Many of our unit tests instantiate an `AllocationService`, which requires having a `GatewayAllocator`. Today almost all of our test use a class called `NoopGatewayAllocator` which does nothing, effectively leaving all shard assignments to the balanced allocator. This is sad as it means we test a system that behaves differently than our production logic in very basic things. For example, a started primary that is lost will be assigned to a node that didn't use to have it.
This PR removes `NoopGatewayAllocator` in favor of a new `TestGatewayAllocator` that inherits the standard `GatewayAllocator` and overrides shard information fetching to return information based on historical assignments the allocator has done. The only exception is `BalanceConfigurationTests` which does test only the balancer and I opted to not have it work around the `GatewayAllocator` being in it's way.
Changes the API of GatewayAllocator#applyStartedShards and
GatewayAllocator#applyFailedShards to take both a RoutingAllocation
and a list of shards to apply. This allows better mock allocators
to be created as being done in #20637.
Closes#20642
Removes the FailedRerouteAllocation class and StartedRerouteAllocation
class, as they were just wrappers for RerouteAllocation that stored
started and failed shards, but these started and failed shards can
be passed in directly to the methods that needed them, removing the
need for this wrapper class and extra level of indirection.
Closes#20626
Today we hold on to all possible tokenizers, tokenfilters etc. when we create
an index service on a node. This was mainly done to allow the `_analyze` API to
directly access all these primitive. We fixed this in #19827 and can now get rid of
the AnalysisService entirely and replace it with a simple map like class. This
ensures we don't create a gazillion long living objects that are entirely useless since
they are never used in most of the indices. Also those objects might consume a considerable
amount of memory since they might load stopwords or synonyms etc.
Closes#19828
This commit changes the default behavior of `_flush` to block if other flushes are ongoing.
This also removes the use of `FlushNotAllowedException` and instead simply return immediately
by skipping the flush. Users should be aware if they set this option that the flush might or might
not flush everything to disk ie. no transactional behavior of some sort.
Closes#20569
This commit removes `ByteSizeValue`'s methods that are duplicated (ex: `mbFrac()` and `getMbFrac()`) in order to only keep the `getN` form.
It also renames `mb()` -> `getMb()`, `kb()` -> `getKB()` in order to be more coherent with the `ByteSizeUnit` method names.
This PR introduces backward compatibility index tests to test the rolling upgrade process amongst Elasticsearch instances within the same major version. The test executes in three phases. In the first phase, we form a cluster of 2 ES instances on an old version. In the second phase, we keep one of the nodes from the old cluster, kill the other node, but preserve its data directory and start an instance of the current version of ES using the same data directory as the killed instance. In the third phase, we kill the other old version ES instance from the first phase and launch a new instance, using the same data directory as the killed instance. Therefore, during phase 3, we have fully migrated and have all current versions of ES running. In each phase, we run REST tests that index documents and search them, ensuring at each stage that the documents from the previous phase are still there.
Note that because we haven't released a GA yet of 5.0, the tests currently don't start an old version cluster in the first phase. Once GA is released, this will be changed to make the backward compatibility version 5.0, while the current version in the cluster will be 5.x.
This change removes all guice interaction from Transport, HttpServerTransport,
HttpServer and TransportService. All these classes as well as their subclasses
or extended version configured via plugins are now created by using plain old
bloody java constructors. YAY!
Currently all the reroute-like methods of `AllocationService` return a result object of type `RoutingAllocation.Result`. The result object contains the new `RoutingTable` and `MetaData` plus an indication whether those were changed. The caller is then responsible of updating a cluster state with these. These means that things can easily go wrong and one can take one of these but not the other causing inconsistencies. We already have a utility method on the `ClusterState` builder that does but no one forces you to do so. Also 99% of the callers do the same thing: i.e., check if the result was changed and if so update the very same cluster state that was passed to `AllocationService`. This PR folds this pattern into `AllocationService` and changes almost all it's methods to return a new cluster state (potentially the original one). This saves some 500 lines of code.
The one exception here is the reroute API which executes allocation commands and potentially returns an explanation as well (next to the routing table and metadata). That API now returns a `CommandsResult` object which encapsulate a cluster state and the explanation.
TransportService is such a central part of the core server, replacing
it's implementation is risky and can cause serious issues. This change removes the ability to
plug in TransportService but allows registering a TransportInterceptor that enables
plugins to intercept requests on both the sender and the receiver ends. This is a commonly used
and overwritten functionality but encapsulates the custom code in a contained manner.
During a networking partition, cluster states updates (like mapping changes or shard assignments)
are committed if a majority of the masters node received the update correctly. This means that the current master has access to enough nodes in the cluster to continue to operate correctly. When the network partition heals, the isolated nodes catch up with the current state and get the changes they couldn't receive before. However, if a second partition happens while the cluster
is still recovering from the previous one *and* the old master is put in the minority side, it may be that a new master is elected which did not yet catch up. If that happens, cluster state updates can be lost.
This commit fixed 95% of this rare problem by adding the current cluster state version to `PingResponse` and use them when deciding which master to join (and thus casting the node's vote).
Note: this doesn't fully mitigate the problem as a cluster state update which is issued concurrently with a network partition can be lost if the partition prevents the commit message (part of the two phased commit of cluster state updates) from reaching any single node in the majority side *and* the partition does allow for the master to acknowledge the change. We are working on a more comprehensive fix but that requires considerate work and is targeted at 6.0.
