Prior to this change ML memory estimation processes for a
given job would always use the same named pipe names. This
would often cause one of the processes to fail.
This change avoids this risk by adding an incrementing counter
value into the named pipe names used for memory estimation
processes.
Backport of #60395
In order to unify model inference and analytics results we
need to write the same fields.
prediction_probability and prediction_score are now written
for inference calls against classification models.
This sets up all indexing to one of our write aliases to require it actually be an alias.
This allows failures scenarios to be captured quickly, loudly, and then potentially recovered.
If a feature is created via a custom pre-processor,
we should return the importance for that feature.
This means we will not return the importance for the
original document field for custom processed features.
closes https://github.com/elastic/elasticsearch/issues/59330
Data frame analytics jobs that work with very large datasets
may produce bulk requests that are over the memory limit
for indexing. This commit adds a helper class that bundles
index requests in bulk requests that steer away from the
memory limit. We then use this class both from the results
joiner and the inference runner ensuring data frame analytics
jobs do not generate bulk requests that are too large.
Note the limit was implemented in #58885.
Backport of #60219
Previously the test was asserting the prediction on each document
was close 10.0 from the expected. It turned out that was not enough
as we occasionally saw the test failing by little.
Instead of relaxing that assertion, this commit changes it to
assert the mean prediction error is less than 10.0. This should
reduce the chances of the test failing significantly.
Fixes#60212
Backport of #60221
When the job is force-closed or shutting down due to a fatal error we clean
up all cancellable job operations. This includes cancelling the results processor.
However, this means that we might not persist objects that are written from the
process like stats, memory usage, etc.
In hindsight, we do not gain from cancelling the results processor in its
entirety. It makes more sense to skip row results and model chunks but keep
stats and instrumentation about the job as the latter may contain useful information
to understand what happened to the job.
Backport of #60113
Putting an ingest pipeline used to require that the user calling
it had permission to get nodes info as well as permission to
manage ingest. This was due to an internal implementaton detail
that was not visible to the end user.
This change alters the behaviour so that a user with the
manage_pipeline cluster privilege can put an ingest pipeline
regardless of whether they have the separate privilege to get
nodes info. The internal implementation detail now runs as
the internal _xpack user when security is enabled.
Backport of #60106
This commit continues on the work in #59801 and makes other
implementors of the LocalNodeMasterListener interface thread safe in
that they will no longer allow the callbacks to run on different
threads and possibly race each other. This also helps address other
issues where these events could be queued to wait for execution while
the service keeps moving forward thinking it is the master even when
that is not the case.
In order to accomplish this, the LocalNodeMasterListener no longer has
the executorName() method to prevent future uses that could encounter
this surprising behavior.
Each use was inspected and if the class was also a
ClusterStateListener, the implementation of LocalNodeMasterListener
was removed in favor of a single listener that combined the logic. A
single listener is used and there is currently no guarantee on execution
order between ClusterStateListeners and LocalNodeMasterListeners,
so a future change there could cause undesired consequences. For other
classes, the implementations of the callbacks were inspected and if the
operations were lightweight, the overriden executorName method was
removed to use the default, which runs on the same thread.
Backport of #59932
In #58877, when we switched test inference on java, we just
use the doc's `_source` as features. However, this could be
missing out on features that were used during training,
e.g. alias fields, etc.
This commit addresses this by extracting fields to use as
features during inference the same way they are extracted
in `DataFrameDataExtractor` when they are used for training.
Backport of #59963
* [ML] add new `custom` field to trained model processors (#59542)
This commit adds the new configurable field `custom`.
`custom` indicates if the preprocessor was submitted by a user or automatically created by the analytics job.
Eventually, this field will be used in calculating feature importance. When `custom` is true, the feature importance for
the processed fields is calculated. When `false` the current behavior is the same (we calculate the importance for the originating field/feature).
This also adds new required methods to the preprocessor interface. If users are to supply their own preprocessors
in the analytics job configuration, we need to know the input and output field names.
When an inference model is loaded it is accounted for in circuit breaker
and should not be released until there are no users of the model. Adds
a reference count to the model to track usage.
Backport of #59525 to 7.x branch.
* Actions are moved to xpack core.
* Transport and rest actions are moved the data-streams module.
* Removed data streams methods from Client interface.
* Adjusted tests to use client.execute(...) instead of data stream specific methods.
* only attempt to delete all data streams if xpack is installed in rest tests
* Now that ds apis are in xpack and ESIntegTestCase
no longers deletes all ds, do that in the MlNativeIntegTestCase
class for ml tests.
