TransportAction currently contains 2 doExecute methods, one which takes
a the task, and one that does not. The latter is what some subclasses
implement, while the first one just calls the latter, dropping the given
task. This commit combines these methods, in favor of just always
assuming a task is present.
TransportRequestHandler currently contains 2 messageReceived methods,
one which takes a Task, and one that does not. The first just delegates
to the second. This commit changes all existing implementors of
TransportRequestHandler to implement the version which takes Task, thus
allowing the class to be a functional interface, and eliminating the
need to throw exceptions when a task needs to be ensured.
Most transport actions don't need the node ThreadPool. This commit
removes the ThreadPool as a super constructor parameter for
TransportAction. The actions that do need the thread pool then have a
member added to keep it from their own constructor.
Historically in TcpTransport server channels were represented by the
same channel interface as socket channels. This was necessary as
TcpTransport was parameterized by the channel type. This commit
introduces TcpServerChannel and HttpServerChannel classes. Additionally,
it adds the implementations for the various transports. This allows
server channels to have unique functionality and not implement the
methods they do not support (such as send and getRemoteAddress).
Additionally, with the introduction of HttpServerChannel this commit
extracts some of the storing and closing channel work to the abstract
http server transport.
The `multiplexer` filter emits multiple tokens at the same position, each
version of the token haivng been passed through a different filter chain.
Identical tokens at the same position are removed.
This allows users to, for example, index lowercase and original-case tokens,
or stemmed and unstemmed versions, in the same field, so that they can search
for a stemmed term within x positions of an unstemmed term.
Most transport actions don't need to resolve index names. This commit
removes the index name resolver as a super constructor parameter for
TransportAction. The actions that do need the resolver then have a
member added to keep the resolver from their own constructor.
This is a general cleanup of channels and exception handling in http.
This commit introduces a CloseableChannel that is a superclass of
TcpChannel and HttpChannel. This allows us to unify the closing logic
between tcp and http transports. Additionally, the normal http channels
are extracted to the abstract server transport.
Finally, this commit (mostly) unifies the exception handling between nio
and netty4 http server transports.
Since #30966, Action no longer has anything but a call to the
GenericAction super constructor. This commit renames GenericAction
into Action, thus eliminating the Action class. Additionally, this
commit removes the Request generic parameter of the class, since
it was unused.
The following analyzers were moved from server module to analysis-common module:
`greek`, `hindi`, `hungarian`, `indonesian`, `irish`, `italian`, `latvian`,
`lithuanian`, `norwegian`, `persian`, `portuguese`, `romanian`, `russian`,
`sorani`, `spanish`, `swedish`, `turkish` and `thai`.
Relates to #23658
This is related to #28898. This PR implements pooling of bytes arrays
when reading from the wire in the http server transport. In order to do
this, we must integrate with netty reference counting. That manner in
which this PR implements this is making Pages in InboundChannelBuffer
reference counted. When we accessing the underlying page to pass to
netty, we retain the page. When netty releases its bytebuf, it releases
the underlying pages we have passed to it.
This change moves tests in `smoke-test-rank-eval-with-mustache` into the main
ranking evaluation module by declaring that the integration testing cluster
requires the `lang-mustache` plugin. This avoids having to maintain the qa
project for only one basic test suite.
While the other two ranking evaluation metrics (precicion and reciprocal rank)
already provide a more detailed output for how their score is calculated, the
discounted cumulative gain metric (dcg) and its normalized variant are lacking
this until now. Its not really clear which level of detail might be useful for
debugging and understanding the final metric calculation, but this change adds a
`metric_details` section to REST output that contains some information about the
evaluation details.
Currently we maintain a compatibility map of http status codes in both
the netty4 and nio modules. These maps convert a RestStatus to a netty
HttpResponseStatus. However, as these fundamentally represent integers,
we can just use the netty valueOf method to convert a RestStatus to a
HttpResponseStatus.
This is related to #28898. With the addition of the http nio transport,
we now have two different modules that provide http transports.
Currently most of the http logic lives at the module level. However,
some of this logic can live in server. In particular, some of the
setting of headers, cors, and pipelining. This commit begins this moving
in that direction by introducing lower level abstraction (HttpChannel,
HttpRequest, and HttpResonse) that is implemented by the modules. The
higher level rest request and rest channel work can live entirely in
server.
Many fixtures have similar code for writing the pid & ports files or
for handling HTTP requests. This commit adds an AbstractHttpFixture
class in the test framework that can be extended for specific testing purposes.
