As of elastic/elasticsearchelastic/elasticsearch#16054 all index level settings
must be registered and use the new settings infrastructure. This commit
prepares for the merge to provide a smooth transition.
Original commit: elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch@bc0a4fec07
This commit addresses the handling of load averages in Marvel due to
upstream changes in core Elasticsearch where the load average field was
changed from an array to an object.
Original commit: elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch@9ea57968bb
Shield expands wildcards to concrete names (aliases or indices) before each request gets executed in es core. It never resolves aliases to concrete indices though, as permissions may be set against aliases rather than indices. During this resolution, it also looks at the state of the indices and the current indices options (expand_wildcards) to expand only to indices with the relevant state. When it comes to aliases though, they may point to multiple indices each one having a different state, so it always expands ignoring expand_wildcards. At that point the request will contain the explicit name of the alias, no wildcards, thus the expand_wildcards option will have no effect in core. ignore_unavailable could be used instead when interacting with shield, which would affect how aliases are resolved to multiple indices. In this case we can only blacklist the test in shield, as it will return both the closed index and the open one.
Original commit: elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch@54c11dfc31
Due to lingering threads when shutting down when running this in CI
this disables watcher in this tests. It is really hard to reproduce
to get the correct order of start/stop. The reason here is, that watcher
is still starting and not finished, when stop is called on the plugin.
Original commit: elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch@2de85bcba6
In elastic/elasticsearchelastic/elasticsearch#15907, we changed the load average
structure to also include 5 and 15 minute load averages. This
commit adjusts the expected JSON structure for
NodeStatsRendererTests.
Original commit: elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch@59f6a1e9d9
When debugging role mapping it is useful to know the actual user DN, which is only logged
when something is actually mapped to the DN. Since this is logged at debug level, we should
always log it.
Original commit: elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch@b690c757d3
Previously we only exposed the use of a single URL for LDAP realms, while the code supported
multiple URLs. Internally we always used a failover server set, which would have provided failover
to another LDAP server if multiple existed. This change introduces a new setting `load_balance.type`
on the realm that indicates the type of load balancing. Valid options are:
* `failover` - the first server in the list will be used until it fails and then additional servers will be tried until
one succeeds. The first successful server will be used from now on. This is the default.
* `round_robin` - continuously iterates through the list of servers for each new connection. If a server is down,
the iteration will continue until a successful connection is made. The downfall here is that the list does not
get reordered on a down server, so there is overhead for always trying the servers in order.
* `dns_failover` - This server set takes a single URL that uses a DNS that will resolve to multiple IP addresses.
Connections will be consistently attempted to servers in the order they are retrieved from the name service; there
is no re-ordering and the first successful connection will be used.
* `dns_round_robin` - This server set takes a single URL that uses a DNS that will resolve to multiple IP addresses.
The addresses retrieved from the name service will connected to in the same order as `round_robin`.
Closeselastic/elasticsearch#31
Original commit: elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch@9ce9a1bf23