Adds a metadata field to snapshots which can be used to store arbitrary
key-value information. This may be useful for attaching a description of
why a snapshot was taken, tagging snapshots to make categorization
easier, or identifying the source of automatically-created snapshots.
Tests were failing in mixed cluster after more broad warnings were introduced
in 6.x These tests were using `yyyy-MM-dd` pattern which is now warning about
the change of `y` to `u`. However, using predefined pattern
`strict_date` which uses the same format prevents the warning from being
generate and allow smooth upgrade/work in mixed cluster.
relates #42679
The date_histogram accepts an interval which can be either a calendar
interval (DST-aware, leap seconds, arbitrary length of months, etc) or
fixed interval (strict multiples of SI units). Unfortunately this is inferred
by first trying to parse as a calendar interval, then falling back to fixed
if that fails.
This leads to confusing arrangement where `1d` == calendar, but
`2d` == fixed. And if you want a day of fixed time, you have to
specify `24h` (e.g. the next smallest unit). This arrangement is very
error-prone for users.
This PR adds `calendar_interval` and `fixed_interval` parameters to any
code that uses intervals (date_histogram, rollup, composite, datafeed, etc).
Calendar only accepts calendar intervals, fixed accepts any combination of
units (meaning `1d` can be used to specify `24h` in fixed time), and both
are mutually exclusive.
The old interval behavior is deprecated and will throw a deprecation warning.
It is also mutually exclusive with the two new parameters. In the future the
old dual-purpose interval will be removed.
The change applies to both REST and java clients.
If `keyedFilters` is null it assumes there are unkeyed filters...which
will NPE if the unkeyed filters was actually empty.
This refactors to simplify the filter assignment a bit, adds an empty
check and tidies up some formatting.
Today the `_field_caps` API returns the list of indices where a field
is present only if this field has different types within the requested indices.
However if the request is an index pattern (or an alias, or both...) there
is no way to infer the indices if the response contains only fields that have
the same type in all indices. This commit changes the response to always return
the list of indices in the response. It also adds a way to retrieve unmapped field
in a specific section per field called `unmapped`. This section is created for each field
that is present in some indices but not all if the parameter `include_unmapped` is set to
true in the request (defaults to false).
Adds some validation to prevent duplicate source names from being
used in the composite agg.
Also refactored to use a ConstructingObjectParser and removed the
private ctor and setter for sources, making it mandatory.
* fix#35262 define deprecations of API's as a whole and urls
* document hot threads deprecated paths
* deprecate scroll_id as part of the URL, documented only as part of the body which is a safer behaviour as well
* use version numbers up to patch version
* rest spec parser picks up deprecated paths as paths too
(cherry picked from commit 7e06023e7603b7584bfd9ee4e8a1ccd82c208ce7)
The `composite` aggregation maps unknown fields as numerics, this means that
any `after` value that is set on a query with an unmapped field on some indices
will fail if the provided value is not numeric. This commit changes the default
value source to use keyword instead in order to be able to parse any type of after
values.
Pipelines require single-valued agg or a numeric to be returned.
If they don't get that, they throw an exception. Unfortunately, this
exception text is very confusing to users because it usually arises
from pathing "through" multiple terms aggs. The final target is a numeric,
but it's the intermediary aggs that cause the problem.
This commit adds the current agg name to the exception message
so the user knows which "level" is the issue.
Fixes some documentation urls in the rest-api-spec. Some of these URLs
pointed to 404s and a few others pointed to deprecated documentation
when we have better documentation now. I'm not consistent about `master`
vs `current` because we're not consistent in other places and I think we
should solve all of those at once with something a little more
automatic.
* Replace usages RandomizedTestingTask with built-in Gradle Test (#40978)
This commit replaces the existing RandomizedTestingTask and supporting code with Gradle's built-in JUnit support via the Test task type. Additionally, the previous workaround to disable all tasks named "test" and create new unit testing tasks named "unitTest" has been removed such that the "test" task now runs unit tests as per the normal Gradle Java plugin conventions.
(cherry picked from commit 323f312bbc829a63056a79ebe45adced5099f6e6)
* Fix forking JVM runner
* Don't bump shadow plugin version
This change rejects an illegal combination of flush parameters where
force is true, but wait_if_ongoing is false. This combination is trappy
and should be forbidden.
Closes#36342
A user reported that the same query that takes ~900ms when querying an index
pattern only takes ~50ms when only querying indices that have matches. The
query is a date range query and we confirmed that the `can_match` phase works
as expected. I was able to reproduce this issue locally with a single node: with
900 1-shard indices, a query to an index pattern that matches all indices runs
in ~90ms while a query to the only index that has matches runs in 0-1ms.
This ended up not being related to the `can_match` phase but to the cost of
resolving aliases when querying an index pattern that matches lots of indices.
In that case, we first resolve the index pattern to a list of concrete indices
and then for each concrete index, we check whether it was matched through an
alias, meaning we might have to apply alias filters. Unfortunately this second
per-index operation runs in linear time with the number of matched concrete
indices, which means that alias resolution runs in O(num_indices^2) overall.
So queries get exponentially slower as an index pattern matches more indices.
I reorganized alias resolution into a one-step operation that runs in linear
time with the number of matches indices, and then a per-index operation that
runs in linear time with the number of aliases of this index. This makes alias
resolution run is O(num_indices * num_aliases_per_index) overall instead. When
testing the scenario described above, the `took` went down from ~90ms to ~10ms.
It is still more than the 0-1ms latency that one gets when only querying the
single index that has data, but still much better than what we had before.
Closes#40248
We discussed recently that the cluster state API should be considered
"internal" and therefore our usual cast-iron stability guarantees do not hold
for this API.
However, there are a good number of REST tests that try to identify the master
node. Today they call `GET /_cluster/state` API and extract the master node ID
from the response. In fact many of these tests just want an arbitary node ID
(or perhaps a data node ID) so an alternative is to call `GET _nodes` or `GET
_nodes/data:true` and obtain a node ID from the keys of the `nodes` map in the
response.
This change adds the ability for YAML-based REST tests to extract an arbitrary
key from a map so that they can obtain a node ID from the nodes info API
instead of using the master node ID from the cluster state API.
Relates #40047.
Adds the search_as_you_type field type that acts like a text field optimized
for as-you-type search completion. It creates a couple subfields that analyze
the indexed terms as shingles, against which full terms are queried, and a
prefix subfield that analyze terms as the largest shingle size used and
edge-ngrams, against which partial terms are queried
Adds a match_bool_prefix query type that creates a boolean clause of a term
query for each term except the last, for which a boolean clause with a prefix
query is created.
The match_bool_prefix query is the recommended way of querying a search as you
type field, which will boil down to term queries for each shingle of the input
text on the appropriate shingle field, and the final (possibly partial) term
as a term query on the prefix field. This field type also supports phrase and
phrase prefix queries however
Right now, the stats API only provides refresh metrics regarding
internal refreshes. This isn't very useful and somewhat misleading for
cluster administrators since the internal refreshes are not indicative
of documents being available for search.