The only repository we can be sure is safe to clean is `fs` so we clean
any snapshots in those repositories after each test. Other repositories
like url and azure tend to throw exceptions rather than let us fetch
their contents during the REST test. So we clean what we can....
Closes#18159
LongGCDisruption simulates a Long GC by suspending all threads belonging to a node. That's fine, unless those threads hold shared locks that can prevent other nodes from running. Concretely the logging infrastructure, which is shared between the nodes, can cause some deadlocks. LongGCDisruption has protection for this, but it needs to be updated to point at log4j2 classes, introduced in #20235
This commit also fixes improper handling of retry logic in LongGCDisruption and adds a protection against deadlocking the test code which activates the disruption (and uses logging too! :)).
On top of that we have some new, evil and nasty tests.
`TransportService#registerRequestHandler` allowed to register
handlers more than once and issues an annoying warn log message when
this happens. This change simple throws an exception to prevent regsitering
the same handler more than once. This commit also removes the ability
to remove request handlers.
Relates to #20468
After this change SearchModule doesn't subclass AbstractModule anymore and all wiring
happens in `Node.java`. As a side-effect several tests don't need a guice injector anymore.
This commit modifies the logger names within Elasticsearch to be the
fully-qualified class name as opposed removing the org.elasticsearch
prefix and dropping the class name. This change separates the root
logger from the Elasticsearch loggers (they were equated from the
removal of the org.elasticsearch prefix) and enables log levels to be
set at the class level (instead of the package level).
Relates #20457
Today we add a prefix when logging within Elasticsearch. This prefix
contains the node name, and index and shard-level components if
appropriate.
Due to some implementation details with Log4j 2 , this does not work for
integration tests; instead what we see is the node name for the last
node to startup. The implementation detail here is that Log4j 2 there is
only one logger for a name, message factory pair, and the key derived
from the message factory is the class name of the message factory. So,
when the last node starts up and starts setting prefixes on its message
factories, it will impact the loggers for the other nodes.
Additionally, the prefixes are lost when logging an exception. This is
due to another implementation detail in Log4j 2. Namely, since we log
exceptions using a parameterized message, Log4j 2 decides that that
means that we do not want to use the message factory that we have
provided (the prefix message factory) and so logs the exception without
the prefix.
This commit fixes both of these issues.
Relates #20429
This commit cuts over geo_point fields to use Lucene's new point-based LatLonPoint type for indexes created in 5.0. Indexes created prior to 5.0 continue to use their respective encoding type. Below is a description of the changes made to support the new encoding type:
* New indexes use a new LatLonPointFieldMapper which provides a parse method for the new type
* The new LatLonPoint parse method removes support for lat_lon and geohash parameters
* Backcompat testing for deprecated lat_lon and geohash parameters is added to all unit and integration tests
* LatLonPointFieldMapper provides DocValues support (enabled by default) which uses Lucene's new LatLonDocValuesField type
* New LatLonPoint field data classes are added for aggregation support (wraps LatLonPoint's Numeric Doc Values)
* MultiFields use the geohash as the string value instead of the lat,lon string making it easier to perform geo string queries on the geohash instead of a lat,lon comma delimited string.
Removed Features:
* With the removal of geohash indexing, GeoHashCellQuery support is removed for all new indexes (still supported on existing indexes)
* LatLonPoint does not support a Distance Range query because it is super inefficient. Instead, the geo_distance_range query should be accomplished using either the geo_distance aggregation, sorting by descending distance on a geo_distance query, or a boolean must not of the excluded distance (which is what the distance_range query did anyway).
TODO:
* fix/finish yaml changes for plugin and rest integration tests
* update documentation
This commit adds a -q/--quiet option to Elasticsearch so that it does not log anything in the console and closes stdout & stderr streams. This is useful for SystemD to avoid duplicate logs in both journalctl and /var/log/elasticsearch/elasticsearch.log while still allows the JVM to print error messages in stdout/stderr if needed.
closes#17220
In 5.x we allowed this with a deprecation warning. This removes the code
added for that deprecation, requiring the cluster name to not be in the
data path.
Resolves#20391
This change removes the guice dependency handling for SearchService and
several related classes like SearchTransportController and SearchPhaseController.
The latter two now have package private constructors and dependencies like FetchPhase
are now created by calling their constructors explicitly. This also cleans up several users
of the DefaultSearchContext and centralized it's creation inside SearchService.
Splits the PrimaryShardAllocator and ReplicaShardAllocator's decision
making for a shard from the implementation of that decision on the
routing table. This is a step toward making it easier to use the same
logic for the cluster allocation explain APIs.
Introduce a base class for unit tests that are based on real `IndexShard`s. The base class takes care of all the little details needed to create and recover shards.
This commit also moves `IndexShardTests` and `ESIndexLevelReplicationTestCase` to use the new base class. All tests in `IndexShardTests` that required a full node environment were moved to a new `IndexShardIT` suite.
Before, when there was a new cluster state to publish,
zen discovery would first update the set of nodes to
ping based on the new cluster state, then publish the new
cluster state. This is problematic because if the cluster
state failed to publish, then the set of nodes to ping
should not have been updated.
