This removes the abstract `getTranslog` method in `Engine`, instead leaving it
to the abstract implementations of the other methods that use the translog. This
allows future Engines not to have a Translog, as instead they must implement the
methods that use the translog pieces to return necessary values.
The goal of this commit is to address unknown licenses when producing
the dependencies info report. We have two different checks that we run
on licenses. The first check is whether or not we have stashed a copy of
the license text for a dependency in the repository. The second is to
map every dependency to a license type (e.g., BSD 3-clause). The problem
here is that the way we were handling licenses in the second check
differs from how we handle licenses in the first check. The first check
works by finding a license file with the name of the artifact followed
by the text -LICENSE.txt. Yet in some cases we allow mapping an artifact
name to another name used to check for the license (e.g., we map
lucene-.* to lucene, and opensaml-.* to shibboleth. The second check
understood the first way of looking for a license file but not the
second way. So in this commit we teach the second check about the
mappings from artifact names to license names. We do this by copying the
configuration from the dependencyLicenses task to the dependenciesInfo
task and then reusing the code from the first check in the second
check. There were some other challenges here though. For example,
dependenciesInfo was checking too many dependencies. For now, we should
only be checking direct dependencies and leaving transitive dependencies
from another org.elasticsearch artifact to that artifact (we want to do
this differently in a follow-up). We also want to disable
dependenciesInfo for projects that we do not publish, users only care
about licenses they might be exposed to if they use our assembled
products. With all of the changes in this commit we have eliminated all
unknown licenses. A follow-up will enforce that when we add a new
dependency it does not get mapped to unknown, these will be forbidden in
the future. Therefore, with this change and earlier changes are left
having no unknown licenses and two custom licenses; custom here means it
does not map to an SPDX license type. Those two licenses are xz and
ldapsdk. A future change will not allow additional custom licenses
unless they are explicitly whitelisted. This ensures that if a new
dependency is added it is mapped to an SPDX license or mapped to custom
because it does not have an SPDX license.
* Fully encapsulate LocalCheckpointTracker inside of the engine
This makes the Engine interface not expose the `LocalCheckpointTracker`, instead
exposing the pieces needed (like retrieving the local checkpoint) as individual
methods.
* Remove DocumentFieldMappers#simpleMatchToFullName, as it is duplicative of MapperService#simpleMatchToIndexNames.
* Rename MapperService#simpleMatchToIndexNames -> simpleMatchToFullName for consistency.
* Simplify EsIntegTestCase#assertConcreteMappingsOnAll to accept concrete fields instead of wildcard patterns.
This is related to #27260. This commit combines the AcceptingSelector
and SocketSelector classes into a single NioSelector. This change
allows the same selector to handle both server and socket channels. This
is valuable as we do not necessarily want a dedicated thread running for
accepting channels.
With this change, this commit removes the configuration for dedicated
accepting selectors for the normal transport class. The accepting
workload for new node connections is likely low, meaning that there is
no need to dedicate a thread to this process.
This commit adds a new writeBlobAtomic() method to the BlobContainer
interface that can be implemented by repository implementations which
support atomic writes operations.
When the BlobContainer implementation does not provide a specific
implementation of writeBlobAtomic(), then the writeBlob() method is used.
Related to #30680
ObjectParser should throw XContentParseExceptions, not IAE. A dedicated parsing
exception can includes the place where the error occurred.
Closes#30605
With #31020 we introduced the ability for transport clients to indicate what features they support
in order to make sure we don't serialize object to them they don't support. This PR adapts the
serialization logic of persistent tasks to be aware of those features and not serialize tasks that
aren't supported.
Also, a version check is added for the future where we may add new tasks implementations and
need to be able to indicate they shouldn't be serialized both to nodes and clients.
As the implementation relies on the interface of `PersistentTaskParams`, these are no longer
optional. That's acceptable as all current implementation have them and we plan to make
`PersistentTaskParams` more central in the future.
Relates to #30731
This commit introduces the ability for a client to communicate to the
server features that it can support and for these features to be used in
influencing the decisions that the server makes when communicating with
the client. To this end we carry the features from the client to the
underlying stream as we carry the version of the client today. This
enables us to enhance the logic where we make protocol decisions on the
basis of the version on the stream to also make protocol decisions on
the basis of the features on the stream. With such functionality, the
client can communicate to the server if it is a transport client, or if
it has, for example, X-Pack installed. This enables us to support
rolling upgrades from the OSS distribution to the default distribution
without breaking client connectivity as we can now elect to serialize
customs in the cluster state depending on whether or not the client
reports to us using the feature capabilities that it can under these
customs. This means that we would avoid sending a client pieces of the
cluster state that it can not understand. However, we want to take care
and always send the full cluster state during node-to-node communication
as otherwise we would end up with different understanding of what is in
the cluster state across nodes depending on which features they reported
to have. This is why when deciding whether or not to write out a custom
we always send the custom if the client is not a transport client and
otherwise do not send the custom if the client is transport client that
does not report to have the feature required by the custom.
Co-authored-by: Yannick Welsch <yannick@welsch.lu>
This change adds an option named `split_queries_on_whitespace` to the `keyword`
field type. When set to true full text queries (`match`, `multi_match`, `query_string`, ...) that target the field will split the input on whitespace to build the query terms. Defaults to `false`.
Closes#30393
This modifies the high level rest client to allow calling code to
customize per request options for the bulk API. You do the actual
customization by passing a `RequestOptions` object to the API call
which is set on the `Request` that is generated by the high level
client. It also makes the `RequestOptions` a thing in the low level
rest client. For now that just means you use it to customize the
headers and the `httpAsyncResponseConsumerFactory` and we'll add
node selectors and per request timeouts in a follow up.
I only implemented this on the bulk API because it is the first one
in the list alphabetically and I wanted to keep the change small
enough to review. I'll convert the remaining APIs in a followup.
This commit removes the RequestBuilder generic type from Action. It was
needed to be used by the newRequest method, which in turn was used by
client.prepareExecute. Both of these methods are now removed, along with
the existing users of prepareExecute constructing the appropriate
builder directly.
Include size of snapshot in snapshot metadata
Adds difference of number of files (and file sizes) between prev and current snapshot. Total number/size reflects total number/size of files in snapshot.
Closes#18543
Currently nio and netty modules use the CompletableFuture class for
managing listeners. This is unfortunate as that class accepts
Throwable. This commit adds a class CompletableContext that wraps
the CompletableFuture but does not accept Throwable. This allows the
modification of netty and nio logic to no longer handle Throwable.
Today, the `ClusterApplier` and `MasterService` both use the
`ClusterStateTaskListener` interface to notify their callers when asynchronous
activities have completed. However, this is not wholly appropriate: none of the
callers into the `ClusterApplier` care about the `ClusterState` arguments that
they receive. This change introduces a dedicated ClusterApplyListener
interface for callers into the `ClusterApplier`, to distinguish these listeners
from the real `ClusterStateTaskListener`s that are waiting for responses from
the `MasterService`.
This commit reintroduces 31251c9 and 63a5799. These commits introduced a
memory leak and were reverted. This commit brings those commits back
and fixes the memory leak by removing unnecessary retain method calls.
This reverts commit 31251c9 introduced in #30695.
We suspect this commit is causing the OOME's reported in #30811 and we will use this PR to test this assertion.
When doing a node restart using the test framework, the restarted node does not only use the
settings provided to the original node, but also additional settings provided by plugin extensions,
which does not correspond to the settings that a node would have on a true restart.
This is related to #29500. We are removing the ability to disable http
pipelining. This PR removes the references to disabling pipelining in
the integration test case.
Adding headers rather than setting them all at once seems more
user-friendly and we already do it in a similar way for parameters
(see Request#addParameter).
The new snapshot includes LUCENE-8324 which fixes missing checkpoint
after a fully deletes segment is dropped on flush. This snapshot should
resolves failed tests in the CorruptedFileIT suite.
Closes#30741Closes#30577
This is related to #29500 and #28898. This commit removes the abilitiy
to disable http pipelining. After this commit, any elasticsearch node
will support pipelined requests from a client. Additionally, it extracts
some of the http pipelining work to the server module. This extracted
work is used to implement pipelining for the nio plugin.
This is related to #27260. The elasticsearch-nio jar is supposed to be
a library opposed to a framework. Currently it internally logs certain
exceptions. This commit modifies it to not rely on logging. Instead
exception handlers are passed by the applications that use the jar.
Meta plugins existed only for a short time, in order to enable breaking
up x-pack into multiple plugins. However, now that x-pack is no longer
installed as a plugin, the need for them has disappeared. This commit
removes the meta plugins infrastructure.
Date histograms on non-fixed timezones such as `Europe/Paris` proved much slower
than histograms on fixed timezones in #28727. This change mitigates the issue by
using a fixed time zone instead when shard data doesn't cross a transition so
that all timestamps share the same fixed offset. This should be a common case
with daily indices.
NOTE: Rewriting the aggregation doesn't work since the timezone is then also
used on the coordinating node to create empty buckets, which might be out of the
range of data that exists on the shard.
NOTE: In order to be able to get a shard context in the tests, I reused code
from the base query test case by creating a new parent test case for both
queries and aggregations: `AbstractBuilderTestCase`.
Mitigates #28727
This pipeline aggregation gives the user the ability to script functions that "move" across a window
of data, instead of single data points. It is the scripted version of MovingAvg pipeline agg.
Through custom script contexts, we expose a number of convenience methods:
- MovingFunctions.max()
- MovingFunctions.min()
- MovingFunctions.sum()
- MovingFunctions.unweightedAvg()
- MovingFunctions.linearWeightedAvg()
- MovingFunctions.ewma()
- MovingFunctions.holt()
- MovingFunctions.holtWinters()
- MovingFunctions.stdDev()
The user can also define any arbitrary logic via their own scripting, or combine with the above methods.
This change adds a `listTasks` method to the high level java
ClusterClient which allows listing running tasks through the
task management API.
Related to #27205
A 6.x node can send a deprecation message that the default number of
shards will change from five to one in 7.0.0. In a mixed cluster,
whether or not a create index request sees five or one shard and
produces a deprecation message depends on the version of the master
node. This means that during BWC tests a test can see this deprecation
message depending on the version of the master node. In 6.x when we
introduced this deprecation message we assumed that whereever we see
this deprecation message is expected. However, in a mixed cluster test
we need a similar mechanism but it would only apply if the version of
the master node is earlier than 7.0.0. This commit takes advantage of a
recent change to expose the version of the master node to do sections of
REST tests. With this in hand, we can skip asserting on the deprecation
message if the version of the master node is before 7.0.0 and otherwise
seeing that deprecation message would be completely unexpected.
This commit is related to #28898. It adds an nio driven http server
transport. Currently it only supports basic http features. Cors,
pipeling, and read timeouts will need to be added in future PRs.
This commit exposes the master version to the REST test context. This
will be needed in a follow-up where the master version will be used to
determine whether or not a certain warning header is expected.
This configures all `qa` projects to use the distribution contained in
the `tests.distribution` system property if it is set. The goal is to
create a simple way to run tests against the default distribution which
has x-pack basic features enabled while not forcing these tests on all
contributors. You run these tests by doing something like:
```
./gradlew -p qa -Dtests.distribution=zip check
```
or
```
./gradlew -p qa -Dtests.distribution=zip bwcTest
```
x-pack basic *shouldn't* get in the way of any of these tests but
nothing is ever perfect so this we have to disable a few when running
with the zip distribution.
This commit changes the default out-of-the-box configuration for the
number of shards from five to one. We think this will help address a
common problem of oversharding. For users with time-based indices that
need a different default, this can be managed with index templates. For
users with non-time-based indices that find they need to re-shard with
the split API in place they no longer need to resort only to
reindexing.
Since this has the impact of changing the default number of shards used
in REST tests, we want to ensure that we still have coverage for issues
that could arise from multiple shards. As such, we randomize (rarely)
the default number of shards in REST tests to two. This is managed via a
global index template. However, some tests check the templates that are
in the cluster state during the test. Since this template is randomly
there, we need a way for tests to skip adding the template used to set
the number of shards to two. For this we add the default_shards feature
skip. To avoid having to write our docs in a complicated way because
sometimes they might be behind one shard, and sometimes they might be
behind two shards we apply the default_shards feature skip to all docs
tests. That is, these tests will always run with the default number of
shards (one).
The following tokenizers were moved: classic, edge_ngram,
letter, lowercase, ngram, path_hierarchy, pattern, thai, uax_url_email and
whitespace.
Left keyword tokenizer factory in server module, because
normalizers directly depend on it.This should be addressed on a
follow up change.
Relates to #23658
There's no need for an extra `blobExists()` call when writing a blob to the HDFS service. The writeBlob implementation for the HDFS repository already uses the `CreateFlag.CREATE` option on the file creation, which ensures that the blob that's uploaded does not already exist. This saves one network roundtrip.
The TokenMetaData equals method compared byte arrays using `.equals` on
the arrays themselves, which is the equivalent of an `==` check. This
means that a seperate byte[] with the same contents would not be
considered equivalent to the existing one, even though it should be.
The method has been updated to use `Array#equals` and similarly the
hashcode method has been updated to call `Arrays#hashCode` instead of
calling hashcode on the array itself.
This commit removes a test that we can not restore from 1.x and 2.x
repository files. This test is not needed, the version of Elasticsearch
that this commit targets can not even read index files from those
versions.
We have a pile of documentation describing how to rebuild the built in
language analyzers and, previously, our documentation testing framework
made sure that the examples successfully built *an* analyzer but they
didn't assert that the analyzer built by the documentation matches the
built in anlayzer. Unsuprisingly, some of the examples aren't quite
right.
This adds a mechanism that tests that the analyzers built by the docs.
The mechanism is fairly simple and brutal but it seems to be working:
build a hundred random unicode sequences and send them through the
`_analyze` API with the rebuilt analyzer and then again through the
built in analyzer. Then make sure both APIs return the same results.
Each of these calls to `_anlayze` takes about 20ms on my laptop which
seems fine.
When deleting or creating a snapshot for a given shard, elasticsearch
usually starts by listing all the existing snapshotted files in the repository.
Then it computes a diff and deletes the snapshotted files that are not
needed anymore. During this deletion, an exception is thrown if the file
to be deleted does not exist anymore.
This behavior is challenging with cloud based repository implementations
like S3 where a file that has been deleted can still appear in the bucket for
few seconds/minutes (because the deletion can take some time to be fully
replicated on S3). If the deleted file appears in the listing of files, then the
following deletion will fail with a NoSuchFileException and the snapshot
will be partially created/deleted.
This pull request makes the deletion of these files a bit less strict, ie not
failing if the file we want to delete does not exist anymore. It introduces a
new BlobContainer.deleteIgnoringIfNotExists() method that can be used
at some specific places where not failing when deleting a file is
considered harmless.
Closes#28322
Upgrade to lucene-7.4.0-snapshot-1ed95c097b
This version contains:
* An Analyzer for Korean
* An IntervalQuery and IntervalsSource that retrieve minimum intervals of positional queries.
* A new API to retrieve matches (offsets and positions) of a query for a single document.
* Support for soft deletes in the index writer.
* A fixed shingle filter that handles index time synonyms.
* Support for emoji sequence in ICUTokenizer (with an upgrade to icu 61.1)
Fix NPE when CumulativeSum agg encounters null/empty bucket
If the cusum agg encounters a null value, it's because the value is
missing (like the first value from a derivative agg), the path is
not valid, or the bucket in the path was empty.
Previously cusum would just explode on the null, but this changes it
so we only increment the sum if the value is non-null and finite.
This is safe because even if the cusum encounters all null or empty
buckets, the cumulative sum is still zero (like how the sum agg returns
zero even if all the docs were missing values)
I went ahead and tweaked AggregatorTestCase to allow testing pipelines,
so that I could delete the IT test and reimplement it as AggTests.
Closes#27544
This commit removes the http.enabled setting. While all real nodes (started with bin/elasticsearch) will always have an http binding, there are many tests that rely on the quickness of not actually needing to bind to 2 ports. For this case, the MockHttpTransport.TestPlugin provides a dummy http transport implementation which is used by default in ESIntegTestCase.
closes#12792
This commit refactors VersionUtils.resolveReleasedVersions to be
simpler, and in the process fixes the behavior to match that of
VersionCollection.groovy.
closes#30133
Starting with the refactoring in https://github.com/elastic/elasticsearch/pull/22778 (released in 5.3) we may fail to properly replicate operation when a mapping update on master fails. If a bulk
operations needs a mapping update half way, it will send a request to the master before continuing
to index the operations. If that request times out or isn't acked (i.e., even one node in the cluster
didn't process it within 30s), we end up throwing the exception and aborting the entire bulk. This is
a problem because all operations that were processed so far are not replicated any more to the
replicas. Although these operations were never "acked" to the user (we threw an error) it cause the
local checkpoint on the replicas to lag (on 6.x) and the primary and replica to diverge.
This PR does a couple of things:
1) Most importantly, treat *any* mapping update failure as a document level failure, meaning only
the relevant indexing operation will fail.
2) Removes the mapping update callbacks from `IndexShard.applyIndexOperationOnPrimary` and
similar methods for simpler execution. We don't use exceptions any more when a mapping
update was successful.
I think we need to do more work here (the fact that a single slow node can prevent those mappings
updates from being acked and thus fail operations is bad), but I want to keep this as small as I can
(it is already too big).
`javadoc` will switch from detaulting to html4 to html5 in "a future
release". We should get ahead of it so we're not surprised. Also, HTML5
is the future! Er, the present. Anyway, this follows up from #30220 to
make the Javadoc for two of the four remaining projects HTML5
compatible.
The internal test cluster can sometimes have 0 nodes. In this situation,
the http.enabled flag will never be read, and thus no deprecation
warning will be emitted. This commit guards the deprecation warning
check in this case.
Today the translog of an engine is exposed and can be accessed directly.
While this exposure offers much flexibility, it also causes these troubles:
- Inconsistent behavior between translog method and engine method.
For example, rolling a translog generation via an engine also trims
unreferenced files, but translog's method does not.
- An engine does not get notified when critical errors happen in translog
as the access is direct.
This change isolates translog of an engine and enforces all accesses to
translog via the engine.
The index thread pool is no longer needed as its primary use-case for
single-document indexing requests has been relieved now that
single-document indexing requests are converted to bulk indexing
requests (with a single document payload).
This adds 2 testcases that test if a shard goes idle
pending (uncommitted) segments are committed and unreferenced
files will be freed.
Relates to #29482
This change adds the current primary term to the header of the current
translog file. Having a term in a translog header is a prerequisite step
that allows us to trim translog operations given the max valid seq# for
that term.
This commit also updates tests to conform the primary term invariant
which guarantees that all translog operations in a translog file have
its terms at most the term stored in the translog header.
* Add a helper method to get a random java.util.TimeZone
This adds a helper method to ESTestCase that returns a randomized
`java.util.TimeZone`. This can be used when transitioning code from Joda to the
JDK's time classes.
Some features have been deprecated since `6.0` like the `_parent` field or the
ability to have multiple types per index. This allows to remove quite some
code, which in-turn will hopefully make it easier to proceed with the removal
of types.
Currently rest-based tests do not work from the IDE, as the security
manager is configured to permit certain network operations when
using the snapshot jars compiled by gradle. We have an existing
workaround that explicitly associates a codebase with the path
from which the classes are loaded (in this case, the IDE build
directory). This PR adds the rest client to this workaround list.
* Move Streams.copy into elasticsearch-core and make a multi-release jar
This moves the method `Streams.copy(InputStream in, OutputStream out)` into the
`elasticsearch-core` project (inside the `o.e.core.internal.io` package). It
also makes this class into a multi-release class where the Java 9 equivalent
uses `InputStream#transferTo`.
This is a followup from
https://github.com/elastic/elasticsearch/pull/29300#discussion_r178147495
* Move ObjectParser into the x-content lib
This moves `ObjectParser`, `AbstractObjectParser`, and
`ConstructingObjectParser` into the libs/x-content dependency. This decoupling
allows them to be used for parsing for projects that don't want to depend on the
entire Elasticsearch jar.
Relates to #28504
* Fixes query_string query equals timezone check
This change fixes a bug where two `QueryStringQueryBuilder`s were found
to be equal if they had the same timezone set even if the query string
in the builders were different
Closes#29403
* Adds mutate function to QueryStringQueryBuilderTests
* iter
This improves the way similarities are plugged in in order to:
- reject the classic similarity on 7.x indices and emit a deprecation
warning otherwise
- reject unkwown parameters on 7.x indices and emit a deprecation
warning otherwise
Even though this breaks the plugin API, I'd like to backport to 7.x so
that users can get deprecation warnings when they are doing something
that will become unsupported in the future.
Closes#23208Closes#29035
* Begin moving XContent to a separate lib/artifact
This commit moves a large portion of the XContent code from the `server` project
to the `libs/xcontent` project. For the pieces that have been moved, some
helpers have been duplicated to allow them to be decoupled from ES helper
classes. In addition, `Booleans` and `CheckedFunction` have been moved to the
`elasticsearch-core` project.
This decoupling is a move so that we can eventually make things like the
high-level REST client not rely on the entire ES jar, only the parts it needs.
There are some pieces that are still not decoupled, in particular some of the
XContent tests still remain in the server project, this is because they test a
large portion of the pluggable xcontent pieces through
`XContentElasticsearchException`. They may be decoupled in future work.
Additionally, there may be more piecese that we want to move to the xcontent lib
in the future that are not part of this PR, this is a starting point.
Relates to #28504
Removes a set of assertions in the test framework that verified that
Streamable objects could be serialized and deserialized across different
versions. When this was discussed the consensus was that this approach
has not caught many bugs in a long time and that serialization testing of
objects was best left to their respective unit and integration tests.
This commit also removes a transport interceptor that was used in
ESIntegTestCase tests to make these assertions about objects coming in
or off the wire.
Today we have a few problems with how we handle bad requests:
- handling requests with bad encoding
- handling requests with invalid value for filter_path/pretty/human
- handling requests with a garbage Content-Type header
There are two problems:
- in every case, we give an empty response to the client
- in most cases, we leak the byte buffer backing the request!
These problems are caused by a broader problem: poor handling preparing
the request for handling, or the channel to write to when the response
is ready. This commit addresses these issues by taking a unified
approach to all of them that ensures that:
- we respond to the client with the exception that blew us up
- we do not leak the byte buffer backing the request
We historically removed reading from the transaction log to get consistent
results from _GET calls. There was also the motivation that the read-modify-update
principle we apply should not be hidden from the user. We still agree on the fact
that we should not hide these aspects but the impact on updates is quite significant
especially if the same documents is updated before it's written to disk and made serachable.
