This commit updates the default ciphers and TLS protocols that are used
when the runtime JDK supports them. New cipher support has been
introduced in JDK 11 and 12 along with performance fixes for AES GCM.
The ciphers are ordered with PFS ciphers being most preferred, then
AEAD ciphers, and finally those with mainstream hardware support. When
available stronger encryption is preferred for a given cipher.
This is a backport of #41385 and #41808. There are known JDK bugs with
TLSv1.3 that have been fixed in various versions. These are:
1. The JDK's bundled HttpsServer will endless loop under JDK11 and JDK
12.0 (Fixed in 12.0.1) based on the way the Apache HttpClient performs
a close (half close).
2. In all versions of JDK 11 and 12, the HttpsServer will endless loop
when certificates are not trusted or another handshake error occurs. An
email has been sent to the openjdk security-dev list and #38646 is open
to track this.
3. In JDK 11.0.2 and prior there is a race condition with session
resumption that leads to handshake errors when multiple concurrent
handshakes are going on between the same client and server. This bug
does not appear when client authentication is in use. This is
JDK-8213202, which was fixed in 11.0.3 and 12.0.
4. In JDK 11.0.2 and prior there is a bug where resumed TLS sessions do
not retain peer certificate information. This is JDK-8212885.
The way these issues are addressed is that the current java version is
checked and used to determine the supported protocols for tests that
provoke these issues.
We have a number of places in analysis-handling code where we check
if a field type is a keyword field, and if so then extract the normalizer rather
than pulling the index-time analyzer. However, a keyword normalizer is
really just a special case of an analyzer, so we should be able to simplify this
by setting the normalizer as the index-time analyzer at construction time.
testclusters detect from settings that security is enabled
if a user is not specified using the DSL introduced in this PR, a default one is created
the appropriate wait conditions are used authenticating with the first user defined in the DSL ( or the default user ).
an example DSL to create a user is user username:"test_user" password:"x-pack-test-password" role: "superuser" all keys are optional and default to the values shown in this example
Upgrades the AWS SDK to the same version that we're using for the repository-s3 plugin, providing
testing capabilities to override certain SDK endpoints in order to point them to localhost for testing.
Adds tests for the various credential providers.
Today Elasticsearch accepts, but silently ignores, port ranges in the
`discovery.seed_hosts` setting:
```
discovery.seed_hosts: 10.1.2.3:9300-9400
```
Silently ignoring part of a setting like this is trappy. With this change we
reject seed host addresses of this form.
Closes#40786
Backport of #41404
This is related to #27260. Currently we have a single read buffer that
is no larger than a single TLS packet. This prevents us from reading
multiple TLS packets in a single socket read call. This commit modifies
our TLS work to support reading similar to the plaintext case. The data
will be copied to a (potentially) recycled TLS packet-sized buffer for
interaction with the SSLEngine.
This fixes#41794. Currently the read timeout test queues up responses
in the netty pipeline. These responses are immediately returned in the
write call, but they are not released. This commit releases the
responses. This will cause the leak detector to quit throwing
exceptions.
This is related to #27260. Currently there is a setting
http.read_timeout that allows users to define a read timeout for the
http transport. This commit implements support for this functionality
with the transport-nio plugin. The behavior here is that a repeating
task will be scheduled for the interval defined. If there have been
no requests received since the last run and there are no inflight
requests, the channel will be closed.
* Implement Bulk Deletes for GCS Repository (#41368)
* Just like #40322 for AWS
* We already had a bulk delete API but weren't using it from the blob container implementation, now we are using it
* Made the bulk delete API also compliant with our interface that only suppresses errors about non existent blobs by stating failed deletes (I didn't use any bulk stat action here since having to stat here should be the exception anyway and it would make error handling a lot more complex)
* Fixed bulk delete API to limit its batch size to 100 in line with GCS recommendations
back port of #41368
This is related to #27260. Currently for the SSLDriver we allocate a
dedicated network write buffer and encrypt the data into that buffer one
buffer at a time. This requires constantly switching between encrypting
and flushing. This commit adds a dedicated outbound buffer for SSL
operations that will internally allocate new packet sized buffers as
they are need (for writing encrypted data). This allows us to totally
encrypt an operation before writing it to the network. Eventually it can
be hooked up to buffer recycling.