This commit fixes the issue by updating the set of
nodes to ping for fault detection only *after* the new
cluster state has been published.
Search section supports an ext section that is used to provide additional config needed from plugins. It is now tied to sub fetch phases because it is the only section that may need additional config, but there is no reason for the two to be tightly coupled.
It is now possible to register a searchExtParser independently from a sub fetch phase. All a search ext parser does is parsing some ext section of a search request, whose parsed resulting object is stored in the search context for later retrieval.
The context was an object where the parsed info are stored. That is more of what we call the builder since after the search refactoring. No need for generics in FetchSubPhaseParser then. Also the previous setHitsExecutionNeeded wasn't useful, it can be removed as well, given that once there is a parsed ext section, it will become a builder that can be retrieved by the sub fetch phase. The sub fetch phase is responsible for doing nothing in case the builder is not set, meaning that the fetch sub phase is plugged in but the request didn't have the corresponding section.
SearchParseElement is renamed to FetchSubPhaseParser and moved to the search.fetch package. Its parse method doesn't get the SearchContext as argument anymore, only the XContentParser, and the return type is what gets parsed (the fetch sub phase context which we may as well rename later).
It is the parser that initializes the FetchSubPhaseContext then. SearchService retrieves the parser by name, calls parse against it and stores the result of parsing by name. No need for FetchSubPhase.ContextFactory anymore, which can be removed.
Given that doc value fields is our own fetch sub phase, it doesn't need to be implemented like if it was plugged in from the outside. It doesn't need its own fetch sub phase context, but it can just be an instance member in SearchContext
Previously we would disable console logging in certain circumstances
(for example, if Elasticsearch is not in the foreground, or if
Elasticsearch is in the foreground but an exception was thrown during
bootstrap). This commit makes this handling work with Log4j 2. This will
prevent users from seeing double bootstrap check failure messages.
Relates #20387
By default, when an exception causes the JVM to terminate, the stack
trace is printed. In the case of failing bootstrap checks, this stack
trace is useless to the user, and might even distract them from seeing
that the bootstrap checks failed for reasons under their control. With
this commit, we cause the stack trace for a failing bootstrap check to
be truncated.
We also modify some methods to not declare that they throw the top level
checked exception type Exception, but instead explicitly declare the
exceptions that they throw. These exceptions are caught and wrapped in a
BootstrapException so that we can percolate only two exception types out
of Bootstrap#init as checked exception, BootstrapException and
NodeValidationException.
Relates #19989
This commit cleans most of the methods of XContentBuilder so that:
- Jackson's convenience methods are used instead of our custom ones (ie field(String,long) now uses Jackson's writeNumberField(String, long) instead of calling writeField(String) then writeNumber(long))
- null checks are added for all field names and values
- methods are grouped by type in the class source
- methods have the same parameters names
- duplicated methods like field(String, String...) and array(String, String...) are removed
- varargs methods now have the "array" name to reflect that it builds arrays
- unused methods like field(String,BigDecimal) are removed
- all methods now follow the execution path: field(String,?) -> field(String) then value(?), and value(?) -> writeSomething() method. Methods to build arrays also follow the same execution path.
Exposing lucene 6.x minhash tokenfilter
Generate min hash tokens from an incoming stream of tokens that can
be used to estimate document similarity.
Closes#20149
Jython shades `jansi` into it's classpath without changing it's package or
anything like that. This causes attempts to load native code on windows which
blows up tests. This change adds `log4j.skipJansi=true` system property to our
tests as well as to the JVM properties we set.
The BackgroundIndexer now uses auto-generated IDs randomly. This causes some problems
for tests that still rely on the fact that the IDs are increasing integers. This change
exposes all IDs via a Set<String> to iterate over for tests.
This commit configures test logging for Log4j 2. The default logger
configuration uses the console appender but at the error level, so most
tests are missing logging. Instead, this commit provides a configuration
for tests which is picked up from the classpath by Log4j 2 when it
initializes. However, this now means that we can no longer initialize
Log4j with a bare-bones configuration when tests run as doing so will
prevent Log4j 2 from attempting to configure logging via the
classpath. Consequently, we move this needed initialization (as
commented, to avoid a message about a status logger not being configured
when we are preparing to configure Log4j from properties files in the
config directory) to only run when we are explicitly configuring Log4j
from properties files.
Relates #20284
If elasticsearch controls the ID values as well as the documents
version we can optimize the code that adds / appends the documents
to the index. Essentially we an skip the version lookup for all
documents unless the same document is delivered more than once.
On the lucene level we can simply call IndexWriter#addDocument instead
of #updateDocument but on the Engine level we need to ensure that we deoptimize
the case once we see the same document more than once.
This is done as follows:
1. Mark every request with a timestamp. This is done once on the first node that
receives a request and is fixed for this request. This can be even the
machine local time (see why later). The important part is that retry
requests will have the same value as the original one.
