This commit modifies the HTTP server used in
AzureBlobStoreRepositoryTests so that it randomly returns
server errors for any type of request executed by the Azure client.
This commit modifies the HTTP server used in
GoogleCloudStorageBlobStoreRepositoryTests so that it randomly
returns server errors. The test does not inject server errors for the
following types of request: batch request, resumable upload request.
The `repository-s3` plugin has supported a storage class of `onezone_ia` since
the SDK upgrade in #30723, but we do not test or document this fact. This
commit adds this storage class to the docs and adds a test to ensure that the
documented storage classes are all accepted by S3 too.
Fixes#30474
This commit removes the usage of MockGoogleCloudStoragePlugin in
GoogleCloudStorageBlobStoreRepositoryTests and replaces it by a
HttpServer that emulates the Storage service. This allows the repository
tests to use the real Google's client under the hood in tests and will allow
us to test the behavior of the snapshot/restore feature for GCS repositories
by simulating random server-side internal errors.
The HTTP server used to emulate the Storage service is intentionally simple
and minimal to keep things understandable and maintainable. Testing full
client options on the server side (like authentication, chunked encoding
etc) remains the responsibility of the GoogleCloudStorageFixture.
Similarly to what had been done for S3 (#46081) and GCS (#46255)
this commit adds repository integration tests for Azure, based on an
internal HTTP server instead of mocks.
When some high values are randomly picked up - for example the number
of indices to snapshot or the number of snapshots to create - the tests
in S3BlobStoreRepositoryTests can generate a high number of requests to
the internal S3 server.
In order to test the retry logic of the S3 client, the internal server is
designed to randomly generate random server errors. When many
requests are made, it is possible that the S3 client reaches its maximum
number of successive retries capacity. Then the S3 client will stop
retrying requests until enough retry attempts succeed, but it means
that any request could fail before reaching the max retries count and
make the test fail too.
Closes#46217Closes#46218Closes#46219
This commit modifies the HTTP server used in S3BlobStoreRepositoryTests
so that it randomly returns server errors for any type of request executed by
the SDK client. It is now possible to verify that the repository tests are s
uccessfully completed even if one or more errors were returned by the S3
service in response of a blob upload, a blob deletion or a object listing request
etc.
Because injecting errors forces the SDK client to retry requests, the test limits
the maximum errors to send in response for each request at 3 retries.
This commit removes the usage of MockAmazonS3 in S3BlobStoreRepositoryTests
and replaces it by a HttpServer that emulates the S3 service. This allows the
repository tests to use the real Amazon's S3 client under the hood in tests and will
allow to test the behavior of the snapshot/restore feature for S3 repositories by
simulating random server-side internal errors.
The HTTP server used to emulate the S3 service is intentionally simple and minimal
to keep things understandable and maintainable. Testing full client options on the
server side (like authentication, chunked encoding etc) remains the responsibility
of the AmazonS3Fixture.
This commit starts from the simple premise that the use of node settings
in blob store repositories is a mistake. Here we see that the node
settings are used to get default settings for store and restore throttle
rates. Yet, since there are not any node settings registered to this
effect, there can never be a default setting to fall back to there, and
so we always end up falling back to the default rate. Since this was the
only use of node settings in blob store repository, we move them. From
this, several places fall out where we were chaining settings through
only to get them to the blob store repository, so we clean these up as
well. That leaves us with the changeset in this commit.
This commit refactors the S3 credentials tests in
RepositoryCredentialsTests so that it now uses a single
node (ESSingleNodeTestCase) to test how secure/insecure
credentials are overriding each other. Using a single node
makes it much easier to understand what each test is actually
testing and IMO better reflect how things are initialized.
It also allows to fold into this class the test
testInsecureRepositoryCredentials which was wrongly located
in S3BlobStoreRepositoryTests. By moving this test away, the
S3BlobStoreRepositoryTests class does not need the
allow_insecure_settings option anymore and thus can be
executed as part of the usual gradle test task.
This commit changes the tests added in #45383 so that the fixture that
emulates the S3 service now sometimes consumes all the request body
before sending an error, sometimes consumes only a part of the request
body and sometimes consumes nothing. The idea here is to beef up a bit
the tests that writes blob because the client's retry logic relies on
marking and resetting the blob's input stream.
This pull request also changes the testWriteBlobWithRetries() so that it
(rarely) tests with a large blob (up to 1mb), which is more than the client's
default read limit on input streams (131Kb).