This change adds back the ability to read from the transaction log but only for update calls.
Calls to the _GET API will always do a refresh if necessary to return consistent results ie.
if stored fields or DocValues Fields are requested.
Closes#26802
Once a document is deleted and Lucene is refreshed, we will not be able
to look up the `version/seq#` associated with that delete in Lucene. As
conflicting operations can still be indexed, we need another mechanism
to remember these deletes. Therefore deletes should still be stored in
the Version Map, even after Lucene is refreshed. Obviously, we can't
remember all deletes forever so a trimming mechanism is needed.
Currently, we remember deletes for at least 1 minute (the default GC
deletes cycle) and clean them periodically. This is, at the moment, the
best we can do on the primary for user facing APIs but this arbitrary
time limit is problematic for replicas. Furthermore, we can't rely on
the primary and replicas doing the trimming in a synchronized manner,
and failing to do so results in the replica and primary making different
decisions.
The following scenario can cause inconsistency between
primary and replica.
1. Primary index doc (index, id=1, v2)
2. Network packet issue causes index operation to back off and wait
3. Primary deletes doc (delete, id=1, v3)
4. Replica processes delete (delete, id=1, v3)
5. 1+ minute passes (GC deletes runs replica)
6. Indexing op is finally sent to the replica which no processes it
because it forgot about the delete.
We can reply on sequence-numbers to prevent this issue. If we prune only
deletes whose seqno at most the local checkpoint, a replica will
correctly remember what it needs. The correctness is explained as
follows:
Suppose o1 and o2 are two operations on the same document with seq#(o1)
< seq#(o2), and o2 arrives before o1 on the replica. o2 is processed
normally since it arrives first; when o1 arrives it should be discarded:
1. If seq#(o1) <= LCP, then it will be not be added to Lucene, as it was
already previously added.
2. If seq#(o1) > LCP, then it depends on the nature of o2:
- If o2 is a delete then its seq# is recorded in the VersionMap,
since seq#(o2) > seq#(o1) > LCP, so a lookup can find it and
determine that o1 is stale.
- If o2 is an indexing then its seq# is either in Lucene (if
refreshed) or the VersionMap (if not refreshed yet), so a
real-time lookup can find it and determine that o1 is stale.
In this PR, we prefer to deploy a single trimming strategy, which
satisfies both requirements, on primary and replicas because:
- It's simpler - no need to distinguish if an engine is running at
primary mode or replica mode or being promoted.
- If a replica subsequently is promoted, user experience is fully
maintained as that replica remembers deletes for the last GC cycle.
However, the version map may consume less memory if we deploy two
different trimming strategies for primary and replicas.
#28245 has introduced the utility class`EngineDiskUtils` with a set of methods to prepare/change
translog and lucene commit points. That util class bundled everything that's needed to create and
empty shard, bootstrap a shard from a lucene index that was just restored etc.
In order to safely do these manipulations, the util methods acquired the IndexWriter's lock. That
would sometime fail due to concurrent shard store fetching or other short activities that require the
files not to be changed while they read from them.
Since there is no way to wait on the index writer lock, the `Store` class has other locks to make
sure that once we try to acquire the IW lock, it will succeed. To side step this waiting problem, this
PR folds `EngineDiskUtils` into `Store`. Sadly this comes with a price - the store class doesn't and
shouldn't know about the translog. As such the logic is slightly less tight and callers have to do the
translog manipulations on their own.
This change refactors the composite aggregation to add an execution mode that visits documents in the order of the values
present in the leading source of the composite definition. This mode does not need to visit all documents since it can early terminate
the collection when the leading source value is greater than the lowest value in the queue.
Instead of collecting the documents in the order of their doc_id, this mode uses the inverted lists (or the bkd tree for numerics) to collect documents
in the order of the values present in the leading source.
For instance the following aggregation:
```
"composite" : {
"sources" : [
{ "value1": { "terms" : { "field": "timestamp", "order": "asc" } } }
],
"size": 10
}
```
... can use the field `timestamp` to collect the documents with the 10 lowest values for the field instead of visiting all documents.
For composite aggregation with more than one source the execution can early terminate as soon as one of the 10 lowest values produces enough
composite buckets. For instance if visiting the first two lowest timestamp created 10 composite buckets we can early terminate the collection since it
is guaranteed that the third lowest timestamp cannot create a composite key that compares lower than the one already visited.
This mode can execute iff:
* The leading source in the composite definition uses an indexed field of type `date` (works also with `date_histogram` source), `integer`, `long` or `keyword`.
* The query is a match_all query or a range query over the field that is used as the leading source in the composite definition.
* The sort order of the leading source is the natural order (ascending since postings and numerics are sorted in ascending order only).
If these conditions are not met this aggregation visits each document like any other agg.
* Remove BytesArray and BytesReference usage from XContentFactory
This removes the usage of `BytesArray` and `BytesReference` from
`XContentFactory`. Instead, a regular `byte[]` should be passed. To assist with
this a helper has been added to `XContentHelper` that will preserve the offset
and length from the underlying BytesReference.
This is part of ongoing work to separate the XContent parts from ES so they can
be factored into their own jar.
Relates to #28504
`$_path` is used by documentation tests to ignore a value from a
response, for example:
```
[source,js]
----
{
"count": 1,
"datafeeds": [
{
"datafeed_id": "datafeed-total-requests",
"state": "started",
"node": {
...
"attributes": {
"ml.machine_memory": "17179869184",
"ml.max_open_jobs": "20",
"ml.enabled": "true"
}
},
"assignment_explanation": ""
}
]
}
----
// TESTRESPONSE[s/"17179869184"/$body.$_path/]
```
That example shows `17179869184` in the compiled docs but when it runs
the tests generated by that doc it ignores `17179869184` and asserts
instead that there is a value in that field. This is required because we
can't predict things like "how many milliseconds will this take?" and
"how much memory will this take?".
Before this change it was impossible to use `$_path` when any component
of the path contained a `.`. This fixes the `$_path` evaluator to
properly escape `.`.
Closes#28770
Changes made in #28972 seems to have changed some assumptions about how
SMILE and CBOR write byte[] values and how this is tested. This changes
the generation of the randomized DocumentField values back to BytesArray
while expecting the JSON and YAML deserialisation to produce Base64
encoded strings and SMILE and CBOR to parse back BytesArray instances.
Closes#29080
Currently we have a fairly complicated logic in the engine constructor logic to deal with all the
various ways we want to mutate the lucene index and translog we're opening.
We can:
1) Create an empty index
2) Use the lucene but create a new translog
3) Use both
4) Force a new history uuid in all cases.
This leads complicated code flows which makes it harder and harder to make sure we cover all the
corner cases. This PR tries to take another approach. Constructing an InternalEngine always opens
things as they are and all needed modifications are done by static methods directly on the
directory, one at a time.
* Decouple XContentBuilder from BytesReference
This commit removes all mentions of `BytesReference` from `XContentBuilder`.
This is needed so that we can completely decouple the XContent code and move it
into its own dependency.
While this change appears large, it is due to two main changes, moving
`.bytes()` and `.string()` out of XContentBuilder itself into static methods
`BytesReference.bytes` and `Strings.toString` respectively. The rest of the
change is code reacting to these changes (the majority of it in tests).
Relates to #28504
As we have factored Elasticsearch into smaller libraries, we have ended
up in a situation that some of the dependencies of Elasticsearch are not
available to code that depends on these smaller libraries but not server
Elasticsearch. This is a good thing, this was one of the goals of
separating Elasticsearch into smaller libraries, to shed some of the
dependencies from other components of the system. However, this now
means that simple utility methods from Lucene that we rely on are no
longer available everywhere. This commit copies IOUtils (with some small
formatting changes for our codebase) into the fold so that other
components of the system can rely on these methods where they no longer
depend on Lucene.
I have long wanted an actual test that dying with dignity works. It is
tricky because if dying with dignity works, it means the test JVM dies
which is usually an abnormal condition. And anyway, how does one force a
fatal error to be thrown. I was motivated to investigate this again by
the fact that I missed a backport to one branch leading to an issue
where Elasticsearch would not successfully die with dignity. And now we
have a solution: we install a plugin that throws an out of memory error
when it receives a request. We hack the standalone test infrastructure
to prevent this from failing the test. To do this, we bypass the
security manager and remove the PID file for the node; this tricks the
test infrastructure into thinking that it does not need to stop the
node. We also bypass seccomp so that we can fork jps to make sure that
Elasticsearch really died. And to be extra paranoid, we parse the logs
of the dead Elasticsearch process to make sure it died with
dignity. Never forget.
Today we have two test base classes that have a lot in common when it comes to testing wire and xcontent serialization: `AbstractSerializingTestCase` and `AbstractXContentStreamableTestCase`. There are subtle differences though between the two, in the way they work, what can be overridden and features that they support (e.g. insertion of random fields).
This commit introduces a new base class called `AbstractWireTestCase` which holds all of the serialization test code in common between `Streamable` and `Writeable`. It has two minimal subclasses called `AbstractWireSerializingTestCase` and `AbstractStreamableTestCase` which are specialized for `Writeable` and `Streamable`.
This commit also introduces a new test class called `AbstractXContentTestCase` for all of the xContent testing, which holds a testFromXContent method for parsing and rendering to xContent. This one can be delegated to from the existing `AbstractStreamableXContentTestCase` and `AbstractSerializingTestCase` so that we avoid code duplicate as much as possible and all these base classes offer the same functionalities in the same way. Having this last base class decoupled from the serialization testing may also help with the REST high-level client testing, as there are some classes where it's hard to implement equals/hashcode and this makes it possible to override `assertEqualInstances` for custom equality comparisons (also this base class doesn't require implementing equals/hashcode as it doesn't test such methods.
This commit is related to #27260. Currently there is a weird
relationship between channel contexts and nio channels. The selectors
use the context for read and writing. But the selector operates directly
on the nio channel for registering, closing, and connecting.
This commit works on improving this relationship. The selector operates
directly on the context which wraps the low level java.nio.channels. The
NioChannel class is simply an API that is used to interact with the
channel (sending messages from outside the selector event loop,
scheduling a close, adding listeners, etc). The context is only used
internally by the channel to implement these apis and by the selector to
perform these operations.
This allows us to save a bit of code, but also adds more coverage as it tests serialization which was missing in some of the existing tests. Also it requires implementing equals/hashcode and we get the corresponding tests for them for free from the base test class.
* Pass InputStream when creating XContent parser
Rather than passing the raw `BytesReference` in when creating the xcontent
parser, this passes the StreamInput (which is an InputStream), this allows us to
decouple XContent from BytesReference.
This also removes the use of `commons.Booleans` so it doesn't require more
external commons classes.
Related to #28504
* Undo boolean removal
* Enhance deprecation javadoc
Add support version and version_type in ingest pipelines
Add support for setting document version and version type in set
processor of an ingest pipeline.
* Remove log4j dependency from elasticsearch-core
This removes the log4j dependency from our elasticsearch-core project. It was
originally necessary only for our jar classpath checking. It is now replaced by
a `Consumer<String>` so that the es-core dependency doesn't have external
dependencies.
The parts of #28191 which were moved in conjunction (like `ESLoggerFactory` and
`Loggers`) have been moved back where appropriate, since they are not required
in the core jar.
This is tangentially related to #28504
* Add javadocs for `output` parameter
* Change @code to @link
Today we have several levels of indirection to acquire an Engine.Searcher.
We first acquire a the reference manager for the scope then acquire an
IndexSearcher and then create a searcher for the engine based on that.
This change simplifies the creation into a single method call instead of
3 different ones.
Previously we introduced a new parameter to `acquireIndexCommit` to
allow acquire either a safe commit or a last commit. However with the
new parameters, callers can provide a nonsense combination - flush first
but acquire the safe commit. This commit separates acquireIndexCommit
method into two different methods to avoid that problem. Moreover, this
change should also improve the readability.
Relates #28038
The REST high-level client supports now encoding of path parts, so that for instance documents with valid ids, but containing characters that need to be encoded as part of urls (`#` etc.), are properly supported. We also make sure that each path part can contain `/` by encoding them properly too.
Closes#28625
Currently the Translog constructor is capable both of opening an existing translog and creating a
new one (deleting existing files). This PR separates these two into separate code paths. The
constructors opens files and a dedicated static methods creates an empty translog.
* Move more XContent.createParser calls to non-deprecated version
Part 2
This moves more of the callers to pass in the DeprecationHandler.
Relates to #28504
* Use parser's deprecation handler where appropriate
* Use logging handler in test that uses deprecated field on purpose
* Move more XContent.createParser calls to non-deprecated version
This moves more of the callers to pass in the DeprecationHandler.
Relates to #28504
* Use parser's deprecation handler where available
Version Utils did not previously have logic that removed the last majors
minor snapshot if there was a next bugfix and maintenance bugfix
release. This adds the logic and fixes some broken assumptions in tests
as well.
relates #28505
The build.snapshot was mistakenly passed in to every snapshot version,
so when release tests were run, these versions were mistaken as released
entities and could not be found in maven, because they do not
exist. This fix removes that bug in logic, and always makes them proper
snapshots. This has a benefit of cleaning up the VersionUtilsTests
because they no longer rely on different sets of versions to check
against, which was also a bug.
Currently if a yaml test has a teardown and a test is failing then
a stash dump of a request in the teardown is logged instead of
a stash dump of a request in the test itself.
By handling the logging of stash dumps separately for setup, tests and
teardown yaml sections we shouldn't miss the stash dump of request/response
that is actually causing the yaml test to fail.
The is a follow up to #28567 changing the method used to capture stack traces, as requested
during the review. Instead of creating a throwable, we explicitly capture the stack trace of the
current thread. This should Make Jason Happy Again ™️ .
Generalizing BWC building so that there is less code to modify for a release. This ensures we do not
need to think about what major or minor version is in the gradle code. It follows the general rules of the
elastic release structure. For more information on the rules, see the VersionCollection's javadoc.
This also removes the additional bwc snapshots that will never be released, such as 6.0.2, which were
being built and tested against every time we ran bwc tests.
Additionally, it creates 4 new projects that correspond to the different types of snapshots that may exist
for a given version. Its possible to now run those individual tasks to work out bwc logic whereas
previously it was impossible and the entire suite of bwc tests had to be run to work out any logic
changes in the build tools' bwc project. Please note that if the project does not make sense for the
version that is current, that an error will be thrown from that individual project if an attempt is made to
run it.
This should allow for automating the version bumps as well, since it removes all the hardcoded version
logic from the configs.
Today we acquire a permit from the shard to coordinate between indexing operations, recoveries and other state transitions. When we leak an permit it's practically impossible to find who the culprit is. This PR add stack traces capturing for each permit so we can identify which part of the code is responsible for acquiring the unreleased permit. This code is only active when assertions are active.
The output is something like:
```
java.lang.AssertionError: shard [test][1] on node [node_s0] has pending operations:
--> java.lang.RuntimeException: something helpful 2
at org.elasticsearch.index.shard.IndexShardOperationPermits.acquire(IndexShardOperationPermits.java:223)
at org.elasticsearch.index.shard.IndexShard.<init>(IndexShard.java:322)
at org.elasticsearch.index.IndexService.createShard(IndexService.java:382)
at org.elasticsearch.indices.IndicesService.createShard(IndicesService.java:514)
at org.elasticsearch.indices.IndicesService.createShard(IndicesService.java:143)
at org.elasticsearch.indices.cluster.IndicesClusterStateService.createShard(IndicesClusterStateService.java:552)
at org.elasticsearch.indices.cluster.IndicesClusterStateService.createOrUpdateShards(IndicesClusterStateService.java:529)
at org.elasticsearch.indices.cluster.IndicesClusterStateService.applyClusterState(IndicesClusterStateService.java:231)
at org.elasticsearch.cluster.service.ClusterApplierService.lambda$callClusterStateAppliers$6(ClusterApplierService.java:498)
at java.base/java.lang.Iterable.forEach(Iterable.java:75)
at org.elasticsearch.cluster.service.ClusterApplierService.callClusterStateAppliers(ClusterApplierService.java:495)
at org.elasticsearch.cluster.service.ClusterApplierService.applyChanges(ClusterApplierService.java:482)
at org.elasticsearch.cluster.service.ClusterApplierService.runTask(ClusterApplierService.java:432)
at org.elasticsearch.cluster.service.ClusterApplierService$UpdateTask.run(ClusterApplierService.java:161)
at org.elasticsearch.common.util.concurrent.ThreadContext$ContextPreservingRunnable.run(ThreadContext.java:566)
at org.elasticsearch.common.util.concurrent.PrioritizedEsThreadPoolExecutor$TieBreakingPrioritizedRunnable.runAndClean(PrioritizedEsThreadPoolExecutor.java:244)
at org.elasticsearch.common.util.concurrent.PrioritizedEsThreadPoolExecutor$TieBreakingPrioritizedRunnable.run(PrioritizedEsThreadPoolExecutor.java:207)
at java.base/java.util.concurrent.ThreadPoolExecutor.runWorker(ThreadPoolExecutor.java:1167)
at java.base/java.util.concurrent.ThreadPoolExecutor$Worker.run(ThreadPoolExecutor.java:641)
at java.base/java.lang.Thread.run(Thread.java:844)
--> java.lang.RuntimeException: something helpful
at org.elasticsearch.index.shard.IndexShardOperationPermits.acquire(IndexShardOperationPermits.java:223)
at org.elasticsearch.index.shard.IndexShard.<init>(IndexShard.java:311)
at org.elasticsearch.index.IndexService.createShard(IndexService.java:382)
at org.elasticsearch.indices.IndicesService.createShard(IndicesService.java:514)
at org.elasticsearch.indices.IndicesService.createShard(IndicesService.java:143)
at org.elasticsearch.indices.cluster.IndicesClusterStateService.createShard(IndicesClusterStateService.java:552)
at org.elasticsearch.indices.cluster.IndicesClusterStateService.createOrUpdateShards(IndicesClusterStateService.java:529)
at org.elasticsearch.indices.cluster.IndicesClusterStateService.applyClusterState(IndicesClusterStateService.java:231)
at org.elasticsearch.cluster.service.ClusterApplierService.lambda$callClusterStateAppliers$6(ClusterApplierService.java:498)
at java.base/java.lang.Iterable.forEach(Iterable.java:75)
at org.elasticsearch.cluster.service.ClusterApplierService.callClusterStateAppliers(ClusterApplierService.java:495)
at org.elasticsearch.cluster.service.ClusterApplierService.applyChanges(ClusterApplierService.java:482)
at org.elasticsearch.cluster.service.ClusterApplierService.runTask(ClusterApplierService.java:432)
at org.elasticsearch.cluster.service.ClusterApplierService$UpdateTask.run(ClusterApplierService.java:161)
at org.elasticsearch.common.util.concurrent.ThreadContext$ContextPreservingRunnable.run(ThreadContext.java:566)
at org.elasticsearch.common.util.concurrent.PrioritizedEsThreadPoolExecutor$TieBreakingPrioritizedRunnable.runAndClean(PrioritizedEsThreadPoolExecutor.java:244)
at org.elasticsearch.common.util.concurrent.PrioritizedEsThreadPoolExecutor$TieBreakingPrioritizedRunnable.run(PrioritizedEsThreadPoolExecutor.java:207)
at java.base/java.util.concurrent.ThreadPoolExecutor.runWorker(ThreadPoolExecutor.java:1167)
at java.base/java.util.concurrent.ThreadPoolExecutor$Worker.run(ThreadPoolExecutor.java:641)
at java.base/java.lang.Thread.run(Thread.java:844)
```
This commit modifies the transport stats with exception test to remove
the requirement that we calculate the published address size when
comparing bytes received. This is tricky and is currently broken as we
also place the address string in the transport exception, however we do
not adjust the bytes for that.
The solution in this commit is to just serialize the transport exception
in the test and use that for the calculation.
* Move to non-deprecated XContentHelper.createParser(...)
This moves away from one of the now-deprecated XContentHelper.createParser
methods in favor of specifying the deprecation logger at parser creation time.
Relates to #28449
Note that this doesn't move all the `createParser` calls because some of them
use the already-deprecated method that doesn't specify the XContentType.
* Remove the deprecated (and now non-needed) createParser method
This commit switches all the modules and server test code to use the
non-deprecated `ParseField.match` method, passing in the parser's deprecation
handler or the logging deprecation handler when a parser is not available (like
in tests).
Relates to #28449
The primary currently replicates writes to all other shard copies as soon as they're added to the routing table. Initially those shards are not even ready yet to receive these replication requests, for example when undergoing a file-based peer recovery. Based on the specific stage that the shard copies are in, they will throw different kinds of exceptions when they receive the replication requests. The primary then ignores responses from shards that match certain exception types. With this mechanism it's not possible for a primary to distinguish between a situation where a replication target shard is not allocated and ready yet to receive requests and a situation where the shard was successfully allocated and active but subsequently failed.
This commit changes replication so that only initializing shards that have successfully opened their engine are used as replication targets. This removes the need to replicate requests to initializing shards that are not even ready yet to receive those requests. This saves on network bandwidth and enables features that rely on the distinction between a "not-yet-ready" shard and a failed shard.
This change adds a shallow copy method for aggregation builders. This method returns a copy of the builder replacing the factoriesBuilder and metaDada
This method is used when the builder is rewritten (AggregationBuilder#rewrite) in order to make sure that we create a new instance of the parent builder when sub aggregations are rewritten.
Relates #27782
Adds allow_partial_search_results flag to search requests with default setting = true.
When false, will error if search either timeouts, has partial errors or has missing shards rather
than returning partial search results. A cluster-level setting provides a default for search requests with no flag.
Closes#27435
This change makes sure that this function does not create field names that end with a '.', more precisely it only allows
alpha-numeric characters to compose the leaf field name.
Closes#27373
The MockUncasedHostProvider accesses nodes that are not fully built yet, where TransportService.getNode() returns null, which means that the null entries end up in the list of seedNodes that UnicastZenPing then uses.
Cluster settings shouldn't leak into the next test.
I played with failing the test if it left over any settings but that
felt like it added more ceremony then it was worth. The advantage is
that any test that intentionally wants to leave settings in place after
the test would fail and require looking at but, so far as I can tell, we
don't have any such tests.
