We have long worked to capture different partitioning scenarios in our testing infra. This PR adds a new variant, inspired by the Jepsen blogs, which was forgotten far - namely a partition where one node can still see and be seen by all other nodes. It also updates the resiliency page to better reflect all the work that was done in this area.
This commits adds support for a `teardown` section that can be defined in REST tests to
clean up any items that may have been created by the test and are not cleaned up by
deletion of indices and templates.
Today we have a ton of logic inside the NettyTransport* codebase. The footprint
of the code that has a direct netty dependency is large and alternative implementations
are pretty hard today since they need to know all about our proticol etc.
This change moves most of the code into TCPTransport* baseclasses and moves all
the protocol send code together. The base classes now contain the majority of the logic
while NettyTransport* classes remain to implement the glue code, configuration and optimization.
The factory for ingest processor is generic, but that is only for the
return type of the create mehtod. However, the actual consumer of the
factories only cares about Processor, so generics are not needed.
This change removes the generic type from the factory. It also removes
AbstractProcessorFactory which only existed in order pull the optional
tag from config. This functionality is moved to the caller of the
factories in ConfigurationUtil, and the create method now takes the tag.
This allows the covariant return of the implementation to work with
tests not needing casts.
The ChannelBuffer interface today leaks into the BytesReference abstraction
which causes a hard dependency on Netty across the board. This chance moves
this dependency and all BytesReference -> ChannelBuffer conversion into
NettyUtlis and removes the abstraction leak on BytesReference.
This change also removes unused methods on the BytesReference interface
and simplifies access to internal pages.
It was inadvertently disabled after applying code review comments. This commit reenables the logger usage checker and makes it less naggy when encountering logging usages of the form logger.info(someStringBuilder). Previously it would fail with the error message "First argument must be a string constant so that we can statically ensure proper place holder usage". Now it will only fail in case any arguments are provided as well, for example logger.info(someStringBuilder, 42).
The plan for persistent node ids ( #17811 ) is to tie the node identity to a file stored in it's data folders. As such it becomes important that nodes in our testing infra have better affinity with their data folders and that their data folders are not cleaned underneath them. The first is important because we fix the random seed used for node id generation (for reproducibility) and allowing the same node to use two different data folders causes two separate nodes to have the same id, which prevents the cluster from forming. The second is important, for example, where a full cluster restart / single node restart need to maintain node identity and wiping the data folders at the wrong moment prevents this.
Concretely this commit does the following:
1) Remove previous attempts to have data folder per role using a prefix. This wasn't effective as it was using the data paths settings which are only used for part of the runs. An attempt to completely separate the paths via the home dir failed due to assumptions made by index custom path about node data folder ordinal uniqueness (see #19076)
2) Change full cluster restarts to start up nodes in the same order their were first created in, only randomly swapping nodes with the same roles.
3) Change test cluster reset methods to first shutdown the unneeded nodes and then re-start the shared nodes that were shut down, so they'll reclaim their data folders.
4) Improve data folder wiping logic and make sure it wipes only folders of "offline" nodes.
5) Add some very basic tests
This commit modifies TimeValue parsing to keep the input time unit. This
enables round-trip parsing from instances of String to instances of
TimeValue and vice-versa. With this, this commit removes support for the
unit "w" representing weeks, and also removes support for fractional
values of units (e.g., 0.5s).
Relates #19102
#18938 has changed the timing in which we send out to nodes to fetch their shard stores. Instead of doing this after the cluster state resulting of the node's join was published, #18938 made it be sent concurrently to the publishing processes. This revealed a couple of points where the shard store fetching is dependent of the current state of affairs of the cluster state, both on the master and the data nodes. The problem discovered were already present without #18938 but required a failure/extreme situations to make them happen.This PR tries to remove as much as possible of these dependencies making shard store fetching simpler and make the way to re-introduce #18938 which was reverted.
These are the notable changes:
1) Allow TransportNodesAction (of which shard store fetching is derived) callers to supply concrete disco nodes, so it won't need the cluster state to resolve them. This was a problem because the cluster state containing the needed nodes was not yet made available through ClusterService. Note that long term we can expect the rest layer to resolve node ids to concrete nodes, making this mode the only one needed.