This commit also backports the following commit:
Handle WRAP ops during SSL read
It is possible that a WRAP operation can occur while decrypting
handshake data in TLS 1.3. The SSLDriver does not currently handle this
well as it does not have access to the outbound buffer during read call.
This commit moves the buffer into the Driver to fix this issue. Data
wrapped during a read call will be queued for writing after the read
call is complete.
Motivated by slow snapshot deletes reported in e.g. #39656 and the fact that these likely are a contributing factor to repositories accumulating stale files over time when deletes fail to finish in time and are interrupted before they can complete.
* Makes snapshot deletion async and parallelizes some steps of the delete process that can be safely run concurrently via the snapshot thread poll
* I did not take the biggest potential speedup step here and parallelize the shard file deletion because that's probably better handled by moving to bulk deletes where possible (and can still be parallelized via the snapshot pool where it isn't). Also, I wanted to keep the size of the PR manageable.
* See https://github.com/elastic/elasticsearch/pull/39656#issuecomment-470492106
* Also, as a side effect this gives the `SnapshotResiliencyTests` a little more coverage for master failover scenarios (since parallel access to a blob store repository during deletes is now possible since a delete isn't a single task anymore).
* By adding a `ThreadPool` reference to the repository this also lays the groundwork to parallelizing shard snapshot uploads to improve the situation reported in #39657
This is related to #27260. Currently for the SSLDriver we allocate a
dedicated network write buffer and encrypt the data into that buffer one
buffer at a time. This requires constantly switching between encrypting
and flushing. This commit adds a dedicated outbound buffer for SSL
operations that will internally allocate new packet sized buffers as
they are need (for writing encrypted data). This allows us to totally
encrypt an operation before writing it to the network. Eventually it can
be hooked up to buffer recycling.
* The check doesn't add much if anything practically, since the S3 repository is eventually consistent and we only log the non-existence of a blob anyway
* We don't do the check on writes for this very reason and documented it as such
* Removing the check saves one API call per single delete speeding up the deletion process and lowering costs
* Adds Bulk delete API to blob container
* Implement bulk delete API for S3
* Adjust S3Fixture to accept both path styles for bulk deletes since the S3 SDK uses both during our ITs
* Closes#40250
* Replace usages RandomizedTestingTask with built-in Gradle Test (#40978)
This commit replaces the existing RandomizedTestingTask and supporting code with Gradle's built-in JUnit support via the Test task type. Additionally, the previous workaround to disable all tasks named "test" and create new unit testing tasks named "unitTest" has been removed such that the "test" task now runs unit tests as per the normal Gradle Java plugin conventions.
(cherry picked from commit 323f312bbc829a63056a79ebe45adced5099f6e6)
* Fix forking JVM runner
* Don't bump shadow plugin version
This change updates our version of httpclient to version 4.5.8, which
contains the fix for HTTPCLIENT-1968, which is a bug where the client
started re-writing paths that contained encoded reserved characters
with their unreserved form.
The xlint exclusions of the following plugins were removed:
* ingest-attachment.
* mapper-size.
* transport-nio. Removing the -try exclusion required some work, because
the NettyAdaptor implements AutoCloseable and NettyAdaptor#close() method
could throw an InterruptedException (ChannelFuture#await() and a generic
Exception is re-thrown, which maybe an ChannelFuture). The easiest way
around this to me seemed that NettyAdaptor should not implement AutoCloseable,
because it is not directly used in a try-with-resources statement.
Relates to #40366
This change adds the following internal refactorings:
* wraps input analyzers into an unmodifiable map in IndexAnalyzers ctor
* removes duplicated indexSetting in IndexAnalyzers
* removes references to IndexAnalyzers from DocumentMapperParser and TypeParser.ParserContext.
It can always be retrieve it from MapperService directly in those cases
The hdfs-fixture is actually executed in plugin/repository-hdfs as a
dependency. The fixture is not needed and actually causes a failure
because we have two copies now and both use the same ports.