This commit adds a new api to track when gold+ features are used within
x-pack. The tracking is done internally whenever a feature is checked
against the current license. The output of the api is a list of each
used feature, which includes the name, license level, and last time it
was used. In addition to a unit test for the tracking, a rest test is
added which ensures starting up a default configured node does not
result in any features registering as used.
There are a couple features which currently do not work well with the
tracking, as they are checked in a manner that makes them look always
used. Those features will be fixed in followups, and in this PR they are
omitted from the feature usage output.
The `create_doc`, `create`, `write` and `index` privileges do not grant
the PutMapping action anymore. Apart from the `write` privilege, the other
three privileges also do NOT grant (auto) updating the mapping when ingesting
a document with unmapped fields, according to the templates.
In order to maintain the BWC in the 7.x releases, the above privileges will still grant
the Put and AutoPutMapping actions, but only when the "index" entity is an alias
or a concrete index, but not a data stream or a backing index of a data stream.
Renames and moves the cross validation splitter package.
First, the package and classes are renamed from using
"cross validation splitter" to "train test splitter".
Cross validation as a term is overloaded and encompasses
more concepts than what we are trying to do here.
Second, the package used to be under `process` but it does
not make sense to be there, it can be a top level package
under `dataframe`.
Backport of #59529
When a field is not included yet its type is unsupported, we currently
state that the reason the field is excluded is that it is not in the
includes list. However, this implies the user could include it but
if the user tried to do so, they would get a failure as they would
be including a field with unsupported type.
This commit improves this by stating the reason a not included field
with unsupported type is excluded is because of its type.
Backport of #59424
Since we have added checking the cardinality of the dependent_variable
for classification, we have introduced a bug where an NPE is thrown
if the dependent_variable is a missing field.
This commit is fixing this issue.
Backport of #59524
This makes the data_stream timestamp field specification optional when
defining a composable template.
When there isn't one specified it will default to `@timestamp`.
(cherry picked from commit 5609353c5d164e15a636c22019c9c17fa98aac30)
Signed-off-by: Andrei Dan <andrei.dan@elastic.co>
Now that we have per-partition categorization, the estimate for
the model memory limit required for a particular analysis config
needs to take into account whether categorization is operating
for the job as a whole or per-partition.
We have recently added internal metrics to monitor the amount of
indexing occurring on a node. These metrics introduce back pressure to
indexing when memory utilization is too high. This commit exposes these
stats through the node stats API.
Removes member variable `index` from `ExtractedFieldsDetector`
as it is not used.
Backport of #59395
Co-authored-by: Elastic Machine <elasticmachine@users.noreply.github.com>
Backport of #59293 to 7.x branch.
* Create new data-stream xpack module.
* Move TimestampFieldMapper to the new module,
this results in storing a composable index template
with data stream definition only to work with default
distribution. This way data streams can only be used
with default distribution, since a data stream can
currently only be created if a matching composable index
template exists with a data stream definition.
* Renamed `_timestamp` meta field mapper
to `_data_stream_timestamp` meta field mapper.
* Add logic to put composable index template api
to fail if `_data_stream_timestamp` meta field mapper
isn't registered. So that a more understandable
error is returned when attempting to store a template
with data stream definition via the oss distribution.
In a follow up the data stream transport and
rest actions can be moved to the xpack data-stream module.
With the introduction of per-partition categorization the old
logic for creating a job notification for categorization status
"warn" does not work. However, the C++ code is already writing
annotations for categorization status "warn" that take into
account whether per-partition categorization is being used and
which partition(s) the warnings relate to. Therefore, this
change alters the Java results processor to create notifications
based on the annotations the C++ writes. (It is arguable that
we don't need both annotations and notifications, but they show
up in different ways in the UI: only annotations are visible in
results and only notifications set the warning symbol in the
jobs list. This means it's best to have both.)
Backport of #59377
This adds a setting to data frame analytics jobs called
`max_number_threads`. The setting expects a positive integer.
When used the user specifies the max number of threads that may
be used by the analysis. Note that the actual number of threads
used is limited by the number of processors on the node where
the job is assigned. Also, the process may use a couple more threads
for operational functionality that is not the analysis itself.
This setting may also be updated for a stopped job.
More threads may reduce the time it takes to complete the job at the cost
of using more CPU.
Backport of #59254 and #57274
Since we are able to load the inference model
and perform inference in java, we no longer need
to rely on the analytics process to be performing
test inference on the docs that were not used for
training. The benefit is that we do not need to
send test docs and fit them in memory of the c++
process.
