Closes#13880
Squashed commit of the following:
commit 316a328e5032e580ba840db993d907631334aac0
Author: Robert Muir <rmuir@apache.org>
Date: Wed Sep 30 16:57:47 2015 -0400
windows is terrible
commit 0406b560c58bf833f8d77af9c7cf3386771dd9c5
Author: Robert Muir <rmuir@apache.org>
Date: Wed Sep 30 16:43:09 2015 -0400
Nuke ES_CLASSPATH appending
Out of box, ES expects its stuff to be in particular places. We should not be appending to ES_CLASSPATH, allowing users to specify stuff there, like we do in elasticsearch.bin.sh
If the user sets it, its not going to work out of box.
Closes#13812
commit 415d8972df28eddec322bb6d70100a1993fa95f6
Author: Robert Muir <rmuir@apache.org>
Date: Wed Sep 30 16:26:35 2015 -0400
Fail hard on empty classpath elements.
This can happen easily, if somehow old 1.x shellscripts survive and try to launch 2.x code.
I have the feeling this happens maybe because of packaging upgrades or something.
Either way: we can just fail hard and clear in this situation, rather than the current situation
where CWD might be /, and we might traverse the entire filesystem until we hit an error...
Relates to #13864
When the plugin manager does not find in `plugin-descriptor.properties` the exact same elasticsearch version it was built on
as the current elasticsearch version, it fails with a message like:
```
ERROR: Elasticsearch version [2.0.0-beta1] is too old for plugin [elasticsearch-mapper-attachments]
```
Actually, the message should be:
```
Plugin [elasticsearch-mapper-attachments] is incompatible with Elasticsearch [2.0.0.beta2]. Was designed for version [2.0.0.beta1].
```
The opposite is true. If you try to install a version of a plugin which was built with a newer version of elasticsearch, it will fail the same way:
```
Plugin [elasticsearch-mapper-attachments] is incompatible with Elasticsearch [2.0.0.beta1]. Was designed for version [2.0.0.beta2].
```
This commit adds supports for expiration after writes to Cache. This
enables entries to expire after they were initially placed in the cache
without prolonging their life on retrieval. Replacements are considered
new writes.
This commit removes and now forbids all uses of
com.google.common.cache.Cache, com.google.common.cache.CacheBuilder,
com.google.common.cache.RemovalListener,
com.google.common.cache.RemovalNotification,
com.google.common.cache.Weigher across the codebase. This is a major
step in the eventual removal of Guava as a dependency.
Relates #13224
We try to get the index shard instance again from the index service on a different
threads while that shard might have already been closed or removed which can cause a NPE
instead of another expected expecption.
This commit shuffels and rewrites some code in RecoverySourceHandler to make it
simpler and more unittestable. This commit doesn't change all parts of this class
neither is it fully tested yet. It's an important part of the infrastrucutre so I started
to make it better tested but I don't want to change everything in one go since it makes
review simpler and more detailed. Future commits will continue cleaning up the class and
add more tests.
If a document is indexed into ES with no id, ES will generate one for it. We used to have an optimization for this case where the engine will not try to resolve the ids of these request in the existing index but immediately try to index them. This optimization has proven to be the source of brittle bugs (solved!) and we disabled it in 1.5, preparing for it to be removed if no performance degradation was found. Since we haven't seen any such degradation we can remove it.
Along with the removal of the optmization, we can remove the autogenerate id flag on indexing requests and the can have duplicate flag. The only downside of the removal of the canHaveDuplicate flag is that we can't make sure any more that when we retry an autogenerated id create operation we will ignore any document already exists exception (See #9125 for background and discussion). To work around this, we don't set the operation to CREATE any more when we generate an id, so the resulting request will never fail when it finds an existing doc but do return a version of 2. I think that's acceptable.
Closes#13857
We have two unneded heavy dependencies on IndexShard that are unneeded and only cause
trouble if you try to mock index shard. This commit removes IndexSettingsService as well as
ClusterSerivce from IndexShard to simplify future mocking and construction.
While refactoring has_child and has_parent query we lost an important detail around types. The types that the inner query gets executed against shouldn't be the main types of the search request but the parent or child type set to the parent query. We used to use QueryParseContext#setTypesWithPrevious as part of XContentStructure class which has been deleted, without taking care though of setting the types and restoring them as part of the innerQuery#toQuery call.
Meanwhile also we make sure that the original context types are restored in PercolatorQueriesRegistry
Closes#13863
Closes#13854
Squashed commit of the following:
commit 42c1166efc55adda0d13fed77de583c0973e44b3
Author: Robert Muir <rmuir@apache.org>
Date: Tue Sep 29 11:59:43 2015 -0400
Add paranoia
Groovy holds on to a classloader, so check it before compilation too.
I have not reviewed yet what Rhino is doing, but just be safe.
commit b58668a81428e964dd5ffa712872c0a34897fc91
Author: Robert Muir <rmuir@apache.org>
Date: Tue Sep 29 11:46:06 2015 -0400
Add SpecialPermission to guard exceptions to security policy.
In some cases (e.g. buggy cloud libraries, scripting engines), we must
grant dangerous permissions to contained cases. Those AccessController blocks
are dangerous, since they truncate the stack, and can allow privilege escalation.
This PR adds a simple permission to check before each one, so that unprivileged code
like groovy scripts, can't do anything they shouldn't be allowed to do otherwise.
GCE plugin tries to start immediately gce discovery even if we don't
set discovery.type. This commmit adds check `discovery.type` and
other required parameters before loading gce plugin.
closes#13614