Provide more actionable error message when installing an offline plugin
in the plugins directory, and the `plugins` directory for the node
contains plugin distribution.
Closes#27401
When parsing GetResponse it was possible that the equality check failed because
items in the map were in a different order (in the `.equals` implementation).
The Java API documentation for index administration currenty is wrong because
the PutMappingRequestBuilder#setSource(Object... source) an
CreateIndexRequestBuilder#addMapping(String type, Object... source) methods
delegate to methods that check that the input arguments are valid key/value
pairs. This changes the docs so the java api code examples are included from
documentation integration tests so we detect compile and runtime issues earlier.
Closes#28131
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.
Currently we have a fairly complicated logic in the engine constructor logic to deal with all the
various ways we want to mutate the lucene index and translog we're opening.
We can:
1) Create an empty index
2) Use the lucene but create a new translog
3) Use both
4) Force a new history uuid in all cases.
This leads complicated code flows which makes it harder and harder to make sure we cover all the
corner cases. This PR tries to take another approach. Constructing an InternalEngine always opens
things as they are and all needed modifications are done by static methods directly on the
directory, one at a time.
* 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
When we copied IOUtils into the Elasticsearch codebase from Lucene, we
brought with it its handling of throwables which are out of whack with
how we handle throwables in our codebase. This commit modifies our copy
of IOUtils to be consistent with how we handle throwables today: do not
catch them. We take advantage of this cleanup to simplify IOUtils.
We today support a global `indexed_chars` processor parameter. But in some cases, users would like to set this limit depending on the document itself.
It used to be supported in mapper-attachments plugin by extracting the limit value from a meta field in the document sent to indexation process.
We add an option which reads this limit value from the document itself
by adding a setting named `indexed_chars_field`.
Which allows running:
```
PUT _ingest/pipeline/attachment
{
"description" : "Extract attachment information. Used to parse pdf and office files",
"processors" : [
{
"attachment" : {
"field" : "data",
"indexed_chars_field" : "size"
}
}
]
}
```
Then index either:
```
PUT index/doc/1?pipeline=attachment
{
"data": "BASE64"
}
```
Which will use the default value (or the one defined by `indexed_chars`)
Or
```
PUT index/doc/2?pipeline=attachment
{
"data": "BASE64",
"size": 1000
}
```
Closes#28942
If the default java.io.tmpdir is used then the startup script creates
it, but if a custom java.io.tmpdir is used then the user must ensure it
exists before running Elasticsearch. If they forget then it can cause
errors that are hard to understand, so this change adds an explicit
check early in the bootstrap and reports a clear error if java.io.tmpdir
is not an accessible directory.
Eclipse Oxygen doesn't seem to be able to infer the correct type
arguments for Arrays::asList in the given test context. Adding cast to
make this more explicit.
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.
When converting the source for an indexing request to JSON, the
conversion can throw an I/O exception which we swallow and proceed with
logging to the slow log. The cause of the I/O exception is lost. This
commit changes this behavior and chooses to drop the entry from the slow
logs and instead lets an exception percolate up to the indexing
operation listener loop. Here, the exception will be caught and logged
at the warn level.
Today we can end up in a situation where the cluster state contains
unknown or invalid settings. This can happen easily during a rolling
upgrade. For example, consider two nodes that are on a version that
considers the setting foo.bar to be known and valid. Assume one of these
nodes is restarted on a higher version that considers foo.bar to now be
either unknown or invalid, and then the second node is restarted
too. Now, both nodes will be on a version that consider foo.bar to be
unknown or invalid yet this setting will still be contained in the
cluster state. This means that if a cluster settings update is applied
and we validate the settings update with the existing settings then
validation will fail. In such a state, the offending setting can not
even be removed. This commit helps out with this situation by archiving
any settings that are unknown or invalid at the time that a settings
update is applied. This allows the setting update to go through, and the
archived settings can be removed at a later time.
This commit adds a JVM flag to ensure that the JVM fatal error logs land
in the default log directory. Users that wish to use an alternative
location should change the path configured here.
These can be seen at the debug level via cluster state update logging
but really they should be more visible like index creation and
deletion. This commit adds info-level logging for template puts and
deletes.
This interning is completely unnecessary because we look up the marker
by the prefix (value, not identity) anyway. This means that regardless
of the identity of the prefix, we end up with the same marker. That is
all that we really care about here.
* 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.
As we have factored Elasticsearch into smaller libraries, we have ended
up in a situation that some of the dependencies of Elasticsearch are not
available to code that depends on these smaller libraries but not server
Elasticsearch. This is a good thing, this was one of the goals of
separating Elasticsearch into smaller libraries, to shed some of the
dependencies from other components of the system. However, this now
means that simple utility methods from Lucene that we rely on are no
longer available everywhere. This commit copies IOUtils (with some small
formatting changes for our codebase) into the fold so that other
components of the system can rely on these methods where they no longer
depend on Lucene.