In this PR I added a new metric for collecting external refreshes as
they occur and exposing them through the stats API. Now, calling an
endpoint for stats will yield external refresh metrics as well.
Relates #36712
Today we don't return segments stats for closed indices which makes it
hard to tell how much memory such an index would require. With this change
we return the statistics if requested by setting `include_unloaded_segments` to
true on the rest request.
Relates to #39512
This commit removes the cluster state size field from the cluster state
response, and drops the backwards compatibility layer added in 6.7.0 to
continue to support this field. As calculation of this field was
expensive and had dubious value, we have elected to remove this field.
This PR adds an internal REST API for querying context information about
Painless whitelists.
Commands include the following:
GET /_scripts/painless/_context -- retrieves a list of contexts
GET /_scripts/painless/_context?context=%name% retrieves all available
information about the API for this specific context
Computing the compressed size of the cluster state on every invocation
of cluster:monitor/state action is expensive, and the value of this
field is dubious anyway. Therefore we want to remove computing this
field. As a first step, we stop computing and return this field by
default. To avoid breaking users, we will give them a system property to
use to tide them over until the next major release when we will actually
remove this field. This comes with a deprecation warning too, and the
backport to the appropriate minor will also include a note in the
migration guide. There will be a follow-up to remove this field in the
next major version.
the test "Implicitly create a typeless ... typed template"
fails occasionally because the index operation hasn't
propogated to update the index mapping in time for the
following assertion about a dynamically mapped field "bar".
error failed with:
```
field [test-1.mappings.my_type.properties.bar] doesn't have a true value
Expected: not null
but: was null
```
refreshing the index should resolve this timing issue.
Today we have no chance to fetch actual segment stats for segments that
are currently unloaded. This is relevant in the case of frozen indices.
This allows to monitor how much memory a frozen index would use if it was
unfrozen.
Backport support for replicating closed indices (#39499)
Before this change, closed indexes were simply not replicated. It was therefore
possible to close an index and then decommission a data node without knowing
that this data node contained shards of the closed index, potentially leading to
data loss. Shards of closed indices were not completely taken into account when
balancing the shards within the cluster, or automatically replicated through shard
copies, and they were not easily movable from node A to node B using APIs like
Cluster Reroute without being fully reopened and closed again.
This commit changes the logic executed when closing an index, so that its shards
are not just removed and forgotten but are instead reinitialized and reallocated on
data nodes using an engine implementation which does not allow searching or
indexing, which has a low memory overhead (compared with searchable/indexable
opened shards) and which allows shards to be recovered from peer or promoted
as primaries when needed.
This new closing logic is built on top of the new Close Index API introduced in
6.7.0 (#37359). Some pre-closing sanity checks are executed on the shards before
closing them, and closing an index on a 8.0 cluster will reinitialize the index shards
and therefore impact the cluster health.
Some APIs have been adapted to make them work with closed indices:
- Cluster Health API
- Cluster Reroute API
- Cluster Allocation Explain API
- Recovery API
- Cat Indices
- Cat Shards
- Cat Health
- Cat Recovery
This commit contains all the following changes (most recent first):
* c6c42a1 Adapt NoOpEngineTests after #39006
* 3f9993d Wait for shards to be active after closing indices (#38854)
* 5e7a428 Adapt the Cluster Health API to closed indices (#39364)
* 3e61939 Adapt CloseFollowerIndexIT for replicated closed indices (#38767)
* 71f5c34 Recover closed indices after a full cluster restart (#39249)
* 4db7fd9 Adapt the Recovery API for closed indices (#38421)
* 4fd1bb2 Adapt more tests suites to closed indices (#39186)
* 0519016 Add replica to primary promotion test for closed indices (#39110)
* b756f6c Test the Cluster Shard Allocation Explain API with closed indices (#38631)
* c484c66 Remove index routing table of closed indices in mixed versions clusters (#38955)
* 00f1828 Mute CloseFollowerIndexIT.testCloseAndReopenFollowerIndex()
* e845b0a Do not schedule Refresh/Translog/GlobalCheckpoint tasks for closed indices (#38329)
* cf9a015 Adapt testIndexCanChangeCustomDataPath for replicated closed indices (#38327)
* b9becdd Adapt testPendingTasks() for replicated closed indices (#38326)
* 02cc730 Allow shards of closed indices to be replicated as regular shards (#38024)
* e53a9be Fix compilation error in IndexShardIT after merge with master
* cae4155 Relax NoOpEngine constraints (#37413)
* 54d110b [RCI] Adapt NoOpEngine to latest FrozenEngine changes
* c63fd69 [RCI] Add NoOpEngine for closed indices (#33903)
Relates to #33888
This test had been disabled because of test failures, but it only affected the
6.x branch. The fix for 6.x is at #39054. On master/7.x/7.0 we can reenable the
test as-is.
This commit changes the `TransportVerifyShardBeforeCloseAction` so that it
always forces the flush of the shard. It seems that #37961 is not sufficient to
ensure that the translog and the Lucene commit share the exact same max
seq no and global checkpoint information in case of one or more noop
operations have been made.
The `BulkWithUpdatesIT.testThatMissingIndexDoesNotAbortFullBulkRequest`
and `FrozenIndexTests.testFreezeEmptyIndexWithTranslogOps` test this trivial
situation and they both fail 1 on 10 executions.
Relates to #33888
Elasticsearch has long [supported](https://www.elastic.co/guide/en/elasticsearch/reference/current/docs-index_.html#index-versioning) compare and set (a.k.a optimistic concurrency control) operations using internal document versioning. Sadly that approach is flawed and can sometime do the wrong thing. Here's the relevant excerpt from the resiliency status page:
> When a primary has been partitioned away from the cluster there is a short period of time until it detects this. During that time it will continue indexing writes locally, thereby updating document versions. When it tries to replicate the operation, however, it will discover that it is partitioned away. It won’t acknowledge the write and will wait until the partition is resolved to negotiate with the master on how to proceed. The master will decide to either fail any replicas which failed to index the operations on the primary or tell the primary that it has to step down because a new primary has been chosen in the meantime. Since the old primary has already written documents, clients may already have read from the old primary before it shuts itself down. The version numbers of these reads may not be unique if the new primary has already accepted writes for the same document
We recently [introduced](https://www.elastic.co/guide/en/elasticsearch/reference/6.x/optimistic-concurrency-control.html) a new sequence number based approach that doesn't suffer from this dirty reads problem.
This commit removes support for internal versioning as a concurrency control mechanism in favor of the sequence number approach.
Relates to #1078
`CreateIndexRequest#source(Map<String, Object>, ... )`, which is used when
deserializing index creation requests, accidentally accepts mappings that are
nested twice under the type key (as described in the bug report #38266).
