This change adds a new special path to the buckets_path syntax
`_bucket_count`. This new option will return the number of buckets for a
multi-bucket aggregation, which can then be used in pipeline
aggregations.
Closes#19553
Before the aggregation tree was traversed to figure out what the parent level is, this commit
changes that by using `NestedScope` to figure out the nested depth level. The big upsides
are that this cleans up `NestedAggregator` (it used a hack to lazily figure out the nested parent filter)
and this is also what `nested` query uses and therefor the `nested` query can be included inside `nested`
aggregation and work correctly.
Closes#11749Closes#12410
Recently, we experience timeouts on our Windows build slaves for
Netty4RestIT. Until we have figured out what's going on, we
increase this test suite's timeout temporarily to ensure this
timeout does not mask other problems.
We disable transitive dependencies in our build plugin
for all dependencies except for the group `org.elasticsearch`.
However, in the reindex plugin we depend on the REST client
and declare its dependencies again which is not necessary
(and led to problems with conflicting versions in #19281).
With this PR we remove the duplicate declaration.
This adds a header that looks like `Location: /test/test/1` to the
response for the index/create/update API. The requirement for the header
comes from https://www.w3.org/Protocols/rfc2616/rfc2616-sec10.htmlhttps://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7231#section-7.1.2 claims that relative
URIs are OK. So we use an absolute path which should resolve to the
appropriate location.
Closes#19079
This makes large changes to our rest test infrastructure, allowing us
to write junit tests that test a running cluster via the rest client.
It does this by splitting ESRestTestCase into two classes:
* ESRestTestCase is the superclass of all tests that use the rest client
to interact with a running cluster.
* ESClientYamlSuiteTestCase is the superclass of all tests that use the
rest client to run the yaml tests. These tests are shared across all
official clients, thus the `ClientYamlSuite` part of the name.
This adds new circuit breaking with the "request" breaker, which adds
circuit breaks based on the number of buckets created during
aggregations. It consists of incrementing during AggregatorBase creation
This also bumps the REQUEST breaker to 60% of the JVM heap now.
The output when circuit breaking an aggregation looks like:
```json
{
"shard" : 0,
"index" : "i",
"node" : "a5AvjUn_TKeTNYl0FyBW2g",
"reason" : {
"type" : "exception",
"reason" : "java.util.concurrent.ExecutionException: QueryPhaseExecutionException[Query Failed [Failed to execute main query]]; nested: CircuitBreakingException[[request] Data too large, data for [<agg [otherthings]>] would be larger than limit of [104857600/100mb]];",
"caused_by" : {
"type" : "execution_exception",
"reason" : "QueryPhaseExecutionException[Query Failed [Failed to execute main query]]; nested: CircuitBreakingException[[request] Data too large, data for [<agg [myagg]>] would be larger than limit of [104857600/100mb]];",
"caused_by" : {
"type" : "circuit_breaking_exception",
"reason" : "[request] Data too large, data for [<agg [otherthings]>] would be larger than limit of [104857600/100mb]",
"bytes_wanted" : 104860781,
"bytes_limit" : 104857600
}
}
}
}
```
Relates to #14046
Messy tests with mustache were either moved to core, moved to a rest test or remained untouched if they actually tested mustache.
Also removed tests that were redundant.
After #13834 many tests that used Groovy scripts (for good or bad reason) in their tests have been moved in the lang-groovy module and the issue #13837 has been created to track these messy tests in order to clean them up.
This commit moves more tests back in core, removes the dependency on Groovy, changes the scripts in order to use the mocked script engine, and change the tests to integration tests.
This change renames the package org.elasticsearch.search.fetch.fielddata in org.elasticsearch.search.fetch.docvalues and renames the
FieldData* classes in DocValue*. This is a follow up of the renaming that happened in #18943
In #15950#15080#16084 we added the support of TimeOut for Requests with a default client`setTimeoutIntervalInMs`.
So we can remove this useless todo which was added for only one method.
Closes#18617.
With #19140 we started persisting the node ID across node restarts. Now that we have a "stable" anchor, we can use it to generate a stable default node name and make it easier to track nodes over a restarts. Sadly, this means we will not have those random fun Marvel characters but we feel this is the right tradeoff.
On the implementation side, this requires a bit of juggling because we now need to read the node id from disk before we can log as the node node is part of each log message. The PR move the initialization of NodeEnvironment as high up in the starting sequence as possible, with only one logging message before it to indicate we are initializing. Things look now like this:
```
[2016-07-15 19:38:39,742][INFO ][node ] [_unset_] initializing ...
