When running in GCE platform, an instance has access to:
http://metadata.google.internal/computeMetadata/v1/instance/network-interfaces/0/ip
Which gives back the private IP address, for example `10.240.0.2`.
http://metadata.google.internal/computeMetadata/v1/instance/network-interfaces/0/externalIp
Gives back the public Ip address, for example `130.211.108.21`.
As we have for `ec2`, we can support new network host settings:
* `_gce:privateIp:X_`: The private IP address of the machine for a given network interface.
* `_gce:hostname_`: The hostname of the machine.
* `_gce_`: Same as `_gce:privateIp:0_` (recommended).
Closes#13605.
Closes#13590.
BTW resolveIfPossible now throws IOException so code is also updated for ec2 discovery and
some basic tests have been added.
The `_create` API is handy way to specify an index operation should only be done if the document doesn't exist. This is currently implemented in explicit code paths all the way down to the engine. However, conceptually this is no different than any other versioned operation - instead of requiring a document is on a specific version, we require it to be deleted (or non-existent). This PR removes Engine.Create in favor of a slight extension in the VersionType logic.
There are however a couple of side effects:
- DocumentAlreadyExistsException is removed and VersionConflictException is used instead (with an improved error message)
- Update will reject version parameters if the upsert option is used (it doesn't compute anyway).
- Translog.Create is also removed infavor of Translog.Index (that's OK because their binary format was the same, so we can just read Translog.Index of the translog file)
Closes#13955
It is rarely used and was not consistently handled by different distributions anyway.
This commit also adds a test for specifying CONF_DIR when installing plugins and
starting elasticsearch.
relates to #12712 and #12954closes#5329closes#13715
With 2.0, we now bind to `localhost` by default instead of binding to the network card and use its IP address.
When the discovery plugin gets from AWS API the list of nodes that should form the cluster, this list is pinged then. But as each node is bound to `localhost`, ping does not get an answer and the node elects itself as the master node.
`network.host` must be set.
Closes#13589.
Types are still optional, but if you do provide them, they can't be null. Split the existing constructor that accepted nnull into two, one that accepts no arguments, and another one that accepts the types argument, which must be not null.
Also trimmed down different ways of setting ids, some were misleading as they would always add the ids to the existing ones and not set them, the add prefix makes that clear. Left `addIds` method that accepts a varargs argument. Added check for ids not be null.
TermsLookupQueryBuilder was left around only for bw comp reasons, but TermsQueryBuilder is its replacement. We can remove it now that it is clear query refactoring goes in master (3.0).
This commit fixes ping timeout settings inconsistencies in
ZenDiscovery. In particular, the documentation refers to the ping
timeout setting as discovery.zen.ping_timeout but the code was
ultimately using discovery.zen.ping.timeout if this was set.
This commit also changes all instances of the raw string
“discovery.zen.ping_timeout” to the constant
o.e.d.z.ZenDiscovery.SETTING_PING_TIMEOUT.
Finally, this commit removes the legacy setting
"discovery.zen.initial_ping_timeout".
Closes#6579, #9581, #9908
The current MoreLikeThisQueryBuilder validation checks for existence of at
least one `like` text or item. This is hard to check in setters, so this PR
tries to change the construction of the query so that we can do these checks
already at construction time.
Changing to using arrays for fieldnames, likeTexts, likeItems, unlikeTexts
and unlikeItems. `likeTexts` and/or `likeItems` need to be specified at
construction time to validate we have at least one item there.
Relates to #10217
This commit moves the size and ops based flush into a synchronous API into
IndexShard and removes the time-based flush alltogether since it' basically
covered by the inactive async flush API we have today. The functionality doesn't
need to be covered by scheduled task and async APIs while we can actually make all
the decisions in a sync manner which is way easier to control and to test.
Closes#13707
Refactor the function_score query so it can be parsed on the coordinating node, split parse into fromXContent and toQuery, make FunctionScoreQueryBuilder Writeable.