2) The data node relied on the cluster state to have the relevant index meta data so it can find data when custom paths are used. We now fall back to read the meta data from disk if needed.
3) The data node was relying on it's own IndexService state to indicate whether the data it has corresponds to an existing allocation. This is of course something it can not know until it got (and processed) the new cluster state from the master. This flag in the response is now removed. This is not a problem because we used that flag to protect against double assigning of a shard to the same node, but we are already protected from it by the allocation deciders.
4) I removed the redundant filterNodeIds method in TransportNodesAction - if people want to filter they can override resolveRequest.
Instead of plugins calling `registerTokenizer` to extend the analyzer
they now instead have to implement `AnalysisPlugin` and override
`getTokenizer`. This lines up extending plugins in with extending
scripts. This allows `AnalysisModule` to construct the `AnalysisRegistry`
immediately as part of its constructor which makes testing anslysis
much simpler.
This also moves the default analysis configuration into `AnalysisModule`
which is how search is setup.
Like `ScriptModule`, `AnalysisModule` no longer extends `AbstractModule`.
Instead it is only responsible for building `AnslysisRegistry`. We still
bind `AnalysisRegistry` but we only do so in `Node`. This is means it
is available at module construction time so we slowly remove the need to
bind it in guice.
This is the same as what Lucene does for its analysis factories, and we hawe
tests that make sure that the elasticsearch factories are in sync with
Lucene's. This is a first step to move forward on #9978 and #18064.
This commit moves template support out of the Search API to its own dedicated Search Template API in the lang-mustache module. It provides a new SearchTemplateAction that can be used to render templates before it gets delegated to the usual Search API. The current REST endpoint are identical, but the Render Search Template endpoint now uses the same Search Template API with a new "simulate" option. When this option is enabled, the Search Template API only renders template and returns immediatly, without executing the search.
Closes#17906
:client ---------> :client:rest
:client-sniffer -> :client:sniffer
:client-test ----> :client:test
This lines the client up with how we do things like modules and
plugins.
This changes adds a MapperPlugin interface which allows pull style
retrieval of mappers and metadata mappers added by plugins. For now, I
have kept the MapperRegistry, but this should be removed in the future
as it is just a silly container for 2 maps which could themselves be
passed around.
Makes ScriptModule just a plain class that manages building the
ScriptSettings and ScriptService from plugins. When we *need*
to bind ScriptService with guice we bind it in a lambda.
Significantly quiets the logging of the docs tests by:
1. Switching two log statements to debug level.
2. Only calling ESTestCase#afterIfFailed if the test failure wasn't
just assumptions being violated.
We pretended to be able to ackt like a different version node for so long it's
time to be honest and remove this ability. It's just confusing and where needed
and tested we should build dedicated extension points.
This commit introduce unit testing infrastructure to test replication operations using real index shards. This is infra is complementary to the full integration tests and unit testing of ReplicationOperation we already have. The new ESIndexLevelReplicationTestCase base makes it easier to test and simulate failure mode that require real shards and but do not need the full blow stack of a complete node.
The commit also add a simple "nothing is wrong" test plus a test that checks we don't drop docs during the various stages of recovery.
For now, only single doc indexing is supported but this can be easily extended in the future.
This change removes some unnecessary dependencies from ClusterService
and cleans up ClusterName creation. ClusterService is now not created
by guice anymore.
Today we have a push model for registering basically anything. All our extension points
are defined on modules which we pass in to plugins. This is harder to maintain and adds
unnecessary dependencies on the modules itself. This change moves towards a pull model
where the plugin offers a getter kind of method to get the extensions. This will also
help in the future if we need to pass dependencies to the extension points which can
easily be defined on the method as arguments if a pull model is used.
Registering a script engine or native scripts still uses Guice today
and is much more complicated than needed. This change moves to a pull
based model where script plugins have to implement a dedicated interface
`ScriptPlugin` and defines simple getter returning instances rather than
classes.
