Most of our field types have the same implementation for their `existsQuery` method which relies on doc_values if present, otherwise it queries norms if available or uses a term query against the _field_names meta field. This standard implementation is repeated in many different mappers.
There are field types that only query doc_values, because they always have them, and field types that always query _field_names, because they never have norms nor doc_values. We could apply the same standard logic to all of these field types as `MappedFieldType` has the knowledge about what data structures are available.
This commit introduces a standard implementation that does the right thing depending on the data structure that is available. With that only field types that require a different behaviour need to override the existsQuery method.
At the same time, this no longer forces subclasses to override `existsQuery`, which could be forgotten when needed. To address this we introduced a new test method in `MapperTestCase` that verifies the `existsQuery` being generated and its consistency with the available data structures.
The dense vector field is not aggregatable although it produces fielddata through its BinaryDocValuesField. It should pass up hasDocValues set to true to its parent class in its constructor, and return isAggregatable false. Same for the sparse vector field (only in 7.x).
This may not have consequences today, but it will be important once we try to share the same exists query implementation throughout all of the mappers with #57607.
Backports #61590 to 7.x
So far we don't allow metadata fields in the document _source. However, in the case of the _doc_count field mapper (#58339) we want to be able to set
This PR adds a method to the metadata field parsers that exposes if the field can be included in the document source or not.
This way each metadata field can configure if it can be included in the document _source
A recent AWS SDK upgrade has introduced a new source of spurious `WARN`
logs when the security manager prevents access to the user's home
directory and therefore to `$HOME/.aws/config`. This is the behaviour we
want, and it's harmless and handled by the SDK as if the config doesn't
exist, so this log message is unnecessary noise. This commit suppresses
this noisy logging by default.
Relates #20313, #56346, #53962Closes#62493
The AssertingInputStream in S3BlobContainerRetriesTests verifies
that InputStream are either fully consumed or aborted, but the
eof flag is only set when the underlying stream returns it.
When buffered read are executed and when the exact number
of remaining bytes are read, the eof flag is not set to true. Instead
the test should rely on the total number of bytes read to know if
the stream has been fully consumed.
Close#62390
This new snapshot contains the following JIRAs that we're interested in:
- [LUCENE-9525](https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/LUCENE-9525)
Better handling of small documents. This should improve retrieval times
when documents are less than ~1kB.
- [LUCENE-9510](https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/LUCENE-9510)
Faster flushes when index sorting is enabled by not compressing the
temporary files that store stored fields and term vectors.
This implements the `fields` API in `_search` for runtime fields using
doc values. Most of that implementation is stolen from the
`docvalue_fields` fetch sub-phase, just moved into the same API that the
`fields` API uses. At this point the `docvalue_fields` fetch phase looks
like a special case of the `fields` API.
While I was at it I moved the "which doc values sub-implementation
should I use for fetching?" question from a bunch of `instanceof`s to a
method on `LeafFieldData` so we can be much more flexible with what is
returned and we're not forced to extend certain classes just to make the
fetch phase happy.
Relates to #59332
Today when an S3RetryingInputStream is closed the remaining bytes
that were not consumed are drained right before closing the underlying
stream. In some contexts it might be more efficient to not consume the
remaining bytes and just drop the connection.
This is for example the case with snapshot backed indices prewarming,
where there is not point in reading potentially large blobs if we know
the cache file we want to write the content of the blob as already been
evicted. Draining all bytes here takes a slot in the prewarming thread
pool for nothing.
This commit removes `integTest` task from all es-plugins.
Most relevant projects have been converted to use yamlRestTest, javaRestTest,
or internalClusterTest in prior PRs.