This in turn causes us to be too lenient in parsing typeless mappings. In
particular, we accept the following index creation request, even though it
should not contain the type key `_doc`:
```
PUT index?include_type_name=false
{
"mappings": {
"_doc": {
"properties": { ... }
}
}
}
```
There is a similar issue for both 'put templates' and 'put mappings' requests
as well.
This PR makes the minimal changes to detect and reject these typed mappings in
requests. It does not address #38266 generally, or attempt a larger refactor
around types in these server-side requests, as I think this should be done at a
later time.
X-Pack security supports built-in authentication service
`token-service` that allows access tokens to be used to
access Elasticsearch without using Basic authentication.
The tokens are generated by `token-service` based on
OAuth2 spec. The access token is a short-lived token
(defaults to 20m) and refresh token with a lifetime of 24 hours,
making them unsuitable for long-lived or recurring tasks where
the system might go offline thereby failing refresh of tokens.
This commit introduces a built-in authentication service
`api-key-service` that adds support for long-lived tokens aka API
keys to access Elasticsearch. The `api-key-service` is consulted
after `token-service` in the authentication chain. By default,
if TLS is enabled then `api-key-service` is also enabled.
The service can be disabled using the configuration setting.
The API keys:-
- by default do not have an expiration but expiration can be
configured where the API keys need to be expired after a
certain amount of time.
- when generated will keep authentication information of the user that
generated them.
- can be defined with a role describing the privileges for accessing
Elasticsearch and will be limited by the role of the user that
generated them
- can be invalidated via invalidation API
- information can be retrieved via a get API
- that have been expired or invalidated will be retained for 1 week
before being deleted. The expired API keys remover task handles this.
Following are the API key management APIs:-
1. Create API Key - `PUT/POST /_security/api_key`
2. Get API key(s) - `GET /_security/api_key`
3. Invalidate API Key(s) `DELETE /_security/api_key`
The API keys can be used to access Elasticsearch using `Authorization`
header, where the auth scheme is `ApiKey` and the credentials, is the
base64 encoding of API key Id and API key separated by a colon.
Example:-
```
curl -H "Authorization: ApiKey YXBpLWtleS1pZDphcGkta2V5" http://localhost:9200/_cluster/health
```
Closes#34383
This adds a dedicated field mapper that supports nanosecond resolution -
at the price of a reduced date range.
When using the date field mapper, the time is stored as milliseconds since the epoch
in a long in lucene. This field mapper stores the time in nanoseconds
since the epoch - which means its range is much smaller, ranging roughly from
1970 to 2262.
Note that aggregations will still be in milliseconds.
However docvalue fields will have full nanosecond resolution
Relates #27330
This PR removes the temporary change we made to the yml test harness in #37285
to automatically set `include_type_name` to `true` in index creation requests
if it's not already specified. This is possible now that the vast majority of
index creation requests were updated to be typeless in #37611. A few additional
tests also needed updating here.
Additionally, this PR updates the test harness to set `include_type_name` to
`false` in index creation requests when communicating with 6.x nodes. This
mirrors the logic added in #37611 to allow for typeless document write requests
in test set-up code. With this update in place, we can remove many references
to `include_type_name: false` from the yml tests.
The terms aggregator loads the global ordinals to retrieve the cardinality of the field to aggregate on. This information is then used to select the strategy to use for the aggregation (breadth_first or depth_first). However this should be avoided if the execution_hint is explicitly set to map since this mode doesn't really need the global ordinals. Since we still need the cardinality of the field this change picks the maximum cardinality in the segments as an estimation of the total cardinality to select the strategy to use (breadth_first or depth_first). This estimation is only used if the execution hint is set to map, otherwise the global ordinals are still used to retrieve the accurate cardinality.
Closes#37705
Implements `geotile_grid` aggregation
This patch refactors previous implementation https://github.com/elastic/elasticsearch/pull/30240
This code uses the same base classes as `geohash_grid` agg, but uses a different hashing
algorithm to allow zoom consistency. Each grid bucket is aligned to Web Mercator tiles.
With #37566 we have introduced the ability to merge multiple search responses into one. That makes it possible to expose a new way of executing cross-cluster search requests, that makes CCS much faster whenever there is network latency between the CCS coordinating node and the remote clusters. The coordinating node can now send a single search request to each remote cluster, which gets reduced by each one of them. from + size results are requested to each cluster, and the reduce phase in each cluster is non final (meaning that buckets are not pruned and pipeline aggs are not executed). The CCS coordinating node performs an additional, final reduction, which produces one search response out of the multiple responses received from the different clusters.
This new execution path will be activated by default for any CCS request unless a scroll is provided or inner hits are requested as part of field collapsing. The search API accepts now a new parameter called ccs_minimize_roundtrips that allows to opt-out of the default behaviour.
Relates to #32125
Currently the put-mapping API assumes that because the type name is `_doc` then
it is dealing with a typeless put-mapping call. Yet we still allow running the
put-mapping API in a typed fashion with `_doc` as a type name. The current logic
triggers surprising errors when doing a typed put-mapping call with `_doc` as a
type name on an index that has a type already.
This is a bit of a corner-case, but is more important on 6.x due to the fact
that using the index API with `_doc` as a type name triggers typed calls to the
put-mapping API with `_doc` as a type name.
Today we pass `discovery.zen.minimum_master_nodes` to nodes started up in
tests, but for 7.x nodes this setting is not required as it has no effect.
This commit removes this setting so that nodes are started with more realistic
configurations, and deprecates it.
This PR attempts to remove all typed calls from our YAML REST tests. The PR adds include_type_name: false to create index requests that use a mapping and also to put mapping requests. It also removes _type from index requests where they haven't already been removed. The PR ignores tests named *_with_types.yml since this are specifically testing typed API behaviour.
The change also includes changing the test harness to add the type _doc to index, update, get and bulk requests that do not specify the document type when the test is running against a mixed 7.x/6.x cluster.
Doc-value fields now return a value that is based on the mappings rather than
the script implementation by default.
This deprecates the special `use_field_mapping` docvalue format which was added
in #29639 only to ease the transition to 7.x and it is not necessary anymore in
7.0.
Currently if you mix typed templates and typeless index creation or typeless
templates and typed index creation then you will end up with an error because
Elasticsearch tries to create an index that has multiple types: `_doc` and
the explicit type name that you used.
This commit proposes to give precedence to the index creation call so that
the type from the template will be ignored if the index creation call is
typeless while the template is typed, and the type from the index creation
call will be used if there is a typeless template.
This is consistent with the fact that index creation already "wins" if a field
is defined differently in the index creation call and in a template: the
definition from the index creation call is used in such cases.
Closes#37773
This commit adds the code in the HTTP layer that will parse exclusion wildcard
expressions.
The existing code issues 404s for wildcards as well as explicit indices.