In 2.0 we added plugin descriptors which require defining a name and
description for the plugin. However, we still have name() and
description() which must be overriden from the Plugin class. This still
exists for classpath plugins. But classpath plugins are mainly for
tests, and even then, referring to classpath plugins with their class is
a better idea. This change removes name() and description(), replacing
the name for classpath plugins with the full class name.
With this commit we exclude certain HTTP requests that are needed to inspect the cluster
from HTTP request limiting to ensure these commands are processed even in critical
memory conditions.
Relates #17951, relates #18145, closes#18833
This will let things that don't depend on :test:framework like the
client use it.
Also skip initializing the classes we check because we don't care
about their initialization behavior because we're not executing them.
This makes the naming conventions check pretty close to instant
from a "human eye" perspective.
Folded grok processor into ingest-common module.
The rest tests have been moved to ingest-common module as well, because these tests don't run in the rest-api-spec module but in the distribution:integ-test-zip module
and adding a test plugin there felt just wrong to me. I think this is ok. I left a tiny ingest rest test behind in that tests with an empty pipeline.
Removed messy tests, these tests were already covered in the rest tests
Added ingest test plugin in test infra so that each module testing integration with ingest doesn't need write its own plugin
Moved reindex ingest tests to qa module
Closes#18490
This commit refactors the handling of thread pool settings so that the
individual settings can be registered rather than registering the top
level group. With this refactoring, individual plugins must now register
their own settings for custom thread pools that they need, but a
dedicated API is provided for this in the thread pool module. This
commit also renames the prefix on the thread pool settings from
"threadpool" to "thread_pool". This enables a hard break on the settings
so that:
- some of the settings can be given more sensible names (e.g., the max
number of threads in a scaling thread pool is now named "max" instead
of "size")
- change the soft limit on the number of threads in the bulk and
indexing thread pools to a hard limit
- the settings names for custom plugins for thread pools can be
prefixed (e.g., "xpack.watcher.thread_pool.size")
- remove dynamic thread pool settings
Relates #18674
A RestClient instance is now created whenever EsIntegTestCase#getRestClient is invoked for the first time. It is then kept until the cluster is cleared (depending on the cluster scope of the test).
Renamed other two restClient methods to createRestClient, as that instance needs to be closed and managed in the tests.
We still have a wrapper called RestTestClient that is very specific to Rest tests, as well as RestTestResponse etc. but all the low level bits around http connections etc. are now handled by RestClient.
This commit adds a UUID for each snapshot, in addition to the already
existing repository and snapshot name. The addition of UUIDs will enable
more robust handling of the deletion of previous snapshots and lingering
files from partially failed delete operations, on top of being able to
uniquely track each snapshot.
Closes#18228
Relates #18156
Currently we support empty query clauses like the filter in
"constant_score" : { "filter" : { } }
How these clauses are handled depends on the surrounding query.
They later are either ignored, converted to match all or no documents or
passed up further in the query hierarchy. During parsing these claues are
currently represented as EmptyQueryBuilders. When not handled anywhere else,
these special cases need to be checked for on the shard when building the
lucene query.
This is trappy, so this PR changes the parsing of compound queries. Instead
of returning QueryBuilder, the core query parsing method
QueryShardContext#parseInnerQueryBuilder() now return an Optional which can
be empty in the case of empty query clauses. This has the advantage of forcing
callers to deal with this sooner or later. When encountering empty Optionals,
compound query builders now have the choice to ignore them, pass them on or
rewrite to a different query, depending on context.
This commit clarifies the behavior that must be adhered to by any
implementors of the BlobContainer interface. This is done through
expanded Javadocs.
Closes#18157Closes#15580
The page cache recycler has a dependency on thread pool that was there
for historical reasons but is no longer needed. This commit removes this
now unneeded dependency.