Currently meta plugins will ask for confirmation of security policy
exceptions for each bundled plugin. This commit collects the necessary
permissions of each bundled plugin, and asks for confirmation of all of
them at the same time.
This change adds the test name to the exceptions thrown by the MockPageCacheRecycler and MockBigArrays. Also, if there is more than one page/array which are not released it will add the first one as the cause of the thrown exception and the others as suppressed exceptions.
Relates to #21315
This introduces a settings updater that allows to specify a list of
settings. Whenever one of those settings changes, the whole block of
settings is passed to the consumer.
This also fixes an issue with affix settings, when used in combination
with group settings, which could result in no found settings when used
to get a setting for a namespace.
Lastly logging has been slightly changed, so that filtered settings now
only log the setting key.
Another bug has been fixed for the mock log appender, which did not
work, when checking for the exact message.
Closes#28047
The tests for those field types were removed in #26549 because the range mapper
was moved to a module, but later this mapper was moved back to core in #27854.
This change adds back those two field types like before to the general setup in
AbstractQueryTestCase and adds some specifics to the RangeQueryBuilder and
TermsQueryBuilder tests. Also adding back an integration test in SearchQueryIT that
has been removed before but that can be kept with the mapper back in core now.
Relates to #28147
In many cases we use the `ShardOperationFailedException` interface to abstract an exception that can only be of one type, namely `DefaultShardOperationException`. There is no need to use the interface in such cases, the concrete type should be used instead. That has the additional advantage of simplifying parsing such exceptions back from rest responses for the high-level REST client
This commit is related to #27260. Currently have a channel context that
implements reading and writing logic for socket channels. Additionally,
we have exception contexts to handle exceptions. And accepting contexts
to handle accepted channels. This PR introduces a ChannelContext that
handles close and exception handling for all channel types.
Additionally, it has implementers that provide specific functionality
for socket channels (read and writing). And specific functionality for
server channels (accepting).
There a number of tests in `AbstractSimpleTransportTestCase` that
create `MockTcpTransport` impls. This commit modifies two of these tests
to use the transport implementation that is being tested.
This commit is related to #27260. Right now we have separate read and
write contexts for implementing specific protocol logic. However, some
protocols require a closer relationship between read and write
operations than is allowed by our current model. An example is HTTP
which might require a write if some problem with request parsing was
encountered.
Additionally, some protocols require close messages to be sent when a
channel is shutdown. This is also problematic in our current model,
where we assume that channels should simply be queued for close and
forgotten.
This commit transitions to a single ChannelContext which implements
all read, write, and close logic for protocols. It is the job of the
context to tell the selector when to close the channel. A channel can
still be manually queued for close with a selector. This is how server
channels are closed for now. And this route allows timeout mechanisms on
normal channel closes to be implemented.
This logging message adds considerable noise to many REST tests, if you
are using something like HTTP basic auth in every API call or set any custom
header.
The log level moves from info to debug, so can still be seen if wanted.
The composite aggregation defers the collection of sub-aggregations to a second pass that visits documents only if they
appear in the top buckets. Though the scorer for sub-aggregations is not set on this second pass and generates an NPE if any sub-aggregation
tries to access the score. This change creates a scorer for the second pass and makes sure that sub-aggs can use it safely to check the score of
the collected documents.
The method `initiateChannel` on `TcpTransport` is explicit in that
channels can be connect asynchronously. All production implementations
do connect asynchronously. Only the blocking `MockTcpTransport`
connects in a synchronous manner. This avoids testing some of the
blocking code in `TcpTransport` that waits on connections to complete.
Additionally, it requires a more extensive method signature than
required for other transports.
This commit modifies the `MockTcpTransport` to make these connections
asynchronously on a different thread. Additionally, it simplifies that
`initiateChannel` method signature.
This is related to #27933. It introduces a jar named elasticsearch-core
in the lib directory. This commit moves the JarHell class from server to
elasticsearch-core. Additionally, PathUtils and some of Loggers are
moved as JarHell depends on them.
Today a primary shard transfers the most recent commit point to a
replica shard in a file-based recovery. However, the most recent commit
may not be a "safe" commit; this causes a replica shard not having a
safe commit point until it can retain a safe commit by itself.
This commits collapses the snapshot deletion policy into the combined
deletion policy and modifies the peer recovery source to send a safe
commit.
Relates #10708
We set the watermarks to low values in other test cases to prevent test
failures on nodes with low disk space (if the disk space is too low, the
test will fail anyway but we should not prematurely fail). This commit
sets the watermarks in the single-node test cases to avoid test failures
in such situations.
Relates #28134
This commit adds the ability to package multiple plugins in a single zip.
The zip file for a meta plugin must contains the following structure:
|____elasticsearch/
| |____ <plugin1> <-- The plugin files for plugin1 (the content of the elastisearch directory)
| |____ <plugin2> <-- The plugin files for plugin2
| |____ meta-plugin-descriptor.properties <-- example contents below
The meta plugin properties descriptor is mandatory and must contain the following properties:
description: simple summary of the meta plugin.
name: the meta plugin name
The installation process installs each plugin in a sub-folder inside the meta plugin directory.
The example above would create the following structure in the plugins directory:
|_____ plugins
| |____ <name_of_the_meta_plugin>
| | |____ meta-plugin-descriptor.properties
| | |____ <plugin1>
| | |____ <plugin2>
If the sub plugins contain a config or a bin directory, they are copied in a sub folder inside the meta plugin config/bin directory.
|_____ config
| |____ <name_of_the_meta_plugin>
| | |____ <plugin1>
| | |____ <plugin2>
|_____ bin
| |____ <name_of_the_meta_plugin>
| | |____ <plugin1>
| | |____ <plugin2>
The sub-plugins are loaded at startup like normal plugins with the same restrictions; they have a separate class loader and a sub-plugin
cannot have the same name than another plugin (or a sub-plugin inside another meta plugin).
It is also not possible to remove a sub-plugin inside a meta plugin, only full removal of the meta plugin is allowed.
Closes#27316
This commit changes IndexShardSnapshotStatus so that the Stage is updated
coherently with any required information. It also provides a asCopy()
method that returns the status of a IndexShardSnapshotStatus at a given
point in time, ensuring that all information are coherent.
Closes#26480
Several responses include the shards_acknowledged flag (indicating whether the
requisite number of shard copies started before the completion of the operation)
and there are two different getters used : isShardsAcknowledged() and isShardsAcked().
This PR deprecates the isShardsAcked() in favour of isShardsAcknowledged() in
CreateIndexResponse, RolloverResponse and CreateIndexClusterStateUpdateResponse.
Closes#27784
This is related to #27260. This commit moves the NioTransport from
:test:framework to a new nio-transport plugin. Additionally, supporting
tcp decoding classes are moved to this plugin. Generic byte reading and
writing contexts are moved to the nio library.
Additionally, this commit adds a basic MockNioTransport to
:test:framework that is a TcpTransport implementation for testing that
is driven by nio.
This commit sets the elasticsearch-nio code base in the
BootstrapForTesting class. This is necessary as that codebase needs
socket permissions. Setting the codebase manually is necessary as
intellij does not package our internal libraries when running tests.
Allows TransportResponse objects not to implement Streamable anymore. As an example, I've adapted the response handler for ShardActiveResponse, allowing the fields in that class to become final.
This commit adds the infrastructure to plugin building and loading to
allow one plugin to extend another. That is, one plugin may extend
another by the "parent" plugin allowing itself to be extended through
java SPI. When all plugins extending a plugin are finished loading, the
"parent" plugin has a callback (through the ExtensiblePlugin interface)
allowing it to reload SPI.
This commit also adds an example plugin which uses as-yet implemented
extensibility (adding to the painless whitelist).
This commit disables the nio transport as an option for the test
transport in integration tests. This is because it does not currently
run properly in intellij due to socket permissions. It should be
reenabled once #27881 is merged (and the proper permissions are added).
* Adds task dependenciesInfo to BuildPlugin to generate a CSV file with dependencies information (name,version,url,license)
* Adds `ConcatFilesTask.groovy` to concatenates multiple files into one
* Adds task `:distribution:generateDependenciesReport` to concatenate `dependencies.csv` files into a single file (`es-dependencies.csv` by default)
# Examples:
$ gradle dependenciesInfo :distribution:generateDependenciesReport
## Use `csv` system property to customize the output file path
$ gradle dependenciesInfo :distribution:generateDependenciesReport -Dcsv=/tmp/elasticsearch-dependencies.csv
## When branch is not master, use `build.branch` system property to generate correct licenses URLs
$ gradle dependenciesInfo :distribution:generateDependenciesReport -Dbuild.branch=6.x -Dcsv=/tmp/elasticsearch-dependencies.csv
Today we always recover a primary from the last commit point. However
with a new deletion policy, we keep multiple commit points in the
existing store, thus we have chance to find a good starting commit
point. With a good starting commit point, we may be able to throw away
stale operations. This PR rollbacks a primary to a starting commit then
recovering from translog.
Relates #10708
This is related to #27802. This commit adds a jar called
elasticsearch-nio that contains the base nio classes that will be used
for the tcp nio transport and eventually the http nio transport.
The jar does not depend on elasticsearch:core, so all references to core
have been removed.
Today when we get a metadata snapshot directly from a store directory,
we acquire a metadata lock, then acquire an IndexWriter lock. However,
we create a CheckIndex in IndexShard without acquiring the metadata lock
first. This causes a recovery failed because the IndexWriter lock can be
still held by method snapshotStoreMetadata. This commit makes sure to
create a CheckIndex under the metadata lock.
Closes#24481Closes#27731
Relates #24787
The last operation executed in IndicesClientDocumentationIT.testCreate()
is an asynchronous index creation. Because nothing waits for its
completion, on slow machines the index can sometimes be created after
the testCreate() test is finished, and it can fail the following test.
Closes#27754
When the first parameter of `ESTestCase#randomValueOtherThan` is `null`
then run the supplier until it returns non-`null`. Previously,
`randomValueOtherThan` just ran the supplier one time which was
confusing.
Unexpectedly, it looks like not tests rely on the original `null`
handling.
Closes#27821
We currently have a complicated port assignment scheme to make sure that the nodes span off by the internal test cluster will be assigned fixed port ranges that will also not collide between clusters. The port ranges need to be fixed in advance so that the nodes will be able to find each other via `UnicastZenPing`.
This approach worked well for the last few years but we are now at a point that our testing has grown beyond it and we exceed the 5 reusable ranges per JVM. This means that nodes are not always assigned the first 5 ports in their range which causes cluster formation issues. On top of that, most of the clusters that are span up don't even rely on `UnicastZenPing` but rather `MockZenPings` that uses in memory maps for discovery (with the down side that they are not influenced by network disruption simulations).
This PR changes `InternalTestCluster` to use port 0 as a fixed assignment. This will allow the OS to manage ports and will ensure we don't have collisions. For tests that need to simulate network disruptions (and thus can't use `MockZenPings`), a new `UnicastHostProvider` is introduced that is based on the current state of the test cluster. Since that is only resolved at run time, it is aware of the port assignments of the OS.
Closes#27818Closes#27762
This commit moves GlobalCheckpointTracker from the engine to IndexShard, where it better fits logically: Tracking the global checkpoint based on the local checkpoints of all shards in the replication group is not a property of the engine, but rather a property fulfilled by the current primary shard. The LocalCheckpointTracker on the other hand is driven by the contents of the local translog. By moving GlobalCheckpointTracker to IndexShard, it makes little sense to keep the SequenceNumbersService class around - it would only wrap the LocalCheckpointTracker. This commit therefore removes the class and replaces occurrences of SequenceNumbersService in the engine directly by LocalCheckpointTracker.
AnalysisFactoryTestCase checks that the ES custom token filter multi-term
awareness matches the underlying lucene factory. For the trim filter this
won't be the case until LUCENE-8093 is released in 7.3, so we add a
temporary exclusion
Closes#27310
This commit fixes the version tests for release tests. The problem here
is that during release tests all version should be treated as released
so the assertions must be modified accordingly.
Relates #27815
When snapshotting the primary we capture a lucene commit at an arbitrary moment from a sequence number perspective. This means that it is possible that the commit misses operations and that there is a gap between the local checkpoint in the commit and the maximum sequence number.
When we restore, this will create a primary that "misses" operations and currently will mean that the sequence number system is stuck (i.e., the local checkpoint will be stuck). To fix this we should fill in gaps when we restore, in a similar fashion to normal store recovery.
Currently randomNonNegativeLong() returns 0 half as often as any positive long,
but random number generators are typically expected to return
uniformly-distributed values unless otherwise specified. This fixes this issue
by mapping Long.MIN_VALUE directly onto 0 rather than resampling.
This commit is related to #27260. It adds a base NioGroup for use in
different transports. This class creates and starts the underlying
selectors. Different protocols or transports are established by passing
the ChannelFactory to the bindServerChannel or openChannel
methods. This allows a TcpChannelFactory to be passed which will
create and register channels that support the elasticsearch tcp binary
protocol or a channel factory that will create http channels (or other).
When an ESSelector is created an underlying nio selector is opened. This
selector is closed by the event loop after close has been signalled by
another thread.
However, there is a possibility that an ESSelector is created and some
exception in the startup process prevents it from ever being started
(however, close will still be called). The allows the selector to leak.
This commit addresses this issue by having the signalling thread close
the selector if the event loop is not running when close is signalled.
Allowing `_doc` as a type will enable users to make the transition to 7.0
smoother since the index APIs will be `PUT index/_doc/id` and `POST index/_doc`.
This also moves most of the documentation to `_doc` as a type name.
Closes#27750Closes#27751
We need to keep index commits and translog operations up to the current
global checkpoint to allow us to throw away unsafe operations and
increase the operation-based recovery chance. This is achieved by a new
index deletion policy.
Relates #10708
This commit attempts to continue unifying the logic between different
transport implementations. As transports call a `TcpTransport` callback
when a new channel is accepted, there is no need to internally track
channels accepted. Instead there is a set of accepted channels in
`TcpTransport`. This set is used for metrics and shutting down channels.
This is related to #27563. This commit modifies the
InboundChannelBuffer to support releasable byte pages. These byte
pages are provided by the PageCacheRecycler. The PageCacheRecycler
must be passed to the Transport with this change.
This is a follow up to #27695. This commit adds a test checking that
across multiple writes using multiple buffers, a write operation
properly keeps track of which buffers still need to be written.
This is a followup to #27551. That commit introduced a bug where the
incorrect byte buffers would be returned when we attempted a write. This
commit fixes the logic.
This is related to #27563. In order to interface with java nio, we must
have buffers that are compatible with ByteBuffer. This commit introduces
a basic ByteBufferReference to easily allow transferring bytes off the
wire to usage in the application.
Additionally it introduces an InboundChannelBuffer. This is a buffer
that can internally expand as more space is needed. It is designed to
be integrated with a page recycler so that it can internally reuse pages.
The final piece is moving all of the index work for writing bytes to a
channel into the WriteOperation.
This commit adds a new dynamic cluster setting named `search.max_buckets` that can be used to limit the number of buckets created per shard or by the reduce phase. Each multi bucket aggregator can consume buckets during the final build of the aggregation at the shard level or during the reduce phase (final or not) in the coordinating node. When an aggregator consumes a bucket, a global count for the request is incremented and if this number is greater than the limit an exception is thrown (TooManyBuckets exception).
This change adds the ability for multi bucket aggregator to "consume" buckets in the global limit, the default is 10,000. It's an opt-in consumer so each multi-bucket aggregator must explicitly call the consumer when a bucket is added in the response.
Closes#27452#26012
Add support for filtering fields returned as part of mappings in get index, get mappings, get field mappings and field capabilities API.
Plugins can plug in their own function, which receives the index as argument, and return a predicate which controls whether each field is included or not in the returned output.
This commit adds the node name to the names of thread pool executors so
that the node name is visible in rejected execution exception messages.
Relates #27663
Today we exclude internal refreshes in the refresh stats. Yet, it's very much
confusing to not take these into account. This change includes internal refreshes
into the stats until we have a dedicated stats for this.
* Sense HA HDFS settings and remove permission restrictions during regular execution.
This PR adds integration tests for HA-Enabled HDFS deployments, both regular and secured.
The Mini HDFS fixture has been updated to optionally run in HA-Mode. A new test suite has
been added for reproducing the effects of a Namenode failing over during regular repository
usage. Going forward, the HDFS Repository will still be subject to its self imposed permission
restrictions during normal use, but will no longer restrict them when running against an HA
enabled HDFS cluster. Instead, the plugin will rely on the provided security policy and not
further restrict the permissions so that the transparent operation to failover to a different
Namenode in the client does not raise security exceptions. Additionally, we are now testing the
secure mode with SASL based wire encryption of data between Elasticsearch and HDFS. This
includes a missing library (commons codec) in order to support this change.
* Add accounting circuit breaker and track segment memory usage
This commit adds a new circuit breaker "accounting" that is used for tracking
the memory usage of non-request-tied memory users. It also adds tracking for the
amount of Lucene segment memory used by a shard as a user of the new circuit
breaker.
The Lucene segment memory is updated when the shard refreshes, and removed when
the shard relocates away from a node or is deleted. It should also be noted that
all tracking for segment memory uses `addWithoutBreaking` so as not to fail the
shard if a limit is reached.
The `accounting` breaker has a default limit of 100% and will contribute to the
parent breaker limit.
Resolves#27044
This potential issue was exposed when I saw this PR #27542. Essentially
we currently execute the write listeners all over the place without
consistently catching and handling exceptions. Some of these exceptions
will be logged in different ways (including as low as `debug`).
This commit adds a single location where these listeners are executed.
If the listener throws an execption, the exception is caught and logged
at the `warn` level.
Pull request #20220 added a change where the store files
that have the same name but are different from the ones in the
snapshot are deleted first before the snapshot is restored.
This logic was based on the `Store.RecoveryDiff.different`
set of files which works by computing a diff between an
existing store and a snapshot.
This works well when the files on the filesystem form valid
shard store, ie there's a `segments` file and store files
are not corrupted. Otherwise, the existing store's snapshot
metadata cannot be read (using Store#snapshotStoreMetadata())
and an exception is thrown
(CorruptIndexException, IndexFormatTooOldException etc) which
is later caught as the begining of the restore process
(see RestoreContext#restore()) and is translated into
an empty store metadata (Store.MetadataSnapshot.EMPTY).
This will make the deletion of different files introduced
in #20220 useless as the set of files will always be empty
even when store files exist on the filesystem. And if some
files are present within the store directory, then restoring
a snapshot with files with same names will fail with a
FileAlreadyExistException.
This is part of the #26865 issue.
There are various cases were some files could exist in the
store directory before a snapshot is restored. One that
Igor identified is a restore attempt that failed on a node
and only first files were restored, then the shard is allocated
again to the same node and the restore starts again (but fails
because of existing files). Another one is when some files
of a closed index are corrupted / deleted and the index is
restored.
This commit adds a test that uses the infrastructure provided
by IndexShardTestCase in order to test that restoring a shard
succeed even when files with same names exist on filesystem.
Related to #26865
This is related to #27260. Currently, basic nio constructs (nio
channels, the channel factories, selector event handlers, etc) implement
logic that is specific to the tcp transport. For example, NioChannel
implements the TcpChannel interface. These nio constructs at some point
will also need to support other protocols (ex: http).
This commit separates the TcpTransport logic from the nio building
blocks.
This change removes the module named aggs-composite and adds the `composite` aggs
as a core aggregation. This allows other plugins to use this new aggregation
and simplifies the integration in the HL rest client.
This is related to #27260. Currently every nio channel has a profile
field. Profile is a concept that only relates to the tcp transport. Http
channels will not have profiles. This commit moves the profile from the
nio channel to the read context. The context is the level that protocol
specific features and logic should live.
Currently we use ActionListener<TcpChannel> for connect, close, and send
message listeners in TcpTransport. However, all of the listeners have to
capture a reference to a channel in the case of the exception api being
called. This commit changes these listeners to be type <Void> as passing
the channel to onResponse is not necessary. Additionally, this change
makes it easier to integrate with low level transports (which use
different implementations of TcpChannel).
This commit removes the ability to use ${prompt.secret} and
${prompt.text} as valid config settings. Secure settings has obsoleted
the need for this, and it cleans up some of the code in Bootstrap.
Projects the depend on the CLI currently depend on core. This should not
always be the case. The EnvironmentAwareCommand will remain in :core,
but the rest of the CLI components have been moved into their own
subproject of :core, :core:cli.
This is related to #27260. Currently, every ESSelector keeps track of
all channels that are registered with it. ESSelector is just an
abstraction over a raw java nio selector. The java nio selector already
tracks its own selection keys. This commit removes our tracking and
relies on the java nio selector tracking.
It leads to harder-to-parse logs that look like this:
```
1> [2017-11-16T20:46:21,804][INFO ][o.e.t.r.y.ClientYamlTestClient] Adding header Content-Type
1> with value application/json
1> [2017-11-16T20:46:21,812][INFO ][o.e.t.r.y.ClientYamlTestClient] Adding header Content-Type
1> with value application/json
1> [2017-11-16T20:46:21,820][INFO ][o.e.t.r.y.ClientYamlTestClient] Adding header Content-Type
1> with value application/json
1> [2017-11-16T20:46:21,966][INFO ][o.e.t.r.y.ClientYamlTestClient] Adding header Content-Type
1> with value application/json
```
This is related to #27260. In the nio transport work we do not catch or
handle `Throwable`. There are a few places where we have exception
handlers that accept `Throwable`. This commit removes those cases.
This commit is a follow up to the work completed in #27132. Essentially
it transitions two more methods (sendMessage and getLocalAddress) from
Transport to TcpChannel. With this change, there is no longer a need for
TcpTransport to be aware of the specific type of channel a transport
returns. So that class is no longer parameterized by channel type.
This is a follow up to #27132. As that PR greatly simplified the
connection logic inside a low level transport implementation, much of
the functionality provided by the NioClient class is no longer
necessary. This commit removes that class.
* This change adds a module called `aggs-composite` that defines a new aggregation named `composite`.
The `composite` aggregation is a multi-buckets aggregation that creates composite buckets made of multiple sources.
The sources for each bucket can be defined as:
* A `terms` source, values are extracted from a field or a script.
* A `date_histogram` source, values are extracted from a date field and rounded to the provided interval.
This aggregation can be used to retrieve all buckets of a deeply nested aggregation by flattening the nested aggregation in composite buckets.
A composite buckets is composed of one value per source and is built for each document as the combinations of values in the provided sources.
