This has no practical impact on users since frozen indices are the only
throttled indices today. However this has an impact on upcoming features
that would use search throttling.
Filtering out throttled indices made sense a couple years ago, but as
we're now improving support for slow requests with `_async_search` and
exploring ways to reduce storage costs, this feature has most likely
become a trap, that we'd like to not have with upcoming features that
would use search throttling.
Relates #54058
Documents several parameters missing from the bulk API's response body
docs. Also moves several response-related chunks of text to the response
body section.
Relates to #55237
This is a backport of #54803 for 7.x.
This pull request cherry picks the squashed commit from #54803 with the additional commits:
6f50c92 which adjusts master code to 7.x
a114549 to mute a failing ILM test (#54818)
48cbca1 and 50186b2 that cleans up and fixes the previous test
aae12bb that adds a missing feature flag (#54861)
6f330e3 that adds missing serialization bits (#54864)
bf72c02 that adjust the version in YAML tests
a51955f that adds some plumbing for the transport client used in integration tests
Co-authored-by: David Turner <david.turner@elastic.co>
Co-authored-by: Yannick Welsch <yannick@welsch.lu>
Co-authored-by: Lee Hinman <dakrone@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Andrei Dan <andrei.dan@elastic.co>
This commit adds a top-level link to the autoscaling API reference page
to the API docs. Additionally, we add a conditional guard on the API
pages to only include them in development builds of the docs.
Fixing the naming of the HLRC values to match the ToXContent field names (i.e. the field names returned from an API call).
Also fixes the names in the _cat API as well.
closes#53946
The main purpose of this commit is to add a single autoscaling REST
endpoint skeleton, for the purpose of starting to build out the build
and testing infrastructure that will surround it. For example, rather
than commiting a fully-functioning autoscaling API, we introduce here
the skeleton so that we can start wiring up the build and testing
infrastructure, establish security roles/permissions, an so on. This
way, in a forthcoming PR that introduces actual functionality, that PR
will be smaller and have less distractions around that sort of
infrastructure.
* [DOCS] Align with ILM API docs (#48705)
* [DOCS] Reconciled with Snapshot/Restore reorg
* [DOCS] Split off ILM overview to a separate topic. (#51287)
* [DOCS} Split off overview to a separate topic.
* [DOCS] Incorporated feedback from @jrodewig.
* [DOCS] Edit ILM GS tutorial (#51513)
* [DOCS] Edit ILM GS tutorial
* [DOCS] Incorporated review feedback from @andreidan.
* [DOCS] Removed test link & fixed anchor & title.
* Update docs/reference/ilm/getting-started-ilm.asciidoc
Co-Authored-By: James Rodewig <james.rodewig@elastic.co>
* Fixed glossary merge error.
Co-authored-by: James Rodewig <james.rodewig@elastic.co>
This change introduces a new feature for indices so that they can be
hidden from wildcard expansion. The feature is referred to as hidden
indices. An index can be marked hidden through the use of an index
setting, `index.hidden`, at creation time. One primary use case for
this feature is to have a construct that fits indices that are created
by the stack that contain data used for display to the user and/or
intended for querying by the user. The desire to keep them hidden is
to avoid confusing users when searching all of the data they have
indexed and getting results returned from indices created by the
system.
Hidden indices have the following properties:
* API calls for all indices (empty indices array, _all, or *) will not
return hidden indices by default.
* Wildcard expansion will not return hidden indices by default unless
the wildcard pattern begins with a `.`. This behavior is similar to
shell expansion of wildcards.
* REST API calls can enable the expansion of wildcards to hidden
indices with the `expand_wildcards` parameter. To expand wildcards
to hidden indices, use the value `hidden` in conjunction with `open`
and/or `closed`.
* Creation of a hidden index will ignore global index templates. A
global index template is one with a match-all pattern.
* Index templates can make an index hidden, with the exception of a
global index template.
* Accessing a hidden index directly requires no additional parameters.
Backport of #50452
Knowing about used analysis components and mapping types would be incredibly
useful in order to know which ones may be deprecated or should get more love.
Some field types also act as a proxy to know about feature usage of some APIs
like the `percolator` or `completion` fields types for percolation and the
completion suggester, respectively.
* Add SLM support to xpack usage and info APIs
This is a backport of #48096
This adds the missing xpack usage and info information into the
`/_xpack` and `/_xpack/usage` APIs. The output now looks like:
```
GET /_xpack/usage
{
...
"slm" : {
"available" : true,
"enabled" : true,
"policy_count" : 1,
"policy_stats" : {
"retention_runs" : 0,
...
}
}
```
and
```
GET /_xpack
{
...
"features" : {
...
"slm" : {
"available" : true,
"enabled" : true
},
...
}
}
```
Relates to #43663
* Fix missing license