Relates #18664
This adds a low level primitive operations to shrink an existing
index into a new index with a single shard. This primitive expects
all shards of the source index to allocated on a single node. Once the target index is initializing on the shrink node it takes a snapshot of the source index shards and copies all files into the target indices data folder. An [optimization](https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/LUCENE-7300) coming in Lucene 6.1 will also allow for optional constant time copy if hard-links are supported by the filesystem. All mappings are merged into the new indexes metadata once the snapshots have been taken on the merge node.
To shrink an existing index all shards must be moved to a single node (one instance of each shard) and the index must be read-only:
```BASH
$ curl -XPUT 'http://localhost:9200/logs/_settings' -d '{
"settings" : {
"index.routing.allocation.require._name" : "shrink_node_name",
"index.blocks.write" : true
}
}
```
once all shards are started on the shrink node. the new index can be created via:
```BASH
$ curl -XPUT 'http://localhost:9200/logs/_shrink/logs_single_shard' -d '{
"settings" : {
"index.codec" : "best_compression",
"index.number_of_replicas" : 1
}
}'
```
This API will perform all needed check before the new index is created and selects the shrink node based on the allocation of the source index. This call returns immediately, to monitor shrink progress the recovery API should be used since all copy operations are reflected in the recovery API with byte copy progress etc.
The shrink operation does not modify the source index, if a shrink operation should
be canceled or if the shrink failed, the target index can simply be deleted and
all resources are released.
This PR changes the InternalTestCluster to support dedicated master nodes. The creation of dedicated master nodes can be controlled using a new `supportsMasterNodes` parameter to the ClusterScope annotation. If set to true (the default), dedicated master nodes will randomly be used. If set to false, no master nodes will be created and data nodes will also be allowed to become masters. If active, test runs will either have 1 or 3 masternodes
This commit simplifies the delayed shard allocation implementation by assigning clear responsibilities to the various components that are affected by delayed shard allocation:
- UnassignedInfo gets a boolean flag delayed which determines whether assignment of the shard should be delayed. The flag gets persisted in the cluster state and is thus available across nodes, i.e. each node knows whether a shard was delayed-unassigned in a specific cluster state. Before, nodes other than the current master were unaware of that information.
- This flag is initially set as true if the shard becomes unassigned due to a node leaving and the index setting index.unassigned.node_left.delayed_timeout being strictly positive. From then on, unassigned shards can only transition from delayed to non-delayed, never in the other direction.
- The reroute step is in charge of removing the delay marker (comparing timestamp when node left to current timestamp).
- A dedicated service DelayedAllocationService, reacting to cluster change events, has the responsibility to schedule reroutes to remove the delay marker.
Closes#18293
Failing the build on deprecation warnings was removed in
19b3ec88af. This commit removes the
suppressed deprecation warnings so that their use is surfaced in the
build now.
Relates #18582
This is a leftover spot that wasn't changed. It was breaking
ClusterSettingsIT#ClusterSettingsIT because that test expected
the test's log level to default to the default logger level for
the nodes.
Significant changes:
* AbstractQueryTestCase has moved to the test framework module, in order for query builder tests in modules and plugins
* Added support to AbstractQueryTestCase to register plugins
* Lift the restriction that only one percolator could be added per index. This validation existed in MapperService, but because the percolator moved to a module it could no longer exist there. Instead of bringing it back it was removed. This validation existed since the percolator cache only supported one percolator query per document, since the percolator cache has been removed this restriction could removed as well.
* While moving percolator tests to the new module, also removed a couple of tests for the deprecated percolate and mpercolate api. These APIs are now sugar APIs for bwc and rediect to the searvh and msearvh APIs. Some tests were still testing as if percolate and mpercolate API did the percolation, but this no longer the case and these tests could be removed.
This now requires that system properties passed to Gradle must be in the form of "-Dtests.es.*" instead of
"-Des.*". It then chops off "tests.es." and passes that as a "-E" property to Elasticsearch.
Also changed system properties:
- `tests.logger.level` became `tests.es.logger.level`
- `node.mode` became `tests.es.node.mode`
- `node.local` became `tests.es.node.local`
The assertBusy method currently has both a Runnable and Callable
version. This has caused confusion with type inference and lambdas
sometimes, in particular with java 9. This change removes the callable
version as nothing was actually using it.