[2016-07-15 19:38:39,826][INFO ][node ] [aAmiW40] node name set to [aAmiW40] by default. set the [node.name] settings to change it
[2016-07-15 19:38:39,829][INFO ][env ] [aAmiW40] using [1] data paths, mounts [[ /(/dev/disk1)]], net usable_space [5.5gb], net total_space [232.6gb], spins? [unknown], types [hfs]
[2016-07-15 19:38:39,830][INFO ][env ] [aAmiW40] heap size [1.9gb], compressed ordinary object pointers [true]
[2016-07-15 19:38:39,837][INFO ][node ] [aAmiW40] version[5.0.0-alpha5-SNAPSHOT], pid[46048], build[473d3c0/2016-07-15T17:38:06.771Z], OS[Mac OS X/10.11.5/x86_64], JVM[Oracle Corporation/Java HotSpot(TM) 64-Bit Server VM/1.8.0_51/25.51-b03]
[2016-07-15 19:38:40,980][INFO ][plugins ] [aAmiW40] modules [percolator, lang-mustache, lang-painless, reindex, aggs-matrix-stats, lang-expression, ingest-common, lang-groovy, transport-netty], plugins []
[2016-07-15 19:38:43,218][INFO ][node ] [aAmiW40] initialized
```
Needless to say, settings `node.name` explicitly still works as before.
The commit also contains some clean ups to the relationship between Environment, Settings and Plugins. The previous code suggested the path related settings could be changed after the initial Environment was changed. This did not have any effect as the security manager already locked things down.
Follow up for #18662 and #18690.
* For consistency, we rename method parameters and use `key` and `secret` instead of `account` and `key`.
* We add some tests to check that settings are correctly applied.
* Tests revealed that some checks are bad like for #18662.
Add test and fix issue for getting the right S3 endpoint
Test when Repository, Repositories or global settings are defined
But ignore testAWSCredentialsWithSystemProviders test
Add tests for AWS Client Configuration
Fix NPE when no region is set
We used to transform region="" to region=null but it's not needed anymore and would actually cause NPE from now.
Follow up for #18662
We add some tests to check that settings are correctly applied.
Tests revealed that some checks were missing.
But we ignore `testAWSCredentialsWithSystemProviders` test for now.
It can happen that the list of healthy hosts is empty, then we get one from the blacklist. but some other operation might have sneaked in and emptied the blacklist in the meantime, so we have to retry till we manage to get some host, either from the healthy list or from the blacklist.
Previously when trying to listen on virtual interfaces during
bootstrap the application would stop working - the interface
couldn't be found by the NetworkUtils class.
The NetworkUtils utilize the underlying JDK NetworkInterface
class which, when asked to lookup by name only takes physical
interfaces into account, failing at virtual (or subinterfaces)
ones (returning null).
Note that when interating over all interfaces, both physical and
virtual ones are taken into account.
This changeset asks for all known interfaces, iterates over them
and matches on the given name as part of the loop, allowing it
to catch both physical and virtual interfaces.
As a result, elasticsearch can now also serve on virtual
interfaces.
A test case has been added which at least makes sure that all
iterable interfaces can be found by their respective name. (It's
not easily possible in a unit test to "fake" virtual interfaces).
Relates #19537
Fixes CORS handling so that it uses the defaults for http.cors.allow-methods
and http.cors.allow-headers if none are specified in the config.
Closes#19520
We better read the header, but who knows what can happen, maybe headers are filtered out for some reasons and we don't want to run into an NPE, then we fallback to auto-detection.
Throw explicit IllegalStateException in unexpected situations, like where both response and exception are set, or when both are unset. Add unit test for SyncResponseListener.
#19096 introduced a generic TCPTransport base class so we can have multiple TCP based transport implementation. These implementations can vary in how they respond internally to situations where we concurrently send, receive and handle disconnects and can have different exceptions. However, disconnects are important events for the rest of the code base and should be distinguished from other errors (for example, it signals TransportMasterAction that it needs to retry and wait for the a (new) master to come back). Therefore, we should make sure that all the implementations do the proper translation from their internal exceptions into ConnectTransportException which is used externally.
Similarly we should make sure that the transport implementation properly recognize errors that were caused by a disconnect as such and deal with them correctly. This was, for example, the source of a build failure at https://elasticsearch-ci.elastic.co/job/elastic+elasticsearch+master+multijob-intake/1080 , where a concurrency issue cause SocketException to bubble out of MockTcpTransport.
This PR adds a tests which concurrently simulates connects, disconnects, sending and receiving and makes sure the above holds. It also fixes anything (not much!) that was found it.
creation timeout so they process the index creation cluster state update
before the test finishes and attempts to cleanup. Otherwise, the index
creation cluster state update could be processed after the test finishes
and cleans up, thereby leaking an index in the cluster state that could
cause issues for other tests that wouldn't expect the index to exist.
Closes#19530
making the test wait until all urgent requests are completed before
finishing, so that tear down can properly delete the created index
and cleanup. Without this wait, it was possible that the test would
finish and cleanup the deleted indices would happen before the
index creation even processed, causing the test to leave a created
index behind.