Backport of #58877
Co-authored-by: Dimitris Athanasiou <dimitris@elastic.co>
Co-authored-by: Benjamin Trent <ben.w.trent@gmail.com>
Backport of #59076 to 7.x branch.
The commit makes the following changes:
* The timestamp field of a data stream definition in a composable
index template can only be set to '@timestamp'.
* Removed custom data stream timestamp field validation and reuse the validation from `TimestampFieldMapper` and
instead only check that the _timestamp field mapping has been defined on a backing index of a data stream.
* Moved code that injects _timestamp meta field mapping from `MetadataCreateIndexService#applyCreateIndexRequestWithV2Template58956(...)` method
to `MetadataIndexTemplateService#collectMappings(...)` method.
* Fixed a bug (#58956) that cases timestamp field validation to be performed
for each template and instead of the final mappings that is created.
* only apply _timestamp meta field if index is created as part of a data stream or data stream rollover,
this fixes a docs test, where a regular index creation matches (logs-*) with a template with a data stream definition.
Relates to #58642
Relates to #53100Closes#58956Closes#58583
This removes the blocking model lookup from the `inference` aggregator's
builder by integrating it into the request rewrite process that loads
stuff asynchronously.
Co-authored-by: Elastic Machine <elasticmachine@users.noreply.github.com>
There have been a few test failures that are likely caused by tests
performing actions that use ML indices immediately after the actions
that create those ML indices. Currently this can result in attempts
to search the newly created index before its shards have initialized.
This change makes the method that creates the internal ML indices
that have been affected by this problem (state and stats) wait for
the shards to be initialized before returning.
Backport of #59027
This commit creates a new Gradle plugin to provide a separate task name
and source set for running YAML based REST tests. The only project
converted to use the new plugin in this PR is distribution/archives/integ-test-zip.
For which the testing has been moved to :rest-api-spec since it makes the most
sense and it avoids a small but awkward change to the distribution plugin.
The remaining cases in modules, plugins, and x-pack will be handled in followups.
This plugin is distinctly different from the plugin introduced in #55896 since
the YAML REST tests are intended to be black box tests over HTTP. As such they
should not (by default) have access to the classpath for that which they are testing.
The YAML based REST tests will be moved to separate source sets (yamlRestTest).
The which source is the target for the test resources is dependent on if this
new plugin is applied. If it is not applied, it will default to the test source
set.
Further, this introduces a breaking change for plugin developers that
use the YAML testing framework. They will now need to either use the new source set
and matching task, or configure the rest resources to use the old "test" source set that
matches the old integTest task. (The former should be preferred).
As part of this change (which is also breaking for plugin developers) the
rest resources plugin has been removed from the build plugin and now requires
either explicit application or application via the new YAML REST test plugin.
Plugin developers should be able to fix the breaking changes to the YAML tests
by adding apply plugin: 'elasticsearch.yaml-rest-test' and moving the YAML tests
under a yamlRestTest folder (instead of test)
Backport of #58582 to 7.x branch.
This commit adds a new metadata field mapper that validates,
that a document has exactly a single timestamp value in the data stream timestamp field and
that the timestamp field mapping only has `type`, `meta` or `format` attributes configured.
Other attributes can affect the guarantee that an index with this meta field mapper has a
useable timestamp field.
The MetadataCreateIndexService inserts a data stream timestamp field mapper whenever
a new backing index of a data stream is created.
Relates to #53100
Dry up tests that use a disruption that isolates the master from all other nodes.
Also, turn disruption types that have neither parameters nor state into constants
to make things a little clearer.
Working through a heap dump for an unrelated issue I found that we can easily rack up
tens of MBs of duplicate empty instances in some cases.
I moved to a static constructor to guard against that in all cases.
.ml-state-write is supposed to be an index alias, however by accident it can become an index. If
.ml-state-write is a concrete index instead of an alias ML stops working. This change improves error
handling by setting the job to failed and properly log and audit the problem. The user still has to
manually fix the problem. This change should lead to a quicker resolution of the problem.
fixes#58482
We already had code to ensure the config index mappings were
up-to-date before creating a new config. However, it's also
possible that an update to a config could add the latest
settings that require the latest mappings to index correctly.
This change checks that the latest config index mappings are
in place in the 3 update actions in the same way as the checks
are done in the 3 put actions.
Backport of #58916
* [ML] handles compressed model stream from native process (#58009)
This moves model storage from handling the fully parsed JSON string to handling two separate types of documents.
1. ModelSizeInfo which contains model size information
2. TrainedModelDefinitionChunk which contains a particular chunk of the compressed model definition string.
`model_size_info` is assumed to be handled first. This will generate the model_id and store the initial trained model config object. Then each chunk is assumed to be in correct order for concatenating the chunks to get a compressed definition.