Closes#13653
Before this commit he tests always run bin/plugin as root which is somewhat
unrealistic and causes trouble (log files owned by root instead of
elasticsearch). After this commit `bin/plugin` runs as root when elasticsearch
is installed via the repository and as elasticsearch otherwise which is much
more realistic.
This also adds extra timeout to starting elasticsearch which is required
when all the plugins are installed. And it fixes up a problem with logging
elasticsearch's log if elasticsearch doesn't start which came up multiple
time while debugging this problem.
Also adds docs recommending running `bin/plugin` as the user that owns the
Elasticsearch files or root if installed with the packages.
Closes#13557
Moving validation from validate() to constructors and setters for the
following query builders:
* GeoDistanceQueryBuilder
* GeoDistanceRangeQueryBuilder
* GeoPolygonQueryBuilder
* GeoShapeQueryBuilder
* GeohashCellQuery
* TermsQueryBuilder
Relates to #10217
Until now we had a cloud-azure plugin which is providing 3 distinct features:
* discovery on Azure
* snapshot/restore on Aure
* SMB store
This commit splits the plugin by feature so people can use either one or the other or both features.
Doc is updated accordingly.
This PR is the second batch in moving the query validation we started
to collect in the validate() method to the corresponding setters
and constructors.
With 2.0, we now bind to `localhost` by default instead of binding to the network card and use its IP address.
When the discovery plugin gets from Azure API the list of nodes that should form the cluster, this list is pinged then. But as each node is bound to `localhost`, ping does not get an answer and the node elects itself as the master node.
Closes#13591
Requesting a million hits, or page 100,000 is always a bad idea, but users
may not be aware of this. This adds a per-index limit on the maximum size +
from that can be requested which defaults to 10,000.
This should not interfere with deep-scrolling.
Closes#9311
* Dropped ScoreType in favour of Lucene's ScoreMode
* Removed `score_type` option from `has_child` and `has_parent` queries in favour for the already existing `score_mode` option.
* Removed the score mode `sum` in favour for the already existing `total` score mode. (`sum` doesn't exist in Lucene's ScoreMode class)
* If `max_children` is set to `0` it now really means that zero children are allowed to match.
This add equals, hashcode, read/write methods, separates toQuery and JSON parsing and adds tests.
Also moving MatchQueryBuilder.Type to MatchQuery to MatchQuery, adding serialization and hashcode,
equals there.
Relates to #10217
Allocation filtering by IP only works today using the node host address. But in some cases, you might want to filter using the publish address which could be different.
This commit splits HasParentQueryParser into toQuery and fromXContent.
This change also deprecates several keys in favor of simplified settings
and adds basic unittests for HasParentQueryParser.
Relates to #10217
Previously the parser could take any Term Vectors request, but this would be
not the case of the builder which would still use MultiGetRequest.Item. This
introduces a new Item class which is used by both the builder and parser.
Beyond that the rest is mostly cleanups such as:
1) Deprecating the ignoreLike methods, in favor to using unlike.
2) Deprecating and renaming MoreLikeThisBuilder#addItem to addLikeItem.
3) Ordering the methods of MoreLikeThisBuilder more logically.
This change is needed for the upcoming query refactoring of MLT.
Closes#13372
This is an intial commit that splits HasChildQueryParser / Builder into
the two seperate steps. This one is particularly nasty since it transports
a pretty wild InnerHits object that needs heavy refactoring. Yet, this commit
has still some nocommits and needs more tests and maybe another cleanup but
it's a start to get the code out there.
This pipeline will calculate percentiles over a set of sibling buckets. This is an exact
implementation, meaning it needs to cache a copy of the series in memory and sort it to determine
the percentiles.
This comes with a few limitations: to prevent serializing data around, only the requested percentiles
are calculated (unlike the TDigest version, which allows the java API to ask for any percentile).
It also needs to store the data in-memory, resulting in some overhead if the requested series is
very large.
Until now we had a cloud-aws plugin which is providing 2 disctinct features:
* discovery on EC2
* snapshot/restore on S3
This commit splits the plugin by feature so people can use either one or the other or both features.