Finally, it optimizes the ZeroInputStream so that it is a bit more effective
(now works using an internal buffer and System.arraycopy() primitives).
This commit adds tests to verify the behavior of the S3BlobContainer and
its underlying AWS SDK client when the remote S3 service is responding
errors or not responding at all. The expected behavior is that requests are
retried multiple times before the client gives up and the S3BlobContainer
bubbles up an exception.
The test verifies the behavior of BlobContainer.writeBlob() and
BlobContainer.readBlob(). In the case of S3 writing a blob can be executed
as a single upload or using multipart requests; the test checks both scenario
by writing a small then a large blob.
* Repository Cleanup Endpoint (#43900)
* Snapshot cleanup functionality via transport/REST endpoint.
* Added all the infrastructure for this with the HLRC and node client
* Made use of it in tests and resolved relevant TODO
* Added new `Custom` CS element that tracks the cleanup logic.
Kept it similar to the delete and in progress classes and gave it
some (for now) redundant way of handling multiple cleanups but only allow one
* Use the exact same mechanism used by deletes to have the combination
of CS entry and increment in repository state ID provide some
concurrency safety (the initial approach of just an entry in the CS
was not enough, we must increment the repository state ID to be safe
against concurrent modifications, otherwise we run the risk of "cleaning up"
blobs that just got created without noticing)
* Isolated the logic to the transport action class as much as I could.
It's not ideal, but we don't need to keep any state and do the same
for other repository operations
(like getting the detailed snapshot shard status)
This change adds a new option called user_dictionary_rules to
Kuromoji's tokenizer. It can be used to set additional tokenization rules
to the Japanese tokenizer directly in the settings (instead of using a file).
This commit also adds a check that no rules are duplicated since this is not allowed
in the UserDictionary.
Closes#25343
* Update the REST API specification
This patch updates the REST API spefication in JSON files to better encode deprecated entities,
to improve specification of URL paths, and to open up the schema for future extensions.
Notably, it changes the `paths` from a list of strings to a list of objects, where each
particular object encodes all the information for this particular path: the `parts` and the `methods`.
Among the benefits of this approach is eg. encoding the difference between using the `PUT` and `POST`
methods in the Index API, to either use a specific document ID, or let Elasticsearch generate one.
Also `documentation` becomes an object that supports an `url` and also a `description` which is a
new field.
* Adapt YAML runner to new REST API specification format
The logic for choosing the path to use when running tests has been
simplified, as a consequence of the path parts being listed under each
path in the spec. The special case for create and index has been removed.
Also the parsing code has been hardened so that errors are thrown earlier
when the structure of the spec differs from what expected, and their
error messages should be more helpful.
The current implementations make it difficult for
adding new privileges (example: a cluster privilege which is
more than cluster action-based and not exposed to the security
administrator). On the high level, we would like our cluster privilege
either:
- a named cluster privilege
This corresponds to `cluster` field from the role descriptor
- or a configurable cluster privilege
This corresponds to the `global` field from the role-descriptor and
allows a security administrator to configure them.
Some of the responsibilities like the merging of action based cluster privileges
are now pushed at cluster permission level. How to implement the predicate
(using Automaton) is being now enforced by cluster permission.
`ClusterPermission` helps in enforcing the cluster level access either by
performing checks against cluster action and optionally against a request.
It is a collection of one or more permission checks where if any of the checks
allow access then the permission allows access to a cluster action.
Implementations of cluster privilege must be able to provide information
regarding the predicates to the cluster permission so that can be enforced.
This is enforced by making implementations of cluster privilege aware of
cluster permission builder and provide a way to specify how the permission is
to be built for a given privilege.
This commit renames `ConditionalClusterPrivilege` to `ConfigurableClusterPrivilege`.
`ConfigurableClusterPrivilege` is a renderable cluster privilege exposed
as a `global` field in role descriptor.
Other than this there is a requirement where we would want to know if a cluster
permission is implied by another cluster-permission (`has-privileges`).
This is helpful in addressing queries related to privileges for a user.
This is not just simply checking of cluster permissions since we do not
have access to runtime information (like request object).
This refactoring does not try to address those scenarios.
Relates #44048
Elasticsearch does not grant Netty reflection access to get Unsafe. The
only mechanism that currently exists to free direct buffers in a timely
manner is to use Unsafe. This leads to the occasional scenario, under
heavy network load, that direct byte buffers can slowly build up without
being freed.
This commit disables Netty direct buffer pooling and moves to a strategy
of using a single thread-local direct buffer for interfacing with sockets.