* Fix 3rd pary S3 tests
This is allready excluded on line 186, by doing this again here, the
other exclusion from arround that line are removed causing the tests to
fail.
* Fix blacklisting with the fixture
Replaces the vagrant based kerberos fixtures with docker based test fixtures plugin.
The configuration is now entirely static on the docker side and no longer driven by Gradle,
also two different services are being configured since there are two different consumers of the fixture that can run in parallel and require different configurations.
Adds the search_as_you_type field type that acts like a text field optimized
for as-you-type search completion. It creates a couple subfields that analyze
the indexed terms as shingles, against which full terms are queried, and a
prefix subfield that analyze terms as the largest shingle size used and
edge-ngrams, against which partial terms are queried
Adds a match_bool_prefix query type that creates a boolean clause of a term
query for each term except the last, for which a boolean clause with a prefix
query is created.
The match_bool_prefix query is the recommended way of querying a search as you
type field, which will boil down to term queries for each shingle of the input
text on the appropriate shingle field, and the final (possibly partial) term
as a term query on the prefix field. This field type also supports phrase and
phrase prefix queries however
This commit adds an InboundHandler to handle inbound message processing.
With this commit, this code is moved out of the TcpTransport.
Additionally, finer grained unit tests are added to ensure that the
inbound processing works as expected
Currently there are some components of message serializer and sending
that still occur in TcpTransport. This commit makes it possible to
send a message without the TcpTransport by moving all of the remaining
application logic to the OutboundHandler. Additionally, it adds unit
tests to ensure that this logic works as expected.
* Add support for setting and keystore settings
* system properties and env var config
* use testclusters for repository-s3
* Some cleanup of the build.gradle file for plugin-s3
* add runner {} to rest integ test task
FilterDirectory.getPendingDeletions does not delegate, fixed
temporarily by overriding in StoreDirectory.
This in turn caused duplicate file name use after a trimUnsafeCommits
had been done, since a new IndexWriter would not consider the pending
deletes in IndexFileDeleter. This should only happen on windows (AFAIK).
Reenabled doing index updates for all tests using
IndexShardTests.indexOnReplicaWithGaps (which could fail due to above
when using mocked WindowsFS).
Added getPendingDeletions delegation to all elasticsearch
FilterDirectory subclasses that were not trivial test-only overrides to
minimize the risk of hitting this issue in another case.
Currently, we maintain a transport name ("mock-nio", "nio", "netty")
that is passed to a `TcpTransportChannel` when a request is received.
The value of this name is to associate with the task when we register a
task with the task manager. However, it is only possible to run ES with
one transport, so having an implementation specific name is unnecessary.
This commit removes the name and replaces it with the generic
"transport".
This commit adds a variant for every official distribution that omits
the bundled jdk. The "no-jdk" naming is conveyed through the package
classifier, alongside the platform. Package tests are also added for
each new distribution.
This change marks the transport-nio plugin as having a client jar. The
nio transport can be used from a transport client and the
x-pack-transport artifact depends on the transport-nio jar but this jar
is not published. This change marks the transport-nio project as having
a client jar so that the jar may be published in the same way that we
publish the netty4 transport artifact.
The change to actually publish the jar will be handled separately as an
update to the release manager.
* Optimize Bulk Message Parsing and Message Length Parsing
* findNextMarker took almost 1ms per invocation during the PMC rally track
* Fixed to be about an order of magnitude faster by using Netty's bulk `ByteBuf` search
* It is unnecessary to instantiate an object (the input stream wrapper) and throw it away, just to read the `int` length from the message bytes
* Fixed by adding bulk `int` read to BytesReference
* Un-mute and fix BuildExamplePluginsIT
There doesn't seem to be anything wrong with the test iteself.
I think the failure were CI performance related, but while it was muted,
some failures managed to sneak in.