For instance the following aggregation:
````
"test_agg": {
"terms": {
"field": "field1"
},
"aggs": {
"nested_test_agg":
"terms": {
"field": "field2"
}
}
}
````
... which retrieves the top N terms for `field1` and for each top term in `field1` the top N terms for `field2`, can be replaced by a `composite` aggregation in order to retrieve **all** the combinations of `field1`, `field2` in the matching documents:
````
"composite_agg": {
"composite": {
"sources": [
{
"field1": {
"terms": {
"field": "field1"
}
}
},
{
"field2": {
"terms": {
"field": "field2"
}
}
},
}
}
````
The response of the aggregation looks like this:
````
"aggregations": {
"composite_agg": {
"buckets": [
{
"key": {
"field1": "alabama",
"field2": "almanach"
},
"doc_count": 100
},
{
"key": {
"field1": "alabama",
"field2": "calendar"
},
"doc_count": 1
},
{
"key": {
"field1": "arizona",
"field2": "calendar"
},
"doc_count": 1
}
]
}
}
````
By default this aggregation returns 10 buckets sorted in ascending order of the composite key.
Pagination can be achieved by providing `after` values, the values of the composite key to aggregate after.
For instance the following aggregation will aggregate all composite keys that sorts after `arizona, calendar`:
````
"composite_agg": {
"composite": {
"after": {"field1": "alabama", "field2": "calendar"},
"size": 100,
"sources": [
{
"field1": {
"terms": {
"field": "field1"
}
}
},
{
"field2": {
"terms": {
"field": "field2"
}
}
}
}
}
````
This aggregation is optimized for indices that set an index sorting that match the composite source definition.
For instance the aggregation above could run faster on indices that defines an index sorting like this:
````
"settings": {
"index.sort.field": ["field1", "field2"]
}
````
In this case the `composite` aggregation can early terminate on each segment.
This aggregation also accepts multi-valued field but disables early termination for these fields even if index sorting matches the sources definition.
This is mandatory because index sorting picks only one value per document to perform the sort.
Right now our different transport implementations must duplicate
functionality in order to stay compliant with the requirements of
TcpTransport. They must all implement common logic to open channels,
close channels, keep track of channels for eventual shutdown, etc.
Additionally, there is a weird and complicated relationship between
Transport and TransportService. We eventually want to start merging
some of the functionality between these classes.
This commit starts moving towards a world where TransportService retains
all the application logic and channel state. Transport implementations
in this world will only be tasked with returning a channel when one is
requested, calling transport service when a channel is accepted from
a server, and starting / stopping itself.
Specifically this commit changes how channels are opened and closed. All
Transport implementations now return a channel type that must comply with
the new TcpChannel interface. This interface has the methods necessary
for TcpTransport to completely manage the lifecycle of a channel. This
includes setting the channel up, waiting for connection, adding close
listeners, and eventually closing.
We use affix settings to group settings / values under a certain namespace.
In some cases like login information for instance a setting is only valid if
one or more other settings are present. For instance `x.test.user` is only valid
if there is an `x.test.passwd` present and vice versa. This change allows to specify
such a dependency to prevent settings updates that leave settings in an inconsistent
state.
We cut over to internal and external IndexReader/IndexSearcher in #26972 which uses
two independent searcher managers. This has the downside that refreshes of the external
reader will never clear the internal version map which in-turn will trigger additional
and potentially unnecessary segment flushes since memory must be freed. Under heavy
indexing load with low refresh intervals this can cause excessive segment creation which
causes high GC activity and significantly increases the required segment merges.
This change adds a dedicated external reference manager that delegates refreshes to the
internal reference manager that then `steals` the refreshed reader from the internal
reference manager for external usage. This ensures that external and internal readers
are consistent on an external refresh. As a sideeffect this also releases old segments
referenced by the internal reference manager which can potentially hold on to already merged
away segments until it is refreshed due to a flush or indexing activity.
* Decouple `ChannelFactory` from Tcp classes
This is related to #27260. Currently `ChannelFactory` is tightly coupled
to classes related to the elasticsearch Tcp binary protocol. This commit
modifies the factory to be able to construct http or other protocol
channels.
If an out of memory error is thrown while merging, today we quietly
rewrap it into a merge exception and the out of memory error is
lost. Instead, we need to rethrow out of memory errors, and in fact any
fatal error here, and let those go uncaught so that the node is torn
down. This commit causes this to be the case.
Relates #27265
The warnings headers have a fairly limited set of valid characters
(cf. quoted-text in RFC 7230). While we have assertions that we adhere
to this set of valid characters ensuring that our warning messages do
not violate the specificaion, we were neglecting the possibility that
arbitrary user input would trickle into these warning headers. Thus,
missing here was tests for these situations and encoding of characters
that appear outside the set of valid characters. This commit addresses
this by encoding any characters in a deprecation message that are not
from the set of valid characters.
Relates #27269
This change adds a new `_split` API that allows to split indices into a new
index with a power of two more shards that the source index. This API works
alongside the `_shrink` API but doesn't require any shard relocation before
indices can be split.
The split operation is conceptually an inverse `_shrink` operation since we
initialize the index with a _syntetic_ number of routing shards that are used
for the consistent hashing at index time. Compared to indices created with
earlier versions this might produce slightly different shard distributions but
has no impact on the per-index backwards compatibility. For now, the user is
required to prepare an index to be splittable by setting the
`index.number_of_routing_shards` at index creation time. The setting allows the
user to prepare the index to be splittable in factors of
`index.number_of_routing_shards` ie. if the index is created with
`index.number_of_routing_shards: 16` and `index.number_of_shards: 2` it can be
split into `4, 8, 16` shards. This is an intermediate step until we can make
this the default. This also allows us to safely backport this change to 6.x.
The `_split` operation is implemented internally as a DeleteByQuery on the
lucene level that is executed while the primary shards execute their initial
recovery. Subsequent merges that are triggered due to this operation will not be
executed immediately. All merges will be deferred unti the shards are started
and will then be throttled accordingly.
This change is intended for the 6.1 feature release but will not support pre-6.1
indices to be split unless these indices have been shrunk before. In that case
these indices can be split backwards into their original number of shards.
While it's not possible to upgrade the Jackson dependencies
to their latest versions yet (see #27032 (comment) for more)
it's still possible to upgrade to the latest 2.8.x version.
We have an hidden setting called `index.queries.cache.term_queries` that disables caching of term queries in the query cache.
Though term queries are not cached in the Lucene UsageTrackingQueryCachingPolicy since version 6.5.
This makes the es policy useless but also makes it impossible to re-enable caching for term queries.
This change appeared in Lucene 6.5 so this setting is no-op since version 5.4 of Elasticsearch
The change in this PR removes the setting and the custom policy.
Only tests should use the single argument Environment constructor. To
enforce this the single arg Environment constructor has been replaced with
a test framework factory method.
Production code (beyond initial Bootstrap) should always use the same
Environment object that Node.getEnvironment() returns. This Environment
is also available via dependency injection.
For FsBlobStore and HdfsBlobStore, if the repository is read only, the blob store should be aware of the readonly setting and do not create directories if they don't exist.
Closes#21495
When partitioning version constants into released and unreleased
versions, today we have a bug in finding the last unreleased
version. Namely, consider the following version constants on the 6.x
branch: ..., 5.6.3, 5.6.4, 6.0.0-alpha1, ..., 6.0.0-rc1, 6.0.0-rc2,
6.0.0, 6.1.0. In this case, our convention dictates that: 5.6.4, 6.0.0,
and 6.1.0 are unreleased. Today we correctly detect that 6.0.0 and 6.1.0
are unreleased, and then we say the previous patch version is unreleased
too. The problem is the logic to remove that previous patch version is
broken, it does not skip alphas/betas/RCs which have been released. This
commit fixes this by skipping backwards over pre-release versions when
finding the previous patch version to remove.
Relates #27206
* Enhances exists queries to reduce need for `_field_names`
Before this change we wrote the name all the fields in a document to a `_field_names` field and then implemented exists queries as a term query on this field. The problem with this approach is that it bloats the index and also affects indexing performance.
This change adds a new method `existsQuery()` to `MappedFieldType` which is implemented by each sub-class. For most field types if doc values are available a `DocValuesFieldExistsQuery` is used, falling back to using `_field_names` if doc values are disabled. Note that only fields where no doc values are available are written to `_field_names`.
Closes#26770
* Addresses review comments
* Addresses more review comments
* implements existsQuery explicitly on every mapper
* Reinstates ability to perform term query on `_field_names`
* Added bwc depending on index created version
* Review Comments
* Skips tests that are not supported in 6.1.0
These values will need to be changed after backporting this PR to 6.x
It is required in order to work correctly with bulk scorer implementations
that change the scorer during the collection process. Otherwise sub collectors
might call `Scorer.score()` on the wrong scorer.
Closes#27131
This commit is a minor refactoring of internal engine to move hooks for
generating sequence numbers into the engine itself. As such, we refactor
tests that relied on this hook to use the new hook, and remove the hook
from the sequence number service itself.
Relates #27082
The headers passed to reindex were skipped except for the last one. This
commit fixes the copying of the headers, as well as adds a base test
case for rest client builders to access the headers within the built
rest client.
relates #22976
Till now the yaml test runner was verifying that the provided path parts and parameters are supported.
With this PR, yaml test runner also checks that all required path parts and parameters are provided.
Introduce minimal thread scheduler as a base class for `ThreadPool`. Such a class can be used from the `BulkProcessor` to schedule retries and the flush task. This allows to remove the `ThreadPool` dependency from `BulkProcessor`, which requires to provide settings that contain `node.name` and also needed log4j for logging. Instead, it needs now a `Scheduler` that is much lighter and gets automatically created and shut down on close.
Closes#26028
Right now we are attempting to set SO_LINGER to 0 on server channels
when we are stopping the tcp transport. This is not a supported socket
option and throws an exception. This also prevents the channels from
being closed.
This commit 1. doesn't set SO_LINGER for server channges, 2. checks
that it is a supported option in nio, and 3. changes the log message
to warn for server channel close exceptions.
While opening a connection to a node, a channel can subsequently
close. If this happens, a future callback whose purpose is to close all
other channels and disconnect from the node will fire. However, this
future will not be ready to close all the channels because the
connection will not be exposed to the future callback yet. Since this
callback is run once, we will never try to disconnect from this node
again and we will be left with a closed channel. This commit adds a
check that all channels are open before exposing the channel and throws
a general connection exception. In this case, the usual connection retry
logic will take over.
Relates #26932
Today we return a `String[]` that requires copying values for every
access. Yet, we already store the setting as a list so we can also directly
return the unmodifiable list directly. This makes list / array access in settings
a much cheaper operation especially if lists are large.
The shard preference _primary, _replica and its variants were useful
for the asynchronous replication. However, with the current impl, they
are no longer useful and should be removed.
Closes#26335
* Add additional low-level logging handler
We have the trace handler which is useful for recording sent messages
but there are times where it would be useful to have more low-level
logging about the events occurring on a channel. This commit adds a
logging handler that can be enabled by setting a certain log level
(org.elasticsearch.transport.netty4.ESLoggingHandler) to trace that
provides trace logging on low-level channel events and includes some
information about the request/response read/write events on the channel
as well.
* Remove imports
* License header
* Remove redundant
* Add test
* More assertions
Today we represent each value of a list setting with it's own dedicated key
that ends with the index of the value in the list. Aside of the obvious
weirdness this has several issues especially if lists are massive since it
causes massive runtime penalties when validating settings. Like a list of 100k
words will literally cause a create index call to timeout and in-turn massive
slowdown on all subsequent validations runs.
With this change we use a simple string list to represent the list. This change
also forbids to add a settings that ends with a .0 which was internally used to
detect a list setting. Once this has been rolled out for an entire major
version all the internal .0 handling can be removed since all settings will be
converted.
Relates to #26723
Since `#getAsMap` exposes internal representation we are trying to remove it
step by step. This commit is cleaning up some xcontent writing as well as
usage in tests
This commit fixes a #26855. Right now we set SO_LINGER to 0 if we are
stopping the transport. This can throw a ChannelClosedException if the
raw channel is already closed. We have a number of scenarios where it is
possible this could be called with a channel that is already closed.
This commit fixes the issue be checking that the channel is not closed
before attempting to set the socket option.
Currently we only log generic messages about errors in logs from the
nio event handler. This means that we do not know which channel had
issues connection, reading, writing, etc.
This commit changes the logs to include the local and remote addresses
and profile for a channel.
We use group settings historically instead of using a prefix setting which is more restrictive and type safe. The majority of the usecases needs to access a key, value map based on the _leave node_ of the setting ie. the setting `index.tag.*` might be used to tag an index with `index.tag.test=42` and `index.tag.staging=12` which then would be turned into a `{"test": 42, "staging": 12}` map. The group settings would always use `Settings#getAsMap` which is loosing type information and uses internal representation of the settings. Using prefix settings allows now to access such a method type-safe and natively.
Currently we only log generic messages about errors in logs from the
nio event handler. This means that we do not know which channel had
issues connection, reading, writing, etc.
This commit changes the logs to include the local and remote addresses
and profile for a channel.
This change adds a fromXContent method to Settings that allows to read
the xcontent that is produced by toXContent. It also replaces the entire settings
loader infrastructure and removes the structured map representation. Future PRs will
also tackle the `getAsMap` that exposes the internal represenation of settings for
better encapsulation.
It is the exciting return of the global checkpoint background
sync. Long, long ago, in snapshot version far, far away we had and only
had a global checkpoint background sync. This sync would fire
periodically and send the global checkpoint from the primary shard to
the replicas so that they could update their local knowledge of the
global checkpoint. Later in time, as we sped ahead towards finalizing
the initial version of sequence IDs, we realized that we need the global
checkpoint updates to be inline. This means that on a replication
operation, the primary shard would piggy back the global checkpoint with
the replication operation to the replicas. The replicas would update
their local knowledge of the global checkpoint and reply with their
local checkpoint. However, this could allow the global checkpoint on the
primary to advance again and the replicas would fall behind in their
local knowledge of the global checkpoint. If another replication
operation never fired, then the replicas would be permanently behind. To
account for this, we added one more sync that would fire when the
primary shard fell idle. However, this has problems:
- the shard idle timer defaults to five minutes, a long time to wait
for the replicas to learn of the new global checkpoint
- if a replica missed the sync, there was no follow-up sync to catch
them up
- there is an inherent race condition where the primary shard could
fall idle mid-operation (after having sent the replication request to
the replicas); in this case, there would never be a background sync
after the operation completes
- tying the global checkpoint sync to the idle timer was never natural
To fix this, we add two additional changes for the global checkpoint to
be synced to the replicas. The first is that we add a post-operation
sync that only fires if there are no operations in flight and there is a
lagging replica. This gives us a chance to sync the global checkpoint to
the replicas immediately after an operation so that they are always kept
up to date. The second is that we add back a global checkpoint
background sync that fires on a timer. This timer fires every thirty
seconds, and is not configurable (for simplicity). This background sync
is smarter than what we had previously in the sense that it only sends a
sync if the global checkpoint on at least one replica is lagging that of
the primary. When the timer fires, we can compare the global checkpoint
on the primary to its knowledge of the global checkpoint on the replicas
and only send a sync if there is a shard behind.
Relates #26591
Add checks for special permissions before reading hdfs stream data. Also adds test from
readonly repository fix. MiniHDFS will now start with an existing repository with a single snapshot
contained within. Readonly Repository is created in tests and attempts to list the snapshots
within this repo.
Removing several occurrences of this typo in the docs and javadocs, seems to be
a common mistake. Corrections turn up once in a while in PRs, better to correct
some of this in one sweep.
Today we have all non-plugin mappers in core. I'd like to start moving those
that neither map to json datatypes nor are very frequently used like `date` or
`ip` to a module.
This commit creates a new module called `mappers-extra` and moves the
`scaled_float` and `token_count` mappers to it. I'd like to eventually move
`range` fields there but it's more complicated due to their intimate
relationship with range queries.
Relates #10368
Today we don't have a pluggable way to validate if the cluster state
is compatible with the node that joins. We already apply some checks for index
compatibility that prevents nodes to join a cluster with indices it doesn't support
but for plugins this isn't possible. This change adds a cluster state validator that
allows plugins to prevent a join if the cluster-state is incompatible.
This test case was leftover from the static bwc tests. There was still
one use for checking we do not load old indices, but this PR moves the
legacy code needed for that directly into the test. I also opened a
follow up issue to completely remove the unsupported test: #26583.
When determining if a build is a snapshot build, we look for a field in
the JAR manifest. However, when running tests, we are not running with a
compiled core Elasticsearch JAR, we are running with the compiled core
classes on the classpath. We have a fallback for this, we always assume
such a situation is a snapshot build. However, when running builds with
-Dbuild.snapshot=false, this is not the case. As such, we need to
fallback to the value of build.snapshot. However, there are cases where
we are not running with a compiled core Elasticsearch JAR (e.g., when
the transport client is embedded in a web container) so we should only
do this fallback if we are in tests. To verify we are in tests, we check
if randomized runner is on the classpath.
Relates #26554
The percolator will add a `_percolator_document_slot` field to all percolator
hits to indicate with what document it has matched. This number matches with
the order in which the documents have been specified in the percolate query.
Also improved the support for multiple percolate queries in a search request.
We currently have a weird relationship between Transport,
TransportService, and TransportServiceAdaptor. At some point I think
that we would like to collapse these all into one concept as we only
support TCP transports.
This commit moves in that direction by eliminating the adaptor and just
passing the transport service to the transport.
The current script service has a script compilation limit for a one
minute window. This is set to a small default value of 15. Instead of
increasing that default value, this commit introduces a new setting
that allows to configure a rate per time unit, so that the script service can deal with bursts better.
The new setting is named `script.max_compilations_rate`,
requires a nonnegative number and a positive time value.
The default is `75/5m`, which is equivalent to the existing 15 per minute.
* Implement adaptive replica selection
This implements the selection algorithm described in the C3 paper for
determining which copy of the data a query should be routed to.
By using the service time EWMA, response time EWMA, and queue size EWMA we
calculate the score of a node by piggybacking these metrics with each search
request.
Since Elasticsearch lacks the "broadcast to every copy" behavior that Cassandra
has (as mentioned in the C3 paper) to update metrics after a node has been
highly weighted, this implementation adjusts a node's response stats using the
average of the its own and the "best" node's metrics. This is so that a long GC
or other activity that may cause a node's rank to increase dramatically does not
permanently keep a node from having requests routed to it, instead it will
eventually lower its score back to the realm where it is a potential candidate
for new queries.
This feature is off by default and can be turned on with the dynamic setting
`cluster.routing.use_adaptive_replica_selection`.
Relates to #24915, however instead of `b=3` I used `b=4` (after benchmarking)
* Randomly use adaptive replica selection for internal test cluster
* Use an action name *prefix* for retrieving pending requests
* Add unit test for replica selection
* don't use adaptive replica selection in SearchPreferenceIT
* Track client connections in a SearchTransportService instead of TransportService
* Bind `entry` pieces in local variables
* Add javadoc link to C3 paper and javadocs for stat adjustments
* Bind entry's key and value to local variables
* Remove unneeded actionNamePrefix parameter
* Use conns.longValue() instead of cached Long
* Add comments about removing entries from the map
* Pull out bindings for `entry` in IndexShardRoutingTable
* Use .compareTo instead of manually comparing
* add assert for connections not being null and gte to 1
* Copy map for pending search connections instead of "live" map
* Increase the number of pending search requests used for calculating rank when chosen
When a node gets chosen, this increases the number of search counts for the
winning node so that it will not be as likely to be chosen again for
non-concurrent search requests.
* Remove unused HashMap import
* Rename rank -> rankShardsAndUpdateStats
* Rename rankedActiveInitializingShardsIt -> activeInitializingShardsRankedIt
* Instead of precalculating winning node, use "winning" shard from ranked list
* Sort null ranked nodes before nodes that have a rank
At current, we do not feel there is enough of a reason to shade the low
level rest client. It caused problems with commons logging and IDE's
during the brief time it was used. We did not know exactly how many
users will need this, and decided that leaving shading out until we
gather more information is best. Users can still shade the jar
themselves. For information and feeback, see issue #26366.
Closes#26328
This reverts commit 3a20922046.
This reverts commit 2c271f0f22.
This reverts commit 9d10dbea39.
This reverts commit e816ef89a2.
This allows plugins to plug rescore implementations into
Elasticsearch. While this is a fairly expert thing to do I've
done my best to point folks to the QueryRescorer as one that at
least documents the tradeoffs that it makes. I've attempted to
limit the API surface area by removing `SearchContext` from the
exposed interface, instead exposing just the IndexSearcher and
`QueryShardContext`. I also tried to make some of the class names
more consistent and do some general cleanup while I was there.
I entertained the notion of moving the `QueryRescorer` to module.
After all, it'd be a wonderful test to prove that you can plug
rescore implementation into Elasticsearch if the only built in
rescore implementation is in the module. But I decided against it
because the new module would require a client jar and it'd require
moving some more things around. I think if we really want to do
it, we should do it as a followup.
I did, on the other hand, create an "example" rescore plugin which
should both be a nice example for anyone wanting to plug in their
own rescore implementation and servers as a good integration test
to make sure that you can indeed plug one in.
Closes#26208
This PR begins the long journey to deprecating Streamable.
The idea here is to add additional method signatures that
support Writeable.Reader, so that the work to migrate objects TransportMessage to
implement Writeable and not Streamable.
One example conversion is done in this PR: SimulatePipelineRequest.
This commit makes the security code aware of the Java 9 FilePermission changes (see #21534) and allows us to remove the `jdk.io.permissionsUseCanonicalPath` system property.
This commit converts script query to use a new FilterScript context. The
new context returns a boolean, so the error that would have previously
happened at runtime if a non boolean was returned would now happen at
script compilation. Also, the leniency of supporting returning a number
and 0 mapping to false, non-zero to true is gone, but it was never
documented. With the new context compilation will now also fail if
special variables are used at compilation time, instead of runtime, eg
ctx.
Right now we use a custom future for the CloseFuture associated with a
channel. This is because we need special unwrapping logic to ensure that
exceptions from a future failure are a certain type (opposed to an
UncategorizedException). However, the current version is limiting
because we can only attach one listener.
This commit changes the CloseFuture to extend the
PlainListenableActionFuture. This change allows us to attach multiple
listeners.
