When relocating a shard before changing the state to relocated, we
verify that a relocation is a still taking place. Yet, this can throw an
exception if the relocation is in fact no longer valid. Sadly, we were
swallowing the exception in this situation. This commit allows such an
exception to bubble up after safely releasing resources.
We previously tried to maintain (while not formally supporting) 32-bit
support, although we never tested this anywhere in CI. Since we do not
formally support this, and 32-bit usage is very low, we have elected to
no longer maintain 32-bit support. This commit removes any implication
of 32-bit support.
Relates #25435
The primary shard uses the GlobalCheckPointTracker to track local checkpoint information of recovering and started replicas in order to calculate the global checkpoint. As the tracker is updated through recoveries as well, it is easier to reason about the tracker if we can ensure that there are no concurrent recovery attempts for the same target shard (which can happen in case of network disconnects).
When a replica shard increases its primary term under the mandate of a new primary, it should also update its global checkpoint; this gives us the guarantee that its global checkpoint is at least as high as the new primary and gives a starting point for the primary/replica resync.
Relates to #25355, #10708
We already have these tests in InternalAggregationTestCase to check random insertions into the response xContent so that we don't fail on future changes in the response format. This change adds the same to AggregationsTests and runs on a whole aggregations tree. Unfortunately we need to exclude many places in the xContent from random insertion, but I added a long comment trying to explaine those.
This commit marks a failing test as awaits fix. The test is failing due
to a primary shard not knowing its own local checkpoint in the global
checkpoint tracker after recovery. If such a shard becomes primary after
promotion, and is then subsequently relocated, it can lead to a
violation of an assertion that when the primary context is transferred
the knowledge of all in-sync local checkpoints is consistent with the
global checkpoint on the relocation target.
Relates #25415
This commit removes the default path settings for data and logs. With
this change, we now ship the packages with these settings set in the
elasticsearch.yml configuration file rather than going through the
default.path.data and default.path.logs dance that we went through in
the past.
Relates #25408
Today we load plugins reflectively, looking for constructors that
conform to specific signatures. This commit tightens the reflective
operations here, not allowing plugins to have ambiguous constructors.
Relates #25405
This commit removes path.conf as a valid setting and replaces it with a
command-line flag for specifying a non-default path for configuration.
Relates #25392
This commit removes an abstraction that was introduced when introducing
the primary context. As this abstraction is used in exactly one place,
we simply make that abstraction local to its usage so that we do not
accumulate yet another general abstraction with exactly one usage.
Relates #25402
This commit updates some assertions in the primary context sealing test
after the restriction on updating allocation IDs from master and
updating global checkpoint on replica while sealed were removed.
* Introduce primary context
The target of a primary relocation is not aware of the state of the
replication group. In particular, it is not tracking in-sync and
initializing shards and their checkpoints. This means that after the
target shard is started, its knowledge of the replication group could
differ from that of the relocation source. In particular, this differing
view can lead to it computing a global checkpoint that moves backwards
after it becomes aware of the state of the entire replication
group. This commit addresses this issue by transferring a primary
context during relocation handoff.
* Fix test
* Add assertion messages
* Javadocs
* Barrier between marking a shard in sync and relocating
* Fix misplaced call
* Paranoia
* Better latch countdown
* Catch any exception
* Fix comment
* Fix wait for cluster state relocation test
* Update knowledge via upate local checkpoint API
* toString
* Visibility
* Refactor permit
* Push down
* Imports
* Docs
* Fix compilation
* Remove assertion
* Fix compilation
* Remove context wrapper
* Move PrimaryContext to new package
* Piping for cluster state version
This commit adds piping for the cluster state version to the global
checkpoint tracker. We do not use it yet.
* Remove unused import
* Implement versioning in tracker
* Fix test
* Unneeded public
* Imports
* Promote on our own
* Add tests
* Import
* Newline
* Update comment
* Serialization
* Assertion message
* Update stale comment
* Remove newline
* Less verbose
* Remove redundant assertion
* Tracking -> in-sync
* Assertions
* Just say no
Friends do not let friends block the cluster state update thread on
network operations.
