Versions Compared

Key

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

Use the Cloudaware list view builder to customize the existing default list views or create a new one from scratch.

...

Standard pre-built list views are available under the section DEFAULT VIEWS. Standard list views are not editable.

Select a any standard list view and click the arrow sign → Clone & Edit View to copy and save the view it as a custom one.

Custom List Views

...

The toggle 'Private List View' is set on by default for each list view created from scratch (in the section CUSTOM VIEWS). Switch it off to let other users see the list view you created.

Note

Customers can control access to public list views creation in their Cloudaware account. By default, users with CloudAware Administrator and CloudAware Collector Only, or a user with custom permission listViewEditor can create public list views visible to all users in the organization. The rest are able to create private list views only.

Filter Criteria


Click +ADD FILTER to add a new filter criteria.

...

A filter criteria consists of a field name, a logical operator and a value. You can select  Select a field name from the drop-down list or type the name in the search bar:

...

Note

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

Image Modified

Image Modified

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

...

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


Field Type


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

...


Select 'JSON field' type to filter the fields containing JSON data, pick the one under question and click Apply. You can also use JSONPath expressions in the box 'Field JSON Path' to focus your search.

...

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

...

Image AddedImage Added

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 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% 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


You can combine several conditions within one group of filters. Select the condition operator AND (all of conditions are true) or OR (any of conditions are true):

...


Using groups of filters and condition operators AND/OR, you can set up complex conditions in the section 'Filter Criteria':

...

Note

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

...

Example: In this example, we initiate 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 criteria, we simply group the required filters and apply negation to the whole filter group.

...

Click the 'label' icon to change a column name (in a resulting list view):

Image Modified

Image Modified


Select the sorting order for assets in a column: ASC for ascending or DESC for descending.

...