But, in general, in an expression with exclude wildcards (-...*) following other
include wildcards, there is no way to tell if the include wildcard produced no
results or they were subsequently excluded.
Therefore, the proposed change is breaking the behavior of 404s for
wildcards. Specifically, no 404s will be returned for wildcards, even
if they are not followed by exclude wildcards or the exclude wildcards
could not possibly exclude what has previously been included.
Only explicitly requested aliases will be called out as missing.
The update request has a lesser known support for a one off update of a known document version. This PR adds an a seq# based alternative to power these operations.
Relates #36148
Relates #10708
This changes adds the support to handle `nested` fields in the `composite`
aggregation. A `nested` aggregation can be used as parent of a `composite`
aggregation in order to target `nested` fields in the `sources`.
Closes#28611
This commit moves the aggregation and mapping code from joda time to
java time. This includes field mappers, root object mappers, aggregations with date
histograms, query builders and a lot of changes within tests.
The cut-over to java time is a requirement so that we can support nanoseconds
properly in a future field mapper.
Relates #27330
Users may require the sequence number and primary terms to perform optimistic concurrency control operations. Currently, you can get the sequence number via the `docvalues_fields` API but the primary term is not accessible because it is maintained by the `SeqNoFieldMapper` and the infrastructure can't find it.
This commit adds a dedicated sub fetch phase to return both numbers that is connected to a new `seq_no_primary_term` parameter.
From #29453 and #37285, the `include_type_name` parameter was already present and defaulted to false. This PR makes the following updates:
- Add deprecation warnings to `RestPutMappingAction`, plus tests in `RestPutMappingActionTests`.
- Add a typeless 'put mappings' method to the Java HLRC, and deprecate the old typed version. To do this cleanly, I opted to create a new `PutMappingRequest` object that differs from the existing server one.
This change adds deprecation warning to the indices.get_mapping API in case the
"inlcude_type_name" parameter is set to "true" and changes the parsing code in
GetMappingsResponse to parse the type-less response instead of the one
containing types. As a consequence the HLRC client doesn't need to force
"include_type_name=true" any more and the GetMappingsResponseTests can be
adapted to the new format as well. Also removing some "include_type_name"
parameters in yaml test and docs where not necessary.
* Default include_type_name to false for get and put mappings.
* Default include_type_name to false for get field mappings.
* Add a constant for the default include_type_name value.
* Default include_type_name to false for get and put index templates.
* Default include_type_name to false for create index.
* Update create index calls in REST documentation to use include_type_name=true.
* Some minor clean-ups around the get index API.
* In REST tests, use include_type_name=true by default for index creation.
* Make sure to use 'expression == false'.
* Clarify the different IndexTemplateMetaData toXContent methods.
* Fix FullClusterRestartIT#testSnapshotRestore.
* Fix the ml_anomalies_default_mappings test.
* Fix GetFieldMappingsResponseTests and GetIndexTemplateResponseTests.
We make sure to specify include_type_name=true during xContent parsing,
so we continue to test the legacy typed responses. XContent generation
for the typeless responses is currently only covered by REST tests,
but we will be adding unit test coverage for these as we implement
each typeless API in the Java HLRC.
This commit also refactors GetMappingsResponse to follow the same appraoch
as the other mappings-related responses, where we read include_type_name
out of the xContent params, instead of creating a second toXContent method.
This gives better consistency in the response parsing code.
* Fix more REST tests.
* Improve some wording in the create index documentation.
* Add a note about types removal in the create index docs.
* Fix SmokeTestMonitoringWithSecurityIT#testHTTPExporterWithSSL.
* Make sure to mention include_type_name in the REST docs for affected APIs.
* Make sure to use 'expression == false' in FullClusterRestartIT.
* Mention include_type_name in the REST templates docs.
With the `include_type_name` available now for indices.get on 6.x after the
backport, the corresponsing yaml test can include anything from 6.7 on.
Also changing the RestGetIndicesActionTests base test class.
* Add include_type_name to the get field mappings API.
* Make sure the API specification lists include_type_name as a boolean.
* Add include_type_name to the get index templates API.
* Add include_type_name to the put index templates API.
This change adds support for the 'include_type_name' parameter for the
indices.get API. This parameter, which defaults to `false` starting in 7.0,
changes the response to not include the indices type names any longer.
If the parameter is set in the request, we additionally emit a deprecation
warning since using the parameter should be only temporarily necessary while
adapting to the new response format and we will remove it with the next major
version.
In Lucene 8 searches can skip non-competitive hits if the total hit count is not requested.
It is also possible to track the number of hits up to a certain threshold. This is a trade off to speed up searches while still being able to know a lower bound of the total hit count. This change adds the ability to set this threshold directly in the track_total_hits search option. A boolean value (true, false) indicates whether the total hit count should be tracked in the response. When set as an integer this option allows to compute a lower bound of the total hits while preserving the ability to skip non-competitive hits when enough matches have been collected.
Relates #33028
The `composite` aggregation uses a TreeMap to keep track of the best buckets.
This ensures a log(n) time cost to insert new buckets but also to retrieve buckets
that are already present in the map. In order to speed up the retrieval of buckets
this change replaces the TreeMap with a priority queue and a HashMap. The insertion
cost is still log(n) but the retrieval of buckets through the HashMap is now done in constant
time. This optimization can bring significant improvement since each document needs
to check if its associated buckets are already present in the current best buckets.
The QueryStringQueryBuilder does not currently delegate to the field mapper's prefixQuery
method, so does not use indexed prefixes. This commit corrects this.
It also fixes a bug where a query a* would not match the word a if indexed prefixes were used with
a minchar setting of 2.
Negative timestamps are currently supported in joda time. These are
dates before epoch. However, it doesn't really make sense to have a
negative timestamp, since this is a modern format. Any dates before
epoch can be represented with normal date formats, like ISO8601.
Additionally, implementing negative epoch timestamp parsing in java time
has an edge case which would more than double the code required. This
commit deprecates use of negative epoch timestamps.
The default index_prefix settings will index prefixes of between 2 and 5 characters in length.
Currently, if a prefix search falls outside of this range at either end we fall back to a standard prefix
expansion, which is still very expensive for single character prefixes. However, we have an option
here to use a wildcard expansion rather than a prefix expansion, so that a query of a* gets remapped
to a? against the _index_prefix field - likely to be a very small set of terms, and certain to be much
smaller than a* against the whole index.
This commit adds this extra level of mapping for any prefix term whose length is one less than
the min_chars parameter of the index_prefixes field.
* Deprecate types in index API
- deprecate type-based constructors of IndexRequest
- update tests to use typeless IndexRequest constructors
- no yaml tests as they have been already added in #35790
Relates to #35190
This change adds a new untyped endpoint `{index}/_source/{id}` for both the
GET and the HEAD methods to get the source of a document or check for its
existance. It also adds deprecation warnings to RestGetSourceAction that emit
a warning when the old deprecated "type" parameter is still used. Also updating
documentation and tests where appropriate.
