Switches most search behavior extensions from push (`onModule(SearchModule)`)
to pull (`implements SearchPlugin`). This effort in general gives plugin
authors a much cleaner view of how to extend Elasticsearch and starts to
set up portions of Elasticsearch as "the plugin API". This commit in
particular does that for search-time behavior like customized suggesters,
highlighters, score functions, and significance heuristics.
It also switches most such customization to being done at search module
construction time which is much, much easier to reason about from a testing
perspective. It also helps significantly in the process of de-guice-ing
Elasticsearch's startup.
There are at least two major search time extensions that aren't covered in
this commit that will simply have to wait for the next commit on the topic
because this one has already grown large: custom aggregations and custom
queries. These will likely live in the same SearchPlugin interface as well.
This change adds a createComponents() method to Plugin implementations
which they can use to return already constructed componenents/services.
Eventually this should be just services ("components" don't really do
anything), but for now it allows any object so that preconstructed
instances by plugins can still be bound to guice. Over time we should
add basic services as arguments to this method, but for now I have left
it empty so as to not presume what is a necessary service.
If the allocation decision for a primary shard was NO, this should
cause the cluster health for the shard to go RED, even if the shard
belongs to a newly created index or is part of cluster recovery.
Relates #9126
Previously, index creation would momentarily cause the cluster health to
go RED, because the primaries were still being assigned and activated.
This commit ensures that when an index is created or an index is being
recovered during cluster recovery and it does not have any active
allocation ids, then the cluster health status will not go RED, but
instead be YELLOW.
Relates #9126
this commit moves the most of the http related integ tests out into it's own
`qa/smoke-test-http` project where most of the test can run against the external cluster.
Today when a node is removed the cluster (it leaves or it fails), we
submit a cluster state update task. These cluster state update tasks are
processed serially on the master. When nodes are removed en masse (e.g.,
a rack is taken down or otherwise becomes unavailable), the master will
be slow to process these failures because of the resulting reroutes and
publishing of each subsequent cluster state. We improve this in this
commit by processing the node removals using the cluster state update
task batch processing framework.
Relates #19289
Today we have a bunch of tests that use netty transport for several reasons
these tests use it because they need to run some tcp based transport. Yet, this
couples our tests tightly to the netty implementation which should be tested on it's own.
This change adds a plain socket based blocking TcpTransport implementation that is used by
default in tests if local transport is suppressed or if network is selected.
It also adds another tcp network implementation as a showcase how the interface works.
Lucene IndexWriter asserts on files existing on the filesystem but
some tests throw IOException explicitly on those operatiosn such that
some tests trip asserts. We had this before on InternalEngine#ctor
and added some logic there to catch only a specific assertions based
on some excepition stack analysis. This change applies the same logic
to the IndexWriter#commit part of the engine since it can hit the same
issue.
This also fixes a self-suppression issue in Store.java.
Closes#19356
Users wanting to send a request by providing only its method and endpoint, effectively the only two required arguments, shouldn't need to pass in an empty map and a null entity for the body. While at it we can also add a variant to send requests by specifying only method, endpoint and params, but not body. Headers remain a vararg as last argument, so they can always optionally be provided.
Closes#19312
Several tests required http.enabled where it was unnecessary.
We also had RestMainActionIT which tests what two of our REST tests
test already so I removed it.
The explicit use of http.enabled: false is also obsolet since our
test do that by default.
The DiscoveryNodeService exists to register CustomNodeAttributes which
plugins can add. This is not necessary, since plugins can already add
additional attributes, and use the node attributes prefix.
This change removes the DiscoveryNodeService, and converts the only
consumer, the ec2 discovery plugin, to add the ec2 availability zone
in additionalSettings().
This change removes the ability for guice to have child injectors (and
the entire concept of parent injectors) from our fork of guice. The
methodology for removing was simple: I removed createChildInjector, and
continued to remove methods and members that were unused until my head
was spinning. The motivation for this change is to limit what our fork
of guice gives us access to, so we don't regress and start adding back
more complicated uses.
This commit adds a note to the GitHub issue template noting that bug
reports on OS that we do not support or feature requests for OS that we
do not support will be closed.
Relates #19322
If there are percolator queries containing `range` queries with ranges based on the current time then this can lead to incorrect results if the `percolate` query gets cached. These ranges are changing each time the `percolate` query gets executed and if this query gets cached then the results will be based on how the range was at the time when the `percolate` query got cached.
The ExtractQueryTermsService has been renamed `QueryAnalyzer` and now only deals with analyzing the query (extracting terms and deciding if the entire query is a verified match) . The `PercolatorFieldMapper` is responsible for adding the right fields based on the analysis the `QueryAnalyzer` has performed, because this is highly dependent on the field mappings. Also the `PercolatorFieldMapper` is responsible for creating the percolate query.
This adds a test that uses transport implementation and sends random requests
to 3 different nodes, the request handlers maybe forwarding the requests to yet another node
etc. until returning the response. This test basically tests that nodes are not deadlocking
in a distributed fashion.
Today in the packaging removal scripts, we disable the service in
post-uninstall. Yet, this happens after service files have been
erased. On some systems, this can cause the service disable to fail
leaving behind state causing the service to be enabled on subsequent
installs. This commit moves the service disabling to the pre-uninstall
script to prevent this issue.
Relates #19328