* Provide an Option to Use Path-Style-Access with S3 Repo
* As discussed, added the option to use path style access back again and
deprecated it.
* Defaulted to `false`
* Added warning to docs
* Closes#41816
- Notes that you can adjust the `s3.client.*.endpoint` setting to point to a
repository held on an S3-compatible service.
- Notes that the default is `s3.amazonaws.com` and not to auto-detect the
endpoint.
- Reformats docs to width.
Closes#35925
* Make repository settings override static settings
* Cache clients according to settings
* Introduce custom implementations for the AWS credentials here to be able to use them as part of a hash key
Today it is unclear that the `storage_class` parameter to an S3 repository only
affects new objects and does not rewrite any existing objects. This commit
clarifies this point.
AWS supports the creation and use of credentials that are only valid for a
fixed period of time. These credentials comprise three parts: the usual access
key and secret key, together with a session token. This commit adds support for
these three-part credentials to the EC2 discovery plugin and the S3 repository
plugin.
Note that session tokens are only valid for a limited period of time and yet
there is no mechanism for refreshing or rotating them when they expire without
restarting Elasticsearch. Nonetheless, this feature is already useful for
nodes that need only run for a few days, such as for training, testing or
evaluation. #29135 tracks the work towards allowing these credentials to be
refreshed at runtime.
Resolves#16428
Similarly to what has been done for s3 and azure, this commit removes
the repository settings `application_name` and `connect/read_timeout`
in favor of client settings. It introduce a GoogleCloudStorageClientSettings
class (similar to S3ClientSettings) and a bunch of unit tests for that,
it aligns the documentation to be more coherent with the S3 one, it
documents the connect/read timeouts that were not documented at all and
also adds a new client setting that allows to define a custom endpoint.
Now the blob size information is available before writing anything,
the repository implementation can know upfront what will be the
more suitable API to upload the blob to S3.
This commit removes the DefaultS3OutputStream and S3OutputStream
classes and moves the implementation of the upload logic directly in the
S3BlobContainer.
related #26993closes#26969
This commit updates the s3 repository docs to clearly mark settings as
part of the s3 client settings, as well as those that are secure and
must be stored in the elasticsearch keystore.
relates #25619
The s3 repository plugin has "third party" integ tests which rely
on external service and configuration setup. These tests are really
internal verification of the plugin (and should be moved to real integ
tests). Running them is not something a user should do, and the
documentation has been out of date for all of 5.x. This commit removes
the docs, removing potential confusion for users.
Currently the default S3 buffer size is 100MB, which can be a lot for small
heaps. This pull request updates the default to be 100MB for heaps that are
greater than 2GB and 5% of the heap size otherwise.
and be much more stingy about what we consider a console candidate.
* Add `// CONSOLE` to check-running
* Fix version in some snippets
* Mark groovy snippets as groovy
* Fix versions in plugins
* Fix language marker errors
* Fix language parsing in snippets
This adds support for snippets who's language is written like
`[source, txt]` and `["source","js",subs="attributes,callouts"]`.
This also makes language required for snippets which is nice because
then we can be sure we can grep for snippets in a particular language.
We have 1074 snippets that look like they should be converted to
`// CONSOLE`. At least that is what `gradle docs:listConsoleCandidates`
says. This adds `// NOTCONSOLE` to explicitly mark snippets that
*shouldn't* be converted to `// CONSOLE`. After marking the blindingly
obvious ones this cuts the remaining snippet count to 1032.
We weren't doing it before because we weren't starting the plugins.
Now we are.
The hardest part of this was handling the files the tests expect
to be on the filesystem. extraConfigFiles was broken.