones containing -environ-

starts with

Use for results that start with a certain value

Grouping Filters

Click +ADD FILTERS GROUP to create a group of filters.

...

Note

Pay attention to the check box Invert group: if checked, it inputs a negation to the meaning of all filters in the group.

Image RemovedImage Added

Example: In this This example we initiate demonstrates a search for all instances that are present in AWS and running, but we also want to exclude the instances containing ‘test’ and ‘dev’ in their names. Instead of looking for appropriate operators with a negative value for each filter criteriacriterion, we simply group the required filters and apply negation to the whole filter group.

Set Up Available Columns


You can manage the columns which will Add more columns to be displayed in the list . Click +ADD COLUMN to add columns. Click the 'label' icon of results. Type the field name in a search bar, drill down into master object folder and select a field from the list on the left.

...

Click Add label to change a column name ( in a resulting list view)the list of results :

Image Removed
Image Added
Image Removed

...

Image Added


Click Add order to set up the the sorting order for assets in a column: ASC for ascending or DESC for descending.

...

Sorting Order Of Columns


Hover over triple dots on the left and two strips to drag a column up or down to manage the order of columns in the list :

...

of results:

...

To initiate search, click SEARCH. The list of results will be available in the lower part of the canvas screen:

...

The following options are available under OPTIONS:

  • Save as New List View

  • Copy Link to This Query

  • Show Equivalent SOQL

  • Show Equivalent CURL