The client sniffer depends on the low-level REST client, while the Java high-level REST client and the transport client depend on Elasticsearch itself. Javadoc are not that useful unless they have links to the Elasticsearch classes in the latter case, and to the low-level REST client in the sniffer javadoc. This commit adds those links.
This chance adds several random test infrastructure improvements that caused
issues in on-going developments but are generally useful. For instance is it impossible
to restart a node with a secure setting source since we close it after the node is started.
This change makes it cloneable such that we can reuse it for a restart.
The following token filters were moved: arabic_stem, brazilian_stem, czech_stem, dutch_stem, french_stem, german_stem and russian_stem.
Relates to #23658
In reindex APIs, when using the `slices` parameter to choose the number of slices, adds the option to specify `slices` as "auto" which will choose a reasonable number of slices. It uses the number of shards in the source index, up to a ceiling. If there is more than one source index, it uses the smallest number of shards among them.
This gives users an easy way to use slicing in these APIs without having to make decisions about how to configure it, as it provides a good-enough configuration for them out of the box. This may become the default behavior for these APIs in the future.
Today we have a `null` invariant on all `ClusterState.Custom`. This makes
several code paths complicated and requires complex state handling in some cases.
This change allows to register a custom supplier that is used to initialize the
initial clusterstate with these transient customs.
The build was ignoring suffixes like "beta1" and "rc1" on the version numbers which was causing the backwards compatibility packaging tests to fail because they expected to be upgrading from 6.0.0 even though they were actually upgrading from 6.0.0-beta1. This adds the suffixes to the information that the build scrapes from Version.java. It then uses those suffixes when it resolves artifacts build from the bwc branch and for testing.
Closes#26017
* Adds ToXContentFragment
This interface is meant for objects that implement `ToXContent` but are not complete objects. It is basically the opposite of `ToXContentObject`. It means that it will be easier to track the migration of classes over to the fragment/not fragment ToXContent model as it will be clear which classes are not migrated. When no classes directly implement `ToXContent` we can make `ToXContent` package private to be sure that all new classes must implement `ToXContentObject` or `ToXContentFragment`.
* review comments
* more review comments
* javadocs
* iter
* Adds tests
* iter
* adds toString test for aggs
* improves tests following review comments
* iter
* iter
We introduced a hack in #25885 to respect the cluster alias if available on the `_index` field. This is important if aggregations or other field data related operations are executed. Yet, we added a small hack that duplicated an implementation detail from the `_index` field data builder to make this work. This change adds a necessary but simple API change that allows us to remove the hack and only have a single implementation.
The goal of this similarity is to help users who would like to keep the
functionality of the `tf-idf` similarity that we want to remove, or to allow
for specific usec-cases (disabling idf, disabling tf, disabling length norm,
etc.) to not have to build a custom plugin and familiarize with the low-level
Lucene API.
Raw requests are supported only by the java yaml test runner and were introduced to test docs snippets. Some yaml tests ended up using them (see #23497) which causes failures for other language clients. This commit migrates those yaml tests to Java tests that send requests through the Java low-level REST client, and also moves the ability to send raw requests to a special client that's only available when testing docs snippets.
Closes#25694
When `refresh=wait_for` is set on an indexing request, we register a listener on the shards that are call during the next refresh. During the recover translog phase, when the engine is open, we have a window of time when indexing operations succeed and they can add their listeners. Those listeners will only be called when the recovery finishes as we do not refresh during recoveries (unless the indexing buffer is full). Next to being a bad user experience, it can also cause deadlocks with an ongoing peer recovery that may wait for those operations to mark the replica in sync (details below).
To fix this, this PR changes refresh listeners to be a noop when the shard is not yet serving reads (implicitly covering the recovery period). It doesn't matter anyway.
Deadlock with recovery:
When finalizing a peer recovery we mark the peer as "in sync". To do so we wait until the peer's local checkpoint is at least as high as the global checkpoint. If an operation with `refresh=wait_for` is added as a listener on that peer during recovery, it is not completed from the perspective of the primary. The primary than may wait for it to complete before advancing the local checkpoint for that peer. Since that peer is not considered in sync, the global checkpoint on the primary can be higher, causing a deadlock. Operation waits for recovery to finish and a refresh to happen. Recovery waits on the operation.
* Adds mutate function to various tests
Relates to #25929
* fix test
* implements mutate function for all single bucket aggs
* review comments
* convert getMutateFunction to mutateIInstance
Currently there is an issue where the send listener is not called in the
nio transport when an exception is throw during channel flush. This
leads to memory leaks. This commit ensures that the listener is called
This commit adds the nio transport as an option in place of the mock tcp
transport for tests. Each test will only use one transport type. The
transport type is decided by a random boolean generated inside of the
`ESTestCase` class.
This commit updates the version for master to 7.0.0-alpha1. It also adds
the 6.1 version constant, and fixes many tests, as well as marking some
as awaits fix.
Closes#25893Closes#25870
ToXContentToBytes is used as a base class that adds toString and buildAsBytes method implementation to classes that implement ToXContent. With the ongoing cleanups, this class is limited and doesn't add a lot of value, given that buildAsBytes can be replaced with XContentHelper.toXContent and toString can be replaced with Strings.toString(this).
The plan would be to remove ToXContentToBytes entirely, and AbstractQueryBuilder is the first place where we can remove its usage.
During peer recoveries, we need to copy over lucene files and replay the operations they miss from the source translog. Guaranteeing that translog files are not cleaned up has seen many iterations overtime. Back in the old 1.0 days, recoveries went through the Engine and actively prevented both translog cleaning and lucene commits. We then moved to a notion called Translog Views, which allowed the recovery code to "acquire" a view into the translog which is then guaranteed to be kept around until the view is closed. The Engine code was free to commit lucene and do what it ever it wanted without coordinating with recoveries. Translog file deletion logic was based on reference counting on the file level. Those counters were incremented when a view was acquired but also when the view was used to create a `Snapshot` that allowed you to read operations from the files. At some point we removed the file based counting complexity in favor of constructs on the Translog level that just keep track of "open" views and the minimum translog generation they refer to. To do so, Views had to be kept around until the last snapshot that was made from them was consumed. This was fine in recovery code but lead to [a subtle bug](https://github.com/elastic/elasticsearch/pull/25862) in the [Primary Replica Resyncer](https://github.com/elastic/elasticsearch/pull/25862).
Concurrently, we have developed the notion of a `TranslogDeletionPolicy` which is responsible for the liveness aspect of translog files. This class makes it very simple to take translog Snapshot into account for keep translog files around, allowing people that just need a snapshot to just take a snapshot and not worry about views and such. Recovery code which actually does need a view can now prevent trimming by acquiring a simple retention lock (a `Closable`). This removes the need for the notion of a View.
* Improves AbstractWireSerializingTestCase equals test
`AbstractWireSerializingTestCase.testEqualsAndHashcode()` now uses `EqualsHashcodeTestUtils` to perform the hashCode and equals checks. To support this `AbstractWireSerializingTestCase` has two new methods: `getCopyFunction()` and `getMutateFunction` which are used when calling `EqualsHashcodeTestUtils`
* Adds TODO
* Makes equivalent changes to AbstractStreamableTestCase
* corrects javadoc error
The following token filters were moved: delimited_payload_filter, keep, keep_types, classic, apostrophe, decimal_digit, fingerprint, min_hash and scandinavian_folding.
Relates to #23658
The Writeble representation is less heavy to parse and that will benefit percolate performance and throughput.
The query builder's binary format has now the same bwc guarentees as the xcontent format.
Added a qa test that verifies that percolator queries written in older versions are still readable by the current version.
This commit fixes tests for environment-aware commands. A previous
change added a check that es.path.conf is not null. The problem is that
this system property is not being set in tests so this check trips every
single time. To fix this, we move the check into a method that can be
overridden, and then override this method in relevant places in tests to
avoid having to set the property in tests. We also add a test that this
check works as expected.
Today we expose `IndexFieldDataService` outside of IndexService to do maintenance
or lookup field data in different ways. Yet, we have a streamlined way to access IndexFieldData
via `QueryShardContext` that should encapsulate all access to it. This also ensures that we control all other functionality like cache clearing etc.
This change also removes the `recycler` option from `ClearIndicesCacheRequest` this option is a no-op and should have been removed long ago.
Currently, NioTransport does start normal socket selectors and the
client when the network server setting is set to false. This commit
makes it so that the client will be started even when the network server
is not enabled.
Additionally, it randomly introduces the NioTransport as an option for
the MockTransportClient throughout tests.
These two methods do do the same thing. The subtle difference between the two is that the former prints out pretty printed content by default while the latter doesn't. There are way more usages of the latter throughout the codebase hence I kept that variant although I do think that it would be much better to print out prettified content by default from a `toString`. That breaks quite some tests so I didn't make that change yet.
Also XContentHelper#toString was outdated as it didn't check the ToXContent#isFragment method to decide whether a new anonymous object has to be created or not. It would simply fail with any ToXContentObject.
Today when we aggregate on the `_index` field the cross cluster search
alias is not taken into account. Neither is it respected when we search
on the field. This change adds support for cluster alias when the cluster
alias is present on the `_index` field.
Closes#25606
Currently we have an option to interrupt the selector thread on close.
This option is not needed as we do not call this method and we should
not be blocking on the network thread. Instead we only need to ever call
wakeup() on the raw selector.
This commit removes all external dependencies from the rest client jar
and shades them in an 'org.elasticsearch.client' package within the jar
using shadowJar gradle plugin. All projects that depended on the
existing jar have been converted to using the 'org.elasticsearch.client'
package prefixes to interact with the rest client.
Closes#25208
Currently we are failing to close socket channels when the initial bind
or connect operation fails. This leaves the file descriptor hanging
around. This closes the channel when an exception occurs during bind or
connect.
Currently an NioChannel is created and it is UNREGISTERED. At some point
it is registered with a selector. From that point on, the channel can
only be closed by the selector. The fact that a channel might not be
associated with a selector has significant implications for concurrency
and the channel shutdown process. The only thing that is simplified by
allowing channels to be in a state independent of a selector is some
testing scenarios.
This PR modifies channels so that they are given a selector at creation
time and are always associated with that selector. Only that selector
can close that channel. This simplifies the channel lifecycle and
closing intricacies.
Removes the primary term from the replication request and pushes it into the transport envelope. This makes it possible to remove the term from the ReplicationOperation universe. The primary term that is to be used for a replication operation is now determined in the reroute phase when the node decides to execute a primary action (and validated once the primary action gets to execute). This makes it possible to validate that the primary action was sent to the correct primary shard instance that it was meant to be sent to (currently we only validate primary actions using the allocation id, which can be reused for failed and reallocated primaries).
When a node tries to join a cluster, it goes through a validation step to make sure the node is compatible with the cluster. Currently we validation that the node can read the cluster state and that it is compatible with the indexes of the cluster. This PR adds validation that the joining node's version is compatible with the versions of existing nodes. Concretely we check that:
1) The node's min compatible version is higher or equal to any node in the cluster (this prevents a too-new node from joining)
2) The node's version is higher or equal to the min compat version of all cluster nodes (this prevents a too old join where, for example, the master is on 5.6, there's another 6.0 node in the cluster and a 5.4 node tries to join).
3) The node's major version is at least as higher as the lowest node in the cluster. This is important as we use the minimum version in the cluster to stop executing bwc code for operations that require multiple nodes. If the nodes are already operating in "new cluster mode", we should prevent nodes from the previous major to join (even if they are wire level compatible). This does mean that if you have a very unlucky partition during the upgrade which partitions all old nodes which are also a minority / data nodes only, the may not be able to re-join the cluster. We feel this edge case risk is well worth the simplification it brings to BWC layers only going one way. This restriction only holds if the cluster state has been recovered (i.e., the cluster has properly formed).
Also, the node join validation can now selectively fail specific nodes (previously the entire batch was failed). This is an important preparation for a follow up PR where we plan to have a rejected joining node die with dignity.
The `QueryRewriteContext` used to provide a client object that can
be used to fetch geo-shapes, terms or documents for percolation. Unfortunately
all client calls used to be blocking calls which can have significant impact on the
rewrite phase since it occupies an entire search thread until the resource is
received. In the case that the index the resource is fetched from isn't on the local
node this can have significant impact on query throughput.
Note: this doesn't fix MLT since it fetches stuff in doQuery which is a different beast. Yet, it is a huge step in the right direction
Today we have duplicated code that is quite complicated to iterate
over rewriteable (`QueryBuilders` mainly) This change introduces a
`Rewriteable` interface that allow to share code to do the rewriting as
well as encapsulation and composition of queries.
Setting a timeout or enforcing low-level search cancellation used to make us
wrap the collector and check either the current time or whether the search
task was cancelled for every collected document. This can be significant
overhead on cheap queries that match many documents.
This commit changes the approach to wrap the bulk scorer rather than the
collector and exponentially increase the interval between two consecutive
checks in order to reduce the overhead of those checks.
When a node tries to join a cluster, it goes through a validation step to make sure the node is compatible with the cluster. Currently we validation that the node can read the cluster state and that it is compatible with the indexes of the cluster. This PR adds validation that the joining node's version is compatible with the versions of existing nodes. Concretely we check that:
1) The node's min compatible version is higher or equal to any node in the cluster (this prevents a too-new node from joining)
2) The node's version is higher or equal to the min compat version of all cluster nodes (this prevents a too old join where, for example, the master is on 5.6, there's another 6.0 node in the cluster and a 5.4 node tries to join).
3) The node's major version is at least as higher as the lowest node in the cluster. This is important as we use the minimum version in the cluster to stop executing bwc code for operations that require multiple nodes. If the nodes are already operating in "new cluster mode", we should prevent nodes from the previous major to join (even if they are wire level compatible). This does mean that if you have a very unlucky partition during the upgrade which partitions all old nodes which are also a minority / data nodes only, the may not be able to re-join the cluster. We feel this edge case risk is well worth the simplification it brings to BWC layers only going one way.
Also, the node join validation can now selectively fail specific nodes (previously the entire batch was failed). This is an important preparation for a follow up PR where we plan to have a rejected joining node die with dignity.
* Register data node stats from info carried back in search responses
This is part of #24915, where we now calculate the EWMA of service time for
tasks in the search threadpool, and send that as well as the current queue size
back to the coordinating node. The coordinating node now tracks this information
for each node in the cluster.
This information will be used in the future the determining the best replica a
search request should be routed to. This change has no user-visible difference.
* Move response time timing into ResponseListenerWrapper
* Move ResponseListenerWrapper to ActionListener instead of SearchActionListener
Also removes the logger
* Move `requestIndex` back to private
* De-guice-ify ResponseCollectorService \o/
* Undo all changes to SearchQueryThenFetchAsyncAction
* Remove unneeded response collector from TransportSearchAction
* Undo all changes to SearchDfsQueryThenFetchAsyncAction
* Completely rewrite the inside of ResponseCollectorService's record keeping
* Documentation and cleanups for ResponseCollectorService
* Add unit test for collection of queue size and service time
* Fix Guice construction error
* Add basic unit tests for ResponseCollectorService
* Fix version constant for the master merge
* Fix test compilation after master merge
* Add a test for node removal on cluster changed event
* Remove integration test as there are now unit tests
* Rename ResponseListenerWrapper -> SearchExecutionStatsCollector
* Fix line-length
* Make classes private and final where appropriate
* Pass nodeId into SearchExecutionStatsCollector and use only ActionListener
* Get nodeId from connection so searchShardTarget can be private
* Remove threadpool from SearchContext, get it from IndexShard instead
* Add missing import
* Use BiFunction for responseWrapper rather than passing in collector service
The following token filters were moved: arabic_normalization, german_normalization, hindi_normalization, indic_normalization, persian_normalization, scandinavian_normalization, serbian_normalization, sorani_normalization, cjk_width and cjk_width
Relates to #23658
#25521 changed channel closing to be handled async on anything but transport stop. This means it may take a while before
calling `connection.close()` and the node being removed from the `connectedNodes` list (but the connection is immediately unusuable).
Fixes#25686
Currently replication and recovery are both coordinated through the latest cluster state available on the ClusterService as well as through the GlobalCheckpointTracker (to have consistent local/global checkpoint information), making it difficult to understand the relation between recovery and replication, and requiring some tricky checks in the recovery code to coordinate between the two. This commit makes the primary the single owner of its replication group, which simplifies the replication model and allows to clean up corner cases we have in our recovery code. It also reduces the dependencies in the code, so that neither RecoverySourceXXX nor ReplicationOperation need access to the latest state on ClusterService anymore. Finally, it gives us the property that in-sync shard copies won't receive global checkpoint updates which are above their local checkpoint (relates #25485).
It was brought up that our current client artifacts have generic names like 'rest' that may cause conflicts with other artifacts.
This commit renames:
- rest -> elasticsearch-rest-client
- sniffer -> elasticsearch-rest-client-sniffer
- rest-high-level -> elasticsearch-rest-high-level-client
A couple of small changes are also preparing the high level client for its first release.
Closes#20248
We already use a per JVM port range in MockTransportService. Yet,
it's possible that if we are executing in the JVM with ordinal 0 that
other clusters reuse ports from the mock transport service and some tests
try to simulate disconnects etc. By using a non-defautl port range (starting at 10300)
we prevent internal test clusters from reusing any of the mock impls ports
Relates to #25301
Today if we search across a large amount of shards we hit every shard. Yet, it's quite
common to search across an index pattern for time based indices but filtering will exclude
all results outside a certain time range ie. `now-3d`. While the search can potentially hit
hundreds of shards the majority of the shards might yield 0 results since there is not document
that is within this date range. Kibana for instance does this regularly but used `_field_stats`
to optimize the indexes they need to query. Now with the deprecation of `_field_stats` and it's upcoming removal a single dashboard in kibana can potentially turn into searches hitting hundreds or thousands of shards and that can easily cause search rejections even though the most of the requests are very likely super cheap and only need a query rewriting to early terminate with 0 results.
This change adds a pre-filter phase for searches that can, if the number of shards are higher than a the `pre_filter_shard_size` threshold (defaults to 128 shards), fan out to the shards
and check if the query can potentially match any documents at all. While false positives are possible, a negative response means that no matches are possible. These requests are not subject to rejection and can greatly reduce the number of shards a request needs to hit. The approach here is preferable to the kibana approach with field stats since it correctly handles aliases and uses the correct threadpools to execute these requests. Further it's completely transparent to the user and improves scalability of elasticsearch in general on large clusters.
There is a bug when a call to `BytesReferenceStreamInput` skip is made
on a `BytesReference` that has an initial offset. The offset for the
current slice is added to the current index and then subtracted from the
length. This introduces the possibility of a negative number of bytes to
skip. This happens inside a loop, which leads to an infinte loop.
This commit correctly subtracts the current slice index from the
slice.length. Additionally, the `BytesArrayTests` are modified to test
instances that include an offset.
This is a protection mechanism to prevent a single search request from
hitting a large number of shards in the cluster concurrently. If a search is
executed against all indices in the cluster this can easily overload the cluster
causing rejections etc. which is not necessarily desirable. Instead this PR adds
a per request limit of `max_concurrent_shard_requests` that throttles the number of
concurrent initial phase requests to `256` by default. This limit can be increased per request
and protects single search requests from overloading the cluster. Subsequent PRs can introduces
addiontional improvemetns ie. limiting this on a `_msearch` level, making defaults a factor of
the number of nodes or sort shards iters such that we gain the best concurrency across nodes.
We lost the cluster alias due to some special caseing in inner hits
and due to the fact that we didn't pass on the alias to the shard request.
This change ensures that we have the cluster alias present on the shard to
ensure all SearchShardTarget reads preserve the alias.
Relates to #25606
Currently when we close a channel in Netty4Utils.closeChannels we
block until the closing is complete. This introduces the possibility
that a network selector thread will block while waiting until a
separate network selector thread closes a channel.
For instance: T1 closes channel 1 (which is assigned to a T1 selector).
Channel 1's close listener executes the closing of the node. That
means that T1 now tries to close channel 2. However, channel 2 is
assigned to a selector that is running on T2. T1 now must wait until T2
closes that channel at some point in the future.
This commit addresses this by adding a boolean to closeChannels
indicating if we should block on close. We only set this boolean to true
if we are closing down the server channels at shutdown. This call is
never made from a network thread. When we call the closeChannels method
with that boolean set to false, we do not block on close.
This change collapses some of the packages for the bucket aggregations into their parent packages. This was done for the following aggregations:
* The variants of the range aggregation (geo_distance, date and ip) were moved into the `o.e.s.a.bucket.range` package
* The `o.e.s.a.bucket.terms.support` package was removed and the classes were moved to `o.e.s.a.bucket.terms`
* The filter aggregation was moved to `o.e.s.a.bucket.filter`
Since this PR is already relatively large with only the above changes subsequent PRs will do similar operations on relevant metric and pipeline aggregations
Relates to #22868
We currently check whether translog files can be trimmed whenever we create a new translog generation or close a view. However #25294 added a long translog retention period (12h, max 512MB by default), which means translog files should potentially be cleaned up long after there isn't any indexing activity to trigger flushes/the creation of new translog files. We therefore need a scheduled background check to clean up those files once they are no longer needed.
Relates to #10708
This commit does two things:
- bumps the version from 6.0.0-alpha3 to 6.0.0-beta1
- renames the 6.0.0-alpha3 version constant to 6.0.0-beta1
Relates #25621
This commit adds cross-settings validation for the low/high/flood stage
disk watermark settings. This validation was enabled by the introduction
of multiple settings validation.
Relates #25600
This commit refactors the global checkpont tracker to make it more
resilient. The main idea is to make it more explicit what state is
actually captured and how that state is updated through
replication/cluster state updates etc. It also fixes the issue where the
local checkpoint information is not being updated when a shard becomes
primary. The primary relocation handoff becomes very simple too, we can
just verbatim copy over the internal state.
Relates #25468
* Improved REST endpoint exception handling, see #15335
Also improved OPTIONS http method handling to better conform with the
http spec.
* Tidied up formatting and comments
See #15335
* Tests for #15335
* Cleaned up comments, added section number
* Swapped out tab indents for space indents
* Test class now extends ESSingleNodeTestCase
* Capture RestResponse so it can be examined in test cases
Simple addition to surface the RestResponse object so we can run tests
against it (see issue #15335).
* Refactored class name, included feedback
See #15335.
* Unit test for REST error handling enhancements
Randomizing unit test for enhanced REST response error handling. See
issue #15335 for more details.
