* Build: Remove old maven deploy support
This change removes the old maven deploy that we have in parallel to
maven-publish, and makes maven-publish fully work with publishing to
maven local. Using `gradle publishToMavenLocal` should be used to
publish to .m2.
Note that there is an unfortunate hack that means for
zip artifacts we must first create/publish a dummy pom file, and then
follow that with the real pom file. It would be nice to have the pom
file contains packaging=zip, but maven central then requires sources and
javadocs. But our zips are really just attached artifacts, so we already
set the packaging type to pom for our zip files. This change just works
around a limitation of the underlying maven publishing library which
silently skips attached artifacts when the packaging type is set to pom.
relates #20164closes#20375
* Remove unnecessary extra spacing
The integ-test-zip distribution did not specify a value for
path.conf. As such, it picked up the default value of
/etc/elasticsearch. This means that on machines that have this
directory, integration tests could fail because they would try to pick
up configuration from that directory rather than from the home directory
of the exploded distribution. This commit fixes this issue by specifying
a value of path.conf for the integ-test-zip distribution.
Relates #20271
This commit sets the default min heap equal to the default max
heap. This is to align the default out-of-box settings with the heap
size bootstrap check.
Some tests still start http implicitly or miss configuring the transport clients correctly.
This commit fixes all remaining tests and adds a depdenceny to `transport-netty` from
`qa/smoke-test-http` and `modules/reindex` since they need an http server running on the nodes.
This also moves all required permissions for netty into it's module and out of core.
Recent changes adds an extra bin/ directory that contains Windows bat files in the normal Bin folder of elasticsearch. For exemple the script elasticsearch.bat is located in bin/bin/elasticsearch.bat instead of bin/elasticsearch.bat.
The distributions had their own copies of these extra files, which was a
carry over from maven. This change removes the duplicate files and
copies them from the root of the project.
closes#18597
This change tweaks the metadata version associated with the deb and rpm
packages. For rpm, dashes are allowed in versions, so we can use the
version as it already exists. For rpm, dashes are not allowed, so this
uses underscores instead. This only affects prerelease versions (eg
alpha/beta/rc), and usually someone doesn't specify the version, so the
inconsistency doesn't matter that much.
This change makes `gradle run` use the full zip distribution. Arguably
we could make it do the same when run inside plugins, but I started out
with this simple change. I am open to moving it into the RunTask itself
so that plugins will do this as well.
After considerable discussion, we have elected to set the default min
heap to 256m and the default max heap to 2g. This is to balance the
desire for a good out-of-the-box performance experience (default max
heap of 2g) with a good out-of-the-box experience running on machines
with limited resources or running multiple instances on a single modern
developer laptop (default min heap of 1g).
Benchmarking with the geonames data set shows that Elasticsearch truly
needs 2g of heap or the heap is a bottleneck for indexing rates. If our
goal is to satisfy the out-of-the-box-experience, we should prioritize
the out-of-the-box performance experience. Thus, the default heap should
be 2g until smaller heaps are not the bottleneck for indexing small data
sets.
This commit fixes the Debian package requires clause for bash. For the
RPM it is okay to specify the binary, but for the Debian package the
package name must be specified.
Today we encourage users to set their minimum and maximum heap settings
equal to each other to prevent the heap from resizing. Yet, the default
heap settings do not start Elasticsearch in this fashion. This commit
addresses this discrepancy by setting the default min heap to '512m' and
the default max heap to the default min heap.
Relates #16334
This commit adds a hard requirement to the RPM and Debian packages for
/bin/bash to be present, and adds a note regarding this to the migration
docs.
Relates #18259
In preparation for a unified release process, we need to be able to
generate the pom files independently of trying to actually publish. This
change adds back the maven-publish plugin just for that purpose. The
nexus plugin still exists for now, so that we do not break snapshots,
but that can be removed at a later time once snapshots are happenign
through the unified tools. Note I also changed the dir jars are written
into so that all our artifacts are under build/distributions.
This changes our packaging to be explicit about the permissions of files
and directories in the tar.gz, rpm, and deb packages. This is to protect
against a user having an incorrectly set umask when installing.
Additionally, plugins that are installed now have their permissions set
by the plugin installation so that plugins that may have been packaged
with incorrect permissions are secured.
Resolves#17634
This allows for a local file based deploy without needed nexus
auth information.
Also signing of packages has been added, either via gradle.properties
or using system properties as a fallback.
The property build.repository allows to configure another endpoint if no
snapshot build is done.
Fix creation of .asc file for tar.gz distribution
Closes#17405
This commit adds a new configuration file jvm.options to centralize and
simplify management of JVM options. This separates the configuration of
the JVM from the packaging scripts (bin/elasticsearch*, bin/service.bat,
and init.d/elasticsearch) simplifying end-user operational management of
custom JVM options.
The build currently uses the old maven support in gradle. This commit
switches to use the newer maven-publish plugin. This will allow future
changes, for example, easily publishing to artifactory.
An additional part of this change makes publishing of build-tools part
of the normal publishing, instead of requiring a separate upload step
from within buildSrc. That also sets us up for a follow up to enable
precomit checks on the buildSrc code itself.
Removes all our logger wrappers except the wrapper for log4j1.2. If you
depend on Elasticsearch's jar in your application you'll need to declare
log4j 1.2 and/or some bridge to your favorite logger.
We did this to simplify our builds and code. No more commons-logging like
log implementation sniffing. No more optional dependency hacks in gradle.
We might one day want to use j.u.l instead of log4j. If we do want that
we can recover its wrapper by studying this commit. We didn't go directly
to j.u.l in this commit because that is a bigger change. Our logging
configuration is based on log4j1.2 and people are used to it. So it'd
be a much more fraught breaking change to do that conversion.
Both modules and integ-test-zip have integration tests (the latter being
the base rest tests). We can currently get odd behavior where
integ-test-zip's integ test does not shutdown its cluster before running
mdoule integ tests (and it then tries to shutdown all those clusters at
once after modules integ tests have run).
The underlying issue can be attributed to a bug in gradle with how cross project
mustRunAfter work with finalizers. This change works around this bug by
setting up mustRunAfter on the shutdown task itself.
We currently use the full suite of packaged rest tests for each
distribution. We also used to run rest tests within core integ tests,
but this stopped working when we split out the test-framework, since the
test files are in there.
This change simplifies the code to run packaged rest tests just once,
for the integ-test-zip, and removes the unused rest tests from
test-framework. Distributions rest tests now check that all modules
were loaded.
This change attempts to simplify the gradle tasks for precommit. One
major part of that is using a "less groovy style", as well as being more
consistent about how tasks are created and where they are configured. It
also allows the things creating the tasks to set up inter task
dependencies, instead of assuming them (ie decoupling from tasks
eleswhere in the build).