2. In the engine we make sure we keep the highest seen time stamp of "retry" requests.
This is updated while the retry request has its doc id lock. Call this `maxUnsafeAutoIdTimestamp`
3. When the engine runs an "optimized" request comes, it compares it's timestamp with the
current `maxUnsafeAutoIdTimestamp` (but doesn't update it). If the the request
timestamp is higher it is safe to execute it as optimized (no retry request with the same
timestamp has been run before). If not we fall back to "non-optimzed" mode and run the request as a retry one
and update the `maxUnsafeAutoIdTimestamp` unless it's been updated already to a higher value
Relates to #19813
* master:
Avoid NPE in LoggingListener
Randomly use Netty 3 plugin in some tests
Skip smoke test client on JDK 9
Revert "Don't allow XContentBuilder#writeValue(TimeValue)"
[docs] Remove coming in 2.0.0
Don't allow XContentBuilder#writeValue(TimeValue)
[doc] Remove leftover from CONSOLE conversion
Parameter improvements to Cluster Health API wait for shards (#20223)
Add 2.4.0 to packaging tests list
Docs: clarify scale is applied at origin+offest (#20242)
* Params improvements to Cluster Health API wait for shards
Previously, the cluster health API used a strictly numeric value
for `wait_for_active_shards`. However, with the introduction of
ActiveShardCount and the removal of write consistency level for
replication operations, `wait_for_active_shards` is used for
write operations to represent values for ActiveShardCount. This
commit moves the cluster health API's usage of `wait_for_active_shards`
to be consistent with its usage in the write operation APIs.
This commit also changes `wait_for_relocating_shards` from a
numeric value to a simple boolean value `wait_for_no_relocating_shards`
to set whether the cluster health operation should wait for
all relocating shards to complete relocation.
* Addresses code review comments
* Don't be lenient if `wait_for_relocating_shards` is set
* master:
Increase visibility of deprecation logger
Skip transport client plugin installed on JDK 9
Explicitly disable Netty key set replacement
percolator: Fail indexing percolator queries containing either a has_child or has_parent query.
Make it possible for Ingest Processors to access AnalysisRegistry
Allow RestClient to send array-based headers
Silence rest util tests until the bogusness can be simplified
Remove unknown HttpContext-based test as it fails unpredictably on different JVMs
Tests: Improve rest suite names and generated test names for docs tests
Add support for a RestClient base path
This commit modifies the call sites that allocate a parameterized
message to use a supplier so that allocations are avoided unless the log
level is fine enough to emit the corresponding log message.
Rest test suites are currently only the directory above the yaml test
file. That is confusing when there are more than one directory level
which contain yaml tests, as there are in generated docs tests. This
change makes rest tests use the full relative path to the rest test root
as the suite name, and also makes the test names for docs tests a little
clearer (that they are testing an example from a specific line number,
instead of just the line number as an opaque test name).
Removed null check for token, if we are outside the null it already means it is null.
Fixed typo in comment and remove leftover assignment to unused local variable.
This test is periodically failing. As I suspect that the GCDisruption scheme is somehow making the wrong node block on
its cluster state update thread, I've added some more logging and a thread dump once the given assertion triggers
again.
Adds an explicit recoverySource field to ShardRouting that characterizes the type of recovery to perform:
- fresh empty shard copy
- existing local shard copy
- recover from peer (primary)
- recover from snapshot
- recover from other local shards on same node (shrink index action)
Objects hierarchy must be tracked when entering/leaving an object so that it better knows if the "newField" has been inserted into an arbitrary holding object.
Can be reproduced with gradle :core:test -Dtests.seed=760F8BD0F7E46D45 -Dtests.class=org.elasticsearch.index.query.MoreLikeThisQueryBuilderTests -Dtests.method="testUnknownObjectException" -Dtests.security.manager=true -Dtests.locale=ko -Dtests.timezone=Etc/Zulu
When need to check the whole hierarchy of objects to know if the newly inserted "newField" object is part of an arbitrary holding object or not.
Reproduced with `gradle :modules:percolator:test -Dtests.seed=736B0B67DA7A3632 -Dtests.class=org.elasticsearch.percolator.PercolateQueryBuilderTests -Dtests.method="testUnknownObjectException" -Dtests.security.manager=true -Dtests.locale=es-ES -Dtests.timezone=ART`
This method fails when a randomized string value contains a double-quote. This commit changes the method so that it is not based on string concatenation anymore. It now use XContentGenerator & XContentParser to mutate the valid queries.
Related #19864
This change adds a special field named _none_ that allows to disable the retrieval of the stored fields in a search request or in a TopHitsAggregation.
To completely disable stored fields retrieval (including disabling metadata fields retrieval such as _id or _type) use _none_ like this:
````
POST _search
{
"stored_fields": "_none_"
}
````
Deprecates the optimize_bbox parameter on geodistance queries. This has no longer been needed since version 2.2 because lucene geo distance queries (postings and LatLonPoint) already optimize by bounding box.
This change converts AllocationDecider registration from push based on
ClusterModule to implementing with a new ClusterPlugin interface.
AllocationDecider instances are allowed to use only Settings and
ClusterSettings.
Adds a class that records changes made to RoutingAllocation, so that at the end of the allocation round other values can be more easily derived based on these changes. Most notably, it:
- replaces the explicit boolean flag that is passed around everywhere to denote changes to the routing table. The boolean flag is automatically updated now when changes actually occur, preventing issues where it got out of sync with actual changes to the routing table.
- records actual changes made to RoutingNodes so that primary term and in-sync allocation ids, which are part of index metadata, can be efficiently updated just by looking at the shards that were actually changed.