We no longer source the environment file in the packaging scripts yet we
had leftover references to variables defined by those environment
files. This commit cleans these up.
The current docs on [Indices APIs: PUT Mapping](https://www.elastic.co/guide/en/elasticsearch/reference/current/indices-put-mapping.html) suggests that a having number of different mapping types per index is still possible in elasticsearch versions > 6.0.0 although they have been [removed](https://www.elastic.co/guide/en/elasticsearch/reference/current/removal-of-types.html). The console code has already been updated accordingly but notes (2) and (3) on the console code still name the `user` mapping type.
This PR updates the list with notes after the console code, as well as the first sentence of the docs
to avoid confusion. Also, I have removed the second command from the console code as it no
longer holds any value if the docs are solely on the `_doc` mapping.
With this commit we skip all GeoIpProcessorFactoryTests on Windows.
These tests use a MappedByteBuffer which will keep its file mappings
until it is garbage-collected. As a consequence, the corresponding
file appears to be still in use, Windows cannot delete it and the test
will fail in teardown.
Closes#29001
I have long wanted an actual test that dying with dignity works. It is
tricky because if dying with dignity works, it means the test JVM dies
which is usually an abnormal condition. And anyway, how does one force a
fatal error to be thrown. I was motivated to investigate this again by
the fact that I missed a backport to one branch leading to an issue
where Elasticsearch would not successfully die with dignity. And now we
have a solution: we install a plugin that throws an out of memory error
when it receives a request. We hack the standalone test infrastructure
to prevent this from failing the test. To do this, we bypass the
security manager and remove the PID file for the node; this tricks the
test infrastructure into thinking that it does not need to stop the
node. We also bypass seccomp so that we can fork jps to make sure that
Elasticsearch really died. And to be extra paranoid, we parse the logs
of the dead Elasticsearch process to make sure it died with
dignity. Never forget.
The requiresKeystore flag was removed from PluginInfo in 6.3.0. This
commit fixes a pair of code comments that incorrectly refer to this
version as 7.0.0.
Previously we allowed a lot of customization of Elasticsearch during
package installation (e.g., the username and group). This customization
was achieved by sourcing the env script (e.g.,
/etc/sysconfig/elasticsearch) during installation. Since we no longer
allow such flexibility, we do not need to source these env scripts
during package installation and removal.
Windows has some strong limitations on command line arguments,
specially when it's too long. In the googlecloudstoragefixture anttask
the classpath argument is very long and the command fails. This commit
removes the classpath as an argument and uses the CLASSPATH
environment variable instead.
This commit removes the ability to specify that a plugin requires the
keystore and instead creates the keystore on package installation or
when Elasticsearch is started for the first time. The reason that we opt
to create the keystore on package installation is to ensure that the
keystore has the correct permissions (the package installation scripts
run as root as opposed to Elasticsearch running as the elasticsearch
user) and to enable removing the keystore on package removal if the
keystore is not modified.
While trying to reroute a shard to or from a non-data node (a node with ``node.data=false``), I encountered a null pointer exception. Though an exception is to be expected, the NPE was occurring because ``allocation.routingNodes()`` would not contain any non-data nodes, so when you attempt to do ``allocation.routingNodes.node(non-data-node)`` it would not find it, and thus error. This occurred regardless of whether I was rerouting to or from a non-data node.
This PR adds a check (as well as a test for these use cases) to return a legible, useful exception if the discovery node you are rerouting to or from is not a data node.
The docs state that `_gce_` is recommended but the code sample states
that `_gce:hostname_` is recommended. This aligns the code sample with
the documentation. Also replace `type` with `zen.hosts_provider` as
discovery.type was removed in #25080.
When an index writer encounters a tragic exception, it could be a
Throwable and not an Exception. Yet we blindly cast the tragic exception
to an Exception which can encounter a ClassCastException. This commit
addresses this by checking if the tragic exception is an Exception and
otherwise wrapping the Throwable in a RuntimeException if it is not. We
choose to wrap the Throwable instead of passing it around because
passing it around leads to changing a lot of places where we handle
Exception to handle Throwable instead. In general, we have tried to
avoid handling Throwable and instead let those bubble up to the uncaught
exception handler.
Log4j2 provides a wide range of logging methods. Our code typically only uses a subset of them. In particular, uses of the methods trace|debug|info|warn|error|fatal(Object) or trace|debug|info|warn|error|fatal(Object, Throwable) have all been wrong, leading to not properly logging the provided message. To prevent these issues in the future, the corresponding Logger methods have been blacklisted.