* Extra newline
* Add allocation ID to assertion
* Rename method
* Another rename
* Introduce sealing
* Sealing tests
* One more assertion
* Fix imports
* Safer sealing
* Remove check
* Remove another sealed check
The following token filters were moved: stemmer, stemmer_override, kstem, dictionary_decompounder, hyphenation_decompounder, reverse, elision and truncate.
Relates to #23658
While real secure settings (ie an ES keystore) cannot be merged
together, mocked secure settings can and need to be sometimes merged.
This commit adds a merge method to allow tests to merge together
multiple instances of secure settings.
This change removes the remaining explicitly specified `index.mapper.single_type`
settings from tests in order to allow the removal of the setting.
This is the already approved part of #25375 broken out to simplfiy reviews on
When Log4j 2 was introduced, we removed support for the system property
es.logger.prefix. Yet, some code was left behind. This commit removes
that dead code.
Relates #25377
Added unit test coverage for GlobalOrdinalsSignificantTermsAggregator, GlobalOrdinalsSignificantTermsAggregator.WithHash, SignificantLongTermsAggregator and SignificantStringTermsAggregator.
Removed integration test.
Relates #22278
This change cleans up remaining tests to not use index.mapping.single_type=false
but instead where applicable use a single type or markt the index as created
with a pre 6.x version.
Yet, there is still on leftover in the client tests that needs special attention.
See `org.elasticsearch.client.SearchIT`
Relates to #24961
OldIndexBackwardsCompatibilityIT#testOldClusterStates tested whether global and index metadata could be read from data directory,
this can also be tested in full cluster qa test that checks cluster state via api.
Relates to #24939
`InternalEngineTests.testConcurrentWritesAndCommits` can be very heavy on disks
if threads are slow and the main thread keeps on pulling commit points holding on
to many many segments. This commit adds some quadratic backoff to not pile up too many
commits and to make sure indexing threads can make progress. This also now doesn't do
busy waiting but waits on a latch with a timeout.
Closes#25110
In #24379 we added ability to upgrade templates on full cluster startup. This PR invokes the same update procedure also when a new node first joins the cluster allowing to update templates on a rolling cluster restart as well.
Closes#24680
When shrinking an index we initialize its max unsafe auto ID timestamp
to the maximum of the max unsafe auto ID timestamps on the source
shards.
Relates #25356
#25147 added the translog deletion policy but didn't enable it by default. This PR enables a default retention of 512MB (same maximum size of the current translog) and an age of 12 hours (i.e., after 12 hours all translog files will be deleted). This increases to chance to have an ops based recovery, even if the primary flushed or the replica was offline for a few hours.
In order to see which parts of the translog are committed into lucene the translog stats are extended to include information about uncommitted operations.
Views now include all translog ops and guarantee, as before, that those will not go away. Snapshotting a view allows to filter out generations that are not relevant based on a specific sequence number.
Relates to #10708
This change cleans up core tests to not use `index.mapping.single_type=false`
but instead where applicable use a single type or markt the index as created
with a pre 6.x version.
Relates to #24961
Due to limitations with CreateProcessW on Windows (ultimately used by
ProcessBuilder) with respect to maximum path lengths, we need to get the
short path name for any native controllers before trying to start them
in case the absolute path exceeds the maximum path length. This commit
uses JNA to invoke the necessary Windows API for this to start the
native controller using the short path.
To be precise about the limitation here, the MSDN docs for
CreateProcessW say for the command line parameter:
>The command line to be executed. The maximum length of this string is
>32,768 characters, including the Unicode terminating null character. If
>lpApplicationName is NULL, the module name portionof lpCommandLine is
>limited to MAX_PATH characters.