* Cleaned up formatting
* New constructor to set HTTP method
Constructor added to support RestController test cases.
* Refactored FakeRestRequest, streamlined test case.
* Cleaned up conflicts
* Tests for #15335
* Added functionality to ignore or include path wildcards
See #15335
* Further enhancements to request handling
Refactored executeHandler to prioritize explicit path matches. See
#15335 for more information.
* Cosmetic fixes
* Refactored method handlers
* Removed redundant import
* Updated integration tests
* Refactoring to address issue #17853
* Cleaned up test assertions
* Fixed edge case if OPTIONS method randomly selected as invalid method
In this test, an OPTIONS method request is valid, and should not return
a 405 error.
* Remove redundant static modifier
* Hook the multiple PathTrie attempts into RestHandler.dispatchRequest
* Add missing space
* Correctly retrieve new handler for each Trie strategy
* Only copy headers to threadcontext once
* Fix test after REST header copying moved higher up
* Restore original params when trying the next trie candidate
* Remove OPTIONS for invalidHttpMethodArray so a 405 is guaranteed in tests
* Re-add the fix I already added and got removed during merge :-/
* Add missing GET method to test
* Add documentation to migration guide about breaking 404 -> 405 changes
* Explain boolean response, pull into local var
* fixup! Explain boolean response, pull into local var
* Encapsulate multiple HTTP methods into PathTrie<MethodHandlers>
* Add PathTrie.retrieveAll where all matching modes can be retrieved
Then TrieMatchingMode can be package private and not leak into RestController
* Include body of error with 405 responses to give hint about valid methods
* Fix missing usageService handler addition
I accidentally removed this :X
* Initialize PathTrieIterator modes with Arrays.asList
* Use "== false" instead of !
* Missing paren :-/
Indexing ids in binary form should help with indexing speed since we would
have to compare fewer bytes upon sorting, should help with memory usage of
the live version map since keys will be shorter, and might help with disk
usage depending on how efficient the terms dictionary is at compressing
terms.
Since we can only expect base64 ids in the auto-generated case, this PR tries
to use an encoding that makes the binary id equal to the base64-decoded id in
the majority of cases (253 out of 256). It also specializes numeric ids, since
this seems to be common when content that is stored in Elasticsearch comes
from another database that uses eg. auto-increment ids.
Another option could be to require base64 ids all the time. It would make things
simpler but I'm not sure users would welcome this requirement.
This PR should bring some benefits, but I expect it to be mostly useful when
coupled with something like #24615.
Closes#18154
Transport profiles unfortunately have never been validated. Yet, it's very
easy to make a mistake when configuring profiles which will most likely stay
undetected since we don't validate the settings but allow almost everything
based on the wildcard in `transport.profiles.*`. This change removes the
settings subset based parsing of profiles but rather uses concrete affix settings
for the profiles which makes it easier to fall back to higher level settings since
the fallback settings are present when the profile setting is parsed. Previously, it was
unclear in the code which setting is used ie. if the profiles settings (with removed
prefixes) or the global node setting. There is no distinction anymore since we don't pull
prefix based settings.
Some tests use MockTransportService to do network based testing.
Yet, we run tests in multiple JVMs that means
concurrent tests could claim port that another JVM just released
and if that test tries to simulate a disconnect it might be smart
enough to re-connect depending on what is tested. To reduce the risk,
since this is very hard to debug we use a different default
port range per JVM unless the incoming settings overriding it.
Closes#25301
Today when we run out of disk all kinds of crazy things can happen
and nodes are becoming hard to maintain once out of disk is hit.
While we try to move shards away if we hit watermarks this might not
be possible in many situations. Based on the discussion in #24299
this change monitors disk utilization and adds a flood-stage watermark
that causes all indices that are allocated on a node hitting the flood-stage
mark to be switched read-only (with the option to be deleted). This allows users to react on the low disk
situation while subsequent write requests will be rejected. Users can switch
individual indices read-write once the situation is sorted out. There is no
automatic read-write switch once the node has enough space. This requires
user interaction.
The flood-stage watermark is set to `95%` utilization by default.
Closes#24299
All query builders written as self contained xContent objects, to we should mark
them accordingly using ToXContentObject. This also makes it possible to use
things like XContentHelper#toXContent to render query builders in tests.
QueryParseContext is currently only used as a wrapper for an XContentParser, so
this change removes it entirely and changes the appropriate APIs that use it so
far to only accept a parser instead.
This commit makes the use of the global network settings explicit instead
of implicit within NetworkService. It cleans up several places where we fall
back to the global settings while we should have used tcp or http ones.
In addition this change also removes unnecessary settings classes
Hadoop 2.7.x libraries fail when running on JDK9 due to the version string changing to a single
character. On Hadoop 2.8, this is no longer a problem, and it is unclear on whether the fix will be
backported to the 2.7 branch. This commit upgrades our dependency of Hadoop for the HDFS
Repository to 2.8.1.
We have various assertions that check we never block on transport
threads. This commit adds the thread names for the NioTransport to
these assertions.
With this change I had to fix two places where we were calling blocking
methods from the transport threads.
This commit adds additional protection to `ESSelector` and its
implementations to ensure that channels are not enqueued after the
selector is closed.
After a channel has been added to the queue, we check that the selector
is open. If it is not, then we remove the channel from the queue. If the
channel is removed successfully, we throw an `IllegalStateException`.
Our current TCPTransport logic assumes that we do not pass pings to
the TCPTransport level.
This commit fixes an issue where NioTransport was passing pings to
TCPTransport and leading to exceptions.
Currently QueryParseContext is only a thin wrapper around an XContentParser that
adds little functionality of its own. I provides helpers for long deprecated
field names which can be removed and two helper methods that can be made static
and moved to other classes. This is a first step in helping to remove
QueryParseContext entirely.
In SimpleNioTransportTests we assert that an IOException has a certain
message. This message appears that it is not dependible (and might
change based on platform).
Our other transport tests (mock and netty) do not make this assertion.
Instead they only assert on our application exception message. This
commit removes the IOException message assertion. And retains the
ConnectTransportException message assertion.
This commit introduces a nio based tcp transport into framework for
testing.
Currently Elasticsearch uses a simple blocking tcp transport for
testing purposes (MockTcpTransport). This diverges from production
where our current transport (netty) is non-blocking.
The point of this commit is to introduce a testing variant that more
closely matches the behavior of production instances.
This commit removes path.conf as a valid setting and replaces it with a
command-line flag for specifying a non-default path for configuration.
Relates #25392
The following token filters were moved: stemmer, stemmer_override, kstem, dictionary_decompounder, hyphenation_decompounder, reverse, elision and truncate.
Relates to #23658
While real secure settings (ie an ES keystore) cannot be merged
together, mocked secure settings can and need to be sometimes merged.
This commit adds a merge method to allow tests to merge together
multiple instances of secure settings.
OldIndexBackwardsCompatibilityIT#testOldClusterStates tested whether global and index metadata could be read from data directory,
this can also be tested in full cluster qa test that checks cluster state via api.
Relates to #24939
#25147 added the translog deletion policy but didn't enable it by default. This PR enables a default retention of 512MB (same maximum size of the current translog) and an age of 12 hours (i.e., after 12 hours all translog files will be deleted). This increases to chance to have an ops based recovery, even if the primary flushed or the replica was offline for a few hours.
In order to see which parts of the translog are committed into lucene the translog stats are extended to include information about uncommitted operations.
Views now include all translog ops and guarantee, as before, that those will not go away. Snapshotting a view allows to filter out generations that are not relevant based on a specific sequence number.
Relates to #10708
Most notable changes:
- better update concurrency: LUCENE-7868
- TopDocs.totalHits is now a long: LUCENE-7872
- QueryBuilder does not remove the boolean query around multi-term synonyms:
LUCENE-7878
- removal of Fields: LUCENE-7500
For the `TopDocs.totalHits` change, this PR relies on the fact that the encoding
of vInts and vLongs are compatible: you can write and read with any of them as
long as the value can be represented by a positive int.
MockTransportServices allows us to simulate network disruptions in our testing infra. Sadly it wasn't updated to the state of the art in Transport land. This PR brings it up to speed. Specifically:
1) Opening a connection is now also blocked (before only node connections were blocked)
2) Simplifies things using the latest connection based notification between TcpTransport and TransportService for when a disconnect happens.
3) By 2, it fixes a race condition where we may fail to respond to a sent request when it is sent concurrently with the closing of a connection. The old code relied on a node based bridge between tcp transport and transport service. Sadly, the following doesn't work any more:
```
if (transport.nodeConnected(node)) {
// this a connected node, disconnecting from it will be up the exception
transport.disconnectFromNode(node); <-- this may now be a noop and it doesn't mean that the transport service was notified of the disconnect between the nodeConnected check and here.
} else {
throw new ConnectTransportException(node, reason, e);
}
```
If secure settings are closed after the node has been constructed
no key-store access is permitted. We should also try to be as close as possible
to the real behavior if we mock secure settings. This change also adds
the same behavior as bootstrap has to InternalTestCluster to ensure we fail
if we try to read from secure settings after the node has been constructed.
In MockFSDirectory we should use the actual indexes settings to build
a new IndexMetaData settings object instead of the node settings.
Relates to #25297
I'm still trying to hunt down rare failures in the cancelation tests
for reindex and friends. Here is the latest:
https://elasticsearch-ci.elastic.co/job/elastic+elasticsearch+5.x+multijob-unix-compatibility/os=ubuntu/876/console
It doesn't show much, other than that one of the tasks didn't kill
itself when asked to cancel.
So I'm going a bit crazy with debug logging so that the next time this
comes up I can trace exactly what happened.
Additionally, this tweaks the logic around how rethrottles were
performed around cancel. Previously we set the `requestsPerSecond`
to `0` when we cancelled the task. That was the "old way" to set them
to inifity which was the intent. This switches that from `0` to
`Float.MAX_VALUE` which is the "new way" to set the `requestsPerSecond`
to infinity. I don't know that this is much better, but it feels better.
In tests, we sometimes create a random directory service and as part of that the IndexSettings get
built again. When we build them again, we need to make sure we do not set the secure settings on
the new IndexMetaData object that gets created as the node settings already have the secure
settings and the index settings and node settings will be combined. If both have secure settings,
the settings builder will throw an AlreadySetException.
Indexing or deleting documents through the IndexShard interface is quite complex and error-prone. It requires multiple calls, e.g. first prepareIndexOnPrimary, then do some checks if mapping updates have occurred, then do the actual indexing using index(...) etc. Currently each consumer of the interface (local recovery, peer recovery, replication) has additional custom checks built around it to deal with mapping updates, some of which are even inconsistent. This commit aims at reducing the complexity by exposing a simpler interface on IndexShard. There are no more prepare*** methods and the mapping complexity is also hidden, but still giving callers a possibility to implement custom logic to deal with mapping updates.
Today we maintain a map of open connections in order to close them when
a low level channel gets closed or handles a failure. We also spawn a thread due to some
tricky concurrency issues especially with respect to netty since they listener might
be called on a transport / boss thread. Executions on those threads must not be blocking
since otherwise we will likely deadlock the event processing which adds to the
complexity of the concurrency model in this class.
This change associates the connection with the close callback that every channel invokes
once it's closed which allows us to remove the connections map. A relaxed non-blocking
concurrency model in the connection close listener allows cleaning up connected nodes without
blocking on any lock.
This change adds tests for the aggregation parsing that try to simulate that we
can parse existing aggregations in a forward compatible way in the future,
ignoring potential newly added fields or substructures to the xContent response.
Removes the `assemble` task from the `build` task when we have
removed `assemble` from the project. We removed `assemble` from
projects that aren't published so our releases will be faster. But
That broke CI because CI builds with `gradle precommit build` and,
it turns out, that `build` includes `check` and `assemble`. With
this change CI will only run `check` for projects without an
`assemble`.
Today TcpTransport is the de-facto base-class for transport implementations.
The need for all the callbacks we have in TransportServiceAdaptor are not necessary
anymore since we can simply have the logic inside the base class itself. This change
moves the stats metrics directly into TcpTransport removing the need for low level
bytes send / received callbacks.
Removes the `assemble` task from projects that are not published.
This should speed up `gradle assemble` by skipping projects that
don't need to be built. Which is useful because `gradle assemble`
is how we cut releases.
We use assertBusy in many places where the underlying code throw exceptions. Currently we need to wrap those exceptions in a RuntimeException which is ugly.
This snapshot has faster range queries on range fields (LUCENE-7828), more
accurate norms (LUCENE-7730) and the ability to use fake term frequencies
(LUCENE-7854).
This commit renames the needsScores method so as to make it
automatically generatable, based on the name of the `_score` variable
which is available in search scripts. It also adds documentation to
ScriptContext to explain the naming and signature of such methods.
In #25201, a setting was added to allow setting the retry timeout for the rest client under the
impression that this would allow requests to go longer than 30s. However, there is also a socket
timeout that needs to be set to greater than 30s, which this change adds a setting for.
Expose the experimental simplepattern and
simplepatternsplit tokenizers in the common
analysis plugin. They provide tokenization based
on regular expressions, using Lucene's
deterministic regex implementation that is usually
faster than Java's and has protections against
creating too-deep stacks during matching.
Both have a not-very-useful default pattern of the
empty string because all tokenizer factories must
be able to be instantiated at index creation time.
They should always be configured by the user
in practice.
This commit adds a setting to change the request timeout for the rest client. This is useful as the
default timeout is 30s, which is also the same default for calls like cluster health. If both are
the same then the response from the cluster health api will not be received as the client usually
times out first making test failures harder to debug.
Relates #25185
Today if a channel gets closed due to a disconnect we notify the response
handler that the connection is closed and the node is disconnected. Unfortunately
this is not a complete solution since it only works for published connections.
Connections that are unpublished ie. for discovery can indefinitely hang since we
never invoke their handers when we get a failure while a user is waiting for
the response. This change adds connection tracking to TcpTransport that ensures
we are notifying the corresponding connection if there is a failure on a channel.
When we disabled `_all` by default for indices created in 6.0, we missed adding
a layer that would handle the situation where `_all` was not enabled in 5.x and
then the cluster was updated to 6.0, this means that when the cluster was
updated the `_all` field would be disabled for 5.x indices and field values
would not be added to the `_all` field.
This adds a compatibility layer for 5.x indices where we treat the default
enabled value for the `_all` field to be `true` if unset on 5.x indices.
Resolves#25068
Test: randomVersionBetween works with unreleased
Modifies randomVersionBetween so that it works with unreleased
versions. This should make switching a version from unreleased
to released much simpler.
This commit refactors the query phase in order to be able
to automatically detect queries that can be early terminated.
If the index sort matches the query sort, the top docs collection is early terminated
on each segment and the computing of the total number of hits that match the query is delegated to a simple TotalHitCountCollector.
This change also adds a new parameter to the search request called `track_total_hits`.
It indicates if the total number of hits that match the query should be tracked.
If false, queries sorted by the index sort will not try to compute this information and
and will limit the collection to the first N documents per segment.
Aggregations are not impacted and will continue to see every document
even when the index sort matches the query sort and `track_total_hits` is false.
Relates #6720
This commit modifies query_string, simple_query_string and multi_match queries to always use a DisjunctionMaxQuery when a disjunction over multiple fields is built. The tiebreaker is set to 1 in order to behave like the boolean query in terms of scoring.
The removal of the coord factor in Lucene 7 made this change mandatory to correctly handle minimum_should_match.
Closes#23966
This commit moves the assumeFalse() calls that implement test skipping
and blacklisting out of the @Before method of ESClientYamlSuiteTestCase.
The problem with having them in the @Before method is that if an
assumption triggers then the @Before methods of classes that extend
ESClientYamlSuiteTestCase will not run, but their @After methods will.
This can lead to inconsistencies that cause assertions in the @After
methods and fail the test even though it was skipped/blacklisted.
Instead the assumeFalse() calls are now at the beginning of the test()
method, which runs after all @Before methods (including those in classes
that extend ESClientYamlSuiteTestCase) have completed. The only side
effect is that overridden test() methods in classes that extend
ESClientYamlSuiteTestCase which call super.test() and also do other things
must now be designed not to consume any InternalAssumptionViolatedException
that may be thrown by the super.test() call.
Relates elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch#1650
For the response parsing we want to be lenient when it comes to parsing
new xContent fields. In order to ensure this in our testing, this change
adds a utility method to XContentTestUtils that takes xContent bytes
representation as input and recursively a random field on each object
level.
Sometimes we also want to exclude a whole subtree from this treatment
(e.g. skipping "_source"), other times an element (e.g. "fields", "highlight"
in SearchHit) can have arbitraryly named objects. Those cases can be
specified as exceptions.
Splits TranslogRecoveryPerformer into three parts:
- the translog operation to engine operation converter
- the operation perfomer (that indexes the operation into the engine)
- the translog statistics (for which there is already RecoveryState.Translog)
This makes it possible for peer recovery to use the same IndexShard interface as bulk shard requests (i.e. Engine operations instead of Translog operations). It also pushes the "fail on bad mapping" logic outside of IndexShard. Future pull requests could unify the BulkShard and peer recovery path even more.
This change moves the parent_id query to the parent-join module and handles the case when only the parent-join field can be declared on an index (index with single type on).
If single type is off it uses the legacy parent join field mapper and switch to the new one otherwise (default in 6).
Relates #20257
Both gradle and java code attempt to infer the type of a each
Version constant in Version.java. It is super important that
they infer that each constant has the same type. If they disagree
we might accidentally not be testing backwards compatibility for
some version.
This adds a test to make sure that they agree, modulo known and
accepted differences (mostly around alphas). It also changes the
minimum wire compatible version from the released 5.4.0 to the
unreleased 5.5.0 as that lines up with the gradle logic.
Relates to #24798
Note that the gradle and java version logic doesn't actually match so
this contains a hack to make it *look* like it matches. Since this is a
start, I'm merging it and going to work on some followups to make the
logic actually match.....
This commit creates TemplateScript and associated classes so that
templates no longer need a special ScriptService.compileTemplate method.
The execute() method is equivalent to the old run() method.
relates #20426
Previously, when allocating bytes for a BigArray, the array was created
(or attempted to be created) and only then would the array be checked
for the amount of RAM used to see if the circuit breaker should trip.
This is problematic because for very large arrays, if creating or
resizing the array, it is possible to attempt to create/resize and get
an OOM error before the circuit breaker trips, because the allocation
happens before checking with the circuit breaker.
This commit ensures that the circuit breaker is checked before all big
array allocations (note, this does not effect the array allocations that
are less than 16kb which use the [Type]ArrayWrapper classes found in
BigArrays.java). If such an allocation or resizing would cause the
circuit breaker to trip, then the breaker trips before attempting to
allocate and potentially running into an OOM error from the JVM.
Closes#24790
After every REST test we wait for the list of pending cluster tasks
to empty before moving on to the next task. If the list doesn't
empty in 10 second we fail the test. This improves the error message
when we fail the test to include the list of running tasks.
For comparing actual and parsed object equality for the response parsing we
currently rely on comparing the original xContent and the output of the parsed
object. Currently we only have cryptic error messages if this comparison fails
which are hard to read also because we recursively compare lists and maps of
the xContent structures we compare.
This commits leverages the existing NotEqualMessageBuilder for providing error
messages that are more detailed and useful for debugging if an error occurs.
ScriptContexts currently understand a FactoryType that can produce
instances of the script InstanceType. However, for search scripts, this
does not work as we have the concept of LeafSearchScript that is created
per lucene segment. This commit effectively renames the existing
SearchScript class into SearchScript.LeafFactory, which is a new,
optional, class that can be defined within a ScriptContext.
LeafSearchScript is effectively renamed back into SearchScript. This
change allows the model of stateless factory -> stateful factory ->
script instance to continue, but in a generic way that any script
context may take advantage of.
relates #20426
Removes the need for the `_UNRELEASED` suffix on versions by detecting if a version should be unreleased or not based on the versions around it. This should make it simpler to automate the task of adding a new version label.
This commit renames the concept of the "compiled type" to a "factory
type", along with all implementations of this class to be named Factory.
This brings it inline with the classes purpose.
This commit adds collection of all contexts to the parameters of
getScriptEngine. This will allow script engines like painless to
precache extra information about the contexts.
This commit changes the compile method of ScriptEngine to be generic in
the same way it is on ScriptService. This moves the shim of handling the
two existing context classes into each script engine, so that each
engine can be worked on independently to convert to real handling of
contexts.
This commit modifies the compile method of ScriptService to be context
aware. The ScriptContext is now a generic class which contains both the
instance type and compiled type for a script. Instance type may be
stateful (for example, pre loading field information for the index a
script will execute on, like in expressions), while the compiled type is
stateless and used to construct instance type instances. This change is
only a first step to cutover ScriptService to the new paradigm. It only
converts callers to the script service, and has a small shim to wrap
compilation from the script engines to support the current two fixed
instance types, SearchScript and ExecutableScript.
Since groovy was removed, we no longer have any ScriptEngines with
resources to release. We may want to keep the option open for a script
engine to close resources, but this would not be common. This commit
adds a default implementation to ScriptEngine for `close()` to reduce
the boiler plate that must be added for a ScriptEngine implementation.
With #24779 in place, we can now guaranteed that a single translog generation file will never have a sequence number conflict that needs to be resolved by looking at primary terms. These conflicts can a occur when a replica contains an operation which isn't part of the history of a newly promoted primary. That primary can then assign a different operation to the same slot and replicate it to the replica.
PS. Knowing that each generation file is conflict free will simplifying repairing these conflicts when we read from the translog.
PPS. This PR also fixes some bugs in the piping of primary terms in the bulk shard action. These bugs are a result of the legacy of IndexRequest/DeleteRequest being a ReplicationRequest. We need to change that as a follow up.
Relates to #10708
This commit cleans up tests which currently use custom script engine
implementations, converting them to use a MockScriptEngine with script
functions provided by the tests. It also creates a common set of metric
scripts which were copied across a couple metric agg tests.
Large test suites with unfortunate seed choices can easily exceed the
1000 script compilations per minute limit. This commit increases the
limit in integration tests to 2048.
Adds a "magic" key to the yaml testing stash mostly for use with
documentation tests. When unstashing an object, `$_path` is the
path into the current position in the object you are unstashing.
This means that in docs tests you can use
`// TESTRESPONSEs/somevalue/$body.${_path}/` to mean "replace
`somevalue` with whatever is the response in the same position."