Closes#38784
* PR review
Backport of #39350
Contains the following:
* LUCENE-8635: Move terms dictionary off-heap for non-primary-key fields in `MMapDirectory`
* LUCENE-8292: `TermsEnum` is fully abstract
* LUCENE-8679: Return WITHIN in `EdgeTree#relateTriangle` only when polygon and triangle share one edge
* LUCENE-8676: Nori tokenizer deals correctly with large buffers
* LUCENE-8697: `GraphTokenStreamFiniteStrings` better handles side paths with gaps
* LUCENE-8664: Add `equals` and `hashCode` to `TotalHits`
* LUCENE-8660: `TopDocsCollector` returns accurate hit counts if the total equals the threshold
* LUCENE-8654: `Polygon2D#relateTriangle` fix for when the polygon is inside the triangle
* LUCENE-8645: `Intervals#fixField` can merge intervals from different fields
* LUCENE-8585: Create jump-tables for DocValues at index time
Blob store compression was not enabled for some of the files in
snapshots due to constructor accessing sub-class fields. Fixed to
instead accept compress field as constructor param. Also fixed chunk
size validation to work.
Deprecated repositories.fs.compress setting as well to be able to unify
in a future commit.
DfsPhase captures terms used for scoring a query in order to build global term statistics across
multiple shards for more accurate scoring. It currently does this by building the query's `Weight`
and calling `extractTerms` on it to collect terms, and then calling `IndexSearcher.termStatistics()`
for each collected term. This duplicates work, however, as the various `Weight` implementations
will already have collected these statistics at construction time.
This commit replaces this round-about way of collecting stats, instead using a delegating
IndexSearcher that collects the term contexts and statistics when `IndexSearcher.termStatistics()`
is called from the Weight.
It also fixes a bug when using rescorers, where a `QueryRescorer` would calculate distributed term
statistics, but ignore field statistics. `Rescorer.extractTerms` has been removed, and replaced with
a new method on `RescoreContext` that returns any queries used by the rescore implementation.
The delegating IndexSearcher then collects term contexts and statistics in the same way described
above for each Query.
This commit changes the `TransportVerifyShardBeforeCloseAction` so that it
always forces the flush of the shard. It seems that #37961 is not sufficient to
ensure that the translog and the Lucene commit share the exact same max
seq no and global checkpoint information in case of one or more noop
operations have been made.
The `BulkWithUpdatesIT.testThatMissingIndexDoesNotAbortFullBulkRequest`
and `FrozenIndexTests.testFreezeEmptyIndexWithTranslogOps` test this trivial
situation and they both fail 1 on 10 executions.
Relates to #33888
In #38333 and #38350 we moved away from the `discovery.zen` settings namespace
since these settings have an effect even though Zen Discovery itself is being
phased out. This change aligns the documentation and the names of related
classes and methods with the newly-introduced naming conventions.
We have had various reports of problems caused by the maxRetryTimeout
setting in the low-level REST client. Such setting was initially added
in the attempts to not have requests go through retries if the request
already took longer than the provided timeout.
The implementation was problematic though as such timeout would also
expire in the first request attempt (see #31834), would leave the
request executing after expiration causing memory leaks (see #33342),
and would not take into account the http client internal queuing (see #25951).
Given all these issues, it seems that this custom timeout mechanism
gives little benefits while causing a lot of harm. We should rather rely
on connect and socket timeout exposed by the underlying http client
and accept that a request can overall take longer than the configured
timeout, which is the case even with a single retry anyways.
This commit removes the `maxRetryTimeout` setting and all of its usages.
For some users, the built in authorization mechanism does not fit their
needs and no feature that we offer would allow them to control the
authorization process to meet their needs. In order to support this,
a concept of an AuthorizationEngine is being introduced, which can be
provided using the security extension mechanism.
An AuthorizationEngine is responsible for making the authorization
decisions about a request. The engine is responsible for knowing how to
authorize and can be backed by whatever mechanism a user wants. The
default mechanism is one backed by roles to provide the authorization
decisions. The AuthorizationEngine will be called by the
AuthorizationService, which handles more of the internal workings that
apply in general to authorization within Elasticsearch.
In order to support external authorization services that would back an
authorization engine, the entire authorization process has become
asynchronous, which also includes all calls to the AuthorizationEngine.