This is exactly how the Windows implementation of Process in the JDK
invokes CreateProcessW: with the executable name (lpApplicationName) set
to NULL.
Relates #25344
Most notable changes:
- better update concurrency: LUCENE-7868
- TopDocs.totalHits is now a long: LUCENE-7872
- QueryBuilder does not remove the boolean query around multi-term synonyms:
LUCENE-7878
- removal of Fields: LUCENE-7500
For the `TopDocs.totalHits` change, this PR relies on the fact that the encoding
of vInts and vLongs are compatible: you can write and read with any of them as
long as the value can be represented by a positive int.
Bringing together shards in a shrunken index means that we need to
address the start of history for the shrunken index. The problem here is
that sequence numbers before the maximum of the maximum sequence numbers
on the source shards can collide in the target shards in the shrunken
index. To address this, we set the maximum sequence number and the local
checkpoint on the target shards to this maximum of the maximum sequence
numbers. This enables correct document-level semantics for documents
indexed before the shrink, and history on the shrunken index will
effectively start from here.
Relates #25321
Ports all of RepositoryUpgradabilityIT to qa:full-cluster-restart and ports as much of RestoreBackwardsCompatIT as possible into qa:full-cluster-restart.
This setting is supposed to ease index upgrades as it allows you
to check for a new setting called `index.internal.version` which
can be used to check before upgrading indices.
If secure settings are closed after the node has been constructed
no key-store access is permitted. We should also try to be as close as possible
to the real behavior if we mock secure settings. This change also adds
the same behavior as bootstrap has to InternalTestCluster to ensure we fail
if we try to read from secure settings after the node has been constructed.
Today when an index is shrunk, the primary terms for its shards start
from one. Yet, this is a problem as the index will already contain
assigned sequence numbers across primary terms. To ensure document-level
sequence number semantics, the primary terms of the target shards must
start from the maximum of all the shards in the source index. This
commit causes this to be the case.
Relates #25307
* [Analysis] Parse synonyms with the same analysis chain
Synonym Token Filter / Synonym Graph Filter tokenize synonyms with whatever tokenizer and token filters appear before it in the chain.
Close#7199
I'm still trying to hunt down rare failures in the cancelation tests
for reindex and friends. Here is the latest:
https://elasticsearch-ci.elastic.co/job/elastic+elasticsearch+5.x+multijob-unix-compatibility/os=ubuntu/876/console
It doesn't show much, other than that one of the tasks didn't kill
itself when asked to cancel.
So I'm going a bit crazy with debug logging so that the next time this
comes up I can trace exactly what happened.
Additionally, this tweaks the logic around how rethrottles were
performed around cancel. Previously we set the `requestsPerSecond`
to `0` when we cancelled the task. That was the "old way" to set them
to inifity which was the intent. This switches that from `0` to
`Float.MAX_VALUE` which is the "new way" to set the `requestsPerSecond`
to infinity. I don't know that this is much better, but it feels better.
This commit fixes a typo in the KeyStoreCli class. The add-file command was incorrectly set to use
the AddStringKeyStoreCommand instead of the AddFileKeyStoreCommand.
Indexing or deleting documents through the IndexShard interface is quite complex and error-prone. It requires multiple calls, e.g. first prepareIndexOnPrimary, then do some checks if mapping updates have occurred, then do the actual indexing using index(...) etc. Currently each consumer of the interface (local recovery, peer recovery, replication) has additional custom checks built around it to deal with mapping updates, some of which are even inconsistent. This commit aims at reducing the complexity by exposing a simpler interface on IndexShard. There are no more prepare*** methods and the mapping complexity is also hidden, but still giving callers a possibility to implement custom logic to deal with mapping updates.
This commit changes the parsing logic of DocWriteResponse, ReplicationResponse
and GetResult so that it skips any unknown additional fields (for forward compatibility
reasons). This affects the IndexResponse, UpdateResponse,DeleteResponse and
GetResponse objects.