Relates to #35190
The following updates were made:
* Add deprecation warnings to `RestUpdateAction`, plus a test in `RestUpdateActionTests`.
* Deprecate relevant methods on the Java HLRC requests/ responses.
* Add HLRC integration tests for the typed APIs.
* Update documentation (for both the REST API and Java HLRC).
* Fix failing integration tests.
Because of an earlier PR, the REST yml tests were already updated (one version without types, and another legacy version that retains types).
* Add IntervalQueryBuilder with support for match and combine intervals
* Add relative intervals
* feedback
* YAML test - broekn
* yaml test; begin to add block source
* Add block; make disjunction its own source
* WIP
* Extract IntervalBuilder and add tests for it
* Fix eq/hashcode in Disjunction
* New yaml test
* checkstyle
* license headers
* test fix
* YAML format
* YAML formatting again
* yaml tests; javadoc
* Add OR test -> requires fix from LUCENE-8586
* Add docs
* Re-do API
* Clint's API
* Delete bash script
* doc fixes
* imports
* docs
* test fix
* feedback
* comma
* docs fixes
* Tidy up doc references to old rule
The following updates were made:
- Add a new untyped endpoint `{index}/_explain/{id}`.
- Add deprecation warnings to Rest*Action, plus tests in Rest*ActionTests.
- For each REST yml test, make sure there is one version without types, and another legacy version that retains types (called *_with_types.yml).
- Deprecate relevant methods on the Java HLRC requests/ responses.
- Update documentation (for both the REST API and Java HLRC).
For each API, the following updates were made:
- Add deprecation warnings to `Rest*Action`, plus tests in `Rest*ActionTests`.
- For each REST yml test, make sure there is one version without types, and another legacy version that retains types (called *_with_types.yml).
- Deprecate relevant methods on the Java HLRC requests/ responses.
- Update documentation (for both the REST API and Java HLRC).
* Add deprecation warnings to `Rest*TermVectorsAction`, plus tests in `Rest*TermVectorsActionTests`.
* Deprecate relevant methods on the Java HLRC requests/ responses.
* Update documentation (for both the REST API and Java HLRC).
* For each REST yml test, create one version without types, and another legacy version that retains types (called *_with_types.yml).
This commit changes the format of the `hits.total` in the search response to be an object with
a `value` and a `relation`. The `value` indicates the number of hits that match the query and the
`relation` indicates whether the number is accurate (in which case the relation is equals to `eq`)
or a lower bound of the total (in which case it is equals to `gte`).
This change also adds a parameter called `rest_total_hits_as_int` that can be used in the
search APIs to opt out from this change (retrieve the total hits as a number in the rest response).
Note that currently all search responses are accurate (`track_total_hits: true`) or they don't contain
`hits.total` (`track_total_hits: true`). We'll add a way to get a lower bound of the total hits in a
follow up (to allow numbers to be passed to `track_total_hits`).
Relates #33028
This commit makes `document`, `update`, `explain`, `termvectors` and `mapping`
typeless APIs work on indices that have a type whose name is not `_doc`.
Unfortunately, this needs to be a bit of a hack since I didn't want calls with
random type names to see documents with the type name that the user had chosen
upon type creation.
The `explain` and `termvectors` do not support being called without a type for
now so the test is just using `_doc` as a type for now, we will need to fix
tests later but this shouldn't require further changes server-side since passing
`_doc` as a type name is what typeless APIs do internally anyway.
Relates #35190
The support for rest_total_hits_as_int has already been merged to 6x
in #35848 so this change adds this new option to master. The plan was
to add this new option as part of #35848 but we've decided to wait a few
days before merging this breaking change so this commit just handles
the new option as a noop exactly like 6x for now. This will allow
users to migrate to this parameter before #35848 is merged.
Relates #33028
The `wait_for_metadata_version` parameter will instruct the cluster state
api to only return a cluster state until the metadata's version is equal or
greater than the version specified in `wait_for_metadata_version`. If
the specified `wait_for_timeout` has expired then a timed out response
is returned. (a response with no cluster state and wait for timed out flag set to true)
In the case metadata's version is equal or higher than `wait_for_metadata_version`
then the api will immediately return.
This feature is useful to avoid external components from constantly
polling the cluster state to whether somethings have changed in the
cluster state's metadata.
* Deprecate types in count requests.
* Move RestCountAction to the 'search' package.
* Deprecate types in multi search requests.
* Add tests for types deprecation in the _search endpoint.
We've decided that the bulk, delete, get, index, update, and search APIs should not
contain this request parameter, and we will instead accept both typed and typeless calls.
Today if a wildcard, date-math expression or alias expands/resolves
to an index that is search-throttled we still search it. This is likely
not the desired behavior since it can unexpectedly slow down searches
significantly.
This change adds a new indices option that allows `search`, `count`
and `msearch` to ignore throttled indices by default. Users can
force expansion to throttled indices by using `ignore_throttled=true`
on the rest request to expand also to throttled indices.
Relates to #34352
This commit adds a new single value metric aggregation that calculates
the statistic called median absolute deviation, which is a measure of
variability that works on more types of data than standard deviation
Our calculation of MAD is approximated using t-digests. In the collect
phase, we collect each value visited into a t-digest. In the reduce
phase, we merge all value t-digests, then create a t-digest of
deviations using the first t-digest's median and centroids
Deprecates `_source_include` and `_source_exclude` url parameters
in favor of `_source_inclues` and `_source_excludes` because those
are consistent with the rest of Elasticsearch's APIs.
Relates to #22792
This change adds throttling to the update-by-query and delete-by-query cases
similar to throttling for reindex. This mostly means additional methods on the
client class itself, since the request hits the same RestHandler, just with
slightly different endpoints, and also the return values are similar.
Mappings with completion type and multi-fields, were not able to index array or
object format on completion fields. Only string format was supported.
This is fixed by providing multiField parser with externalValueContext with already parsed object
closes#15115
Although we allow to index BigInteger and BigDecimal into a keyword
field, source filtering on these fields would fail
as XContentBuilder was not able to deserialize BigInteger and BigDecimal
to json.
This modifies XContentBuilder to allow to handle BigInteger and
BigDecimal.
Closes#32395
This commit duplicates REST tests for the
- `indices.create`
- `indices.put_mapping`
- `indices.get_mapping`
- `index`
- `get`
- `delete`
- `update`
- `bulk`
APIs, so that we both test them when used without types (include_type_name=false)
and with types, mostly for mixed-version cluster tests.
Given a suite called `X_test_name.yml`, I first copied it to
`(X+1)_test_name_with_types.yml` and then changed `X_test_name.yml` to set
`include_type_name=false` on every API that supports it.
Relates #15613
This commit fixes bwc rest tests for the doc_values format deprecation
in search. The message of the deprecation changed in 6.4.1 so the bwc test
should not check against 6.4.0.