Rather than having one win against the other, reject duplicated apis. Also enforce the convention that see the api name have the same name as the name of the rest spec file that defines it.
This change makes ES compile with java9 again, build 118.
* There are a handful of changes due to failure to determine types during compile.
* The attachment plugins which use tika needed to have tika upgraded in order to pickup fixes there for java 9.
* azure discovery and s3 repository indirectly depend on jaxb, which is no longer in the default modules. They now add a jaxb dependency externally, and make JarHell allow for this package.
This removes the ScriptMode class entirely, which was an enum with two
options (ON and OFF) which essentially boiled down to true and false.
Now the boolean values are used instead.
Before 5.0 for it was required that the percolator queries were cached in jvm heap as Lucene queries for two reasons:
1) Performance. The percolator evaluated all percolator queries all the time. There was no pre-selecting queries that are likely to match like we have today.
2) Updates made to percolator queries were visible in realtime, Today these changes are visible in near realtime. So updating no longer requires the percolator to have the queries in jvm heap.
So having the percolator queries in jvm heap via the percolator cache is now less attractive. Especially when there are many percolator queries then these queries can consume many GBs of jvm heap.
Removing the percolator cache does make the percolate query slower compared to how the execution time in 5.0.0-alpha1 and alpha2, but it is still faster compared to 2.x and before.
Today when parsing settings during bootstrap, we add a system property
for every Elasticsearch setting. Additionally, settings can be set via
system properties. This commit simplifies this situation.
- settings are no longer propogated to system properties
- system properties can not be used to set settings
- the "es." prefix on settings is no longer required (nor permitted)
- test logging has a dedicated system property (tests.logger.level)
Relates #18198
We often require a random joda DateTimeZone in our tests. Currently
there are a few options for generating such a random DateTimeZone
from the set of available ids. Currently most random picks are not
really reproducable across different jvms because they rely on order
in the ids set implementation. The helper in DateProcessorFactoryTests
thus performs a sort on the set of ids before random picking from
the result, so I moved this to ESTestCase to make it publicly
available and changed all other tests to use that method.
This commit adds a variety of real disk metrics for the block devices
that back Elasticsearch data paths. A collection of statistics are read
from /proc/diskstats and are used to report the raw metrics for
operations and read/write bytes.
Relates #15915
This change does the following:
- Queries that are currently unsupported such as prefix queries on numeric
fields or term queries on geo fields now throw an error rather than returning
a query that does not match anything.
- Fuzzy queries on numeric, date and ip fields are now unsupported: they used
to create range queries, we now expect users to use range queries directly.
Fuzzy, regexp and prefix queries are now only supported on text/keyword
fields (including `_all`).
- The `_uid` and `_id` fields do not support prefix or range queries anymore as
it would prevent us to store them more efficiently in the future, eg. by
using a binary encoding.
Note that it is still possible to ignore these errors by using the `lenient`
option of the `match` or `query_string` queries.
Previously multiple extensions could be provided, however, this can lead
to confusion with on-disk scripts (ie, "foo.js" and "foo.javascript")
having different content. Only a single extension is now supported.
The only language currently supporting multiple extensions was the
Javascript engine ("js" and "javascript"). It now only supports the
`.js` extension.
Relates to #10598
This removes all the mentions of the sandbox from the script engine
services and permissions model. This means that the following settings
are no longer supported:
```yaml
script.inline: sandbox
script.stored: sandbox
```
Instead, only a `true` or `false` value can be specified.
Since this would otherwise break the default-allow parameter for
languages like expressions, painless, and mustache, all script engines
have been updated to have individual settings, for instance:
```yaml
script.engine.groovy.inline: true
```
Would enable all inline scripts for groovy. (they can still be
overridden on a per-operation basis).
Expressions, Painless, and Mustache all default to `true` for inline,
file, and stored scripts to preserve the old scripting behavior.
Resolves#17114
This makes it much easier to apply to other projects.
Fixes to doc tests infrastructure:
* Fix comparing lists. Was totally broken.
