* Clean up s/ElasticSearch/Elasticsearch on docs/*
* Clean up s/ElasticSearch/Elasticsearch on src/* bin/* & pom.xml
* Clean up s/ElasticSearch/Elasticsearch on NOTICE.txt and README.textile
Closes#4634
Fixes#4451
Date fields without date (HH:mm:ss, for example) are parsed as time on Jan 1, 1970 UTC. However, before this change partial dates without year (MMM dd HH:mm:ss, for example) were parsed as as days of they year 2000. This change makes all partial dates to be treated based on year 1970. This is breaking change - before this change "Dec 15, 10:00:00" in most cases was parsed (and indexed) as "2000-12-15T10:00:00Z". After this change, it will be consistently parsed and indexed as "1970-12-15T10:00:00Z"
Refactor cache recycling so that it only caches large arrays (pages) that can
later be used to build more complex data-structures such as hash tables.
- QueueRecycler now takes a limit like other non-trivial recyclers.
- New PageCacheRecycler (inspired of CacheRecycler) has the ability to cache
byte[], int[], long[], double[] or Object[] arrays using a fixed amount of
memory (either globally or per-thread depending on the Recycler impl, eg.
queue is global while thread_local is per-thread).
- Paged arrays in o.e.common.util can now optionally take a PageCacheRecycler
to reuse existing pages.
- All aggregators' data-structures now use PageCacheRecycler:
- for all arrays (counts, mins, maxes, ...)
- LongHash can now take a PageCacheRecycler
- there is a new BytesRefHash (inspired from Lucene but quite different,
still; for instance it cheats on BytesRef comparisons by using Unsafe)
that also takes a PageCacheRecycler
Close#4557
Adding a small value to the threshold prevents weight deltas that are
very very close to the threshold to not trigger relocations. These
deltas can be rounding errors that lead to unnecessary relocations. In
practice this might only happen under very rare circumstances.
In general it's a good idea for the shard allocator to be a bit
more conversavtive in terms of rebalancing since in general relocation
costs are pretty high.
Closes#4630
Norms can be eagerly loaded on a per-field basis by setting norms.loading to
`eager` instead of the default `lazy`:
```
"my_string_field" : {
"type": "string",
"norms": {
"loading": "eager"
}
}
```
In case this behavior should be applied to all fields, it is possible to change
the default value by setting `index.norms.loading` to `eager`.
Close#4079
First, this breaks backwards compatibility!
* Removed /_cluster/nodes/stats endpoint
* Excpect the stats types not as parameters, but as part of the URL
* Returning all indices stats by default, returning all nodes stats by default
* Supporting groups & types in nodes stats now as well
* Updated documentation & tests accordingly
* Allow level parameter for "shards" and "indices" (cluster does not make sense here)
Closes#4057
Note: This breaks backward compatibility
* Removed clear/all parameters, now all stats are returned by default
* Made the metrics part of the URL
* Removed a lot of handlers
* Added shards/indices/cluster level paremeter to change response serialization
* Returning translog statistics in IndicesStats
* Added TranslogStats class
* Added IndexShard.translogStats() method to get the stats from concrete implementation
* Updated documentation
Closes#4054
The reason to not start packages on installation is to allow to configure
them before starting up (setting heap, cluster.name etc)
Also the documentation was updated in order to show, which statements need
to be executed.
In addition, these statements are also printed out when the package is
installed, depending on whether chkconfig, system or update-rc.d is used.
Closes#3722
When testing plugin manager with real downloads, it could happen that the test run forever. Fortunately, test suite will be interrupted after 20 minutes, but it could be useful not to fail the whole test suite but only warn in that case.
By default, plugin manager still wait indefinitely but it can be modified using new `--timeout` option:
```sh
bin/plugin --install elasticsearch/kibana --timeout 30s
bin/plugin --install elasticsearch/kibana --timeout 1h
```
Closes#4603.
Closes#4600.
Today during restart scenarios it is possible that we recover from a node that
has already been upgraded to version N+1. The node that we relocate to is
on version N and might not be able to read the index format from the node
we relocate from. This causes `IndexFormatToNewException` during
recovery but only after recovery has finished which can cause large
load spikes during the upgrade period.
Closes#4588