Compare how you must carefully mock out all the numbers in the profile
response without this change:
```
// TESTRESPONSE[s/"id": "\[2aE02wS1R8q_QFnYu6vDVQ\]\[twitter\]\[1\]"/"id": $body.profile.shards.0.id/]
// TESTRESPONSE[s/"rewrite_time": 51443/"rewrite_time": $body.profile.shards.0.searches.0.rewrite_time/]
// TESTRESPONSE[s/"score": 51306/"score": $body.profile.shards.0.searches.0.query.0.breakdown.score/]
// TESTRESPONSE[s/"time_in_nanos": "1873811"/"time_in_nanos": $body.profile.shards.0.searches.0.query.0.time_in_nanos/]
// TESTRESPONSE[s/"build_scorer": 2935582/"build_scorer": $body.profile.shards.0.searches.0.query.0.breakdown.build_scorer/]
// TESTRESPONSE[s/"create_weight": 919297/"create_weight": $body.profile.shards.0.searches.0.query.0.breakdown.create_weight/]
// TESTRESPONSE[s/"next_doc": 53876/"next_doc": $body.profile.shards.0.searches.0.query.0.breakdown.next_doc/]
// TESTRESPONSE[s/"time_in_nanos": "391943"/"time_in_nanos": $body.profile.shards.0.searches.0.query.0.children.0.time_in_nanos/]
// TESTRESPONSE[s/"score": 28776/"score": $body.profile.shards.0.searches.0.query.0.children.0.breakdown.score/]
// TESTRESPONSE[s/"build_scorer": 784451/"build_scorer": $body.profile.shards.0.searches.0.query.0.children.0.breakdown.build_scorer/]
// TESTRESPONSE[s/"create_weight": 1669564/"create_weight": $body.profile.shards.0.searches.0.query.0.children.0.breakdown.create_weight/]
// TESTRESPONSE[s/"next_doc": 10111/"next_doc": $body.profile.shards.0.searches.0.query.0.children.0.breakdown.next_doc/]
// TESTRESPONSE[s/"time_in_nanos": "210682"/"time_in_nanos": $body.profile.shards.0.searches.0.query.0.children.1.time_in_nanos/]
// TESTRESPONSE[s/"score": 4552/"score": $body.profile.shards.0.searches.0.query.0.children.1.breakdown.score/]
// TESTRESPONSE[s/"build_scorer": 42602/"build_scorer": $body.profile.shards.0.searches.0.query.0.children.1.breakdown.build_scorer/]
// TESTRESPONSE[s/"create_weight": 89323/"create_weight": $body.profile.shards.0.searches.0.query.0.children.1.breakdown.create_weight/]
// TESTRESPONSE[s/"next_doc": 2852/"next_doc": $body.profile.shards.0.searches.0.query.0.children.1.breakdown.next_doc/]
// TESTRESPONSE[s/"time_in_nanos": "304311"/"time_in_nanos": $body.profile.shards.0.searches.0.collector.0.time_in_nanos/]
// TESTRESPONSE[s/"time_in_nanos": "32273"/"time_in_nanos": $body.profile.shards.0.searches.0.collector.0.children.0.time_in_nanos/]
```
To how you can cavalierly mock all the numbers at once with this change:
```
// TESTRESPONSE[s/(?<=[" ])\d+(\.\d+)?/$body.$_path/]
```
This commit removes an unused assertions enabled method in
ESTestCase. For future uses of such a method, use the field ENABLED in
org.elasticsearch.Assertions.
This commit moves the handling of nested and parent/child inner hits to specialized classes that can be defined outside of ES core.
InnerHitBuilderContext is now used by the parent query (nested or hasChild, ...) to build the sub context from the InnerHitBuilder definition.
BWC is also ensured so that nodes in previous versions can still send/receive inner hits to/from this version.
Relates #20257
As we work towards contexts implying the return type of compilation, we
first need ScriptContext to not be an enum. This commit removes the
Standard enum and Plugin subclass of ScriptContext.
ScriptEngine implementations have an overridable method to indicate they
are safe to use as inline scripts. Since groovy was removed fro 6.0,
there are no longer any implementations which used the default false
value. Furthermore, the value was not actually read anywhere. This
commit removes the method. The ScriptEngineRegistry was also no longer
necessary as it only was used to build a map from language to engine.
Allows plugins to register pre-configured tokenizers. Much
of the decisions are the same as those in #24223, #24572,
and #24223. This only migrates the lowercase tokenizer but
I figure that is a good start because it proves out the features.
This PR revolves around places in the code where introducing a StringBuilder might make the construction
of a String easier to follow and also, maybe avoid a case where the compiler's very safe way of introducing
StringBuilder instead of String might not always be optimal for performance.
Native scripts have been replaced in documentation by implementing
a ScriptEngine and they were deprecated in 5.5.0. This commit
removes the native script infrastructure for 6.0.
closes#19966
Approaching the release of 6.0 we need to sort out the usage of
`Version#minimumCompatibilityVersion` which was still set to 5.0.0.
Now this change moves it to the latest released version of 5.x (5.4 at this point)
to ensure we are compatible with the latest minor of the previous major. This change
also removes all the `_UNRELEASED` from the versions that where released and drops versions
that were never released and are not expected to be released (bugfixes in minors that are not
the latest in the previous major).
We've switched to supporting only `yml` files but anyone who didn't
notice will commit a `yaml` file which won't be executed
which is bad because it is easy not to notice. The test to catch this is
simple enough that I think it is worth adding just to warn folks about
their mistake.
This commit renames all rest test files to use the .yml extension
instead of .yaml. This way the extension used within all of
elasticsearch for yaml is consistent.
Moves the remaining preconfigured token figured into the analysis-common module. There were a couple of tests in core that depended on the pre-configured token filters so I had to touch them:
* `GetTermVectorsCheckDocFreqIT` depended on `type_as_payload` but didn't do anything important with it. I dropped the dependency. Then I moved the test to a single node test case because we're trying to cut down on the number of `ESIntegTestCase` subclasses.
* `AbstractTermVectorsTestCase` and its subclasses depended on `type_as_payload`. I dropped their usage of the token filter and added an integration test for the termvectors API that uses `type_as_payload` to the `analysis-common` module.
* `AnalysisModuleTests` expected a few pre-configured token filtes be registered by default. They aren't any more so I dropped this assertion. We assert that the `CommonAnalysisPlugin` registers these pre-built token filters in `CommonAnalysisFactoryTests`
* `SearchQueryIT` and `SuggestSearchIT` had tests that depended on the specific behavior of the token filters so I moved the tests to integration tests in `analysis-common`.
Today when an index is `read-only` the index is also blocked from
being deleted which sometimes is undesired since in-order to make
changes to a cluster indices must be deleted to free up space. This is
a likely scenario in a hosted environment when disk-space is limited to switch
indices read-only but allow deletions to free up space.
This is almost exclusively for docs test which frequently match the
entire response. This allow something like:
```
- set: {nodes.$master.http.publish_address: host}
- match:
$body:
{
"nodes": {
$host: {
... stuff in here ...
}
}
}
```
This should make it possible for the docs tests to work with
unpredictable keys.
This moves the releasing logic to the base test, so that individual test cases don't need
to worry about releasing the aggregators. It's not a big deal for individual aggs,
but once tests start using sub-aggs, it can become tricky to free (without double-freeing)
all the aggregators.
Template script engines (mustache, the only one) currently return a
BytesReference that users must know is utf8 encoded. This commit
modifies all callers and mustache to have the template engine return
String. This is much simpler, and does not require decoding in order to
use (for example, in ingest).
We had a hack in setting up permissions for tests to support testing
the lang-python plugin. We also had a hack to prevent Log4j from
loading a shaded version of Jansi provided by Jython. This plugin has
been removed so these hacks are no longer necessary.
Relates #24681
The disruption tests sit in a single test suite which causes these tests
to be single-threaded. We can split this test suite into multiple suites
(logically, of course) enabling them to be run in parallel reducing the
total run time of all integration tests in core. This commit splits the
discovery with service disruptions test suite into three suites
- master disruptions
- discovery disruptions
- cluster disruptions
The last one could probably be better named, it is meant to represent
performing actions in the cluster (indexing, failing a shard, etc.)
while a disruption is taking place.
Relates #24662
When constructing an array list, if we know the size of the list in
advance (because we are adding objects to it derived from another list),
we should size the array list to the appropriate capacity in advance (to
avoid resizing allocations). This commit does this in various places.
Relates #24439
* Add parent-join module
This change adds a new module named `parent-join`.
The goal of this module is to provide a replacement for the `_parent` field but as a first step this change only moves the `has_child`, `has_parent` queries and the `children` aggregation to this module.
These queries and aggregations are no longer in core but they are deployed by default as a module.
Relates #20257
Today we prune transport handlers in TransportService when a node is disconnected.
This can cause connections to starve in the TransportService if the connection is
opened as a short living connection ie. without sharing the connection to a node
via registering in the transport itself. This change now moves to pruning based
on the connections cache key to ensure we notify handlers as soon as the connection
is closed for all connections not just for registered connections.
Relates to #24632
Relates to #24575
Relates to #24557
- Removes clusterState, getInitialClusterState and getMinimumMasterNodes methods from Discovery interface.
- Sets PingContextProvider in ZenPing constructor
- Renames state in ZenDiscovery to committedState
This allows other plugins to use a client to call the functionality
that is in the core modules without duplicating the logic.
Plugins can now safely send the request and response classes via the
client even if the requests are executed locally. All relevant classes
are loaded by the core classloader such that plugins can share them.
This is re-adds this commit that was revered in 952feb58e4
This commit adds support for histogram and date_histogram agg compound order by refactoring and reusing terms agg order code. The major change is that the Terms.Order and Histogram.Order classes have been replaced/refactored into a new class BucketOrder. This is a breaking change for the Java Transport API. For backward compatibility with previous ES versions the (date)histogram compound order will use the first order. Also the _term and _time aggregation order keys have been deprecated; replaced by _key.
Relates to #20003: now that all these aggregations use the same order code, it should be easier to move validation to parse time (as a follow up PR).
Relates to #14771: histogram and date_histogram aggregation order will now be validated at reduce time.
Closes#23613: if a single BucketOrder that is not a tie-breaker is added with the Java Transport API, it will be converted into a CompoundOrder with a tie-breaker.
This allows other plugins to use a client to call the functionality
that is in the core modules without duplicating the logic.
Plugins can now safely send the request and response classes via the
client even if the requests are executed locally. All relevant classes
are loaded by the core classloader such that plugins can share them.
Adds tests for reindex-from-remote for the latest 2.4, 1.7, and
0.90 releases. 2.4 and 1.7 are fairly popular versions but 0.90
is a point of pride.
This fixes any issues those tests revealed.
Closes#23828Closes#24520
This adds parsing to all implementations of SingleBucketAggregations. They are mostly similar, so they share the common
base class `ParsedSingleBucketAggregation` and the shared base test `InternalSingleBucketAggregationTestCase`.
There are now three public static method to build instances of
PreConfiguredTokenFilter and the ctor is private. I chose static
methods instead of constructors because those allow us to change
out the implementation returned if we so desire.
Relates to #23658
This PR introduces a subproject in test/fixtures that contains a Vagrantfile used for standing up a
KRB5 KDC (Kerberos). The PR also includes helper scripts for provisioning principals, a few
changes to the HDFS Fixture to allow it to interface with the KDC, as well as a new suite of
integration tests for the HDFS Repository plugin.
The HDFS Repository plugin senses if the local environment can support the HDFS Fixture
(Windows is generally a restricted environment). If it can use the regular fixture, it then tests if
Vagrant is installed with a compatible version to determine if the secure test fixtures should be
enabled. If the secure tests are enabled, then we create a Kerberos KDC fixture, tasks for adding
the required principals, and an HDFS fixture configured for security. A new integration test task is
also configured to use the KDC and secure HDFS fixture and to run a testing suite that uses
authentication. At the end of the secure integration test the fixtures are torn down.
Adds a new "icu_collation" field type that exposes lucene's
ICUCollationDocValuesField. ICUCollationDocValuesField is the replacement
for ICUCollationKeyFilter which has been deprecated since Lucene 5.
This commit renames ScriptEngineService to ScriptEngine. It is often
confusing because we have the ScriptService, and then
ScriptEngineService implementations, but the latter are not services as
we see in other places in elasticsearch.
File scripts have 2 related settings: the path of file scripts, and
whether they can be dynamically reloaded. This commit deprecates those
settings.
relates #21798
Today we rely on background syncs to relay the global checkpoint under
the mandate of the primary to its replicas. This means that the global
checkpoint on a replica can lag far behind the primary. The commit moves
to inlining global checkpoints with replication requests. When a
replication operation is performed, the primary will send the latest
global checkpoint inline with the replica requests. This keeps the
replicas closer in-sync with the primary.
However, consider a replication request that is not followed by another
replication request for an indefinite period of time. When the replicas
respond to the primary with their local checkpoint, the primary will
advance its global checkpoint. During this indefinite period of time,
the replicas will not be notified of the advanced global
checkpoint. This necessitates a need for another sync. To achieve this,
we perform a global checkpoint sync when a shard falls idle.
Relates #24513
This changes the way we register pre-configured token filters so that
plugins can declare them and starts to move all of the pre-configured
token filters out of core. It doesn't finish the job because doing
so would make the change unreviewably large. So this PR includes
a shim that keeps the "old" way of registering pre-configured token
filters around.
The Lowercase token filter is special because there is a "special"
interaction between it and the lowercase tokenizer. I'm not sure
exactly what to do about it so for now I'm leaving it alone with
the intent of figuring out what to do with it in a followup.
This also renames these pre-configured token filters from
"pre-built" to "pre-configured" because that seemed like a more
descriptive name.
This is a part of #23658
Now that indices have a single type by default, we can move to the next step
and identify documents using their `_id` rather than the `_uid`.
One notable change in this commit is that I made deletions implicitly create
types. This helps with the live version map in the case that documents are
deleted before the first type is introduced. Otherwise there would be no way
to differenciate `DELETE index/foo/1` followed by `PUT index/foo/1` from
`DELETE index/bar/1` followed by `PUT index/foo/1`, even though those are
different if versioning is involved.
In order to make MockLogAppender (utility to test logging) available outside
of es-core move MockLogAppender from test core-tests to test framework. As
package names do not change, no need to change clients.
Changes the scope of the AllocationService dependency injection hack so that it is at least contained to the AllocationService and does not leak into the Discovery world.
Async shard fetching only uses the node id to correlate responses to requests. This can lead to a situation where a response from an earlier request is mistaken as response from a new request when a node is restarted. This commit adds unique round ids to correlate responses to requests.
TransportService and RemoteClusterService are closely coupled already today
and to simplify remote cluster integration down the road it can be a direct
dependency of TransportService. This change moves RemoteClusterService into
TransportService with the goal to make it a hidden implementation detail
of TransportService in followup changes.
This commit cleans up some cases where a list or map was being
constructed, and then an existing collection was copied into the new
collection. The clean is to instead use an appropriate constructor to
directly copy the existing collection in during collection
construction. The advantage of this is that the new collection is sized
appropriately.
Relates #24409
Separates cluster state publishing from applying cluster states:
- ClusterService is split into two classes MasterService and ClusterApplierService. MasterService has the responsibility to calculate cluster state updates for actions that want to change the cluster state (create index, update shard routing table, etc.). ClusterApplierService has the responsibility to apply cluster states that have been successfully published and invokes the cluster state appliers and listeners.
- ClusterApplierService keeps track of the last applied state, but MasterService is stateless and uses the last cluster state that is provided by the discovery module to calculate the next prospective state. The ClusterService class is still kept around, which now just delegates actions to ClusterApplierService and MasterService.
- The discovery implementation is now responsible for managing the last cluster state that is used by the consensus layer and the master service. It also exposes the initial cluster state which is used by the ClusterApplierService. The discovery implementation is also responsible for adding the right cluster-level blocks to the initial state.
- NoneDiscovery has been renamed to TribeDiscovery as it is exclusively used by TribeService. It adds the tribe blocks to the initial state.
- ZenDiscovery is synchronized on state changes to the last cluster state that is used by the consensus layer and the master service, and does not submit cluster state update tasks anymore to make changes to the disco state (except when becoming master).
Control flow for cluster state updates is now as follows:
- State updates are sent to MasterService
- MasterService gets the latest committed cluster state from the discovery implementation and calculates the next cluster state to publish
- MasterService submits the new prospective cluster state to the discovery implementation for publishing
- Discovery implementation publishes cluster states to all nodes and, once the state is committed, asks the ClusterApplierService to apply the newly committed state.
- ClusterApplierService applies state to local node.
This adds the `index.mapping.single_type` setting, which enforces that indices
have at most one type when it is true. The default value is true for 6.0+ indices
and false for old indices.
Relates #15613
This commit fixes some inconsistencies in long GC disruption where we
mixed stopping and suspending when the action we are performing on
threads is suspending which is distinct from stopping a thread.
The one argument ctor for `Script` creates a script with the
default language but most usages of are for testing and either
don't care about the language or are for use with
`MockScriptEngine`. This replaces most usages of the one argument
ctor on `Script` with calls to `ESTestCase#mockScript` to make
it clear that the tests don't need the default scripting language.
I've also factored out some copy and pasted script generation
code into a single place. I would have had to change that code
to use `mockScript` anyway, so it was easier to perform the
refactor.
Relates to #16314
We can leak disrupted threads here since we never wait for them to
complete after freeing them from their loops. This commit addresses this
by joining on disrupted threads, and addresses fallout from trying to
join here.
Relates #24338
Another step down the road to dropping the
lucene-analyzers-common dependency from core.
Note that this removes some tests that no longer compile from
core. I played around with adding them to the analysis-common
module where they would compile but we already test these in
the tests generated from the example usage in the documentation.
I'm not super happy with the way that `requriesAnalysisSettings`
works with regards to plugins. I think it'd be fairly bug-prone
for plugin authors to use. But I'm making it visible as is for
now and I'll rethink later.
A part of #23658
Most of these settings should always be pulled from the repository
settings. A couple were leftover that should be moved to client
settings. The path style access setting should be removed altogether.
This commit adds deprecations for all of these existing settings, as
well as adding new client specific settings for max retries and
throttling.
relates #24143
Creates a new task `namingConventionsMain`, that runs on the
`buildSrc` and `test:framework` projects and fails the build if
any of the classes in the main artifacts are named like tests or
are non-abstract subclasses of ESTestCase.
It also fixes the three tests that would cause it to fail.
`tests.enable_mock_modules` is a documented but unrespected / unused
option to disable all mock modules / pluings during test runs. This
will basically site-step mock assertions like check-index on shard closing.
This can speed up test-execution dramatically on nodes with slow disks etc.
Relates to #24304
If the user explicitly configured path.data to include
default.path.data, then we should not fail the node if we find indices
in default.path.data. This commit addresses this.
Relates #24285
The unwrap method was leftover from support javascript and python. Since
those languages are removed in 6.0, this commit removes the unwrap
feature from scripts.
Today we might promote a primary and recover from store where after translog
recovery the local checkpoint is still behind the maximum sequence ID seen.
To fill the holes in the sequence ID history this PR adds a utility method
that fills up all missing sequence IDs up to the maximum seen sequence ID
with no-ops.
Relates to #10708
Start moving built in analysis components into the new analysis-common
module. The goal of this project is:
1. Remove core's dependency on lucene-analyzers-common.jar which should
shrink the dependencies for transport client and high level rest client.
2. Prove that analysis plugins can do all the "built in" things by moving all
"built in" behavior to a plugin.
3. Force tests not to depend on any oddball analyzer behavior. If tests
need anything more than the standard analyzer they can use the mock
analyzer provided by Lucene's test infrastructure.
This change adds an index setting to define how the documents should be sorted inside each Segment.
It allows any numeric, date, boolean or keyword field inside a mapping to be used to sort the index on disk.
It is not allowed to use a `nested` fields inside an index that defines an index sorting since `nested` fields relies on the original sort of the index.
This change does not add early termination capabilities in the search layer. This will be added in a follow up.
Relates #6720
This change simplifies how the rest test runner finds test files and
removes all leniency. Previously multiple prefixes and suffixes would
be tried, and tests could exist inside or outside of the classpath,
although outside of the classpath never quite worked. Now only classpath
tests are supported, and only one resource prefix is supported,
`/rest-api-spec/tests`.
closes#20240
We want to upgrade to Lucene 7 ahead of time in order to be able to check whether it causes any trouble to Elasticsearch before Lucene 7.0 gets released. From a user perspective, the main benefit of this upgrade is the enhanced support for sparse fields, whose resource consumption is now function of the number of docs that have a value rather than the total number of docs in the index.
Some notes about the change:
- it includes the deprecation of the `disable_coord` parameter of the `bool` and `common_terms` queries: Lucene has removed support for coord factors
- it includes the deprecation of the `index.similarity.base` expert setting, since it was only useful to configure coords and query norms, which have both been removed
- two tests have been marked with `@AwaitsFix` because of #23966, which we intend to address after the merge
In Elasticsearch 5.3.0 a bug was introduced in the merging of default
settings when the target setting existed as an array. When this bug
concerns path.data and default.path.data, we ended up in a situation
where the paths specified in both settings would be used to write index
data. Since our packaging sets default.path.data, users that configure
multiple data paths via an array and use the packaging are subject to
having shards land in paths in default.path.data when that is very
likely not what they intended.
This commit is an attempt to rectify this situation. If path.data and
default.path.data are configured, we check for the presence of indices
there. If we find any, we log messages explaining the situation and fail
the node.
Relates #24099
Some systems like GCE rely on a plaintext file containing credentials.
Rather than extract the information out of that credentials file and
store each peace individually in the keystore, it is cleaner to just
store the entire file.
This commit adds support to the keystore wrapper for secure file
settings. These are settings that contain an entire file that would
normally be stored on the local filesystem. Retrieving the file returns
an input stream to the file contents. This also adds a `add-file`
command to the keystore cli.
In order to support both strings and files as values for settings, the
metadata format of the keystore has also been updated (with backcompat)
to keep a map of setting name to type.
This commit adds support for replacing a stashed value within a header of a REST test. This is
useful for requests that may want to use a value previously obtained within a header.
We had a couple of unfortunate field name collisions in our CI, where the json duplicate check tripped. Increasing the minimum length of randomly generated field names should decrease the chance of this issue happening again.