This will reduce the memory usage from networking. Elasticsearch
currently derives very little value from direct buffer usage (TLS,
compression, Lucene, Elasticsearch handling, etc all use heap bytes). So
this seems like the correct trade-off until that changes.
Uses JDK 11's per-socket configuration of TCP keepalive (supported on Linux and Mac), see
https://bugs.openjdk.java.net/browse/JDK-8194298, and exposes these as transport settings.
By default, these options are disabled for now (i.e. fall-back to OS behavior), but we would like
to explore whether we can enable them by default, in particular to force keepalive configurations
that are better tuned for running ES.
Currently in the transport-nio work we connect and bind channels on the
a thread before the channel is registered with a selector. Additionally,
it is at this point that we set all the socket options. This commit
moves these operations onto the event-loop after the channel has been
registered with a selector. It attempts to set the socket options for a
non-server channel at registration time. If that fails, it will attempt
to set the options after the channel is connected. This should fix
#41071.
* Stop Passing Around REST Request in Multiple Spots
* Motivated by #44564
* We are currently passing the REST request object around to a large number of places. This works fine since we simply copy the full request content before we handle the rest itself which is needlessly hard on GC and heap.
* This PR removes a number of spots where the request is passed around needlessly. There are many more spots to optimize in follow-ups to this, but this one would already enable bypassing the request copying for some error paths in a follow up.
* Create S3 Third Party Test Task that Covers the S3 CLI Tool
* Adjust snapshot cli test tool tests to work with real S3
* Build adjustment
* Clean up repo path before testing
* Dedup the logic for asserting path contents by using the correct utility method here that somehow became unused
We often start testing with early access versions of new Java
versions and this have caused minor issues in our tests
(i.e. #43141) because the version string that the JVM reports
cannot be parsed as it ends with the string -ea.
This commit changes how we parse and compare Java versions to
allow correct parsing and comparison of the output of java.version
system property that might include an additional alphanumeric
part after the version numbers
(see [JEP 223[(https://openjdk.java.net/jeps/223)). In short it
handles a version number part, like before, but additionally a
PRE part that matches ([a-zA-Z0-9]+).
It also changes a number of tests that would attempt to parse
java.specification.version in order to get the full version
of Java. java.specification.version only contains the major
version and is thus inappropriate when trying to compare against
a version that might contain a minor, patch or an early access
part. We know parse java.version that can be consistently
parsed.
Resolves#43141
These Azure tests have hard println statements which means we always see
these messages during configuration. Yet, there are unnecessary most of
the time. This commit changes them to use debug logging.
The repository-hdfs runners need to be disabled it in fips mode.
Testing done for all the tasks, dynamic created and static (integTest, integTestHa, integSecureTest, integSecureHaTest)
While the code works perfectly well for a single segment, it returns the wrong values for multiple segments. E.g. If we have 500 docs in one segment and if we want to get the doc id = 280 then data.advanceExact(topDocs.scoreDocs[i].doc) works fine. If we have two segments, say, with first segment having docs 1-200 and the second segment having docs 201-500, then 280 is fetched from the second segment but is actually 480. Subtracting the docBase (280-200) takes us to the correct document which is 80 in the second segment and actually 280.
Today we have an annotation for controlling logging levels in
tests. This annotation serves two purposes, one is to control the
logging level used in tests, when such control is needed to impact and
assert the behavior of loggers in tests. The other use is when a test is
failing and additional logging is needed. This commit separates these
two concerns into separate annotations.
The primary motivation for this is that we have a history of leaving
behind the annotation for the purpose of investigating test failures
long after the test failure is resolved. The accumulation of these stale
logging annotations has led to excessive disk consumption. Having
recently cleaned this up, we would like to avoid falling into this state
again. To do this, we are adding a link to the test failure under
investigation to the annotation when used for the purpose of
investigating test failures. We will add tooling to inspect these
annotations, in the same way that we have tooling on awaits fix
annotations. This will enable us to report on the use of these
annotations, and report when stale uses of the annotation exist.
* We only use this method in one place in production code and can replace that with a read -> remove it to simplify the interface
* Keep it as an implementation detail in the Azure repository
This commit moves the config that stores Cors options into the server
package. Currently both nio and netty modules must have a copy of this
config. Moving it into server allows one copy and the tests to be in a
common location.
Registering a channel with a selector is a required operation for the
channel to be handled properly. Currently, we mix the registeration with
other setup operations (ip filtering, SSL initiation, etc). However, a
fail to register is fatal. This PR modifies how registeration occurs to
immediately close the channel if it fails.