* Fix order of actual vs expected parameters.
* Allow multiple `// TESTRESPONSE` lines with substitutions to join
into one big list of subtitutions. This makes lets the docs look
tidier.
* Exclude build from snippet scanning
* Allow subclasses of ESRestTestCase access to the admin execution context
Most of the current implementations of BaseNodesResponse (plural Nodes) ignore FailedNodeExceptions.
- This adds a helper function to do the grouping to TransportNodesAction
- Requires a non-null array of FailedNodeExceptions within the BaseNodesResponse constructor
- Reads/writes the array to output
- Also adds StreamInput and StreamOutput methods for generically reading and writing arrays
The `ip` field uses a binary representation internally. This breaks when
rendering sort values in search responses since elasticsearch tries to write a
binary byte[] as an utf8 json string. This commit extends the `DocValueFormat`
API in order to give fields a chance to choose how to render values.
Closes#6077
In preparation for a unified release process, we need to be able to
generate the pom files independently of trying to actually publish. This
change adds back the maven-publish plugin just for that purpose. The
nexus plugin still exists for now, so that we do not break snapshots,
but that can be removed at a later time once snapshots are happenign
through the unified tools. Note I also changed the dir jars are written
into so that all our artifacts are under build/distributions.
Adds infrastructure so `gradle :docs:check` will extract tests from
snippets in the documentation and execute the tests. This is included
in `gradle check` so it should happen on CI and during a normal build.
By default each `// AUTOSENSE` snippet creates a unique REST test. These
tests are executed in a random order and the cluster is wiped between
each one. If multiple snippets chain together into a test you can annotate
all snippets after the first with `// TEST[continued]` to have the
generated tests for both snippets joined.
Snippets marked as `// TESTRESPONSE` are checked against the response
of the last action.
See docs/README.asciidoc for lots more.
Closes#12583. That issue is about catching bugs in the docs during build.
This catches *some* bugs in the docs during build which is a good start.
This commit introduces a handshake when initiating a light
connection. During this handshake, node information, cluster name, and
version are received from the target node of the connection. This
information can be used to immediately validate that the target node is
a member of the same cluster, and used to set the version on the
stream. This will allow us to extend APIs that are used during initial
cluster recovery without a major version change.
Relates #15971
This commit removes the method Strings#splitStringToArray and replaces
the call sites with invocations to String#split. There are only two
explanations for the existence of this method. The first is that
String#split is slightly tricky in that it accepts a regular expression
rather than a character to split on. This means that if s is a string,
s.split(".") does not split on the character '.', but rather splits on
the regular expression '.' which splits on every character (of course,
this is easily fixed by invoking s.split("\\.") instead). The second
possible explanation is that (again) String#split accepts a regular
expression. This means that there could be a performance concern
compared to just splitting on a single character. However, it turns out
that String#split has a fast path for the case of splitting on a single
character and microbenchmarks show that String#split has 1.5x--2x the
throughput of Strings#splitStringToArray. There is a slight behavior
difference between Strings#splitStringToArray and String#split: namely,
the former would return an empty array in cases when the input string
was null or empty but String#split will just NPE at the call site on
null and return a one-element array containing the empty string when the
input string is empty. There was only one place relying on this behavior
and the call site has been modified accordingly.
With this commit we compress HTTP responses provided the client
supports it (as indicated by the HTTP header 'Accept-Encoding').
We're also able to process compressed HTTP requests if needed.
The default compression level is lowered from 6 to 3 as benchmarks
have indicated that this reduces query latency with a negligible
increase in network traffic.
Closes#7309
Previously, we would determine index deletes in the cluster state by
comparing the index metadatas between the current cluster state and the
previous cluster state and decipher which ones were missing (the missing
ones are deleted indices). This led to a situation where a node that
went offline and rejoined the cluster could potentially cause dangling
indices to be imported which should have been deleted, because when a node
rejoins, its previous cluster state does not contain reliable state.
This commit introduces the notion of index tombstones in the cluster
state, where we are explicit about which indices have been deleted.
