This change removes the subdirectory support for extra-plugins, and
replaces it with an iteration of sibling directories with the prefix
"extra-plugin-".
This change adds back the last of the missing test options to the juni4
wrapper. leaveTemporary is important in that setting it to true (which
is how we had it set in maven) removes the warnings we currently get
about a leftover file that cannot be deleted (from jna).
This change adds back the multi node smoke test, as well as making the
cluster formation for any test allow multiple nodes. The main changes in
cluster formation are abstracting out the node specific configuration to
a helper struct, as well as making a single wait task that waits for all
nodes after their start tasks have run. The output on failure was also
improved to log which node's info is being printed.
* Forbid System.setProperties & co in forbidden APIs.
* Ban property write access at runtime with security manager.
Plugins that need to modify system properties will need to request permission in their plugin-security.policy
As part of the refactoring to allow --debug-jvm with gradle run, the way
java options are passed for integ tests was changed. However, we need to
make sure the jvm argline passed goes to ES_GC_OPTS because this
allows overriding things like which garbage collector we run, which we
do for testing from jenkins. This change adds back ES_GC_OPTS.
Because jar hell checks run during static initialization of tests, a
failure will result in all tests failing. However, only the first test
within each jvm shows the jarhell failure, and later tests get a class
not found exception for the class that failed to load when static init
failed.
This change adds a task to run as part of precommit, which checks the
test runtime classpath for jarhell.
closes#14721
If there is a failure in the elasticsearch start script, we currently
completely lose the failure. This is due to how spawning works with ant.
This change avoids the issue by introducing an intermediate script,
built dynamically before running ant exec, which runs elasticsearch and
redirects the output to a log file. This essentially causes us to run
elasticsearch in the foreground and capture the output, but at the same
time keep a running script which ant can pump streams from (which will
always be empty).
There were a number of subtle issues with the existing logging that
wraps events from Junit4 and ant. This change:
* Tweaks at what level certain events are logged
* Fixes -Dtests.output=always to force everything to be logged
* Makes -Dtests.class imply -Dtests.output=always
* Captures ant logging from junit4, so that direct jvm output will be
logged on failure when not using gradle info logging
When the build tries to start an elasticsearch instance but the start fails
if it fails to find the log file then we log a line about how we can't find
the file.
Sometimes when running elasticsearch, it is useful to attach a remote
debugger. This change adds a --debug-jvm option (the same name gradle
uses for its tests debug option), which adds java agent config for a
remote debugger. The configuration is set to hava java suspend until the
remove debugger is attached.
closes#14772
If you build elasticsearch without a git repository it was creating a null
shortHash which was causing Elasticsearch not to be able to form transport
connections.
Closes#14748
This makes the rest tests **tons** more responsive.
Also stop test progress output from jumping by using formating. The progess
now looks like:
Suites [004/549], Tests [0019|0|0], in 1.58s J2 completed UpdateNumberOfReplicasTests
The changes included are:
1. The suites, total tests, and JVM id are now padded based on their maximum
size. The maximum number of tests is just a guess because that data isn't
easily available when the suite starts. JVM id rarely matters because only
the most crazy individuals use more than 10 JVMs.
2. The suite information is reordered. Now its runtime, jvm id, suite name,
and, optionally, method name. This reordering is useful because the thing
that varies in length, the suite and method name, are on the right hand
side. This means that nothing jumps around during the test run.
We recently got a run command with gradle, but it is sometimes useful to
run ES with a specific plugin. This is a start, by making each esplugin
have a run command which installs the plugin and runs elasticsearch in
the foreground.
This makes forbidden patterns a little smarter, so it does not need to
run on every build. It works because the marker file timestamp will be
compared against the source files (which are the inputs to forbidden
patterns).
closes#14788
We currently enforce JAVA_HOME is set, but use gradle's java version to
compile, and JAVA_HOME version to test. This change makes the compile
and test both use JAVA_HOME, and clarifies which java version is used by
gradle and that used for the compile/test.
With gradle, deploying to maven means first generating poms. These are
filled in based on dependencies of the project. Recently, we started
disallowing transitive dependencies. However, this configuration does
not translate to maven poms because maven has no concept of excluding
all transitive dependencies.
This change adds exclusions for each of the transitive deps of each
dependency being added to the maven pom. It does so by creating dummy
configurations for each direct dependency (which does not have
transitive deps excluded), so that we can iterate the transitive deps
when building the pom.
Note, this should be simpler (just modifying maven's pom model), but
gradle tries to hide that from their api, causing us to need to
manipulate the xml directly.
https://discuss.gradle.org/t/modifying-maven-pom-generation-to-add-excludes/12744
Currently elasticsearch in integ tests is started using an ant task on
windows, or gradle exec on everything else. However, gradle exec has
some flaws, one being Ctrl-C does not run finalizedBy tasks, which means
interrupting integ tests will leak a jvm. This change makes all systems
use ant exec. One caveat is, if there is any output by the jvm, we lose
it in ant bit heaven. But this is no different than what we had with
gradle. In the future, we should look at using a separate thread to
pump streams from the elasticsearch process.
closes#14701
closes#14726
Squashed commit of the following:
commit 5b591e98570e3fa481b2816a44063b98bff36ddf
Author: Robert Muir <rmuir@apache.org>
Date: Fri Nov 13 00:54:08 2015 -0500
add assumption for self-signing in PluginManagerTests
commit ed11e5371b6f71591dc41c6f60d033502cfcf029
Author: Robert Muir <rmuir@apache.org>
Date: Fri Nov 13 00:20:59 2015 -0500
show error output from integ test startup
commit d8b187a10e95d89a0e775333dcbe1aaa903fb376
Author: Robert Muir <rmuir@apache.org>
Date: Thu Nov 12 22:14:11 2015 -0500
fix gradle check under jigsaw
If we use JAVA_HOME consistently for tests, we can run tests with a
different version of java than gradle runs with. For example, this
enables running tests with jigsaw, but building with java 8. The only
caveat is intellij does not set JAVA_HOME. This change enforces
JAVA_HOME is set, but ignores for intellij.
This moves the min java version used by elasticsearch to one place, a
constant in BuildPlugin. For me on java 9, this fixed my jar to have the
correct target/source versions.
closes#14702