In addition to be an allocation decider, DiskThresholdDecider also
monitors the used disk in order to trigger a reroute when the thresholds
are crossed. This change splits out the settings for disk thresholds
into DiskThresholdSettings, and moves the monitoring to a new
DiskThresholdMonitor. DiskThresholdDecider is then in line with other
allocation deciders, needing only Settings and ClusterSettings for
construction, which will allow deguicing allocation deciders.
`LobObtainFailedException` should be reserved for on-disk locks that
Lucene attempts (like `write.lock`). This switches our in-memory
semaphore locks for shards to use a different exception. Additionally,
ShardLockObtainFailedException no longer subclasses IOException, since
no IO is being done is this case.
Resolves#19978
As the most complicated `FetchSubPhase` highlighting gets its own package
(`o.e.seach.fetch.subphase.highlight`. No other `FetchSubPhase`s get their
own package. Instead they all reside together in `o.e.search.fetch.subphase`.
Add package descriptions to `o.e.search.fetch` and subpackages.
This commit defaults the max local storage nodes to one. The motivation
for this change is that a default value greather than one is dangerous
as users sometimes end up unknowingly starting a second node and start
thinking that they have encountered data loss.
Relates #19964
This commit separates the description of the links in the network that are to be disrupted from the failure that is to be applied to the links (disconnect/unresponsive/delay). Previously we had subclasses for the various kind of network disruption schemes combining on one hand failure mode (disconnect/unresponsive/delay) as well as the network links to cut (two partitions / bridge partitioning) into a single class.
I also reduced the visibility of a couple classes and renamed/consolidated some
test classes for consistency, eg. removing the `Simple` prefix or using the
`<Type>FieldMapperTests` convention for testing field mappers.
testUnknownObjectException used to generate malformed json objects in some cases, due to the existence of arrays as it was not closing the injected object correctly. That is why the test was catching JsonParseException among the exception that are expected to be thrown. That is fixed by tracking where the new object is placed and placing its end object marker to the right level rather than always at the end.
Also introduced a mechanism to explicitly declare objects that won't cause any exception when they get additional objects injected, so that there is no need to override the method anymore as that caused copy pasting of the whole test method. This also makes sure that changes are reflected in tests, as those inner objects are not skipped but we actually check that what is declared is true (no exceptions get thrown when an additional object is added within them.
When compiling many dynamically changing scripts, parameterized
scripts (<https://www.elastic.co/guide/en/elasticsearch/reference/master/modules-scripting-using.html#prefer-params>)
should be preferred. This enforces a limit to the number of scripts that
can be compiled within a minute. A new dynamic setting is added -
`script.max_compilations_per_minute`, which defaults to 15.
If more dynamic scripts are sent, a user will get the following
exception:
```json
{
"error" : {
"root_cause" : [
{
"type" : "circuit_breaking_exception",
"reason" : "[script] Too many dynamic script compilations within one minute, max: [15/min]; please use on-disk, indexed, or scripts with parameters instead",
"bytes_wanted" : 0,
"bytes_limit" : 0
}
],
"type" : "search_phase_execution_exception",
"reason" : "all shards failed",
"phase" : "query",
"grouped" : true,
"failed_shards" : [
{
"shard" : 0,
"index" : "i",
"node" : "a5V1eXcZRYiIk8lecjZ4Jw",
"reason" : {
"type" : "general_script_exception",
"reason" : "Failed to compile inline script [\"aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa\"] using lang [painless]",
"caused_by" : {
"type" : "circuit_breaking_exception",
"reason" : "[script] Too many dynamic script compilations within one minute, max: [15/min]; please use on-disk, indexed, or scripts with parameters instead",
"bytes_wanted" : 0,
"bytes_limit" : 0
}
}
}
],
"caused_by" : {
"type" : "general_script_exception",
"reason" : "Failed to compile inline script [\"aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa\"] using lang [painless]",
"caused_by" : {
"type" : "circuit_breaking_exception",
"reason" : "[script] Too many dynamic script compilations within one minute, max: [15/min]; please use on-disk, indexed, or scripts with parameters instead",
"bytes_wanted" : 0,
"bytes_limit" : 0
}
}
},
"status" : 500
}
```
This also fixes a bug in `ScriptService` where requests being executed
concurrently on a single node could cause a script to be compiled
multiple times (many in the case of a powerful node with many shards)
due to no synchronization between checking the cache and compiling the
script. There is now synchronization so that a script being compiled
will only be compiled once regardless of the number of concurrent
searches on a node.
Relates to #19396
Some random operations were conditionally performed in the before test, which made tests not repeatable. For instance take the seed chain to repeat a specific iteration and try to reproduce it, this conditional code would get executed in both cases when trying to isolate the failure, but not among the different iterations (as only the first method/iteration executes it), hence the failure will not reproduce.
Moved the random operations to beforeClass and left the non random part in the before method, which is needed as it depends on some method that can be overridden by subclasses.
This commit cleans up indices in a snapshot repository when all
snapshots containing the index are all deleted. Previously, empty
indices folders would lay around after all snapshots containing
them were deleted.