Today we maintain a map of open connections in order to close them when
a low level channel gets closed or handles a failure. We also spawn a thread due to some
tricky concurrency issues especially with respect to netty since they listener might
be called on a transport / boss thread. Executions on those threads must not be blocking
since otherwise we will likely deadlock the event processing which adds to the
complexity of the concurrency model in this class.
This change associates the connection with the close callback that every channel invokes
once it's closed which allows us to remove the connections map. A relaxed non-blocking
concurrency model in the connection close listener allows cleaning up connected nodes without
blocking on any lock.
This test is failing because delete /{index} requests no longer support
index matching an alias. This commit removes testing such requests again
aliases.
Closes#25284
This change adds tests for the aggregation parsing that try to simulate that we
can parse existing aggregations in a forward compatible way in the future,
ignoring potential newly added fields or substructures to the xContent response.
Today TcpTransport is the de-facto base-class for transport implementations.
The need for all the callbacks we have in TransportServiceAdaptor are not necessary
anymore since we can simply have the logic inside the base class itself. This change
moves the stats metrics directly into TcpTransport removing the need for low level
bytes send / received callbacks.
Moves the keyword tokenizer to the analysis-common module. The keyword tokenizer is special because it is used by CustomNormalizerProvider so I pulled it out into its own PR. To get the move to work I've reworked the lookup from static to one using the AnalysisRegistry. This seems safe enough.
Part of #23658.
With #23997 we have introduced a new internal index option that allows to resolve index expressions only against concrete indices while ignoring aliases. Such index option was applied to IndicesAliasesRequest, so that the index part of alias actions would only be resolved against concrete indices.
Same is done in this commit with delete index request. Deleting aliases has always been confusing as some users expect it to only remove the alias from the index (which has its own specific API). Even worse, in case of filtered aliases, deleting an alias may leave users with the expectation that only the documents that match the filter are deleted, which was never the case. To address all this confusion, delete index api works now only against concrete indices. WIldcard expressions will be only resolved against concrete index, as if aliases didn't exist. If one tries to delete against an alias, an IndexNotFoundException will be thrown regardless of whether the alias exists or not, as a concrete index with such a name doesn't exist.
Closes#2318
This PR extends the TranslogDeletionPolicy to allow keeping the translog files longer than what is needed for recovery from lucene. Specifically, we allow specifying the total size of the files and their maximum age (i.e., keep up to 512MB but no longer than 12 hours). This will allow making ops based recoveries more common.
Note that the default size and age still set to 0, maintaining current behavior. This is needed as the other components in the system are not yet ready for a longer translog retention. I will adapt those in follow up PRs.
Relates to #10708
This commit does two things:
1. Adds logging at the DEBUG level for when the index-N blob is
updated.
2. When attempting to delete a snapshot, if the snapshot was not found
in the repository data, an exception is now thrown instead of silently
ignoring the lack of presence of the snapshot in the repository data.
We use assertBusy in many places where the underlying code throw exceptions. Currently we need to wrap those exceptions in a RuntimeException which is ugly.
This commit adds a NamedXContentProvider interface that can
be implemented by plugins or modules using Java's SPI feature
in order to provide additional NamedXContent parsers to external
applications like the Java High Level Rest Client.
At index time Elasticsearch needs to look up the version associated with the
`_id` of the document that is being indexed, which is often the bottleneck for
indexing.
While reviewing the output of the `jfr` telemetry from a Rally benchmark, I saw
that significant time was spent in `ConcurrentHashMap#get` and `ThreadLocal#get`.
The reason is that we cache lookup objects per thread and segment, and for every
indexed document, we first need to look up the cache associated with this
segment (`ConcurrentHashMap#get`) and then get a state that is local to the
current thread (`ThreadLocal#get`). So if you are indexing N documents per
second and have S segments, both these methods will be called N*S times per
second.