A few projects needed to be adjusted to allow complete removal of this task
* x-pack/plugin - converted to use yamlRestTest and javaRestTest
* plugins/repository-hdfs - kept the integTest task, but use `rest-test` plugin to define the task
* qa/die-with-dignity - convert to javaRestTest
* x-pack/qa/security-example-spi-extension - convert to javaRestTest
* multiple projects - remove the integTest.enabled = false (yay!)
related: #61802
related: #60630
related: #59444
related: #59089
related: #56841
related: #59939
related: #55896
Kibana often highlights *everything* like this:
```
POST /_search
{
"query": ...,
"size": 500,
"highlight": {
"fields": {
"*": { ... }
}
}
}
```
This can get slow when there are hundreds of mapped fields. I tested
this locally and unscientifically and it took a request from 20ms to
150ms when there are 100 fields. I've seen clusters with 2000 fields
where simple search go from 500ms to 1500ms just by turning on this sort
of highlighting. Even when the query is just a `range` that and the
fields are all numbers and stuff so it won't highlight anything.
This speeds up the `unified` highlighter in this case in a few ways:
1. Build the highlighting infrastructure once field rather than once pre
document per field. This cuts out a *ton* of work analyzing the query
over and over and over again.
2. Bail out of the highlighter before loading values if we can't produce
any results.
Combined these take that local 150ms case down to 65ms. This is unlikely
to be really useful when there are only a few fetched docs and only a
few fields, but we often end up having many fields with many fetched
docs.
This pull request adds a new set of APIs that allows tracking the number of requests performed
by the different registered repositories.
In order to avoid losing data, the repository statistics are archived after the repository is closed for
a configurable retention period `repositories.stats.archive.retention_period`. The API exposes the
statistics for the active repositories as well as the modified/closed repositories.
Backport of #60371
There are currently half a dozen ways to add plugins and modules for
test clusters to use. All of them require the calling project to peek
into the plugin or module they want to use to grab its bundlePlugin
task, and then both depend on that task, as well as extract the archive
path the task will produce. This creates cross project dependencies that
are difficult to detect, and if the dependent plugin/module has not yet
been configured, the build will fail because the task does not yet
exist.
This commit makes the plugin and module methods for testclusters
symmetetric, and simply adding a file provider directly, or a project
path that will produce the plugin/module zip. Internally this new
variant uses normal configuration/dependencies across projects to get
the zip artifact. It also has the added benefit of no longer needing the
caller to add to the test task a dependsOn for bundlePlugin task.
FetchSubPhase has two 'execute' methods, one which takes all hits to be examined,
and one which takes a single HitContext. It's not obvious which one should be implemented
by a given sub-phase, or if implementing both is a possibility; nor is it obvious that we first
run the hitExecute methods of all subphases, and then subsequently call all the
hitsExecute methods.
This commit reworks FetchSubPhase to replace these two variants with a processor class,
`FetchSubPhaseProcessor`, that is returned from a single `getProcessor` method. This
processor class has two methods, `setNextReader()` and `process`. FetchPhase collects
processors from all its subphases (if a subphase does not need to execute on the current
search context, it can return `null` from `getProcessor`). It then sorts its hits by docid, and
groups them by lucene leaf reader. For each reader group, it calls `setNextReader()` on
all non-null processors, and then passes each doc id to `process()`.
Implementations of fetch sub phases can divide their concerns into per-request, per-reader
and per-document sections, and no longer need to worry about sorting docs or dealing with
reader slices.
FetchSubPhase now provides a FetchSubPhaseExecutor that exposes two methods,
setNextReader(LeafReaderContext) and execute(HitContext). The parent FetchPhase collects all
these executors together (if a phase should not be executed, then it returns null here); then
it sorts hits, and groups them by reader; for each reader it calls setNextReader, and then
execute for each hit in turn. Individual sub phases no longer need to concern themselves with
sorting docs or keeping track of readers; global structures can be built in
getExecutor(SearchContext), per-reader structures in setNextReader and per-doc in execute.
The recursive data.path FilePermission check is an extremely hot
codepath in Elasticsearch. Unfortunately the FilePermission check in
Java is extremely allocation heavy. As it iterates through different
file permissions, it allocates byte arrays for each Path component that
must be compared. This PR improves the situation by adding the recursive
data.path FilePermission it its own PermissionsCollection object which
is checked first.