Adds `warnings` syntax to the yaml test that allows you to expect
a `Warning` header that looks like:
```
- do:
warnings:
- '[index] is deprecated'
- quotes are not required because yaml
- but this argument is always a list, never a single string
- no matter how many warnings you expect
get:
index: test
type: test
id: 1
```
These are accessible from the docs with:
```
// TEST[warning:some warning]
```
This should help to force you to update the docs if you deprecate
something. You *must* add the warnings marker to the docs or the build
will fail. While you are there you *should* update the docs to add
deprecation warnings visible in the rendered results.
AbstractQueryTestCase parses the main version of the query in strict mode, meaning that it will fail if any deprecated syntax is used. It should do the same for alternate versions (e.g. short versions). This is the way it is because the two alternate versions for ids query are both deprecated. Moved testing for those to a specific test method that isolates the deprecations and actually tests that the two are deprecated.
Our parsing code accepted up until now queries in the following form (note that the query starts with `[`:
```
{
"bool" : [
{
"must" : []
}
]
}
```
This would lead to a null pointer exception as most parsers assume that the field name ("must" in this example) is the first thing that can be found in a query if its json is valid, hence always non null while parsing. Truth is that the additional array layer doesn't make the json invalid, hence the following code fragment would cause NPE within ParseField, because null gets passed to `parseContext.isDeprecatedSetting`:
```
if (token == XContentParser.Token.FIELD_NAME) {
currentFieldName = parser.currentName();
} else if (parseContext.isDeprecatedSetting(currentFieldName)) {
// skip
} else if (token == XContentParser.Token.START_OBJECT) {
```
We could add null checks in each of our parsers in lots of places, but we rely on `currentFieldName` being non null in all of our parsers, and we should consider it a bug when these unexpected situations are not caught explicitly. It would be best to find a way to prevent such queries altogether without changing all of our parsers.
The reason why such a query goes through is that we've been allowing a query to start with either `[` or `{`. The only reason I found is that we accept `match_all : []`. This seems like an undocumented corner case that we could drop support for. Then we can be stricter and accept only `{` as start token of a query. That way the only next token that the parser can encounter if the json is valid (otherwise the json parser would barf earlier) is actually a field_name, hence the assumption that all our parser makes hold.
The downside of this is simply dropping support for `match_all : []`
Relates to #12887
Old:
```
> Throwable #1: java.lang.AssertionError: expected [2xx] status code but api [reindex] returned [400 Bad Request] [{"error":{"root_cause":[{"type":"parsing_exception","reason":"[reindex] failed to parse field [dest]","line":1,"col":25}],"type":"parsing_exception","reason":"[reindex] failed to parse field [dest]","line":1,"col":25,"caused_by":{"type":"illegal_argument_exception","reason":"[dest] unknown field [asdfadf], parser not found"}},"status":400}]
> at __randomizedtesting.SeedInfo.seed([9325F8C5C6F227DD:1B71C71F680E4A25]:0)
> at org.elasticsearch.test.rest.yaml.section.DoSection.execute(DoSection.java:119)
> at org.elasticsearch.test.rest.yaml.ESClientYamlSuiteTestCase.test(ESClientYamlSuiteTestCase.java:309)
> at java.lang.Thread.run(Thread.java:745)
```
New:
```
> Throwable #1: java.lang.AssertionError: Failure at [reindex/10_basic:12]: expected [2xx] status code but api [reindex] returned [400 Bad Request] [{"error":{"root_cause":[{"type":"parsing_exception","reason":"[reindex] failed to parse field [dest]","line":1,"col":25}],"type":"parsing_exception","reason":"[reindex] failed to parse field [dest]","line":1,"col":25,"caused_by":{"type":"illegal_argument_exception","reason":"[dest] unknown field [asdfadf], parser not found"}},"status":400}]
> at __randomizedtesting.SeedInfo.seed([444DEEAF47322306:CC19D175E9CE4EFE]:0)
> at org.elasticsearch.test.rest.yaml.ESClientYamlSuiteTestCase.executeSection(ESClientYamlSuiteTestCase.java:329)
> at org.elasticsearch.test.rest.yaml.ESClientYamlSuiteTestCase.test(ESClientYamlSuiteTestCase.java:309)
> at java.lang.Thread.run(Thread.java:745)
> Caused by: java.lang.AssertionError: expected [2xx] status code but api [reindex] returned [400 Bad Request] [{"error":{"root_cause":[{"type":"parsing_exception","reason":"[reindex] failed to parse field [dest]","line":1,"col":25}],"type":"parsing_exception","reason":"[reindex] failed to parse field [dest]","line":1,"col":25,"caused_by":{"type":"illegal_argument_exception","reason":"[dest] unknown field [asdfadf], parser not found"}},"status":400}]
> at org.elasticsearch.test.rest.yaml.section.DoSection.execute(DoSection.java:119)
> at org.elasticsearch.test.rest.yaml.ESClientYamlSuiteTestCase.executeSection(ESClientYamlSuiteTestCase.java:325)
> ... 37 more
```
Sorry for the longer stack trace, but I wanted to be sure I didn't throw
anything away by accident.
Currently any code that wants to added NamedWriteables to the
NamedWriteableRegistry can do so via guice injection of the registry,
and registering at construction time. However, this makes the registry
complex: it has both get and register methods synchronized, and there is
likely contention on the read side from multiple threads. The
registration has mostly already been contained to guice modules at node
construction time.
