The documentation currently tells users to use `doc['event_date'].value.getMillis` to access
milliseconds in a date. It turns out the way it works is `doc['event_date'].value.millis`. This
change corrects this and gives a hint at how other date related methods work.
This commit switches the joda time backcompat in scripting to use
augmentation over ZonedDateTime. The augmentation methods provide
compatibility with the missing methods between joda's DateTime and
java's ZonedDateTime. Due to getDayOfWeek returning an enum in the java
API, ZonedDateTime is wrapped so that the method can return int like the
joda time does. The java time api version is renamed to
getDayOfWeekEnum, which will be kept through 7.x for compatibility while
users switch back to getDayOfWeek once joda compatibility is removed.
This allows tokenfilters to be applied selectively, depending on the status of the current token in the tokenstream. The filter takes a scripted predicate, and only applies its subfilter when the predicate returns true.
This commit adds two pieces. The first is a small set of documentation providing
instructions on how to get setup to run context examples. This will require a download
similar to how Kibana works for some of the examples. The second is an ingest processor
example using the downloaded data. More examples will follow as ideally one per PR.
This also adds a set of tests to individually test each script as a unit test.
This commit adds a boolean system property, `es.scripting.use_java_time`,
which controls the concrete return type used by doc values within
scripts. The return type of accessing doc values for a date field is
changed to Object, essentially duck typing the type to allow
co-existence during the transition from joda time to java time.
Throw an exception for doc['field'].value
if this document is missing a value for the field.
After deprecation changes have been backported to 6.x,
make this a default behaviour in 7.0
Closes#29286
This change adds two contexts the execute scripts against:
* SEARCH_SCRIPT: Allows to run scripts in a search script context.
This context is used in `function_score` query's script function,
script fields, script sorting and `terms_set` query.
* FILTER_SCRIPT: Allows to run scripts in a filter script context.
This context is used in the `script` query.
In both contexts a index name needs to be specified and a sample document.
The document is needed to create an in-memory index that the script can
access via the `doc[...]` and other notations. The index name is needed
because a mapping is needed to index the document.
Examples:
```
POST /_scripts/painless/_execute
{
"script": {
"source": "doc['field'].value.length()"
},
"context" : {
"search_script": {
"document": {
"field": "four"
},
"index": "my-index"
}
}
}
```
Returns:
```
{
"result": 4
}
```
POST /_scripts/painless/_execute
{
"script": {
"source": "doc['field'].value.length() <= params.max_length",
"params": {
"max_length": 4
}
},
"context" : {
"filter_script": {
"document": {
"field": "four"
},
"index": "my-index"
}
}
}
Returns:
```
{
"result": true
}
```
Also changed PainlessExecuteAction.TransportAction to use TransportSingleShardAction
instead of HandledAction, because now in case score or filter contexts are used
the request needs to be redirected to a node that has an active IndexService
for the index being referenced (a node with a shard copy for that index).
* Handle missing values in painless
Throw an exception for `doc['field'].value`
if this document is missing a value for the `field`.
For 7.0:
This is the default behaviour from 7.0
For 6.x:
To enable this behavior from 6.x, a user can set a jvm.option:
`-Des.script.exception_for_missing_value=true` on a node.
If a user does not enable this behavior, a deprecation warning is logged on start up.
Closes#29286
Full restructure of the spec into new sections for operators, statements, scripts, functions, lambdas, and regexes. Split of operators into 6 sections, a table, reference, array, numeric, boolean, and general. Clean up of all operators sections. Sporadic clean up else where.
Currently failures to compile a script usually lead to a ScriptException, which
inherits the 500 INTERNAL_SERVER_ERROR from ElasticsearchException if it does
not contain another root cause. Instead, this should be a 400 Bad Request error.
This PR changes this more generally for script compilation errors by changing
ScriptException to return 400 (bad request) as status code.
Closes#12315
Added an api that allows to execute an arbitrary script and a result to be returned.
```
POST /_scripts/painless/_execute
{
"script": {
"source": "params.var1 / params.var2",
"params": {
"var1": 1,
"var2": 1
}
}
}
```
Relates to #27875
Adds support for triple quoted strings to the documentation test
generator. Kibana's CONSOLE tool has supported them for a year but we
were unable to use them in Elasticsearch's docs because the process that
converts example snippets into tests couldn't handle this. This change
adds code to convert them into standard JSON so we can pass them to
Elasticsearch.
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.
Links to inner classes were using `$` in urls instead of `.`, causing
them to 404.
Also fixes the doc generation code to generate docs into the correct
directory. We moved the docs but never updated the generation code.
This commit adds back "id" as the key within a script to specify a
stored script (which with file scripts now gone is no longer ambiguous).
It also adds "source" as a replacement for "code". This is in an attempt
to normalize how scripts are specified across both put stored scripts and script usages, including search template requests. This also deprecates the old inline/stored keys.