In the case where the previous cluster state is not useful for index
metadata comparisons, a node now determines which indices are to be
deleted based on these tombstones in the cluster state. There is also
functionality to purge the tombstones after exceeding a certain amount.
Closes#17265Closes#16358Closes#17435
This commit actually bounds the size of the generic thread pool. The
generic thread pool was of type cached, a thread pool with an unbounded
number of workers and an unbounded work queue. With this commit, the
generic thread pool is now of type scaling. As such, the cached thread
pool type has been removed. By default, the generic thread pool is
constructed with a core pool size of four, a max pool size of 128 and
idle workers can be reaped after a keep-alive time of thirty seconds
expires. The work queue for this thread pool remains unbounded.
When I pulled on the thread that is "Remove PROTOTYPEs from
SignificanceHeuristics" I ended up removing SignificanceHeuristicStreams
and replacing it with readNamedWriteable. That seems like a lot at once
but it made sense at the time. And it is what we want in the end, I think.
Anyway, this also converts registration of SignificanceHeuristics to
use ParseFieldRegistry to make them consistent with Queries, Aggregations
and lots of other stuff.
Adds a new and wonderous hack to support serialization checking of
NamedWriteables registered by plugins!
Related to #17085
This commit contains the following improvements/fixes:
1. Renaming method names and variables to better reflect the purpose
of the method and the semantics of the variable.
2. For deleting indexes, replace the closed parameter passed to the
delete index/store methods with obtaining the index's state from the
IndexSettings that is already passed in.
3. Added tests to the IndexWithShadowReplicaIT suite, some of which
show issues in the shadow replica delete process that are captured in
Github issue 17695.
Closes#17638
With this commit we limit the size of all in-flight requests on
HTTP level. The size is guarded by the same circuit breaker that
is also used on transport level. Similarly, the size that is used
is HTTP content length.
Relates #16011
With this commit we limit the size of all in-flight requests on
transport level. The size is guarded by a circuit breaker and is
based on the content size of each request.
By default we use 100% of available heap meaning that the parent
circuit breaker will limit the maximum available size. This value
can be changed by adjusting the setting
network.breaker.inflight_requests.limit
Relates #16011
We have a couple places in the code base that assume that search is always done
on the inverted index. However with the new points API in Lucene 6, this is not
true anymore. This commit makes MappedFieldType.indexedValueForSearch protected
and fixes call sites to keep working for field types that use the inverted
index and either work differently ar throw an exception otherwise. For instance,
it will still be possible to run cross_fields multi match queries on numeric
fields, but the score contributions will not be blended as well as before, and
significant terms aggregations on long terms will not be possible anymore since
points do not record document frequencies.
CBOR is natively supported in Elasticsearch and allows for byte arrays.
This means, that by using CBOR the user can prevent base64 conversions
for the data being sent back and forth.
This PR adds support to extract data from a byte array in addition to
a string. This also required to add a ByteArrayValueSource class.
Sometimes we get a test failure caused by search contexts left open.
The tests include a stack trace of the call that opened the context
but nothing else about the context. This adds more information about
the context that has been left open like what query it was running,
what shard it targeted, and whether or not it was a scroll.
Relates to #17582
We have both `Settings.settingsBuilder` and `Settings.builder` that do exactly
the same thing, so we should keep only one. I kept `Settings.builder` since it
has my preference but also it is the one that we use in examples of the Java API.
This removes the inconsistent output of IP addresses. The format was parsing-unfriendly and it makes it hard
to reason about API responses, such as to _nodes.
With this change in place, it will never print the hostname as part of the default format, which has the
added benefit that it can be used consistently for URIs, which was not the case when the hostname might
appear at the front with "hostname/ip:port".
Aggregations need to perform instanceof calls on MappedFieldType instances in
order to know how they should be parsed or formatted. Instead, we should let
the field types provide a formatter/parser that can can be used.
This change makes the root (/) rest api delegate to a transport action to get the
data for the response. This aligns this rest api with all of the other apis, which
delegate to one or more actions.
In doing this, unit tests were added to provide coverage of the RestMainAction
and the associated classes.