Currently the http pipelining handlers seem to support chunked http
content. However, this does not make sense. There is a content
aggregator in the pipeline before the pipelining handler. This means the
pipelining handler should only see full http messages. Additionally, the
request handler immediately after the pipelining handler only supports
full messages.
This commit modifies both nio and netty4 pipelining handlers to assert
that an inbound message is a full http message. Additionally it removes
the tests for chunked content.
This adds a thread interrupter that allows us to encapsulate calls to org.joni.Matcher#search()
This method can hang forever if the regex expression is too complex.
The thread interrupter in the background checks every 3 seconds whether there are threads
execution the org.joni.Matcher#search() method for longer than 5 seconds and
if so interrupts these threads.
Joni has checks that that for every 30k iterations it checks if the current thread is interrupted and
if so returns org.joni.Matcher#INTERRUPTED
Closes#28731
This commit upgrades us to Netty 4.1.25. This upgrade is more
challenging than past upgrades, all because of a new object cleaner
thread that they have added. This thread requires an additional security
permission (set context class loader, needed to avoid leaks in certain
scenarios). Additionally, there is not a clean way to shutdown this
thread which means that the thread can fail thread leak control during
tests. As such, we have to filter this thread from thread leak control.
Previously this was called for the combine script only. This change checks for self references for
init, map, and reduce scripts as well, and adds unit test coverage for the init, map, and combine cases.
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
This is related to #27260 and #28898. This commit adds the transport-nio
plugin as a random option when running the http smoke tests. As part of
this PR, I identified an issue where cors support was not properly
enabled causing these tests to fail when using transport-nio. This
commit also fixes that issue.
This field is similar to the `feature` field but is better suited to index
sparse feature vectors. A use-case for this field could be to record topics
associated with every documents alongside a metric that quantifies how well
the topic is connected to this document, and then boost queries based on the
topics that the logged user is interested in.
Relates #27552
move `finger_print`, `pattern` and `standard_html_strip` analyzers
to analysis-common module. (both AnalysisProvider and PreBuiltAnalyzerProvider)
Changed PreBuiltAnalyzerProviderFactory to extend from PreConfiguredAnalysisComponent and
changed to make sure that predefined analyzers are always instantiated with the current
ES version and if an instance is requested for a different version then delegate to PreBuiltCache.
This is similar to the behaviour that exists today in AnalysisRegistry.PreBuiltAnalysis and
PreBuiltAnalyzerProviderFactory. (#31095)
Relates to #23658
This is related to #28898. This commit adds cors support to the nio http
transport. Most of the work is copied directly from the netty module
implementation. Additionally, this commit adds tests for the nio http
channel.
Currently this class takes care of moth selecting the relevant value, and
replacing missing values if any. This is fine for sorting, which always needs
to do both at the same time, but we also have a number of aggregations and
script utils that need to retain information about missing values so this change
proposes to decouple selection of the relevant value and replacement of missing
values.
ObjectParser should throw XContentParseExceptions, not IAE. A dedicated parsing
exception can includes the place where the error occurred.
Closes#30605
This snapshot includes:
- LUCENE-8341: Record soft deletes in SegmentCommitInfo which will resolve#30851
- LUCENE-8335: Enforce soft-deletes field up-front
This is related to #31017. That issue identified that these three http
methods were treated like GET requests. This commit adds them to
RestRequest. This means that these methods will be handled properly and
generate 405s.
This commit introduces the ability for a client to communicate to the
server features that it can support and for these features to be used in
influencing the decisions that the server makes when communicating with
the client. To this end we carry the features from the client to the
underlying stream as we carry the version of the client today. This
enables us to enhance the logic where we make protocol decisions on the
basis of the version on the stream to also make protocol decisions on
the basis of the features on the stream. With such functionality, the
client can communicate to the server if it is a transport client, or if
it has, for example, X-Pack installed. This enables us to support
rolling upgrades from the OSS distribution to the default distribution
without breaking client connectivity as we can now elect to serialize
customs in the cluster state depending on whether or not the client
reports to us using the feature capabilities that it can under these
customs. This means that we would avoid sending a client pieces of the
cluster state that it can not understand. However, we want to take care
and always send the full cluster state during node-to-node communication
as otherwise we would end up with different understanding of what is in
the cluster state across nodes depending on which features they reported
to have. This is why when deciding whether or not to write out a custom
we always send the custom if the client is not a transport client and
otherwise do not send the custom if the client is transport client that
does not report to have the feature required by the custom.
Co-authored-by: Yannick Welsch <yannick@welsch.lu>