This commit changes version lookup to use a cache per index reader rather than
per segment. While this makes cache entries live for less long, we now only need
to do one call to `ConcurrentHashMap#get` and `ThreadLocal#get` per indexed
document.
This snapshot has faster range queries on range fields (LUCENE-7828), more
accurate norms (LUCENE-7730) and the ability to use fake term frequencies
(LUCENE-7854).
This commit renames the needsScores method so as to make it
automatically generatable, based on the name of the `_score` variable
which is available in search scripts. It also adds documentation to
ScriptContext to explain the naming and signature of such methods.
This commit removes the global caching of the field query and replaces it with
a caching per field. Each field can use a different `highlight_query` and the rewriting of
some queries (prefix, automaton, ...) depends on the targeted field so the query used for highlighting
must be unique per field.
There might be a small performance penalty when highlighting multiple fields since the query needs to be rewritten
once per highlighted field with this change.
Fixes#25171
* Remove QUERY_AND_FETCH BWC for pre-5.3.0 nodes
This was a BWC layer where we expicitly set the `search_type` to
"query_and_fetch" when a single node is queried on pre-5.3 nodes. Since 6.0 no
longer needs to be compatible with 5.3 nodes, this can be removed.
* Fix indentation
* Remove unused QUERY_FETCH_ACTION_NAME constant
* Add more missing AggregationBuilder getters
- getMetadata for all aggs
- various getters on TermsAggBuilder (without "get" prefix to maintain convention)
- Also makes InternalSum's ctor public, to follow suit of other metrics (min/max/avg/etc)
We introduced a new API for ranges in order to be able to decide whether points
or doc values would be more appropriate to execute a query, but since
`ProfileWeight` does not implement this API, the optimization is disabled when
profiling is enabled.
In order to add scroll support for cross cluster search we need
to resolve the nodes encoded in the scroll ID to send requests to the
corresponding nodes. This change adds the low level connection infrastructure
that also ensures that connections are re-established if the cluster is
disconnected due to a network failure or restarts.
Relates to #25094
Today if a channel gets closed due to a disconnect we notify the response
handler that the connection is closed and the node is disconnected. Unfortunately
this is not a complete solution since it only works for published connections.
Connections that are unpublished ie. for discovery can indefinitely hang since we
never invoke their handers when we get a failure while a user is waiting for
the response. This change adds connection tracking to TcpTransport that ensures
we are notifying the corresponding connection if there is a failure on a channel.
This modifies a method Mark added to the AggregatorBase that allows aggregations
to add additional memory tracking for datastructures used during execution. If
an aggregation would like to reclaim circuit breaker reserved bytes by adding a
negative number, `addWithoutBreaking` should be used instead of
`addEstimateBytesAndMaybeBreak`.
Resolves#24511
Duplicate data paths already fail to work because we would attempt to
take out a node lock on the directory a second time which will fail
after the first lock attempt succeeds. However, how this failure
manifests is not apparent at all and is quite difficult to
debug. Instead, we should explicitly reject duplicate data paths to make
the failure cause more obvious.
Relates #25178
When attempting to obtain the node lock, if an exception is thrown it is
not logged. This makes debugging difficult. This commit causes such an
exception to be logged.
Relates #25176
* Aggregations bug: Significant_text fails on arrays of text.
The set of previously-seen tokens in a doc was allocated per-JSON-field string value rather than once per JSON document meaning the number of docs containing a term could be over-counted leading to exceptions from the checks in significance heuristics. Added unit test for this scenario
Closes#25029
Sorted scroll search can use early termination when the index sort matches the scroll search sort.
The optimization can be done after the first query (which still needs to collect all documents)
by applying a query that only matches documents that are greater than the last doc retrieved in the previous request.
Since the index is sorted, retrieving the list of documents that are greater than the last doc
only requires a binary search on each segment.
This change introduces this new query called `SortedSearchAfterDocQuery` and apply it when possible.