Native side change: https://github.com/elastic/ml-cpp/pull/1349
The checks on the license state have a singular method, isAllowed, that
returns whether the given feature is allowed by the current license.
However, there are two classes of usages, one which intends to actually
use a feature, and another that intends to return in telemetry whether
the feature is allowed. When feature usage tracking is added, the latter
case should not count as a "usage", so this commit reworks the calls to
isAllowed into 2 methods, checkFeature, which will (eventually) both
check whether a feature is allowed, and keep track of the last usage
time, and isAllowed, which simply determines whether the feature is
allowed.
Note that I considered having a boolean flag on the current method, but
wanted the additional clarity that a different method name provides,
versus a boolean flag which is more easily copied without realizing what
the flag means since it is nameless in call sites.
This PR implements recursive mapping merging for composable index templates.
When creating an index, we perform the following:
* Add each component template mapping in order, merging each one in after the
last.
* Merge in the index template mappings (if present).
* Merge in the mappings on the index request itself (if present).
Some principles:
* All 'structural' changes are disallowed (but everything else is fine). An
object mapper can never be changed between `type: object` and `type: nested`. A
field mapper can never be changed to an object mapper, and vice versa.
* Generally, each section is merged recursively. This includes `object`
mappings, as well as root options like `dynamic_templates` and `meta`. Once we
reach 'leaf components' like field definitions, they always overwrite an
existing one instead of being merged.
Relates to #53101.
When per_partition_categorization.stop_on_warn is set for an analysis
config it is now passed through to the autodetect C++ process.
Also adds some end-to-end tests that exercise the functionality
added in elastic/ml-cpp#1356
Backport of #58632
* Replace compile configuration usage with api (#58451)
- Use java-library instead of plugin to allow api configuration usage
- Remove explicit references to runtime configurations in dependency declarations
- Make test runtime classpath input for testing convention
- required as java library will by default not have build jar file
- jar file is now explicit input of the task and gradle will ensure its properly build
* Fix compile usages in 7.x branch
Adds parsing of `status` and `memory_reestimate_bytes`
to data frame analytics `memory_usage`. When the training surpasses
the model memory limit, the status will be set to `hard_limit` and
`memory_reestimate_bytes` can be used to update the job's
limit in order to restart the job.
Backport of #58588
Today we have individual settings for configuring node roles such as
node.data and node.master. Additionally, roles are pluggable and we have
used this to introduce roles such as node.ml and node.voting_only. As
the number of roles is growing, managing these becomes harder for the
user. For example, to create a master-only node, today a user has to
configure:
- node.data: false
- node.ingest: false
- node.remote_cluster_client: false
- node.ml: false
at a minimum if they are relying on defaults, but also add:
- node.master: true
- node.transform: false
- node.voting_only: false
If they want to be explicit. This is also challenging in cases where a
user wants to have configure a coordinating-only node which requires
disabling all roles, a list which we are adding to, requiring the user
to keep checking whether a node has acquired any of these roles.
This commit addresses this by adding a list setting node.roles for which
a user has explicit control over the list of roles that a node has. If
the setting is configured, the node has exactly the roles in the list,
and not any additional roles. This means to configure a master-only
node, the setting is merely 'node.roles: [master]', and to configure a
coordinating-only node, the setting is merely: 'node.roles: []'.
With this change we deprecate the existing 'node.*' settings such as
'node.data'.
* [ML] make waiting for renormalization optional for internally flushing job (#58537)
When flushing, datafeeds only need the guaruntee that the latest bucket has been handled.
But, in addition to this, the typical call to flush waits for renormalization to complete. For large jobs, this can take a fair bit of time (even longer than a bucket length). This causes unnecessary delays in handling data.
This commit adds a new internal only flag that allows datafeeds (and forecasting) to skip waiting on renormalization.
closes#58395
This changes the default value for the results field of inference
applied on models that are trained via a data frame analytics job.
Previously, the results field default was `predicted_value`. This
commit makes it the same as in the training job itself. The new
default field is `<dependent_variable>_prediction`. Apart from
making inference consistent with the training job the model came
from, it is helpful to preserve the dependent variable name
by default as it provides some context to the user that may
avoid confusion as to which model results came from.
Backport of #58538
This commits allows data streams to be a valid source for analytics and transforms.
Data streams are fairly transparent and our `_search` and `_reindex` actions work without error.
For `_transforms` the check-pointing works as desired as well. Data streams are effectively treated as an `alias` and the backing index values are stored within checkpointing information.