* Improves doc values format deprecation message
This changes the deprecation message when doc values fields do not
supply a format form logging a deprecation warning for each offending
field individually to logging a single message which lists all
offending fields
Closes#33572
* Updates YAML test with new deprecation message
Also adds a test to ensure multiple deprecation warnings are collated
into one message
* Condenses collection of fields without format check
Moves the collection of fields that don't have a format to a separate
loop and moves the logging of the deprecation warning to be next to it
at the expesnse of looping through the field list twice
* fixes typo
* Fixes test
Now that types are unique per mapping we can retrieve the document mapper
without referencing the type. This fixes an NPE when stored fields are disabled.
For 6x we'll need a different fix since mappings can still have multiple types.
Relates #32941
We used to set `maxScore` to `0` within `TopDocs` in situations where there is really no score as the size was set to `0` and scores were not even tracked. In such scenarios, `Float.Nan` is more appropriate, which gets converted to `max_score: null` on the REST layer. That's also more consistent with lucene which set `maxScore` to `Float.Nan` when merging empty `TopDocs` (see `TopDocs#merge`).
Today `_msearch` doesn't allow modifying the `max_concurrent_shard_requests`
per sub search request. This change adds support for setting this parameter on
all sub-search requests in an `_msearch`.
Relates to #31877
* Make cluster stats response contain cluster UUID
* Updating constructor usage in Monitoring tests
* Adding cluster_uuid field to Cluster Stats API reference doc
* Adding rest api spec test for expecting cluster_uuid in cluster stats response
* Adding missing newline
* Indenting do section properly
* Missed a spot!
* Fixing the test cluster ID
Adds a new single-value metrics aggregation that computes the weighted
average of numeric values that are extracted from the aggregated
documents. These values can be extracted from specific numeric
fields in the documents.
When calculating a regular average, each datapoint has an equal "weight"; it
contributes equally to the final value. In contrast, weighted averages
scale each datapoint differently. The amount that each datapoint contributes
to the final value is extracted from the document, or provided by a script.
As a formula, a weighted average is the `∑(value * weight) / ∑(weight)`
A regular average can be thought of as a weighted average where every value has
an implicit weight of `1`.
Closes#15731
* add support for is_write_index in put-alias body parsing
The Rest Put-Alias Action does separate parsing of the alias body
to construct the IndicesAliasesRequest. This extra parsing
was missed in #30703.
* test flag was not just ignored by the parser
* disable backcompat tests
This creates a YAML test "features" that indices if the cluster being
tested has xpack installed (`xpack`) or if it does *not* have xpack
installed (`no_xpack`). It uses those features to centralize skipping
a few tests that fail if xpack is installed.
The plan is to use this in a followup to skip docs tests that require
xpack when xpack is not installed. We *plan* to use the declaration
of required license level on the docs page to generate the required
`skip`.
Closes#30933.
Get Mapping currently throws index not found exception (and returns
404 status code) from the REST layer whenever an index was specified
and no indices have been returned. We should not have this logic in the
REST layer though as only our index resolver should decide whether we
need to throw exceptions or not based on provided indices and corresponding
indices options.
Closes#31485
This commit adds the is-write-index flag for aliases.
It allows requests to set the flag, and responses to display the flag.
It does not validate and/or affect any indexing/getting/updating behavior
of Elasticsearch -- this will be done in a follow-up PR.
Add a `NodeSelector` so that users can filter the nodes that receive
requests based on node attributes.
I believe we'll need this to backport #30523 and we want it anyway.
I also added a bash script to help with rebuilding the sniffer parsing
test documents.
Allows users of the Low Level REST client to specify which hosts a
request should be run on. They implement the `NodeSelector` interface
or reuse a built in selector like `NOT_MASTER_ONLY` to chose which nodes
are valid. Using it looks like:
```
Request request = new Request("POST", "/foo/_search");
RequestOptions options = request.getOptions().toBuilder();
options.setNodeSelector(NodeSelector.NOT_MASTER_ONLY);
request.setOptions(options);
...
```
This introduces a new `Node` object which contains a `HttpHost` and the
metadata about the host. At this point that metadata is just `version`
and `roles` but I plan to add node attributes in a followup. The
canonical way to **get** this metadata is to use the `Sniffer` to pull
the information from the Elasticsearch cluster.
I've marked this as "breaking-java" because it breaks custom
implementations of `HostsSniffer` by renaming the interface to
`NodesSniffer` and by changing it from returning a `List<HttpHost>` to a
`List<Node>`. It *shouldn't* break anyone else though.
Because we expect to find it useful, this also implements `host_selector`
support to `do` statements in the yaml tests. Using it looks a little
like:
```
---
"example test":
- skip:
features: host_selector
- do:
host_selector:
version: " - 7.0.0" # same syntax as skip
apiname:
something: true
```
The `do` section parses the `version` string into a host selector that
uses the same version comparison logic as the `skip` section. When the
`do` section is executed it passed the off to the `RestClient`, using
the `ElasticsearchHostsSniffer` to sniff the required metadata.
The idea is to use this in mixed version tests to target a specific
version of Elasticsearch so we can be sure about the deprecation
logging though we don't currently have any examples that need it. We do,
however, have at least one open pull request that requires something
like this to properly test it.
Closes#21888
With `max_concurrent_shard_requests` we used to throttle / limit
the number of concurrent shard requests a high level search request
can execute per node. This had several problems since it limited the
number on a global level based on the number of nodes. This change
now throttles the number of concurrent requests per node while still
allowing concurrency across multiple nodes.
Closes#31192
The following analyzers were moved from server module to analysis-common module:
`snowball`, `arabic`, `armenian`, `basque`, `bengali`, `brazilian`, `bulgarian`,
`catalan`, `chinese`, `cjk`, `czech`, `danish`, `dutch`, `english`, `finnish`,
`french`, `galician` and `german`.
Relates to #23658
* Fix index prefixes to work with span_multi
Text fields that use `index_prefixes` can rewrite `prefix` queries into
`term` queries internally. This commit fix the handling of this rewriting
in the `span_multi` query.
This change also copies the index options of the text field into the
prefix field in order to be able to run positional queries. This is mandatory
for `span_multi` to work but this could also be useful to optimize `match_phrase_prefix`
queries in a follow up. Note that this change can only be done on indices created
after 6.3 since we set the index options to doc only in this version.
Fixes#31056
Specifying `index_phrases: true` on a text field mapping will add a subsidiary
[field]._index_phrase field, indexing two-term shingles from the parent field.
The parent analysis chain is re-used, wrapped with a FixedShingleFilter.
At query time, if a phrase match query is executed, the mapping will redirect it
to run against the subsidiary field.
This should trade faster phrase querying for a larger index and longer indexing
times.
Relates to #27049
Since master will always communicate with a >=6.4 node, the logic for
checking if the node is 6.4 and conditionally reading and writing based
on that can be removed from master. This logic will stay in 6.x as it is
the bridge to the cleaner response in master. This also unmutes the
failing test due to this bwc change.