Scrolls with this optimization will search all documents on the first request and then will early terminate each segment
after $size doc for any subsequent requests.
Relates #6720
#25005 changed the translog dynamic to fsync the checkpoint before trimming a file. This changed the dynamics of potential failure modes which requires a change to testWithRandomException - it's now possible that we had an exception but the translog was trimmed.
Closes#25133
Get mappings HEAD requests incorrectly return a content-length header of
0. This commit addresses this by removing the special handling for get
mappings HEAD requests, and just relying on the general mechanism that
exists for handling HEAD requests in the REST layer.
Relates #23192
Today when an exception is thrown handling a HEAD request, the body is
swallowed before the channel has a chance to see it. Yet, the channel is
where we compute the content length that would be returned as a header
in the response. This is a violation of the HTTP specification. This
commit addresses the issue. To address this issue, we remove the special
handling in bytes rest response for HEAD requests when an exception is
thrown. Instead, we let the upstream channel handle the special case, as
we already do today for the non-exceptional case.
Relates #25172
We have a custom logger implementation known as a prefix logger that is
used to write every message by the logger with a given prefix. This is
useful for node-level, index-level, and shard-level messages where we
want to log the node name, index name, and shard ID, respectively, if
possible. The mechanism that we employ is that of a marker. Log4j has a
built-in facility for managing these markers, but its effectively a
memory leak because these markers are held in a map and can never be
released. This is problematic for us since indices and shards do not
necessarily have infinite life spans and so on a node where there are
many indices being creted and destroyed, this infinite lifespan can be a
problem indeed. To solve this, we use our own cache of markers. This is
necessary to prevent too many instances of the marker for the same
prefix from being created (just think of all the shard-level components
that exist in the system), and to workaround the effective leak in
Log4j. These markers are stored as weak references in a weak hash
map. It is these weak references that are unneeded. When a key is
removed from a weak hash map, the corresponding entry is placed on a
reference queue that is eventually cleared. This commit simplifies
prefix logger by removing this unnecessary weak reference wrapper.
Relates #22460
When the cluster state is updated with Shard Started entries, it simply adds "shard-started" as the source of the change.
This adds the index name and shard ID so that we can see who/what is spamming the changes when the index creation step has already left the cluster state.
There are a few places where arrays are output in messages yet the
output would merely use the default toString implementation rather than
actually putting the content of the array in the message. This commit
fixes the issue.
Relates #24340
This change extends the tests and parsing of SearchResponse to make sure we can
skip additional fields the parser doesn't know for forward compatibility
reasons.
This commit adds back "id" as the key within a script to specify a
stored script (which with file scripts now gone is no longer ambiguous).
It also adds "source" as a replacement for "code". This is in an attempt
to normalize how scripts are specified across both put stored scripts and script usages, including search template requests. This also deprecates the old inline/stored keys.
When `index.mapping.single_type` is `true` the `_uid` field is not used and instead `_id` field is used.
Prior to this change nested documents would in this case still use the `_uid` field to mark to what root
document they belong to. In case of deleting documents this could lead to only the root Lucene document
to be deleted and not the nested Lucene documents. This broke the docid block ordering the block join
relies on in order to work correctly and thus causing the `nested` query, `nested` aggregation, nested sorting
and nested inner hits to either fail or yield incorrect results.
This bug only manifests in 6.0.0-ALPHA2 release and snaphots (5.5.0-SNAPSHOT, 5.6.0-SNAPSHOT, 6.0.0-SNAPSHOT).
This was introduced in #24460: the constructor of `Translog.Delete` that takes
a `StreamInput` does not set the type and id. To make it a bit more robust, I
made fields final so that forgetting to set them would make the compiler
complain.
This change removes the `postings` highlighter. This highlighter has been removed from Lucene master (7.x) because it behaves
exactly like the `unified` highlighter when index_options is set to `offsets`:
https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/LUCENE-7815
It also makes the `unified` highlighter the default choice for highlighting a field (if `type` is not provided).
