When the `BulkProcessor` is used with the high-level REST client, a scheduler is internally created that allows to schedule tasks. Such scheduler is not exposed to users and needs to be closed once the `BulkProcessor` is closed. There are two ways to close the `BulkProcessor` though, one is the ordinary `close` method and the other one is `awaitClose`. The former closes the scheduler while the latter doesn't, leaving threads lingering.
* Remove all dependencies from XContentBuilder
This commit removes all of the non-JDK dependencies from XContentBuilder, with
the exception of `CollectionUtils.ensureNoSelfReferences`. It adds a third
extension point around dealing with time-based fields and formatters to work
around the Joda dependency.
This decoupling allows us to be able to move XContentBuilder to a separate lib
so it can be available for things like the high level rest client.
Relates to #28504
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.
Adds docs for `HighLevelRestClient#multiSearch`. Unlike the `multiGet`
docs these are much more sparse because multi-search doesn't support
setting many options on the `MultiSearchRequest` and instead just wraps
a list of `SearchRequest`s.
Closes#28389
Currently we store the indices specified in the request URL together with all
the other ranking evaluation specification in RankEvalSpec. This is not ideal
since e.g. the indices are not rendered to xContent and so cannot be parsed
back. Instead we should keep them in RankEvalRequest.
* Decouple XContentBuilder from BytesReference
This commit removes all mentions of `BytesReference` from `XContentBuilder`.
This is needed so that we can completely decouple the XContent code and move it
into its own dependency.
While this change appears large, it is due to two main changes, moving
`.bytes()` and `.string()` out of XContentBuilder itself into static methods
`BytesReference.bytes` and `Strings.toString` respectively. The rest of the
change is code reacting to these changes (the majority of it in tests).
Relates to #28504
The REST status 503 means "I can not handle the request that you sent
me." However today we respond to a main request with a 503 when there
are certain cluster blocks despite still responding with an actual main
response. This is broken, we should respond with a 200 status. This
commit removes this silliness.
The recent addition of the _cluster/settings API was merged together with another change that added encoding of the different URL parts. That broke the cluster PUT settings API straight-away. This commit fixes this problem. The '/' that's part of the /_cluster/settings endpoint should not be encoded.
The REST high-level client supports now encoding of path parts, so that for instance documents with valid ids, but containing characters that need to be encoded as part of urls (`#` etc.), are properly supported. We also make sure that each path part can contain `/` by encoding them properly too.
Closes#28625
* Move to non-deprecated XContentHelper.createParser(...)
This moves away from one of the now-deprecated XContentHelper.createParser
methods in favor of specifying the deprecation logger at parser creation time.
Relates to #28449
Note that this doesn't move all the `createParser` calls because some of them
use the already-deprecated method that doesn't specify the XContentType.
* Remove the deprecated (and now non-needed) createParser method
* [DOCS] expand examples on providing mappings for create index and put mapping
The create index API and put mappings API docs the for high-level Java REST client didn't have a lot of info on how to provide mappings. This commit adds some examples.
This commit splits the async execution documentation into 2 parts, one
for the async method itself and one for the action listener. This allows
to add more doc and to use CountDownLatches in doc tests to wait for
asynchronous operations to be completed before moving to the next test.
It also renames few files.
Related to #28457
Similarly to other documentation tests in the high level client, the
asynchronous operation like update, index or delete can make the test
fail if it sneak in between the middle of another operation.
This commit moves the async doc tests to be the last ones executed and
adds assert busy loops to ensure that the asynchronous operations are
correctly terminated.
closes#28446
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 change adds support for the new ranking evaluation API to the High Level Rest Client.
This mostly means adding support for parsing the various response objects back from the
REST representation. It includes one change to the response syntax where previously we didn't
print the type of the metric details section but we now need it to pick the right parser to
parse this section back.
Closes#28198
Script fields can get a bit more complicated than just stored fields. A script can return null, an object and also an array. Extended parsing to support such valid values. Also renamed util method from `parseStoredFieldsValue` to `parseFieldsValue` given that it can parse stored fields but also script fields, anything that's returned as `fields`.
Closes#28380
It has been pointed out that GET with body may cause problems to some proxies. We are then switching to POST the API that retrieve info and support a request body.
Closes#28326
The search request body can never be null as `SearchRequest` doesn't allow the inner `SearchSourceBuilder` to be null. Instead, when search source is not set, the request body is going to be an empty json object (`{}``)
Today, the way to call them API under the indices namespace is by doing e.g. `client.indices().createIndex()`. Our spec define the API under the indices namespace as e.g. `indices.create`, hence there is no need to repeat the index suffix for each method as that is already defined by the namespace. Using the `index` suffix in each method was an oversight which must be corrected.