Closes#30807
This change deprecates completion queries and documents without context that target a
context enabled completion field. Querying without context degrades the search
performance considerably (even when the number of indexed contexts is low).
This commit targets master but the deprecation will take place in 6.x and the functionality
will be removed in 7 in a follow up.
Closes#29222
This change adds a new option to the composite aggregation named `missing_bucket`.
This option can be set by source and dictates whether documents without a value for the
source should be ignored. When set to true, documents without a value for a field emits
an explicit `null` value which is then added in the composite bucket.
The `missing` option that allows to set an explicit value (instead of `null`) is deprecated in this change and will be removed in a follow up (only in 7.x).
This commit also changes how the big arrays are allocated, instead of reserving
the provided `size` for all sources they are created with a small intial size and they grow
depending on the number of buckets created by the aggregation:
Closes#29380
Include size of snapshot in snapshot metadata
Adds difference of number of files (and file sizes) between prev and current snapshot. Total number/size reflects total number/size of files in snapshot.
Closes#18543
This PR breaks the include_defaults functionality of the get settings API into its own
test, which is skipped for mixed-mode clusters containing pre-6.4 nodes.
The writeTo method of VerifyRepositoryResponse incorrectly used its
local version to determine what it was receiving, rather than the
sender's version. This fixes a bug that ocassionally happened when a 6.4
master node sent data to a 7.0 client, causing the number of bytes to be
improperly read. This also unmutes the test.
Closes#30807
This commit adds the ability to configure how a docvalue field should be
formatted, so that it would be possible eg. to return a date field
formatted as the number of milliseconds since Epoch.
Closes#27740
Currently in a rescore request if window_size is smaller than
the top N documents returned (N=size), explanation of scores could be incorrect
for documents that were a part of topN and not part of rescoring.
This PR corrects this, but saving in RescoreContext docIDs of documents
for which rescoring was applied, and adding rescoring explanation
only for these docIDs.
Closes#28725
Since #30143, the Cluster State API should always returns the current
cluster_uuid in the response body, regardless of the metrics filters.
This is not exactly true as it is returned only if metadata metrics and
no specific indices are requested.
This commit fixes the behavior to always return the cluster_uuid and
add new test.
This pipeline aggregation gives the user the ability to script functions that "move" across a window
of data, instead of single data points. It is the scripted version of MovingAvg pipeline agg.
Through custom script contexts, we expose a number of convenience methods:
- MovingFunctions.max()
- MovingFunctions.min()
- MovingFunctions.sum()
- MovingFunctions.unweightedAvg()
- MovingFunctions.linearWeightedAvg()
- MovingFunctions.ewma()
- MovingFunctions.holt()
- MovingFunctions.holtWinters()
- MovingFunctions.stdDev()
The user can also define any arbitrary logic via their own scripting, or combine with the above methods.
When we split/shrink an index we open several IndexWriter instances
causeing file-deletes to be pending on windows. This subsequently fails
when we open an IW to bootstrap the index history due to pending deletes.
This change sidesteps the check since we know our history goes forward
in terms of files and segments.
Closes#30416
Now that the change to deprecate copy settings and disallow it being
explicitly set to false is backported, this commit adjusts the BWC
versions in master.
This commit changes the default out-of-the-box configuration for the
number of shards from five to one. We think this will help address a
common problem of oversharding. For users with time-based indices that
need a different default, this can be managed with index templates. For
users with non-time-based indices that find they need to re-shard with
the split API in place they no longer need to resort only to
reindexing.
Since this has the impact of changing the default number of shards used
in REST tests, we want to ensure that we still have coverage for issues
that could arise from multiple shards. As such, we randomize (rarely)
the default number of shards in REST tests to two. This is managed via a
global index template. However, some tests check the templates that are
in the cluster state during the test. Since this template is randomly
there, we need a way for tests to skip adding the template used to set
the number of shards to two. For this we add the default_shards feature
skip. To avoid having to write our docs in a complicated way because
sometimes they might be behind one shard, and sometimes they might be
behind two shards we apply the default_shards feature skip to all docs
tests. That is, these tests will always run with the default number of
shards (one).
The following tokenizers were moved: classic, edge_ngram,
letter, lowercase, ngram, path_hierarchy, pattern, thai, uax_url_email and
whitespace.
Left keyword tokenizer factory in server module, because
normalizers directly depend on it.This should be addressed on a
follow up change.
Relates to #23658
We want copying settings to be the default behavior. This commit
deprecates not copying settings, and disallows explicitly not copying
settings. This gives users a transition path to the future default
behavior.
there are two tests that have failed multiple times in one day on windows CI.
This commit AwaitsFixes them until their timeout issues are resolved.
tracking here: https://github.com/elastic/elasticsearch/issues/30503
That PR changed the execution path of index settings default to be on the master
until the PR is back-ported the old master will not return default settings.
This PR adds support for the Get Settings API to the java high-level rest client.
Furthermore, logic related to the retrieval of default settings has been moved from the rest layer into the transport layer and now default settings may be retrieved consistency via both the rest API and the transport API.
Many tests are added with a version check so that they do not run against a
version that doesn't have the feature yet. Master is 7.0, so all tests that
do not run against 6.0+ can be removed and the version check can be removed
on all tests that always run on 6.0+.
This adds a new `_ignored` meta field which indexes and stores fields that have
been ignored at index time because of the `ignore_malformed` option. It makes
malformed documents easier to identify by using `exists` or `term(s)` queries
on the `_ignored` field.
Closes#29494
Today when an index is created from shrinking or splitting an existing
index, the target index inherits almost none of the source index
settings. This is surprising and a hassle for operators managing such
indices. Given this is the default behavior, we can not simply change
it. Instead, we start by introducing the ability to copy settings. This
flag can be set on the REST API or on the transport layer and it has the
behavior that it copies all settings from the source except non-copyable
settings (a property of a setting introduced in this
change). Additionally, settings on the request will always override.
This change is the first step in our adventure:
- this flag is added here in 7.0.0 and immediately deprecated
- this flag will be backported to 6.4.0 and remain deprecated
- then, we will remove the ability to set this flag to false in 7.0.0
- finally, in 8.0.0 we will remove this flag and the only behavior will
be for settings to be copied
Currently, the only way to get the REST response for the `/_cluster/state`
call to return the `cluster_uuid` is to request the `metadata` metrics,
which is one of the most expensive response structures. However, external
monitoring agents will likely want the `cluster_uuid` to correlate the
response with other API responses whether or not they want cluster
metadata.
Clearing the cache indices can be done via GET and POST. As GET should
only support read only operations, this removes the support for using
GET for clearing the indices caches.
This commit renames the bulk thread pool to the write thread pool. This
is to better reflect the fact that the underlying thread pool is used to
execute any document write request (single-document index/delete/update
requests, and bulk requests).