There are still two clear loopholes for how a user can interact with a
channel even if registration fails. 1. through the exception handler.
2. through the channel accepted callback. These can perhaps be improved
in the future. For now, this PR prevents writes from proceeding if the
channel is not registered.
Test clusters currently has its own set of logic for dealing with
finding different versions of Elasticsearch, downloading them, and
extracting them. This commit converts testclusters to use the
DistributionDownloadPlugin.
Due to recent changes are done for converting `repository-hdfs` to test
clusters (#41252), the `integTestSecure*` tasks did not depend on
`secureHdfsFixture` which when running would fail as the fixture
would not be available. This commit adds the dependency of the fixture
to the task.
The `secureHdfsFixture` is a `AntFixture` which is spawned a process.
Internally it waits for 30 seconds for the resources to be made available.
For my local machine, it took almost 45 seconds to be available so I have
added the wait time as an input to the `AntFixture` defaults to 30 seconds
and set it to 60 seconds in case of secure hdfs fixture.
The integ test for secure hdfs was disabled for a long time and so
the changes done in #42090 to fix the tests are also done in this commit.
Simplifies AbstractSimpleTransportTestCase to use JVM-local ports and also adds an assertion so
that cases like #44134 can be more easily debugged. The likely reason for that one is that a test,
which was repeated again and again while always spawning a fresh Gradle worker (due to Gradle
daemon) kept increasing Gradle worker IDs, causing an overflow at some point.
* Test fixtures improovements
Don't disable some of the precommit tasks on fixtures.
This no longer makes sense now that a project can both produce and use a
fixture.
In order for this to be possible, had to add an additional configuration
to make JarHell class accessible to the task even if it's not a
dependency of the project and fix some of the third party audit fallout
from #43671 which wasn't detected at the time due to the issue being
fixed here.
Closes#43918
* Use ability to list child "folders" in the blob store to implement recursive delete on all stale index folders when cleaning up instead of using the diff between two `RepositoryData` instances to cover aborted deletes
* Runs after ever delete operation
* Relates #13159 (fixing most of this issues caused by unreferenced indices, leaving some meta files to be cleaned up only)
* Provide an Option to Use Path-Style-Access with S3 Repo
* As discussed, added the option to use path style access back again and
deprecated it.
* Defaulted to `false`
* Added warning to docs
* Closes#41816
This brings TokenizerFactory into line with CharFilterFactory and TokenFilterFactory,
and removes the need to pass around tokenizer names when building custom analyzers.
As this means that TokenizerFactory is no longer a functional interface, the commit also
adds a factory method to TokenizerFactory to make construction simpler.
This is a prerequisite of #42189:
* Add directory delete method to blob container specific to each implementation:
* Some notes on the implementations:
* AWS + GCS: We can simply exploit the fact that both AWS and GCS return blobs lexicographically ordered which allows us to simply delete in the same order that we receive the blobs from the listing request. For AWS this simply required listing without the delimiter setting (so we get a deep listing) and for GCS the same behavior is achieved by not using the directory mode on the listing invocation. The nice thing about this is, that even for very large numbers of blobs the memory requirements are now capped nicely since we go page by page when deleting.
* For Azure I extended the parallelization to the listing calls as well and made it work recursively. I verified that this works with thread count `1` since we only block once in the initial thread and then fan out to a "graph" of child listeners that never block.
* HDFS and FS are trivial since we have directory delete methods available for them
* Enhances third party tests to ensure the new functionality works (I manually ran them for all cloud providers)
* Add Ability to List Child Containers to BlobContainer (#42653)
* Add Ability to List Child Containers to BlobContainer
* This is a prerequisite of #42189
This change adds the ability to attach annotative information for
classes, methods, fields, static methods, class bindings, and
instance bindings during Painless whitelisting.
Annotations are specified as @annotation or optionally as
@annotation[parameter="argument",...].
Annotations open up the ability to specify whitelist objects as
having a short name (no_import -> @no_import) or deprecated.
Currently nio implements ip filtering at the channel context level. This
is kind of a hack as the application logic should be implemented at the
handler level. This commit moves the ip filtering into a channel
handler. This requires adding an indicator to the channel handler to
show when a channel should be closed.
* This check is redundant, if the container doesn't exist subsequent operations will fail anyway. Since we are not running this exists check during verification I don't think there's much point to having it in snapshot initialization.