It looks like it is possible for a request to throw an exception early
before any API interaciton has happened. This can lead to the request count
map containing a `null` for the request count key.
The assertion is not correct and we should not NPE here
(as that might also hide the original exception since we are running this code in
a `finally` block from within the S3 SDK).
Closes#61670
Runtime fields need to have a SearchLookup available, when building their fielddata implementations, so that they can look up other fields, runtime or not.
To achieve that, we add a Supplier<SearchLookup> argument to the existing MappedFieldType#fielddataBuilder method.
As we introduce the ability to look up other fields while building fielddata for mapped fields, we implicitly add the ability for a field to require other fields. This requires some protection mechanism that detects dependency cycles to prevent stack overflow errors.
With this commit we also introduce detection for cycles, as well as a limit on the depth of the references for a runtime field. Note that we also plan on introducing cycles detection at compile time, so the runtime cycles detection is a last resort to prevent stack overflow errors but we hope that we can reject runtime fields from being registered in the mappings when they create a cycle in their definition.
Note that this commit does not introduce any production implementation of runtime fields, but is rather a pre-requisite to merge the runtime fields feature branch.
This is a breaking change for MapperPlugins that plug in a mapper, as the signature of MappedFieldType#fielddataBuilder changes from taking a single argument (the index name), to also accept a Supplier<SearchLookup>.
Relates to #59332
Co-authored-by: Nik Everett <nik9000@gmail.com>
DeprecationLogger's constructor should not create two loggers. It was
taking parent logger instance, changing its name with a .deprecation
prefix and creating a new logger.
Most of the time parent logger was not needed. It was causing Log4j to
unnecessarily cache the unused parent logger instance.
depends on #61515
backports #58435
Backport to add case insensitive support for regex queries.
Forks a copy of Lucene’s RegexpQuery and RegExp from Lucene master.
This can be removed when 8.7 Lucene is released.
Closes#59235
Splitting DeprecationLogger into two. HeaderWarningLogger - responsible for adding a response warning headers and ThrottlingLogger - responsible for limiting the duplicated log entries for the same key (previously deprecateAndMaybeLog).
Introducing A ThrottlingAndHeaderWarningLogger which is a base for other common logging usages where both response warning header and logging throttling was needed.
relates #55699
relates #52369
backports #55941
Before when a value was copied to a field through a parent field or `copy_to`,
we parsed it using the `FieldMapper` from the source field. Instead we should
parse it using the target `FieldMapper`. This ensures that we apply the
appropriate mapping type and options to the copied value.
To implement the fix cleanly, this PR refactors the value parsing strategy. Now
instead of looking up values directly, field mappers produce a helper object
`ValueFetcher`. The value fetchers are responsible for almost all aspects of
fetching, including looking up the right paths in the _source.
The PR is fairly big but each commit can be reviewed individually.
Fixes#61033.
Same as https://github.com/elastic/elasticsearch/pull/43288 for GCS.
We don't need to do the bucket exists check before using the repo, that just needlessly
increases the necessary permissions for using the GCS repository.
* Merge test runner task into RestIntegTest (#60261)
* Merge test runner task into RestIntegTest
* Reorganizing Standalone runner and RestIntegTest task
* Rework general test task configuration and extension
* Fix merge issues
* use former 7.x common test configuration
We have various ways of copying between two streams and handling thread-local
buffers throughout the codebase. This commit unifies a number of them and
removes buffer allocations in many spots.
- Replace immediate task creations by using task avoidance api
- One step closer to #56610
- Still many tasks are created during configuration phase. Tackled in separate steps
The `SourceLookup` class provides access to the _source for a particular
document, specified through `SourceLookup#setSegmentAndDocument`. Previously
the search context contained a single `SourceLookup` that was shared between
different fetch subphases. It was hard to reason about its state: is
`SourceLookup` set to the expected document? Is the _source already loaded and
available?