Unlike `classification`, which is using a cross validation splitter
that produces training sets whose size is predictable and equal to
`training_percent * class_cardinality`, for regression we have been
using a random splitter that takes an independent decision for each
document. This means we cannot predict the exact size of the training
set. This poses a problem as we move towards performing test inference
on the java side as we need to be able to provide an accurate upper
bound of the training set size to the c++ process.
This commit replaces the random splitter we use for regression with
the same streaming-reservoir approach we do for `classification`.
Backport of #58331
There was a discrepancy in the implementation of flush
acknowledgements: most of the class was designed on the
basis that the "last finalized bucket time" could be null
but the wire serialization assumed that it was never
null. This works because, the C++ sends zero "last
finalized bucket time" when it is not known or not
relevant. But then the Java code will print that to
XContent as it is assuming null represents not known or
not relevant.
This change corrects the discrepancies. Internally within
the class null represents not known or not relevant, but
this is translated from/to 0 for communications from the
C++ and old nodes that have the bug.
Additionally I switched from Date to Instant for this
class and made the member variables final to modernise it
a bit.
Backport of #58413
Backporting #58096 to 7.x branch.
Relates to #53100
* use mapping source direcly instead of using mapper service to extract the relevant mapping details
* moved assertion to TimestampField class and added helper method for tests
* Improved logic that inserts timestamp field mapping into an mapping.
If the timestamp field path consisted out of object fields and
if the final mapping did not contain the parent field then an error
occurred, because the prior logic assumed that the object field existed.
When a local model is constructed, the cache hit miss count is incremented.
When a user calls _stats, we will include the sum cache hit miss count across ALL nodes. This statistic is important to in comparing against the inference_count. If the cache hit miss count is near the inference_count it indicates that the cache is overburdened, or inappropriately configured.
This commit bumps our JNA dependency from 4.5.1 to 5.5.0, so that we are
now on the latest maintained line, and pick up a large collection of bug
fixes that have accumulated.
The main improvement here is that the total expected
count of training rows in the test is calculated as the
sum of the training fraction times the cardinality of each
class (instead of the training fraction times the total doc count).
Also relaxes slightly the error bound on the uniformity test from 0.12
to 0.13.
Closes#54122
Backport of #58180
This commit adds an optional field, `description`, to all ingest processors
so that users can explain the purpose of the specific processor instance.
Closes#56000.
* Remove usage of deprecated testCompile configuration
* Replace testCompile usage by testImplementation
* Make testImplementation non transitive by default (as we did for testCompile)
* Update CONTRIBUTING about using testImplementation for test dependencies
* Fail on testCompile configuration usage
This type of result will store stats about how well categorization
is performing. When per-partition categorization is in use, separate
documents will be written for every partition so that it is possible
to see if categorization is working well for some partitions but not
others.
This PR is a minimal implementation to allow the C++ side changes to
be made. More Java side changes related to per-partition
categorization will be in followup PRs. However, even in the long
term I do not see a major benefit in introducing dedicated APIs for
querying categorizer stats. Like forecast request stats the
categorizer stats can be read directly from the job's results alias.
Backport of #57978
Adds support for reading in `model_size_info` objects.
These objects contain numeric values indicating the model definition size and complexity.
Additionally, these objects are not stored or serialized to any other node. They are to be used for calculating and storing model metadata. They are much smaller on heap than the true model definition and should help prevent the analytics process from using too much memory.
Co-authored-by: Elastic Machine <elasticmachine@users.noreply.github.com>
Now that annotations are part of the anomaly detection job results
the annotations index should be refreshed on flushing and closing
the job so that flush and close continue to fulfil their contracts
that immediately after returning all results the job generated up
to that point are searchable.
ModelLoadingService only caches models if they are referenced by an
ingest pipeline. For models used in search we want to always cache the
models and rely on TTL to evict them. Additionally when an ingest
pipeline is deleted the model it references should not be evicted if
it is used in search.
Search after is a better choice for the delete expired data iterators
where processing takes a long time as unlike scroll a context does not
have to be kept alive. Also changes the delete expired data endpoint to
404 if the job is unknown
Since we change the memory estimates for data frame analytics jobs from worst case to a realistic case, the strict less-than assertion in the test does not hold anymore. I replaced it with a less-or-equal-than assertion.
Backport or #57882
When Joni, the regex engine that powers grok emits a warning it
does so by default to System.err. System.err logs are all bucketed
together in the server log at WARN level. When Joni emits a warning,
it can be extremely verbose, logging a message for each execution
again that pattern. For ingest node that means for every document
that is run that through Grok. Fortunately, Joni provides a call
back hook to push these warnings to a custom location.