* This PR is mainly motivated by the fact that this forces more permissions to be available in shared environments
* Upgrade to latest GCS SDK and transitive dependencies (I chose the later version here on conflict)
* Remove now unnecessary hack for custom endpoints (the linked bugs were both resolved in the SDK)
* Use `internalCluster().close()` to force all nodes (and not just the datanodes) to shut down even if one fails to shut down in time
* Force closing httpServer to get cleaner logs if nodes still hang on shut down
* Relates #43048
* introduce state to the REST API specification
* change state over to stability
* CCR is no GA updated to stable
* SQL is now GA so marked as stable
* Introduce `internal` as state for API's, marks stable in terms of lifetime but unstable in terms of guarantees on its output format since it exposes internal representations
* make setting a wrong stability value, or not setting it at all an error that causes the YAML test suite to fail
* update spec files to be explicit about their stability state
* Document the fact that stability needs to be defined
Otherwise the YAML test runner will fail (with a nice exception message)
* address check style violations
* update rest spec unit tests to include stability
* found one more test spec file not declaring stability, made sure stability appears after documentation everywhere
* cluster.state is stable, mark response in some way to denote its a key value format that can be changed during minors
* mark data frame API's as beta
* remove internal and private as states for an API
* removed the wrong enum values in the Stability Enum in the previous commit
(cherry picked from commit 61c34bbd92f8f7e5f22fa411c6b682b0ebd8a99d)
Infra has fixed#10462 by installing `haveged` on CI workers.
This commit enables the disabled fixture and tests, and mounts
`/dev/urandom` for the container so there is enough
entropy required for kdc.
Note: hdfs-repository tests have been disabled, will raise a separate issue for it.
Closes#40624Closes#40678
We are still using `FileSwitchDirectory` in the case a user configures file based pre-load of mmaps. This is trappy for multiple reasons if the both directories used by `FileSwitchDirectory` point to the same filesystem directory. One issue is LUCENE-8835 that cause issues like #37111 - unless LUCENE-8835 isn't fixed we should not use it in elasticsearch. Instead we use a similar trick as we use for HybridFS and subclass mmap directory directly.
Currently suggesters return null values on empty shards. Usually this gets replaced
by results from other non-epmty shards, but if the index is completely epmty (e.g. after
creation) the search responses "suggest" is also "null" and we don't render a corresponding
output in the REST response. This is an irritating edge case that requires special handling on
the user side (see #42473) and should be fixed.
This change makes sure every suggester type (completion, terms, phrase) returns at least an
empty skeleton suggestion output, even for empty shards. This way, even if we don't find
any suggestions anywhere, we still return and output the empty suggestion.
Closes#42473
Fixes an issue where repositories are unintentionally shared among tests (given that the repo contents is captured in a static variable on the test class, to allow "sharing" among nodes) and two tests randomly chose the same snapshot name, leading to a conflict.
Closes#42519
We initially added `requireDocker` for a way for tasks to say that they
absolutely must have it, like the build docker image tasks.
Projects using the test fixtures plugin are not in this both, as the
intent with these is that they will be skipped if docker and docker-compose
is not available.
Before this change we were lenient, the docker image build would succeed
but produce nothing. The implementation was also confusing as it was not
immediately obvious this was the case due to all the indirection in the
code.
The reason we have this leniency is that when we added the docker image
build, docker was a fairly new requirement for us, and we didn't have
it deployed in CI widely enough nor had CI configured to prefer workers
with docker when possible. We are in a much better position now.
The other reason was other stack teams running `./gradlew assemble`
in their respective CI and the possibility of breaking them if docker is
not installed. We have been advocating for building specific distros for
some time now and I will also send out an additional notice
The PR also removes the use of `requireDocker` from tests that actually
use test fixtures and are ok without it, and fixes a bug in test
fixtures that would cause incorrect configuration and allow some tasks
to run when docker was not available and they shouldn't have.
Closes #42680 and #42829 see also #42719
This commit fixes the version parsing in various tests. The issue here is that
the parsing was relying on java.version. However, java.version can contain
additional characters such as -ea for early access builds. See JEP 233:
Name Syntax
------------------------------ --------------
java.version $VNUM(\-$PRE)?
java.runtime.version $VSTR
java.vm.version $VSTR
java.specification.version $VNUM
java.vm.specification.version $VNUM
Instead, we want java.specification.version.