Instead of using a global source lookup, the fetch hit context now provides
access to a lookup that is set to load from the hit document.
This refactor closes#31000, since the same `SourceLookup` is no longer shared
between the 'fetch _source phase' and script execution.
For all OSS plugins (except repository-* and discovery-*) integTest
task is now a no-op and all of the tests are now executed via a test,
yamlRestTest, javaRestTest, or internalClusterTest.
This commit does NOT convert the discovery-* and repository-* since they
are bit more complex then the rest of tests and this PR is large enough.
Those plugins will be addressed in a future PR(s).
This commit also fixes a minor issue that did not copy the rest api
for projects that only had YAML TEST tests.
related: #56841
For OSS plugins that begin with discovery-*, the integTest
task is now a no-op and all of the tests are now executed via a test,
yamlRestTest, javaRestTest, or internalClusterTest.
related: #56841
related: #59444
For OSS plugins that being with repository-*, integTest
task is now a no-op and all of the tests are now executed via a test,
yamlRestTest, javaRestTest, or internalClusterTest.
related: #56841
related: #59444
In #60297 we added some tests related to logging from the transport
layer, but these tests failed occasionally since the cluster
was kept alive between test invocations but the logging framework
expected it only to be used for a single test. With this commit we
reduce the scope of the internal test cluster to `TEST` to solve this
problem.
Closes#60321.
This feature adds a new `fields` parameter to the search request, which
consults both the document `_source` and the mappings to fetch fields in a
consistent way. The PR merges the `field-retrieval` feature branch.
Addresses #49028 and #55363.
Transport connections between nodes remain in place until one or other
node shuts down or the connection is disrupted by a flaky network.
Today it is very difficult to demonstrate that transient failures and
cluster instability are caused by the network even though this is often
the case. In particular, transport connections open and close without
logging anything, even at `DEBUG` level, making it very hard to quantify
the scale of the problem or to correlate the networking problems with
external events.
This commit adds the missing `DEBUG`-level logging when transport
connections open and close, and also tracks the total number of
transport connections a node has opened as a measure of the stability of
the underlying network.
keepalives tell any intermediate devices that the connection remains alive, which helps with overzealous firewalls that are
killing idle connections. keepalives are enabled by default in Elasticsearch, but use system defaults for their
configuration, which often times do not have reasonable defaults (e.g. 7200s for TCP_KEEP_IDLE) in the context of
distributed systems such as Elasticsearch.
This PR sets the socket-level keep_alive options for network.tcp.{keep_idle,keep_interval} to 5 minutes on configurations
that support it (>= Java 11 & (MacOS || Linux)) and where the system defaults are set to something higher than 5
minutes. This helps keep the connections alive while not interfering with system defaults or user-specified settings
unless they are deemed to be set too high by providing better out-of-the-box defaults.
Due to complicated access checks (reads and writes execute in their own access context) on some repositories (GCS, Azure, HDFS), using a hard coded buffer size of 4k for restores was needlessly inefficient.
By the same token, the use of stream copying with the default 8k buffer size for blob writes was inefficient as well.
We also had dedicated, undocumented buffer size settings for HDFS and FS repositories. For these two we would use a 100k buffer by default. We did not have such a setting for e.g. GCS though, which would only use an 8k read buffer which is needlessly small for reading from a raw `URLConnection`.
This commit adds an undocumented setting that sets the default buffer size to `128k` for all repositories. It removes wasteful allocation of such a large buffer for small writes and reads in case of HDFS and FS repositories (i.e. still using the smaller buffer to write metadata) but uses a large buffer for doing restores and uploading segment blobs.
This should speed up Azure and GCS restores and snapshots in a non-trivial way as well as save some memory when reading small blobs on FS and HFDS repositories.
We never used the `IndexSettings` parameter and we only used the
`MappedFieldType` parameter to get the name of the field which we
already know everywhere where we build the `IFD.Builder`. This allows us
to drop a fair bit of ceremony from a couple of tests.