The strategy used internally by this highlighter remain the same as before, it checks `term_vectors` first, then `postings` and ultimately it re-analyzes the text.
Ultimately it rewrites the docs so that the options that the `unified` highlighter cannot handle are clearly marked as such.
There are few features that the `unified` highlighter is not able to handle which is why the other highlighters (`plain` and `fvh`) are still available.
I'll open separate issues for these features and we'll deprecate the `fvh` and `plain` highlighters when full support for these features have been added to the `unified`.
This change extends the tests and parsing of SearchShardFailure to make sure we
can skip fields the parser doesn't know for forward compatibility reasons.
When parsing responses we should be ignoring any new unknown fields or inner
objects in most cases to be forward compatible with changes in core on the
client side. This change adds test for this for Suggestions and its various
subclasses to check if we are able to ignore new fields and objects in the
xContent.
When we disabled `_all` by default for indices created in 6.0, we missed adding
a layer that would handle the situation where `_all` was not enabled in 5.x and
then the cluster was updated to 6.0, this means that when the cluster was
updated the `_all` field would be disabled for 5.x indices and field values
would not be added to the `_all` field.
This adds a compatibility layer for 5.x indices where we treat the default
enabled value for the `_all` field to be `true` if unset on 5.x indices.
Resolves#25068
The Log4j dependency is separated into two artifacts, the API and the
core implementation. This is to enable replacing Log4j on the backend
through the SLF4J bridge with another logging implementation. For this
reason, the dependencies are marked as optional. This causes confusion
amongst users as to use the bridge, the API should be non-optional since
it is needed for the bridge to function correctly. While they could pull
it into their application directly, it would be clearer if we simply
marked this depdendency as non-optional. Note that this does not mean
that users have to use Log4j for logging in their application, so we are
not marking core as required, it only clarifies what they need to be
able to plug in a different logging implementation.
Relates #25136
Previously this would output:
```
GET /test-1/_mappings
{ }
```
And after this change:
```
GET /test-1/_mappings
{
"test-1": {
"mappings": {}
}
}
```
To bring parity back to the REST output after #24723.
Relates to #25090
Previously in #24723 we changed the `_alias` API to not go through the
`RestGetIndicesAction` endpoint, instead creating a `RestGetAliasesAction` that
did the same thing.
This changes the formatting so that it matches the old formatting of the
endpoint, before:
```
GET /test-1/_alias
{ }
```
And after this change:
```
GET /test-1/_alias
{
"test-1": {
"aliases": {}
}
}
```
This is related to #25090
GeoUtils#isValidLongitude is inconsistent with GeoUtils#isValidLatitude.
Neither technically need the isInfinite() check because they then compare
against min and max values.
When parsing resonses we should be ignoring any new unknown fields or inner
objects in most cases to be forward compatible with changes in core on the
client side. This change adds test for this for QueryProfileShardResult and
nested substructures and changes the parsing code where necessary to be able to
ignore new fields and objects in the xContent.
Test: randomVersionBetween works with unreleased
Modifies randomVersionBetween so that it works with unreleased
versions. This should make switching a version from unreleased
to released much simpler.
Added common base class for ScriptDocValues.Strings and ScriptDocValues.BytesRefs now that these classes are very similar.
Also cleaned up the BinaryDVFieldDataTests:
* Use junit assertions instead of hamcrest
* Use BytesRef directly instead of byte[]
Closes#24785
The FVH fails with an NPE when a match phrase prefix is rewritten in an empty phrase query.
This change makes sure that the multi match query rewrites to a MatchNoDocsQuery (instead of an empty phrase query) when there is
a single term and that term does not expand to any term in the index.
Fixes#25088
This commit refactors the query phase in order to be able
to automatically detect queries that can be early terminated.
If the index sort matches the query sort, the top docs collection is early terminated
on each segment and the computing of the total number of hits that match the query is delegated to a simple TotalHitCountCollector.