This commit implements Joni's callback hook to push the Joni warning
to the Elasticsearch server logger (logger.org.elasticsearch.ingest.common.GrokProcessor)
at debug level. Generally these warning indicate a possible issue with
the regular expression and upon creation of the Grok processor will
do a "test run" of the expression and log the result (if any) at WARN
level. This WARN level log should only occur on pipeline creation which
is a much lower frequency then every document.
Additionally, the documentation is updated with instructions for how
to set the logger to debug level.
This adds new plugin level circuit breaker for the ML plugin.
`model_inference` is the circuit breaker qualified name.
Right now it simply adds to the breaker when the model is loaded (and possibly breaking) and removing from the breaker when the model is unloaded.
Before to determine if a field is meta-field, a static method of MapperService
isMetadataField was used. This method was using an outdated static list
of meta-fields.
This PR instead changes this method to the instance method that
is also aware of meta-fields in all registered plugins.
Related #38373, #41656Closes#24422
Deleting expired data can take a long time leading to timeouts if there
are many jobs. Often the problem is due to a few large jobs which
prevent the regular maintenance of the remaining jobs. This change adds
a job_id parameter to the delete expired data endpoint to help clean up
those problematic jobs.
This PR adds the initial Java side changes to enable
use of the per-partition categorization functionality
added in elastic/ml-cpp#1293.
There will be a followup change to complete the work,
as there cannot be any end-to-end integration tests
until elastic/ml-cpp#1293 is merged, and also
elastic/ml-cpp#1293 does not implement some of the
more peripheral functionality, like stop_on_warn and
per-partition stats documents.
The changes so far cover REST APIs, results object
formats, HLRC and docs.
Backport of #57683
This is a major refactor of the underlying inference logic.
The main refactor is now we are separating the model configuration and
the inference interfaces.
This has the following benefits:
- we can store extra things with the model that are not
necessary for inference (i.e. treenode split information gain)
- we can optimize inference separate from model serialization and storage.
- The user is oblivious to the optimizations (other than seeing the benefits).
A major part of this commit is removing all inference related methods from the
trained model configurations (ensemble, tree, etc.) and moving them to a new class.
This new class satisfies a new interface that is ONLY for inference.
The optimizations applied currently are:
- feature maps are flattened once
- feature extraction only happens once at the highest level
(improves inference + feature importance through put)
- Only storing what we need for inference + feature importance on heap
When we force delete a DF analytics job, we currently first force
stop it and then we proceed with deleting the job config.
This may result in logging errors if the job config is deleted
before it is retrieved while the job is starting.
Instead of force stopping the job, it would make more sense to
try to stop the job gracefully first. So we now try that out first.
If normal stop fails, then we resort to force stopping the job to
ensure we can go through with the delete.
In addition, this commit introduces `timeout` for the delete action
and makes use of it in the child requests.
Backport of #57680
In #55592 and #55416, we deprecated the settings for enabling and disabling
basic license features and turned those settings into no-ops. Since doing so,
we've had feedback that this change may not give users enough time to cleanly
switch from non-ILM index management tools to ILM. If two index managers
operate simultaneously, results could be strange and difficult to
reconstruct. We don't know of any cases where SLM will cause a problem, but we
are restoring that setting as well, to be on the safe side.
This PR is not a strict commit reversion. First, we are keeping the new
xpack.watcher.use_ilm_index_management setting, introduced when
xpack.ilm.enabled was made a no-op, so that users can begin migrating to using
it. Second, the SLM setting was modified in the same commit as a group of other
settings, so I have taken just the changes relating to SLM.
* [ML] mark forecasts for force closed/failed jobs as failed (#57143)
forecasts that are still running should be marked as failed/finished in the following scenarios:
- Job is force closed
- Job is re-assigned to another node.
Forecasts are not "resilient". Their execution does not continue after a node failure. Consequently, forecasts marked as STARTED or SCHEDULED should be flagged as failed. These forecasts can then be deleted.
Additionally, force closing a job kills the native task directly. This means that if a forecast was running, it is not allowed to complete and could still have the status of `STARTED` in the index.
relates to https://github.com/elastic/elasticsearch/issues/56419
* [ML] adds new for_export flag to GET _ml/inference API (#57351)
Adds a new boolean flag, `for_export` to the `GET _ml/inference/<model_id>` API.
This flag is useful for moving models between clusters.
This adds a max_model_memory setting to forecast requests.
This setting can take a string value that is formatted according to byte sizes (i.e. "50mb", "150mb").
