Collect a custom metric for a custom device

Custom metrics enable you to specify the metric data that the ExtraHop system collects from your network. After you create a custom metric with a trigger, you assign the trigger to your devices. This process is fairly straightforward for devices that are discovered by the ExtraHop system, but custom devices require additional processing.

When you have a custom metric that you want to collect for both discovered and custom devices, your trigger must include instructions on how to handle the different device types.

When a trigger is running on a discovered device, you can collect metrics through the Flow.<role>.device object. However, when a trigger is running on a custom device, you must collect metrics through the Flow.<role>.customDevices array. Both elements must be in any trigger that is assigned to custom and discovered devices.

In the following procedure, we show you how to modify an example trigger that collects a custom metric for HTTP 404 errors. The original trigger was written for only discovered devices, but we show you how to add parameters to collect the metric for custom devices as well.

Before you begin

  1. Log in to the ExtraHop system through https://<extrahop-hostname-or-IP-address>.
  2. Click the System Settings icon and then click Triggers.
  3. Click the name of the trigger that collects the custom metric.
  4. Click the Editor tab.
  5. Modify the trigger script to collect the custom metric for custom devices.
    In this example, we will modify the following trigger code, which collects a custom metric for HTTP 404 errors on web servers that were discovered by the ExtraHop system:
    if (HTTP.statusCode === 404){    
        Flow.server.device.metricAddDetailCount(
        "404UriAndReferrer",
        "404:" + HTTP.uri + " | REFERRER:" + HTTP.referer,
        1);
    }
    1. First, add a statement that assigns the Flow.server.device object to a variable:
      let server = Flow.server.device;
    2. Add a for loop that accesses each custom device that is acting as a server in the flow:
      for (i = 0; i < Flow.server.customDevices.length; i++){
      
      }
    3. Inside of the for loop, add an if statement that checks the hasTrigger property of each custom device to determine whether the trigger is running on the device:
      if (Flow.server.customDevices[i]['hasTrigger']){
      
      }
    4. Inside of the if statement, add a statement that reassigns the server variable to the device, and add another statement to break the for loop:
      server = Flow.server.customDevices[i];
      break;
    5. Finally, outside of the for loop, add a call to the metricAddDetailCount method to add the custom metric to the device:
      server.metricAddDetailCount(
          "404UriAndReferrer",
          "404:" + HTTP.uri + " | REFERRER:" + HTTP.referer,
          1);
    Because the server variable is reassigned only if the trigger is running on a custom device, the code works for both discovered and custom devices. The complete code for this example is shown below:
    if (HTTP.statusCode === 404){
        let server = Flow.server.device;
        for (i = 0; i < Flow.server.customDevices.length; i++){
            if (Flow.server.customDevices[i]['hasTrigger']){
                server = Flow.server.customDevices[i]; 
                break;
            }
        }
        server.metricAddDetailCount(
            "404UriAndReferrer",
            "404:" + HTTP.uri + " | REFERRER:" + HTTP.referer,
            1);
    }
  6. Assign the trigger to the custom device.
Last modified 2024-04-02