Previously, if a node left the cluster (for example, due to a long GC),
during a snapshot, the master node would mark the snapshot as failed, but
the node itself could continue snapshotting the data on its shards to the
repository. If the node rejoins the cluster, the master may assign it to
hold the replica shard (where it held the primary before getting kicked off
the cluster). The initialization of the replica shard would repeatedly fail
with a ShardLockObtainFailedException until the snapshot thread finally
finishes and relinquishes the lock on the Store.
This commit resolves the situation by ensuring that when a shard is removed
from a node (such as when a node rejoins the cluster and realizes it no longer
holds the active shard copy), any snapshotting of the removed shards is aborted.
In the scenario above, when the node rejoins the cluster, it will see in the cluster
state that the node no longer holds the primary shard, so IndicesClusterStateService
will remove the shard, thereby causing any snapshots of that shard to be aborted.
Closes#20876
The cluster state on a node is updated either
- by incoming cluster states that are received from the active master or
- by the node itself when it notices that the master has gone.
In the second case, the node adds the NO_MASTER_BLOCK and removes the current master as active master from its cluster state. In one particular case, it would also update the list of nodes, removing the master node that just failed. In the future, we want a clear separation between actions that can be executed by a master publishing a cluster state and a node locally updating its cluster state when no active master is around.
This commit fixes responses to HEAD requests so that the value of the
Content-Length is correct per the HTTP spec. Namely, the value of this
header should be equal to the Content-Length if the request were not a
HEAD request.
This commit also fixes a memory leak on HEAD requests to the main action
that arose from the bytes on a builder not being released due to them
being dropped on the floor to ensure that the response to the main
action did not have a body.
Relates #21123
Converts docs for `_cat/segments`, `_cat/plugins` and `_cat/repositories`
from `curl` to `// CONSOLE` so they are tested as part of the build and
are cleaner to use in Console. They should work fine with `curl` with
the `COPY AS CURL` link.
Also swaps the `source` type of the response from `js` to `txt` because
that is more correct. The syntax highlighter doesn't care. It looks at
the text to figure out the language. So it looks a little funny for `_cat`
responses regardless.
Relates to #18160
This commit adds preformatted tags to the Javadoc for
OsProbe#readSysFsCgroupCpuAcctCpuStat to render the form of the cpu.stat
file in a fixed-width font.
When acquiring cgroup stats, we check if such stats are available by
invoking a method areCgroupStatsAvailable. This method checks
availability by looking for existence of some virtual files in
/proc/self/cgroup and /sys/fs/cgroups. If these stats are not available,
the getCgroup method returns null. The OsProbeTests#testCgroupProbe did
not account for this. On some systems where tests run, the cgroup stats
might not be available yet this test method was expecting them to be (we
mock the relevant virtual file reads). This commit handles the execution
of this test on such systems by overriding the behavior of
OsProbe#areCgroupStatsAvailable. We test both the possibility of this
method returning true as well as false.
On some systems, cgroups will be available but not configured. And in
some cases, cgroups will be configured, but not for the subsystems that
we are expecting (e.g., cpu and cpuacct). This commit strengthens the
handling of cgroup stats on such systems.
Relates #21094
When system starts, it creates a temporary file named .es_temp_file to ensure the data directories are writable.
If system crashes after creating the .es_temp_file but before deleting this file, next time the system will not be able to start because the Files.createFile(resolve) will throw an exception if the file already exists.
Currently test that check that equals() and hashCode() are working as expected
for classes implementing them are quiet similar. This change moves common
assertions in this method to a common utility class. In addition, another common
utility function in most of these test classes that creates copies of input
object by running them through a StreamOutput and reading them back in, is moved
to ESTestCase so it can be shared across all these classes.
Closes#20629
Today the request interceptor can't support async calls since the response
of the async call would execute on a different thread ie. a client or listener
thread. This means in-turn that the intercepted handler is not executed with the
thread it was supposed to run and therefor can, if it's executing blocking
operations, potentially deadlock an entire server.
Since with j`ava-1.8.0-openjdk-1.8.0.111-1.b15.el7_2.x86_64`, the OpenJDK packaged for CentOS and OEL override the default value (`false`) for the JVM option `AssumeMP` and force it to `true` (see [this patch](https://git.centos.org/blob/rpms!!java-1.8.0-openjdk.git/ab03fcc7a277355a837dd4c8500f8f90201ea353/SOURCES!always_assumemp.patch))
Because it is forced to true by default for these packages, the following warning message is printed to the standard output when the Vagrant box has only 1 CPU:
> OpenJDK 64-Bit Server VM warning: If the number of processors is expected to increase from one, then you should configure the number of parallel GC threads appropriately using -XX:ParallelGCThreads=N
This message will then fail the test introduced in #20422 where we check if no entries have been added to the journal after the service has been started.
This commit restore the default value for the `AssumeMP` option for CentOS and OracleServer.
Before this commit `curl -XHEAD localhost:9200?pretty` would return
`Content-Length: 1` and a body which is fairly upsetting to standards
compliant tools. Now it'll return `Content-Length: 0` with an empty
body like every other `HEAD` request.
Relates to #21075
Refactors the BalancedShardsAllocator to create a method that
provides an allocation decision for allocating a single
unassigned shard or a single started shard that can no longer
remain on its current node. Having a separate method that
provides a detailed decision on the allocation of a single shard
will enable the cluster allocation explain API to directly
invoke these methods to provide allocation explanations.
Versions before 2.0 needed to be told to return interesting fields
like `_parent`, `_routing`, `_ttl`, and `_timestamp`. And they come
back inside a `fields` block which we need to parse.
Closes#21044