Hi,
I've created a query builder DSL for Kotlin language that mimics the JSON query DSL.
This makes it easier to translate the documentation targeting the JSON api onto kotlin code.
Please consider adding it to the list of community clients.
Thanks,
Mike Buhot
This commit slightly expands the scaling thread pool configuration test
coverage. In particular, the test testScalingThreadPoolConfiguration is
expanded to include the case when min is equal to size, and the test
testDynamicThreadPoolSize is expanded to include all possible cases when
size is greater than or equal to min.
This commit fixes an index name equality check in RoutingNodes. Namely,
the check was comparing an instance of Index to an instance of
String. Instead, the index name should be obtained from the Index
instance to be compared to the instance of String.
Closes#17982
The RPM init script did not include the check for `bin/elasticsearch` being
executable. This fix adds this checks and makes the tests pass.
This fixes the init script, so the tests pass on centos-6 again.
The url that takes an id has a trailing forward slash, not really an
error but as its the only url in the whole spec that does this it
triggered my OCD :)
Today when restarting Elasticsearch using the start-stop-daemon on
Debian-based systems using System V init, we sleep for one second
between the process successfully stopping and starting the process
again. This sleep is unnecessary as the stop function retries forever
until the previous instance successfully terminates. This commit removes
that unncessary sleep.
Relates #17966
Previously, we would determine index deletes in the cluster state by
comparing the index metadatas between the current cluster state and the
previous cluster state and decipher which ones were missing (the missing
ones are deleted indices). This led to a situation where a node that
went offline and rejoined the cluster could potentially cause dangling
indices to be imported which should have been deleted, because when a node
rejoins, its previous cluster state does not contain reliable state.
This commit introduces the notion of index tombstones in the cluster
state, where we are explicit about which indices have been deleted.
In the case where the previous cluster state is not useful for index
metadata comparisons, a node now determines which indices are to be
deleted based on these tombstones in the cluster state. There is also
functionality to purge the tombstones after exceeding a certain amount.
Closes#17265Closes#16358Closes#17435
This adds information similar to what is from the [shard stores
API](https://www.elastic.co/guide/en/elasticsearch/reference/2.3/indices-shards-stores.html)
to the cluster allocation explanation API (in fact, internally it uses
that API).
This means when you have a decision that otherwise could indicate that a
shard can go somewhere, you now have more information:
```json
{
"shard" : {
"index" : "i",
"index_uuid" : "QzoKda9aQCG_hCaZQ18GEg",
"id" : 0,
"primary" : true
},
"assigned" : false,
"unassigned_info" : {
"reason" : "CLUSTER_RECOVERED",
"at" : "2016-04-11T20:58:04.088Z"
},
"allocation_delay" : "0s",
"allocation_delay_ms" : 0,
"remaining_delay" : "0s",
"remaining_delay_ms" : 0,
"nodes" : {
"24Qmw4tdRTuVOtjAdtmr5Q" : {
"node_name" : "Vampire by Night",
"node_attributes" : { },
"final_decision" : "YES",
"weight" : 7.0,
"decisions" : [ ],
"store" : {
"allocation_id" : "aC6qVWA7TT2pgsalYxxUJQ",
"store_exception" : "IndexFormatTooOldException[Format version is not supported (resource BufferedChecksumIndexInput(SimpleFSIndexInput(path=\"/home/hinmanm/scratch/elasticsearch-5.0.0-alpha1-SNAPSHOT/data/elasticsearch/nodes/0/indices/QzoKda9aQCG_hCaZQ18GEg/0/index/segments_1\"))): -1906795950 (needs to be between 1071082519 and 1071082519). This version of Lucene only supports indexes created with release 5.0 and later.]",
"allocation" : "UNUSED"
}
}
}
}
```
The "store" section is the new section, and will include allocation, id,
and the exception if there is one.
Relates to #17372
This commit converts the settings for the ResourceWatcherService to use the new infrastructure and
registers the settings so that they do not cause errors when used.
This commit clarifies an error message that is produced when an attempt
is made to resize the backing queue for a scaling executor. As this
queue is unbounded, resizing the backing queue does not make sense. The
clarification here is to specify that this restriction is because the
executor is a scaling executor.
This commit actually bounds the size of the generic thread pool. The
generic thread pool was of type cached, a thread pool with an unbounded
number of workers and an unbounded work queue. With this commit, the
generic thread pool is now of type scaling. As such, the cached thread
pool type has been removed. By default, the generic thread pool is
constructed with a core pool size of four, a max pool size of 128 and
idle workers can be reaped after a keep-alive time of thirty seconds
expires. The work queue for this thread pool remains unbounded.
The list settings parser supports retrieving lists defined in settings that use a key followed by a `.` and a
number (for example `foo.bar.0`). However, the exists method would indicate that the provided settings
do not contain a value for this setting. This change makes it so that the exists method now handles this
format.
The getting started docs use dynamic mappings. With the recent change to
string split into text and keyword, text lost the default ability to do
aggs. This was added back in #17188. This change updates the getting
started examples to use the keyword multi field added to dynamically
mapped text fields.
closes#17941