This change makes the registry immutable, taking all of the
NamedWriteable readers at construction time. It also allows plugins to
added arbitrary named writables that it may use in its own transport
actions.
conform with the requirements of the writeBlob method by
throwing a FileAlreadyExistsException if attempting to write
to a blob that already exists. This change means implementations
of BlobContainer should never overwrite blobs - to overwrite a
blob, it must first be deleted and then can be written again.
Closes#15579
After #13834 many tests that used Groovy scripts (for good or bad reason) in their tests have been moved in the lang-groovy module and the issue #13837 has been created to track these messy tests in order to clean them up.
The work started with #19280, #19302 and #19336 and this PR moves the remaining messy tests back in core, removes the dependency on Groovy, changes the scripts in order to use the mocked script engine, and change the tests to integration tests.
It also moves IndexLookupIT test back (even if it has good chance to be removed soon) and fixes its tests.
It also changes AbstractQueryTestCase to use custom script plugins in tests.
closes#13837
* Rename operation to result and reworking responses
* Rename DocWriteResponse.Operation enum to DocWriteResponse.Result
These are just easier to interpret names.
Closes#19664
This is cleanup work from #19566, where @nik9000 suggested trying to nuke the isCreated and isFound methods. I've combined nuking the two methods with removing UpdateHelper.Operation in favor of DocWriteResponse.Operation here.
Closes#19631.
This removes two packages, consolidating them into their parent package
and adds `package-info.java` files to describe all of the packages under
`org.elasticsearch.test.rest`.
The tests for authentication extend ESIntegTestCase and use a mock
authentication plugin. This way the clients don't have to worry about
running it. Sadly, that means we don't really have good coverage on the
REST portion of the authentication.
This also adds ElasticsearchStatusException, and exception on which you
can set an explicit status. The nice thing about it is that you can
set the RestStatus that it returns to whatever arbitrary status you like
based on the status that comes back from the remote system.
reindex-from-remote then uses it to wrap all remote failures, preserving
the status from the remote Elasticsearch or whatever proxy is between us
and the remove Elasticsearch.
This makes it obvious that these tests are for running the client yaml
suites. Now that there are other ways of running tests using the REST
client against a running cluster we can't go on calling the shared
client yaml tests "REST tests". They are rest tests, but they aren't
**the** rest tests.
This adds a header that looks like `Location: /test/test/1` to the
response for the index/create/update API. The requirement for the header
comes from https://www.w3.org/Protocols/rfc2616/rfc2616-sec10.htmlhttps://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7231#section-7.1.2 claims that relative
URIs are OK. So we use an absolute path which should resolve to the
appropriate location.
Closes#19079
This makes large changes to our rest test infrastructure, allowing us
to write junit tests that test a running cluster via the rest client.
It does this by splitting ESRestTestCase into two classes:
* ESRestTestCase is the superclass of all tests that use the rest client
to interact with a running cluster.
* ESClientYamlSuiteTestCase is the superclass of all tests that use the
rest client to run the yaml tests. These tests are shared across all
official clients, thus the `ClientYamlSuite` part of the name.
After #13834 many tests that used Groovy scripts (for good or bad reason) in their tests have been moved in the lang-groovy module and the issue #13837 has been created to track these messy tests in order to clean them up.
This commit moves more tests back in core, removes the dependency on Groovy, changes the scripts in order to use the mocked script engine, and change the tests to integration tests.
With #19140 we started persisting the node ID across node restarts. Now that we have a "stable" anchor, we can use it to generate a stable default node name and make it easier to track nodes over a restarts. Sadly, this means we will not have those random fun Marvel characters but we feel this is the right tradeoff.
On the implementation side, this requires a bit of juggling because we now need to read the node id from disk before we can log as the node node is part of each log message. The PR move the initialization of NodeEnvironment as high up in the starting sequence as possible, with only one logging message before it to indicate we are initializing. Things look now like this:
```
[2016-07-15 19:38:39,742][INFO ][node ] [_unset_] initializing ...
[2016-07-15 19:38:39,826][INFO ][node ] [aAmiW40] node name set to [aAmiW40] by default. set the [node.name] settings to change it
[2016-07-15 19:38:39,829][INFO ][env ] [aAmiW40] using [1] data paths, mounts [[ /(/dev/disk1)]], net usable_space [5.5gb], net total_space [232.6gb], spins? [unknown], types [hfs]
[2016-07-15 19:38:39,830][INFO ][env ] [aAmiW40] heap size [1.9gb], compressed ordinary object pointers [true]
[2016-07-15 19:38:39,837][INFO ][node ] [aAmiW40] version[5.0.0-alpha5-SNAPSHOT], pid[46048], build[473d3c0/2016-07-15T17:38:06.771Z], OS[Mac OS X/10.11.5/x86_64], JVM[Oracle Corporation/Java HotSpot(TM) 64-Bit Server VM/1.8.0_51/25.51-b03]
[2016-07-15 19:38:40,980][INFO ][plugins ] [aAmiW40] modules [percolator, lang-mustache, lang-painless, reindex, aggs-matrix-stats, lang-expression, ingest-common, lang-groovy, transport-netty], plugins []
[2016-07-15 19:38:43,218][INFO ][node ] [aAmiW40] initialized
```
Needless to say, settings `node.name` explicitly still works as before.