Doc is updated accordingly.
The shaded version of elasticsearch was built at the very beginning to avoid dependency conflicts in a specific case where:
* People use elasticsearch from Java
* People needs to embed elasticsearch jar within their own application (as it's today the only way to get a `TransportClient`)
* People also embed in their application another (most of the time older) version of dependency we are using for elasticsearch, such as: Guava, Joda, Jackson...
This conflict issue can be solved within the projects themselves by either upgrade the dependency version and use the one provided by elasticsearch or by shading elasticsearch project and relocating some conflicting packages.
Example
-------
As an example, let's say you want to use within your project `Joda 2.1` but elasticsearch `2.0.0-beta1` provides `Joda 2.8`.
Let's say you also want to run all that with shield plugin.
Create a new maven project or module with:
```xml
<groupId>fr.pilato.elasticsearch.test</groupId>
<artifactId>es-shaded</artifactId>
<version>1.0-SNAPSHOT</version>
<properties>
<elasticsearch.version>2.0.0-beta1</elasticsearch.version>
</properties>
<dependencies>
<dependency>
<groupId>org.elasticsearch</groupId>
<artifactId>elasticsearch</artifactId>
<version>${elasticsearch.version}</version>
</dependency>
<dependency>
<groupId>org.elasticsearch.plugin</groupId>
<artifactId>shield</artifactId>
<version>${elasticsearch.version}</version>
</dependency>
</dependencies>
```
And now shade and relocate all packages which conflicts with your own application:
```xml
<build>
<plugins>
<plugin>
<groupId>org.apache.maven.plugins</groupId>
<artifactId>maven-shade-plugin</artifactId>
<version>2.4.1</version>
<executions>
<execution>
<phase>package</phase>
<goals>
<goal>shade</goal>
</goals>
<configuration>
<relocations>
<relocation>
<pattern>org.joda</pattern>
<shadedPattern>fr.pilato.thirdparty.joda</shadedPattern>
</relocation>
</relocations>
</configuration>
</execution>
</executions>
</plugin>
</plugins>
</build>
```
You can create now a shaded version of elasticsearch + shield by running `mvn clean install`.
In your project, you can now depend on:
```xml
<dependency>
<groupId>fr.pilato.elasticsearch.test</groupId>
<artifactId>es-shaded</artifactId>
<version>1.0-SNAPSHOT</version>
</dependency>
<dependency>
<groupId>joda-time</groupId>
<artifactId>joda-time</artifactId>
<version>2.1</version>
</dependency>
```
Build then your TransportClient as usual:
```java
TransportClient client = TransportClient.builder()
.settings(Settings.builder()
.put("path.home", ".")
.put("shield.user", "username:password")
.put("plugin.types", "org.elasticsearch.shield.ShieldPlugin")
)
.build();
client.addTransportAddress(new InetSocketTransportAddress(new InetSocketAddress("localhost", 9300)));
// Index some data
client.prepareIndex("test", "doc", "1").setSource("foo", "bar").setRefresh(true).get();
SearchResponse searchResponse = client.prepareSearch("test").get();
```
If you want to use your own version of Joda, then import for example `org.joda.time.DateTime`. If you want to access to the shaded version (not recommended though), import `fr.pilato.thirdparty.joda.time.DateTime`.
You can run a simple test to make sure that both classes can live together within the same JVM:
```java
CodeSource codeSource = new org.joda.time.DateTime().getClass().getProtectionDomain().getCodeSource();
System.out.println("unshaded = " + codeSource);
codeSource = new fr.pilato.thirdparty.joda.time.DateTime().getClass().getProtectionDomain().getCodeSource();
System.out.println("shaded = " + codeSource);
```
It will print:
```
unshaded = (file:/path/to/joda-time-2.1.jar <no signer certificates>)
shaded = (file:/path/to/es-shaded-1.0-SNAPSHOT.jar <no signer certificates>)
```
This PR also removes fully-loaded module.
By the way, the project can now build with Maven 3.3.3 so we can relax a bit our maven policy.