The default value is `20mb`.
There is a HARD limit at `500mb` which will throw an error if used.
If the limit is larger than 40% the anomaly job's configured model limit, the forecast limit is reduced to be strictly lower than that value. This reduction is logged and audited.
related native change: https://github.com/elastic/ml-cpp/pull/1238
closes: https://github.com/elastic/elasticsearch/issues/56420
Allows geo fields (`geo_point`, `geo_shape`) to have missing values.
Fixes a bug where such missing values would result in an error.
Closes#57299
Backport of #57300
Since #51888 the ML job stats endpoint has returned entries for
jobs that have a persistent task but not job config. Such
orphaned tasks caused monitoring to fail.
This change ignores any such corrupt jobs for monitoring purposes.
Backport of #57235
If a job is NOT opened, forecasts should be able to be deleted, no matter their state.
This also fixes a bug with expanding forecast IDs. We should check for wildcard `*` and `_all` when expanding the ids
closes https://github.com/elastic/elasticsearch/issues/56419
Fix delete_expired_data/nightly maintenance when
many model snapshots need deleting (#57041)
The queries performed by the expired data removers pull back entire
documents when only a few fields are required. For ModelSnapshots in
particular this is a problem as they contain quantiles which may be
100s of KB and the search size is set to 10,000.
This change makes the search more efficient by only requesting the
fields needed to work out which expired data should be deleted.
Field mapping detection is done via grok patterns.
This commit adds well-known text (WKT) formatted geometry detection.
If everything is a `POINT`, then a `geo_point` mapping is preferred.
Otherwise, if all the fields are WKT geometries a `geo_shape` mapping is preferred.
This does **NOT** detect other types of formatted geometries (geohash, comma delimited points, etc.)
closes https://github.com/elastic/elasticsearch/issues/56967
Merging logic is currently split between FieldMapper, with its merge() method, and
MappedFieldType, which checks for merging compatibility. The compatibility checks
are called from a third class, MappingMergeValidator. This makes it difficult to reason
about what is or is not compatible in updates, and even what is in fact updateable - we
have a number of tests that check compatibility on changes in mapping configuration
that are not in fact possible.
This commit refactors the compatibility logic so that it all sits on FieldMapper, and
makes it called at merge time. It adds a new FieldMapperTestCase base class that
FieldMapper tests can extend, and moves the compatibility testing machinery from
FieldTypeTestCase to here.
Relates to #56814
Throttling nightly cleanup as much as we do has been over cautious.
Night cleanup should be more lenient in its throttling. We still
keep the same batch size, but now the requests per second scale
with the number of data nodes. If we have more than 5 data nodes,
we don't throttle at all.
Additionally, the API now has `requests_per_second` and `timeout` set.
So users calling the API directly can set the throttling.
This commit also adds a new setting `xpack.ml.nightly_maintenance_requests_per_second`.
This will allow users to adjust throttling of the nightly maintenance.
In DF analytics classification, it is possible to use no samples
of a class if its cardinality is too low.
This commit fixes this by ensuring the target sample count can never be zero.
Backport of #56783
This is a followup to #56632. Tests that had to be changed
to mock the C++ log handler more accurately need to be more
careful about when that stream ends, as ending of that
stream is used to detect crashes in the production system.
Fixes#56796
Adds the conflicting types and an example of an index which specifies
them in order to make it easier for the user to understand the conflict.
Backport of #56700
Prior to this change the named pipes that connect the ML C++
processes to the Elasticsearch JVM were all opened before any
of them were read from or written to.
This created a problem, where if the C++ process logged more
messages between opening the log pipe and opening the last
pipe to be connected than there was space for in the named
pipe's buffer then the C++ process would block. This would
mean it never got as far as opening the last named pipe, so
the JVM would never get as far as reading from the log pipe,
hence a deadlock.
This change alters the connection order so that the JVM
starts reading from the logging pipe immediately after opening
it so that if the C++ process logs messages while opening the
other named pipes they are captured in a timely manner and
there is no danger of a deadlock.
Backport of #56632
Two spots that allow for some optimization:
* We are often creating a composite reference of just a single item in
the transport layer => special cased via static constructor to make sure we never do that
* Also removed the pointless case of an empty composite bytes ref
* `ByteBufferReference` is practically always created from a heap buffer these days so there
is no point of dealing with all the bounds checks and extra references to sliced buffers from that
and we can just use the underlying array directly
We have been using a zero timeout in the case that DF analytics
is stopped. This may cause a timeout when we cancel, for example,
the reindex task.
This commit fixes this by using the default timeout instead.