The commit also contains some clean ups to the relationship between Environment, Settings and Plugins. The previous code suggested the path related settings could be changed after the initial Environment was changed. This did not have any effect as the security manager already locked things down.
#19096 introduced a generic TCPTransport base class so we can have multiple TCP based transport implementation. These implementations can vary in how they respond internally to situations where we concurrently send, receive and handle disconnects and can have different exceptions. However, disconnects are important events for the rest of the code base and should be distinguished from other errors (for example, it signals TransportMasterAction that it needs to retry and wait for the a (new) master to come back). Therefore, we should make sure that all the implementations do the proper translation from their internal exceptions into ConnectTransportException which is used externally.
Similarly we should make sure that the transport implementation properly recognize errors that were caused by a disconnect as such and deal with them correctly. This was, for example, the source of a build failure at https://elasticsearch-ci.elastic.co/job/elastic+elasticsearch+master+multijob-intake/1080 , where a concurrency issue cause SocketException to bubble out of MockTcpTransport.
This PR adds a tests which concurrently simulates connects, disconnects, sending and receiving and makes sure the above holds. It also fixes anything (not much!) that was found it.
* rethrow script compilation exceptions into ingest configuration exceptions
* update readProcessor to rethrow any exception as an ElasticsearchException
We throw IOException, which is the exception that is going to be thrown in 99% of the cases. A more generic exception can happen, and if it is a runtime one we just let it bubble up as is, otherwise we wrap it into runtime one so that we don't require to catch Exception everywhere, which seems odd.
Also adjusted javadocs for all performRequest methods
With the introduction of the async client, ResponseException doesn't eagerly read the response body anymore into a string. That is better, but raised a problem in our REST tests infra: we were reading the response body twice, while it can only be consumed once. Introduced a RestTestResponseException that wraps a ResponseException and exposes the body which now gets read only once.
The new method accepts the usual parameters (method, endpoint, params, entity and headers) plus a response listener and an async response consumer. Shortcut methods are also added that don't require params, entity and the async response consumer optional.
There are a few relevant api changes as a consequence of the move to async client that affect sync methods:
- Response doesn't implement Closeable anymore, responses don't need to be closed
- performRequest throws Exception rather than just IOException, as that is the the exception that we get from the FutureCallback#failed method in the async http client
- ssl configuration is a bit simpler, one only needs to call setSSLStrategy from a custom HttpClientConfigCallback, that doesn't end up overridng any other default around connection pooling (it used to happen with the sync client and make ssl configuration more complex)
Relates to #19055
We used to mutate it as part of building the aggregation. That
caused assertVersionSerializable to fail because it assumes that
requests aren't mutated after they are sent.
Closes#19481
The `client/transport` project adds a new jar build project that
pulls in all dependencies and configures all required modules.
Preinstalled modules are:
* transport-netty
* lang-mustache
* reindex
* percolator
The `TransportClient` classes are still in core
while `TransportClient.Builder` has only a protected construcutor
such that users are redirected to use the new `TransportClientBuilder`
from the new jar.
Closes#19412
* Removed `Template` class and unified script & template parsing logic. Templates are scripts, so they should be defined as a script. Unless there will be separate template infrastructure, templates should share as much code as possible with scripts.
* Removed ScriptParseException in favour for ElasticsearchParseException
* Moved TemplateQueryBuilder to lang-mustache module because this query is hard coded to work with mustache only
Before returning, index creation now waits for the configured number
of shard copies to be started. In the past, a client would create an
index and then potentially have to check the cluster health to wait
to execute write operations. With the cluster health semantics changing
so that index creation does not cause the cluster health to go RED,
this change enables waiting for the desired number of active shards
to be active before returning from index creation.
Relates #9126
Also introduced a `Processor.Parameters` class that is holder for several services processors rely on,
the IngestPlugin#getProcessors(...) method has been changed to accept `Processor.Parameters` instead
of each service seperately.
This commit renames the Netty 3 transport module from transport-netty to
transport-netty3. This is to make room for a Netty 4 transport module,
transport-netty4.
Relates #19439
Today `node.mode` and `node.local` serve almost the same purpose, they
are a shortcut for `discovery.type` and `transport.type`. If `node.local: true`
or `node.mode: local` is set elasticsearch will start in _local_ mode which means
only nodes within the same JVM are discovered and a non-network based transport
is used. The _local_ mode it only really used in tests or if nodes are embedded.
For both, embedding and tests explicit configuration via `discovery.type` and `transport.type`
should be preferred.
This change removes all the usage of these settings and by-default doesn't
configure a default transport implemenation since netty is now a module. Yet, to make
the user expericence flawless, plugins or modules can set a `http.type.default` and
`transport.type.default`. Plugins set this via `PluginService#additionalSettings()`
which enforces _set-once_ which prevents node startup if set multiple times. This means
that our distributions will just startup with netty transport since it's packaged as a
module unless `transport.type` or `http.transport.type` is explicitly set.
This change also found a bunch of bugs since several NamedWriteables were not registered if a
transport client is used. Now that we don't rely on the `node.mode` leniency which is inherited
instead of using explicit settings, `TransportClient` uses `AssertingLocalTransport` which detects these problems since it serializes all messages.
Closes#16234