This change also adds a new parameter to the search request called `track_total_hits`.
It indicates if the total number of hits that match the query should be tracked.
If false, queries sorted by the index sort will not try to compute this information and
and will limit the collection to the first N documents per segment.
Aggregations are not impacted and will continue to see every document
even when the index sort matches the query sort and `track_total_hits` is false.
Relates #6720
This commit modifies query_string, simple_query_string and multi_match queries to always use a DisjunctionMaxQuery when a disjunction over multiple fields is built. The tiebreaker is set to 1 in order to behave like the boolean query in terms of scoring.
The removal of the coord factor in Lucene 7 made this change mandatory to correctly handle minimum_should_match.
Closes#23966
This change extracts the main logic from `TransportClearScrollAction`
into a new class `ClearScrollController` and adds a corresponding unit test.
Relates to #25094
The `scorerSupplier` API allows to give a hint to queries in order to let them
know that they will be consumed in a random-access fashion. We should use this
for aggregations, function_score and matched queries.
When we open a translog, we rely on the `translog.ckp` file to tell us what the maximum generation file should be and on the information stored in the last lucene commit to know the first file we need to recover. This requires coordination and is currently subject to a race condition: if a node dies after a lucene commit is made but before we remove the translog generations that were unneeded by it, the next time we open the translog we will ignore those files and never delete them (I have added tests for this).
This PR changes the approach to have the translog store both of those numbers in the `translog.ckp`. This means it's more self contained and easier to control.
This change also decouples the translog recovery logic from the specific commit we're opening. This prepares the ground to fully utilize the deletion policy introduced in #24950 and store more translog data that's needed for Lucene, keep multiple lucene commits around and be free to recover from any of them.
For the response parsing we want to be lenient when it comes to parsing
new xContent fields. In order to ensure this in our testing, this change
adds a utility method to XContentTestUtils that takes xContent bytes
representation as input and recursively a random field on each object
level.
Sometimes we also want to exclude a whole subtree from this treatment
(e.g. skipping "_source"), other times an element (e.g. "fields", "highlight"
in SearchHit) can have arbitraryly named objects. Those cases can be
specified as exceptions.
This commit removes wrapper methods on QueryShardContext used to compile
scripts. Instead, the script service is made accessible in the context,
and calls to compile can be made directly. This will ease transition to
each of those location becoming their own context, since they would no
longer be able to expect the same script class type.
Splits TranslogRecoveryPerformer into three parts:
- the translog operation to engine operation converter
- the operation perfomer (that indexes the operation into the engine)
- the translog statistics (for which there is already RecoveryState.Translog)
This makes it possible for peer recovery to use the same IndexShard interface as bulk shard requests (i.e. Engine operations instead of Translog operations). It also pushes the "fail on bad mapping" logic outside of IndexShard. Future pull requests could unify the BulkShard and peer recovery path even more.
The unified highlighter rewrites MultiPhrasePrefixQuery to SpanNearQuer even when there is a single term in the phrase.
Though SpanNearQuery throws an exception when the number of clauses is less than 2.
This change returns a simple PrefixQuery when there is a single term and builds the SpanNearQuery otherwise.
Relates #25088
The PR takes a different approach to solve #24806 than currently implemented via #25052. The `refreshMetric` that IndexShard maintains is updated using the refresh listeners infrastructure in lucene. This means that we truly count all refreshes that lucene makes and not have to worry about each individual caller (like `IndexShard@refresh` and `Engine#get()`)
parent/child: Allow updating mapping without specifying `_parent` field on each update.
Prior to this change when a mapping has a `_parent` field then any update (also updates that didn't modify the `_parent` field) to the mapping involved specifying the `_parent` field again. With this change specifying the `_parent` field on each mapping update is no longer required.
Closes#23381
We have a callback interface that is not needed because it is
effectively the same as java.util.function.Consumer. This commit removes
it.
Relates #25089