Backport of #56423
It is possible that the config document for a data frame
analytics job is deleted from the config index. If that is
the case the user is unable to stop a running job because
we attempt to retrieve the config and that will throw.
This commit changes that. When the request is forced,
we do not expand the requested ids based on the existing
configs but from the list of running tasks instead.
Backport of #56360
Due to multi-threading it is possible that phase progress
updates written from the c++ process arrive reordered.
We can address this by ensuring that progress may only increase.
Closes#56282
Backport of #56339
* [ML] lay ground work for handling >1 result indices (#55892)
This commit removes all but one reference to `getInitialResultsIndexName`.
This is to support more than one result index for a single job.
The following settings are now no-ops:
* xpack.flattened.enabled
* xpack.logstash.enabled
* xpack.rollup.enabled
* xpack.slm.enabled
* xpack.sql.enabled
* xpack.transform.enabled
* xpack.vectors.enabled
Since these settings no longer need to be checked, we can remove settings
parameters from a number of constructors and methods, and do so in this
commit.
We also update documentation to remove references to these settings.
This PR implements the following changes to make ML model snapshot
retention more flexible in advance of adding a UI for the feature in
an upcoming release.
- The default for `model_snapshot_retention_days` for new jobs is now
10 instead of 1
- There is a new job setting, `daily_model_snapshot_retention_after_days`,
that defaults to 1 for new jobs and `model_snapshot_retention_days`
for pre-7.8 jobs
- For days that are older than `model_snapshot_retention_days`, all
model snapshots are deleted as before
- For days that are in between `daily_model_snapshot_retention_after_days`
and `model_snapshot_retention_days` all but the first model snapshot
for that day are deleted
- The `retain` setting of model snapshots is still respected to allow
selected model snapshots to be retained indefinitely
Backport of #56125
In #55763 I thought I could remove the flag that marks
reindexing was finished on a data frame analytics task.
However, that exposed a race condition. It is possible that
between updating reindexing progress to 100 because we
have called `DataFrameAnalyticsManager.startAnalytics()` and
a call to the _stats API which updates reindexing progress via the
method `DataFrameAnalyticsTask.updateReindexTaskProgress()` we
end up overwriting the 100 with a lower progress value.
This commit fixes this issue by bringing back the help of
a `isReindexingFinished` flag as it was prior to #55763.
Closes#56128
Backport of #56135
Backport of #56034.
Move includeDataStream flag from an IndicesOptions to IndexNameExpressionResolver.Context
as a dedicated field that callers to IndexNameExpressionResolver can set.
Also alter indices stats api to support data streams.
The rollover api uses this api and otherwise rolling over data stream does no longer work.
Relates to #53100
If there are ill-formed pipelines, or other pipelines are not ready to be parsed, `InferenceProcessor.Factory::accept(ClusterState)` logs warnings. This can be confusing and cause log spam.
It might lead folks to think there an issue with the inference processor. Also, they would see logs for the inference processor even though they might not be using the inference processor. Leading to more confusion.
Additionally, pipelines might not be parseable in this method as some processors require the new cluster state metadata before construction (e.g. `enrich` requires cluster metadata to be set before creating the processor).
closes https://github.com/elastic/elasticsearch/issues/55985
Backport of #55858 to 7.x branch.
Currently the TransportBulkAction detects whether an index is missing and
then decides whether it should be auto created. The coordination of the
index creation also happens in the TransportBulkAction on the coordinating node.
This change adds a new transport action that the TransportBulkAction delegates to
if missing indices need to be created. The reasons for this change:
* Auto creation of data streams can't occur on the coordinating node.
Based on the index template (v2) either a regular index or a data stream should be created.
However if the coordinating node is slow in processing cluster state updates then it may be
unaware of the existence of certain index templates, which then can load to the
TransportBulkAction creating an index instead of a data stream. Therefor the coordination of
creating an index or data stream should occur on the master node. See #55377
* From a security perspective it is useful to know whether index creation originates from the
create index api or from auto creating a new index via the bulk or index api. For example
a user would be allowed to auto create an index, but not to use the create index api. The
auto create action will allow security to distinguish these two different patterns of
index creation.
This change adds the following new transport actions:
AutoCreateAction, the TransportBulkAction redirects to this action and this action will actually create the index (instead of the TransportCreateIndexAction). Later via #55377, can improve the AutoCreateAction to also determine whether an index or data stream should be created.
The create_index index privilege is also modified, so that if this permission is granted then a user is also allowed to auto create indices. This change does not yet add an auto_create index privilege. A future change can introduce this new index privilege or modify an existing index / write index privilege.
Relates to #53100