With this change, we add support for fallback settings
thread_pool.bulk.* which will be supported until 7.0.0.
We also add a system property so that the display name of the thread
pool remains as "bulk" if needed to avoid breaking users.
Added an api that allows to execute an arbitrary script and a result to be returned.
```
POST /_scripts/painless/_execute
{
"script": {
"source": "params.var1 / params.var2",
"params": {
"var1": 1,
"var2": 1
}
}
}
```
Relates to #27875
Now that single-document indexing requests are executed on the bulk
thread pool the index thread pool is no longer needed. This commit
removes this thread pool from Elasticsearch.
This commit add the `include_type_name` option to the `index`, `update`,
`delete`, `get`, `bulk` and `search` APIs. When set to `false`, the response
will omit the `_type` in the response. This option doesn't work if the endpoint
contains a type. For instance, the following call would succeed:
```
GET index/_doc/1?include_type_name=false
```
But the following one would fail:
```
GET index/some_type/1?include_type_name=false
```
Relates #15613
CRUD: Parsing changes for UpdateRequest (#29293)
Use `ObjectParser` to parse `UpdateRequest` so we reject unknown fields
and drop support for the `_fields` parameter because it was deprecated
in 5.x.
Unlike the `indices.create`, `indices.get_mapping` and `indices.put_mapping`
APIs, the index APIs do not need the `include_type_name` option, they can work
work with and without types withouth knowing whether types are being used.
Internally, `_doc` is used as a type if no type is provided, like for the
`indices.put_mapping` API.
Currently, a flush stats contains only the total flush which is the sum
of manual flush (via API) and periodic flush (async triggered when the
uncommitted translog size is exceeded the flush threshold). Sometimes,
it's useful to know these two numbers independently. This commit tracks
and returns a periodic flush count in a flush stats.
This adds an `include_type_name` option to the `indices.create`,
`indices.get_mapping` and `indices.put_mapping` APIs, which defaults to `true`.
When set to `false`, then mappings will be returned directly in the body of
the `indices.get_mapping` API, without keying them by the type name, the
`indices.create` will expect mappings directly under the `mappings` key, and
the `indices.put_mapping` will use `_doc` as a type name and fail if a `type`
is provided explicitly.
Relates #15613
Some features have been deprecated since `6.0` like the `_parent` field or the
ability to have multiple types per index. This allows to remove quite some
code, which in-turn will hopefully make it easier to proceed with the removal
of types.
* Move ObjectParser into the x-content lib
This moves `ObjectParser`, `AbstractObjectParser`, and
`ConstructingObjectParser` into the libs/x-content dependency. This decoupling
allows them to be used for parsing for projects that don't want to depend on the
entire Elasticsearch jar.
Relates to #28504
Currently the ranking evaluation API doesn't support many of the
standard parameters of the search API. Some of these make sense, like
adding support for the common indices options parameters, which this
change adds.
Today we report thread pool info using a common object. This means that
we use a shared set of terminology that is not consistent with the
terminology used to the configure thread pools. This holds in particular
for the minimum and maximum number of threads in the thread pool where
we use the following terminology:
thread pool info | fixed | scaling
min core size
max max size
A previous change addressed this for the nodes info API. This commit
changes the display of thread pool info in the cat thread pool API too
to be dependent on the type of the thread pool so that we can align the
terminology in the output of thread pool info with the terminology used
to configure a thread pool.
Some source files seem to have the execute bit (a+x) set, which doesn't
really seem to hurt but is a bit odd. This change removes those, making
the permissions similar to other source files in the repository.
This change refactors the composite aggregation to add an execution mode that visits documents in the order of the values
present in the leading source of the composite definition. This mode does not need to visit all documents since it can early terminate
the collection when the leading source value is greater than the lowest value in the queue.
Instead of collecting the documents in the order of their doc_id, this mode uses the inverted lists (or the bkd tree for numerics) to collect documents
in the order of the values present in the leading source.
For instance the following aggregation:
```
"composite" : {
"sources" : [
{ "value1": { "terms" : { "field": "timestamp", "order": "asc" } } }
],
"size": 10
}
```
... can use the field `timestamp` to collect the documents with the 10 lowest values for the field instead of visiting all documents.
For composite aggregation with more than one source the execution can early terminate as soon as one of the 10 lowest values produces enough
composite buckets. For instance if visiting the first two lowest timestamp created 10 composite buckets we can early terminate the collection since it
is guaranteed that the third lowest timestamp cannot create a composite key that compares lower than the one already visited.
This mode can execute iff:
* The leading source in the composite definition uses an indexed field of type `date` (works also with `date_histogram` source), `integer`, `long` or `keyword`.
* The query is a match_all query or a range query over the field that is used as the leading source in the composite definition.
* The sort order of the leading source is the natural order (ascending since postings and numerics are sorted in ascending order only).
If these conditions are not met this aggregation visits each document like any other agg.
By the time the master branch is released the deprecated url
parameters in the `/_cache/clear` API will have been deprecated
for a couple of minor releases. Since master will be the next
major release we are fine with removing these parameters.
* Add a REST integration test that documents date_range support
Add a test case that exercises date_range aggregations using the missing
option.
Addresses #17597
* Test cleanup and correction
Adding a document with a null date to exercise `missing` option, update
test name to something reasonable.
* Update documentation to explain how the "missing" parameter works for
date_range aggregations.
* Wrap lines at 80 chars in docs.
* Change format of test to YAML for readability.
This reverts commit f057fc294a.
The rescorer does not resort the collapsed values inside the top docs
during rescoring. For this reason the Lucene rescorer is not compatible
with collapsing.
Relates #27243
* Reject regex search if regex string is too long (#28344)
* Add docs
* Introduce index level setting `index.max_regex_length`
to control the maximum length of the regular expression
Closes#28344
We added a rest test for the translog last modified age without a
version check. This causes BWC failed because the stats are not
available in the old versions.
Relates #28613
Currently the Translog constructor is capable both of opening an existing translog and creating a
new one (deleting existing files). This PR separates these two into separate code paths. The
constructors opens files and a dedicated static methods creates an empty translog.
Adds allow_partial_search_results flag to search requests with default setting = true.
When false, will error if search either timeouts, has partial errors or has missing shards rather
than returning partial search results. A cluster-level setting provides a default for search requests with no flag.
Closes#27435
This adds the ability to index term prefixes into a hidden subfield, enabling prefix queries to be run without multitermquery rewrites. The subfield reuses the analysis chain of its parent text field, appending an EdgeNGramTokenFilter. It can be configured with minimum and maximum ngram lengths. Query terms with lengths outside this min-max range fall back to using prefix queries against the parent text field.
The mapping looks like this:
"my_text_field" : {
"type" : "text",
"analyzer" : "english",
"index_prefix" : { "min_chars" : 1, "max_chars" : 10 }
}
Relates to #27049