Adding an example of how to re-implement the polish stempel analyzer
in case a user want to modify or extend it. In order for the analyzer to be
able to use polish stopwords, also registering a polish_stop filter for the
stempel plugin.
Closes#13150
We had this as a dependency for legacy dependencies that still needed
the Log4j 1.2 API. This appears to no longer be necessary, so this
commit removes this artifact as a dependency.
To remove this dependency, we had to fix a few places where we were
accidentally relying on Log4j 1.2 instead of Log4j 2 (easy to do, since
both APIs were on the compile-time classpath).
Finally, we can remove our custom Netty logger factory. This was needed
when we were on Log4j 1.2 and handled logging in our own unique
way. When we migrated to Log4j 2 we could have dropped this
dependency. However, even then Netty would still pick up Log4j 1.2 since
it was on the classpath, thus the advantage to removing this as a
dependency now.
* Cleanup Bulk Delete Exception Logging
* Follow up to #41368
* Collect all failed blob deletes and add them to the exception message
* Remove logging of blob name list from caller exception logging
* Add Infrastructure to Run 3rd Party Repository Tests
* Add infrastructure to run third party repository tests using our standard JUnit infrastructure
* This is a prerequisite of #42189
* Remove Delete Method from BlobStore (#41619)
* The delete method on the blob store was used almost nowhere and just duplicates the delete method on the blob containers
* The fact that it provided for some recursive delete logic (that did not behave the same way on all implementations) was not used and not properly tested either
Both of these classes are basically a bloated wrapper around a simple
construct that can simply be a DirectoryFactory interface. This change
removes both classes and replaces them with a simple stateless interface
that creates a new `Directory` per shard. The concept of `index.store` is preserved
since it makes sense from a configuration perspective.
This commit updates the default ciphers and TLS protocols that are used
when the runtime JDK supports them. New cipher support has been
introduced in JDK 11 and 12 along with performance fixes for AES GCM.
The ciphers are ordered with PFS ciphers being most preferred, then
AEAD ciphers, and finally those with mainstream hardware support. When
available stronger encryption is preferred for a given cipher.
This is a backport of #41385 and #41808. There are known JDK bugs with
TLSv1.3 that have been fixed in various versions. These are:
1. The JDK's bundled HttpsServer will endless loop under JDK11 and JDK
12.0 (Fixed in 12.0.1) based on the way the Apache HttpClient performs
a close (half close).
2. In all versions of JDK 11 and 12, the HttpsServer will endless loop
when certificates are not trusted or another handshake error occurs. An
email has been sent to the openjdk security-dev list and #38646 is open
to track this.
3. In JDK 11.0.2 and prior there is a race condition with session
resumption that leads to handshake errors when multiple concurrent
handshakes are going on between the same client and server. This bug
does not appear when client authentication is in use. This is
JDK-8213202, which was fixed in 11.0.3 and 12.0.
4. In JDK 11.0.2 and prior there is a bug where resumed TLS sessions do
not retain peer certificate information. This is JDK-8212885.
The way these issues are addressed is that the current java version is
checked and used to determine the supported protocols for tests that
provoke these issues.
We have a number of places in analysis-handling code where we check
if a field type is a keyword field, and if so then extract the normalizer rather
than pulling the index-time analyzer. However, a keyword normalizer is
really just a special case of an analyzer, so we should be able to simplify this
by setting the normalizer as the index-time analyzer at construction time.
testclusters detect from settings that security is enabled
if a user is not specified using the DSL introduced in this PR, a default one is created
the appropriate wait conditions are used authenticating with the first user defined in the DSL ( or the default user ).
an example DSL to create a user is user username:"test_user" password:"x-pack-test-password" role: "superuser" all keys are optional and default to the values shown in this example
Upgrades the AWS SDK to the same version that we're using for the repository-s3 plugin, providing
testing capabilities to override certain SDK endpoints in order to point them to localhost for testing.
Adds tests for the various credential providers.
Today Elasticsearch accepts, but silently ignores, port ranges in the
`discovery.seed_hosts` setting:
```
discovery.seed_hosts: 10.1.2.3:9300-9400
```
Silently ignoring part of a setting like this is trappy. With this change we
reject seed host addresses of this form.
Closes#40786
Backport of #41404
This is related to #27260. Currently we have a single read buffer that
is no larger than a single TLS packet. This prevents us from reading
multiple TLS packets in a single socket read call. This commit modifies
our TLS work to support reading similar to the plaintext case. The data
will be copied to a (potentially) recycled TLS packet-sized buffer for
interaction with the SSLEngine.