This change adds secure settings for access/secret keys and proxy
username/password to ec2 discovery. It adds the new settings with the
prefix `discovery.ec2`, copies other relevant ec2 client settings to the
same prefix, and deprecates all other settings (`cloud.aws.*` and
`cloud.aws.ec2.*`). Note that this is simpler than the client configs
in repository-s3 because discovery is only initialized once for the
entire node, so there is no reason to complicate the configuration with
the ability to have multiple sets of client settings.
relates #22475
This test was sporadically failing for the following reason:
- 4 nodes (nodes 0, 1, 2, and 3) running with `minimum_master_nodes` set to 3
- we stop 2 nodes (node 0 and 3)
- wait for cluster block to be in place on all nodes
- start 2 nodes (node 4 and node 5) and do a `prepareHealth().setWaitForNodes("4")`
- then do a search request
The search request runs into the `ClusterBlockException` as the `prepareHealth().setWaitForNodes("4")` check succeeds on a cluster state that has
nodes 1, 2, 3, and 4, i.e., only one of the two new nodes has joined the cluster and only one of the two dead nodes was removed by the master
(removing the dead nodes only happens after there are again `minimum_master_nodes` nodes in the cluster).
This commit fixes the issue by reusing a method from InternalTestCluster that checks that the right nodes have rejoined the cluster.
ESTestCase has methods to shuffle xContent keys given a builder or a parser. Shuffling wasn't actually doing what was expected but rather reordering the keys in their natural ordering, hence the output was always the same at every run. Corrected that and added tests, also fixed a couple of tests that were affected by this fix.
When executing an index operation on the primary shard,
`TransportShardBulkAction` first parses the document, sees if there are any
mapping updates that needs to be applied, and then updates the mapping on the
master node. It then re-parses the document to make sure that the mappings have
been applied and propagated.
This adds a check that skips the second parsing of the document in the event
there was not a mapping update applied in the first case.
Fixes a performance regression introduced in #23665
This commit renames the random ASCII helper methods in ESTestCase. This
is because this method ultimately uses the random ASCII methods from
randomized runner, but these methods actually only produce random
strings generated from [a-zA-Z].
Relates #23886
the test reduce the wait for initial cluster state to 0, causing multiple nodes to be start while elections are going on. This means there is a chance of a split election which shouldn't cause the test to time out.
This commit adds a single node discovery type. With this discovery type,
a node will elect itself as master and never form a cluster with another
node.
Relates #23595
It starts nodes in any order and thus it disabled the wait for first cluster state at node start up time
the later is required for the auto management logic.
Closes#23728
The method Boolean#getBoolean is dangerous. It is too easy to mistakenly
invoke this method thinking that it is parsing a string as a
boolean. However, what it actually does is get a system property with
the specified string, and then attempts to use usual crappy boolean
parsing in the JDK to parse that system property as boolean with
complete leniency (it parses every input value into either true or
false); that is, this method amounts to invoking
Boolean#parseBoolean(String) on the result of
System#getProperty(String). Boo. This commit bans usage of this method.
Relates #23864
This commit changes the listener passed to sendMessage from a Runnable
to a ActionListener.
This change also removes IOException from the sendMessage signature.
That signature is misleading as it allows implementers to assume an
exception will be thrown in case of failure. That does not happen due
to Netty's async nature.
When executing an update request, the request timeout is not transferred
to the index/delete request executed on behalf of the update
request. This leads to update requests not timing out when they should
(e.g., if not all shards are available when the request specifies
wait_for_shards=all with a small timeout). This commit causes the
index/delete requests to honor the update request timeout.
Relates #23825
After the removal of the joda time hack we used to have, we can cleanup
the codebase handling in security, jarhell and plugins to be more picky
about uniqueness. This was originally in #18959 which was never merged.
closes#18959
Search took time uses an absolute clock to measure elapsed time, and
then tries to deal with the complexities of using an absolute clock for
this purpose. Instead, we should use a high-precision monotonic relative
clock that is designed exactly for measuring elapsed time. This commit
modifies the search infrastructure to use a relative clock for measuring
took time, but still provides an absolute clock for the components of
search that require a real clock (e.g., index name expression
resolution, etc.).
Relates #23662
Currently the task manager is tied to the transport and can only create tasks based on TransportRequests. This commit enables task manager to support tasks created by non-transport services such as the persistent tasks service.
Throw error when skip or do sections are malformed, such as they don't start with the proper token (START_OBJECT). That signals bad indentation, which would be ignored otherwise. Thanks (or due to) our pull parsing code, we were still able to properly parse the sections, yet other runners weren't able to.
Closes#21980
* [TEST] fix indentation in matrix_stats yaml tests
* [TEST] fix indentation in painless yaml test
* [TEST] fix indentation in analysis yaml tests
* [TEST] fix indentation in generated docs yaml tests
* [TEST] fix indentation in multi_cluster_search yaml tests
Today when resetting the deprecation logger after a test is torn down,
we attach a new thread context to the deprecation logger. This thread
context is never cleared and we are left with a thread context attached
to the deprecation logger for every test method that ran in the same
JVM. This commit adds a flag when resetting the deprecation logger to
not attach a new thread context when the test is being torn down.
Relates #23441
This commit fixes the date format in warning headers. There is some
confusion around whether or not RFC 1123 requires two-digit
days. However, the warning header specification very clearly relies on a
format that requires two-digit days. This commit removes the usage of
RFC 1123 date/time format from Java 8, which allows for one-digit days,
in favor of a format that forces two-digit days (it's otherwise
identical to RFC 1123 format, it is just fixed width).
Relates #23418
This commit adds a convenience method for simultaneously asserting
settings deprecations and other warnings and fixes some tests where
setting deprecations and general warnings were present.
Previously, cluster.routing.allocation.same_shard.host was not a dynamic
setting and could not be updated after startup. This commit changes the
behavior to allow the setting to be dynamically updatable. The
documentation already states that the setting is dynamic so no
documentation changes are required.
Closes#22992
The warning header used by Elasticsearch for delivering deprecation
warnings has a specific format (RFC 7234, section 5.5). The format
specifies that the warning header should be of the form
warn-code warn-agent warn-text [warn-date]
Here, the warn-code is a three-digit code which communicates various
meanings. The warn-agent is a string used to identify the source of the
warning (either a host:port combination, or some other identifier). The
warn-text is quoted string which conveys the semantic meaning of the
warning. The warn-date is an optional quoted date that can be in a few
different formats.
This commit corrects the warning header within Elasticsearch to follow
this specification. We use the warn-code 299 which means a
"miscellaneous persistent warning." For the warn-agent, we use the
version of Elasticsearch that produced the warning. The warn-text is
unchanged from what we deliver today, but is wrapped in quotes as
specified (this is important as a problem that exists today is that
multiple warnings can not be split by comma to obtain the individual
warnings as the warnings might themselves contain commas). For the
warn-date, we use the RFC 1123 format.
Relates #23275
This allows to set content-type together with the body itself. At the moment it is always json, but this change allows makes it easier to randomize it later
Console.readText may return null in certain cases. This commit fixes a
bug in Terminal.promptYesNo which assumed a non-null return value. It
also adds a test for this, and modifies mock terminal to be able to
handle null input values.
In #23253 we added an the ability to incrementally reduce search results.
This change exposes the parameter to control the batch since and therefore
the memory consumption of a large search request.
Today all query results are buffered up until we received responses of
all shards. This can hold on to a significant amount of memory if the number of
shards is large. This commit adds a first step towards incrementally reducing
aggregations results if a, per search request, configurable amount of responses
are received. If enough query results have been received and buffered all so-far
received aggregation responses will be reduced and released to be GCed.
This commit cleans up some parsing tests added from the High Level Rest Client: IndexResponseTests, DeleteResponseTests, UpdateResponseTests, BulkItemResponseTests.
These tests are now more uniform with the others test-from-to-XContent tests we have, they now shuffle the XContent fields before parsing, the asserting method for parsed objects does not used a Map<String, Object> anymore, and buggy equals/hasCode methods in ShardInfo and ShardInfo.Failure have been removed.
This commit enforces the requirement of Content-Type for the REST layer and removes the deprecated methods in transport
requests and their usages.
While doing this, it turns out that there are many places where *Entity classes are used from the apache http client
libraries and many of these usages did not specify the content type. The methods that do not specify a content type
explicitly have been added to forbidden apis to prevent more of these from entering our code base.
Relates #19388
With #22977, network disruption also disconnects nodes from the transport service. That has the side effect that when the disruption is healed, the disconnected node stay disconnected until the `NodeConnectionsService` restores the connection. This can take too long for the tests. This PR adds logic to the cluster healing to restore connections immediately.
See https://elasticsearch-ci.elastic.co/job/elastic+elasticsearch+master+multijob-unix-compatibility/os=debian/611/console for an example failure.
When nested objects are present in the mappings, many queries get deoptimized
due to the need to exclude documents that are not in the right space. For
instance, a filter is applied to all queries that prevents them from matching
non-root documents (`+*:* -_type:__*`). Moreover, a filter is applied to all
child queries of `nested` queries in order to make sure that the child query
only matches child documents (`_type:__nested_path`), which is required by
`ToParentBlockJoinQuery` (the Lucene query behing Elasticsearch's `nested`
queries).
These additional filters slow down `nested` queries. In 1.7-, the cost was
somehow amortized by the fact that we cached filters very aggressively. However,
this has proven to be a significant source of slow downs since 2.0 for users
of `nested` mappings and queries, see #20797.
This change makes the filtering a bit smarter. For instance if the query is a
`match_all` query, then we need to exclude nested docs. However, if the query
is `foo: bar` then it may only match root documents since `foo` is a top-level
field, so no additional filtering is required.
Another improvement is to use a `FILTER` clause on all types rather than a
`MUST_NOT` clause on all nested paths when possible since `FILTER` clauses
are more efficient.
Here are some examples of queries and how they get rewritten:
```
"match_all": {}
```
This query gets rewritten to `ConstantScore(+*:* -_type:__*)` on master and
`ConstantScore(_type:AutomatonQuery {\norg.apache.lucene.util.automaton.Automaton@4371da44})`
with this change. The automaton is the complement of `_type:__*` so it matches
the same documents, but is faster since it is now a positive clause. Simplistic
performance testing on a 10M index where each root document has 5 nested
documents on average gave a latency of 420ms on master and 90ms with this change
applied.
```
"term": {
"foo": {
"value": "0"
}
}
```
This query is rewritten to `+foo:0 #(ConstantScore(+*:* -_type:__*))^0.0` on
master and `foo:0` with this change: we do not need to filter nested docs out
since the query cannot match nested docs. While doing performance testing in
the same conditions as above, response times went from 250ms to 50ms.
```
"nested": {
"path": "nested",
"query": {
"term": {
"nested.foo": {
"value": "0"
}
}
}
}
```
This query is rewritten to
`+ToParentBlockJoinQuery (+nested.foo:0 #_type:__nested) #(ConstantScore(+*:* -_type:__*))^0.0`
on master and `ToParentBlockJoinQuery (nested.foo:0)` with this change. The
top-level filter (`-_type:__*`) could be removed since `nested` queries only
match documents of the parent space, as well as the child filter
(`#_type:__nested`) since the child query may only match nested docs since the
`nested` object has both `include_in_parent` and `include_in_root` set to
`false`. While doing performance testing in the same conditions as above,
response times went from 850ms to 270ms.
I encountered several cases of duplicate field names when generating random
fields using the RandomObjects helper. This leads to invalid json in some tests,
so increasing the minimum field name length to four to make this less likely to
happen.
When Netty decodes a bad HTTP request, it marks the decoder result on
the HTTP request as a failure, and reroutes the request to GET
/bad-request. This either leads to puzzling responses when a bad request
is sent to Elasticsearch (if an index named "bad-request" does not exist
then it produces an index not found exception and otherwise responds
with the index settings for the index named "bad-request"). This commit
addresses this by inspecting the decoder result on the HTTP request and
dispatching the request to a bad request handler preserving the initial
cause of the bad request and providing an error message to the client.
Relates #23153
This commit adds a new method to the TransportChannel that provides access to the version of the
remote node that the response is being sent on and that the request came from. This is helpful
for serialization of data attached as headers.
The traces callback is only called after responses are set. This can lead to concurrent issues where the trace is notified of previously sent responses if it was added after the response was sent (enabling further execution of the test) but before the tracer call backs are called.
EvillPeerRecoveryIT checks scenario where recovery is happening while there are on going indexing operation that already have been assigned a seq# . This is fairly hard to achieve and the test goes through a couple of hoops via the plugin infra to achieve that. This PR extends the unit tests infra to allow for those hoops to happen in unit tests. This allows the test to be moved to RecoveryDuringReplicationTests
Relates to #22484
We have a bunch of interfaces that have only a single implementation
for 6 years now. These interfaces are pretty useless from a SW development
perspective and only add unnecessary abstractions. They also require
lots of casting in many places where we expect that there is only one
concrete implementation. This change removes the interfaces, makes
all of the classes final and removes the duplicate `foo` `getFoo` accessors
in favor of `getFoo` from these classes.
Elasticsearch v5.0.0 uses allocation IDs to safely allocate primary shards whereas prior versions of ES used a version-based mode instead. Elasticsearch v5 still has support for version-based primary shard allocation as it needs to be able to load 2.x shards. ES v6 can drop the legacy support.
#22194 gave us the ability to open low level temporary connections to remote node based on their address. With this use case out of the way, actual full blown connections should validate the node on the other side, making sure we speak to who we think we speak to. This helps in case where multiple nodes are started on the same host and a quick node restart causes them to swap addresses, which in turn can cause confusion down the road.
Secure settings from the elasticsearch keystore were not yet validated.
This changed improves support in Settings so that secure settings more
seamlessly blend in with normal settings, allowing the existing settings
validation to work. Note that the setting names are still not validated
(yet) when using the elasticsearc-keystore tool.
As part of #22116 we are going to forbid usage of api
java.net.URL#openStream(). However in a number of places across the
we use this method to read files from the local filesystem. This commit
introduces a helper method openFileURLStream(URL url) to read files
from URLs. It does specific validation to only ensure that file:/
urls are read.
Additionlly, this commit removes unneeded method
FileSystemUtil.newBufferedReader(URL, Charset). This method used the
openStream () method which will soon be forbidden. Instead we use the
Files.newBufferedReader(Path, Charset).
This is in order to trigger listeners for disconnect events, most importantly the NodeFaultDetection. MockTransportService now does slightly a better job at mimicking real life failures: connecting to already connected node will be a noop (we don't detect any errors here in production either) and failing to send will cause the target node to be disconnected.
This is the cause of failure in https://elasticsearch-ci.elastic.co/job/elastic+elasticsearch+5.2+multijob-unix-compatibility/os=debian/72
When a node receives a new cluster state from the master, it opens up connections to any new node in the cluster state. That has always been done serially on the cluster state thread but it has been a long standing TODO to do this concurrently, which is done by this PR.
This is spin off of #22828, where an extra handshake is done whenever connecting to a node, which may slow down connecting. Also, the handshake is done in a blocking fashion which triggers assertions w.r.t blocking requests on the cluster state thread. Instead of adding an exception, I opted to implement concurrent connections which both side steps the assertion and compensates for the extra handshake.
This commit upgrades the checkstyle configuration from version 5.9 to
version 7.5, the latest version as of today. The main enhancement
obtained via this upgrade is better detection of redundant modifiers.
Relates #22960
This change adds a strict mode for xcontent parsing on the rest layer. The strict mode will be off by default for 5.x and in a separate commit will be enabled by default for 6.0. The strict mode, which can be enabled by setting `http.content_type.required: true` in 5.x, will require that all incoming rest requests have a valid and supported content type header before the request is dispatched. In the non-strict mode, the Content-Type header will be inspected and if it is not present or not valid, we will continue with auto detection of content like we have done previously.
The content type header is parsed to the matching XContentType value with the only exception being for plain text requests. This value is then passed on with the content bytes so that we can reduce the number of places where we need to auto-detect the content type.
As part of this, many transport requests and builders were updated to provide methods that
accepted the XContentType along with the bytes and the methods that would rely on auto-detection have been deprecated.
In the non-strict mode, deprecation warnings are issued whenever a request with body doesn't provide the Content-Type header.
See #19388
This commit change ElasticsearchException.failureFromXContent() method so that it now parses root causes which were ignored before, and adds them as suppressed exceptions of the returned exception.
The seq# base recovery logic relies on rolling back lucene to remove any operations above the global checkpoint. This part of the plan is not implemented yet but have to have these guarantees. Instead we should make the seq# logic validate that the last commit point (and the only one we have) maintains the invariant and if not, fall back to file based recovery.
This commit adds a test that creates situation where rollback is needed (primary failover with ops in flight) and fixes another issue that was surfaced by it - if a primary can't serve a seq# based recovery request and does a file copy, it still used the incoming `startSeqNo` as a filter.
Relates to #22484 & #10708
With the new secure settings, methods like getAsMap() no longer work
correctly as a means of checking for empty settings, or the total size.
This change converts the existing uses of that method to use methods
directly on Settings. Note this does not update the implementations to
account for SecureSettings, as that will require a followup which
changes how secure settings work.
Also adds many `equals` and `hashCode` implementations and moves
the failure printing in `MatchAssertion` into a common spot and
exposes it over `assertEqualsWithErrorMessageFromXContent` which
does an object equality test but then uses `toXContent` to print
the differences.
Relates to #22278
This moves the building blocks for delete by query into core. This
should enabled two thigns:
1. Plugins other than reindex to implement "bulk by scroll" style
operations.
2. Plugins to directly call delete by query. Those plugins should
be careful to make sure that task cancellation still works, but
this should be possible.
Notes:
1. I've mostly just moved classes and moved around tests methods.
2. I haven't been super careful about cohesion between these core
classes and reindex. They are quite interconnected because I wanted
to make the change as mechanical as possible.
Closes#22616
* S3 repository: Add named configurations
This change implements named configurations for s3 repository as
proposed in #22520. The access/secret key secure settings which were
added in #22479 are reverted, and the only secure settings are those
with the new named configs. All other previously used settings for the
connection are deprecated.
closes#22520
Also adds many `equals` and `hashCode` implementations and moves
the failure printing in `MatchAssertion` into a common spot and
exposes it over `assertEqualsWithErrorMessageFromXContent` which
does an object equality test but then uses `toXContent` to print
the differences.
Relates to #22278
This commit introduces sequence-number-based recovery. When a replica
has fallen out of sync, rather than performing a file-based recovery we
first attempt to replay operations since the last local checkpoint on
the replica. To do this, at the start of recovery the replica tells the
primary what its local checkpoint is. The primary will then wait for all
operations between that local checkpoint and the current maximum
sequence number to complete; this is to ensure that there are no gaps in
the operations that will be replayed from the primary to the
replica. This is a best-effort attempt as we currently have no
guarantees on the primary that these operations will be available; if we
are not able to replay all operations in the desired range, we just
fallback to file-based recovery. Later work will strengthen the
guarantees.
Relates #22484
* Add top hits collapsing to search request
The field collapsing is done with a custom top docs collector that "collapse" search hits with same field value.
The distributed aspect is resolve using the two passes that the regular search uses. The first pass "collapse" the top hits, then the coordinating node merge/collapse the top hits from each shard.
```
GET _search
{
"collapse": {
"field": "category",
}
}
```
This change also adds an ExpandCollapseSearchResponseListener that intercepts the search response and expands collapsed hits using the CollapseBuilder#innerHit} options.
The retrieval of each inner_hits is done by sending a query to all shards filtered by the collapse key.
```
GET _search
{
"collapse": {
"field": "category",
"inner_hits": {
"size": 2
}
}
}
```
To effectively allow a plugin to intercept a transport handler it needs
to know if the handler must be executed even if there is a rejection on the
thread pool in the case the wrapper forks a thread to execute the actual handler.
Today we try to be smart and make a generic decision if an exception should
be treated as a document failure but in some cases concurrency in the index writer
make this decision very difficult since we don't have a consistent state in the case
another thread is currently failing the IndexWriter/InternalEngine due to a tragic event.
This change simplifies the exception handling and makes specific decisions about document failures
rather than using a generic heuristic. This prevent exceptions to be treated as document failures
that should have failed the engine but backed out of failing since since some other thread has
already taken over the failure procedure but didn't finish yet.
* S3 repository: Deprecate specifying credentials through env vars and sys props
This is a follow up to #22479, where storing credentials secure way was
added.
Today we do not preserve response headers if they are present on a transport protocol
response. While preserving these headers is not always desired, in the most cases we
should pass on these headers to have consistent results for depreciation headers etc.
yet, this hasn't been much of a problem since most of the deprecations are detected early
ie. on the coordinating node such that this bug wasn't uncovered until #22647
This commit allow to optionally preserve headers when a context is restored and also streamlines
the context restore since it leaked frequently into the callers thread context when the callers
context wasn't restored again.
Previously, certain settings that could take multiple comma delimited
values would pick up incorrect values for all entries but the first if
each comma separated value was followed by a whitespace character. For
example, the multi-value "A,B,C" would be correctly parsed as
["A", "B", "C"] but the multi-value "A, B, C" would be incorrectly parsed
as ["A", " B", " C"].
This commit allows a comma separated list to have whitespace characters
after each entry. The specific settings that were affected by this are:
cluster.routing.allocation.awareness.attributes
index.routing.allocation.require.*
index.routing.allocation.include.*
index.routing.allocation.exclude.*
cluster.routing.allocation.require.*
cluster.routing.allocation.include.*
cluster.routing.allocation.exclude.*
http.cors.allow-methods
http.cors.allow-headers
For the allocation filtering related settings, this commit also provides
validation of each specified entry if the filtering is done by _ip,
_host_ip, or _publish_ip, to ensure that each entry is a valid IP
address.
Closes#22297
Today we have quite some abstractions that are essentially providing a simple
dispatch method to the plugins defining a `HttpServerTransport`. This commit
removes `HttpServer` and `HttpServerAdaptor` and introduces a simple `Dispatcher` functional
interface that delegate to `RestController` by default.
Relates to #18482
All the language clients support a special ignore parameter that doesn't get passed to elasticsearch with the request, but used to indicate which error code should not lead to an exception if returned for a specific request.
Moving this to the low level REST client will allow the high level REST client to make use of it too, for instance so that it doesn't have to intercept ResponseExceptions when the get api returns a 404.
TransportInterceptors are commonly used to enrich requests with headers etc.
which requires access the the thread context. This is not always easily possible
since threadpools are hard to access for instance if the interceptor is used on a transport client.
This commit passes on the thread context to all the interceptors for further consumption.
Closes#22585