The use of roles also leaked out of the AuthorizationService in our
existing code that is not specifically related to roles so this also
needed to be addressed. RequestInterceptor instances sometimes used a
role to ensure a user was not attempting to escalate their privileges.
Addressing this leakage of roles meant that the RequestInterceptor
execution needed to move within the AuthorizationService and that
AuthorizationEngines needed to support detection of whether a user has
more privileges on a name than another. The second area where roles
leaked to the user is in the handling of a few privilege APIs that
could be used to retrieve the user's privileges or ask if a user has
privileges to perform an action. To remove the leakage of roles from
these actions, the AuthorizationService and AuthorizationEngine gained
methods that enabled an AuthorizationEngine to return the response for
these APIs.
Ultimately this feature is the work included in:
#37785#37495#37328#36245#38137#38219Closes#32435
Renames the following settings to remove the mention of `zen` in their names:
- `discovery.zen.hosts_provider` -> `discovery.seed_providers`
- `discovery.zen.ping.unicast.concurrent_connects` -> `discovery.seed_resolver.max_concurrent_resolvers`
- `discovery.zen.ping.unicast.hosts.resolve_timeout` -> `discovery.seed_resolver.timeout`
- `discovery.zen.ping.unicast.hosts` -> `discovery.seed_addresses`
Today the following settings in the `discovery.zen` namespace are still used:
- `discovery.zen.no_master_block`
- `discovery.zen.hosts_provider`
- `discovery.zen.ping.unicast.concurrent_connects`
- `discovery.zen.ping.unicast.hosts.resolve_timeout`
- `discovery.zen.ping.unicast.hosts`
This commit deprecates all other settings in this namespace so that they can be
removed in the next major version.
This PR removes the temporary change we made to the yml test harness in #37285
to automatically set `include_type_name` to `true` in index creation requests
if it's not already specified. This is possible now that the vast majority of
index creation requests were updated to be typeless in #37611. A few additional
tests also needed updating here.
Additionally, this PR updates the test harness to set `include_type_name` to
`false` in index creation requests when communicating with 6.x nodes. This
mirrors the logic added in #37611 to allow for typeless document write requests
in test set-up code. With this update in place, we can remove many references
to `include_type_name: false` from the yml tests.
The apache commons http client implementations recently released
versions that solve TLS compatibility issues with the new TLS engine
that supports TLSv1.3 with JDK 11. This change updates our code to
use these versions since JDK 11 is a supported JDK and we should
allow the use of TLSv1.3.
Today we pass `discovery.zen.minimum_master_nodes` to nodes started up in
tests, but for 7.x nodes this setting is not required as it has no effect.
This commit removes this setting so that nodes are started with more realistic
configurations, and deprecates it.
This PR attempts to remove all typed calls from our YAML REST tests. The PR adds include_type_name: false to create index requests that use a mapping and also to put mapping requests. It also removes _type from index requests where they haven't already been removed. The PR ignores tests named *_with_types.yml since this are specifically testing typed API behaviour.
The change also includes changing the test harness to add the type _doc to index, update, get and bulk requests that do not specify the document type when the test is running against a mixed 7.x/6.x cluster.
* Make repository settings override static settings
* Cache clients according to settings
* Introduce custom implementations for the AWS credentials here to be able to use them as part of a hash key
This commit moves the aggregation and mapping code from joda time to
java time. This includes field mappers, root object mappers, aggregations with date
histograms, query builders and a lot of changes within tests.
The cut-over to java time is a requirement so that we can support nanoseconds
properly in a future field mapper.
Relates #27330
This commit introduces a NetworkMessage class. This class has two
subclasses - InboundMessage and OutboundMessage. These messages can
be serialized and deserialized independent of the transport. This allows
more granular testing. Additionally, the serialization mechanism is now
a simple Supplier. This builds the framework to eventually move the
serialization of transport messages to the network thread. This is the
one serialization component that is not currently performed on the
network thread (transport deserialization and http serialization and
deserialization are all on the network thread).
Currently we create dedicated network threads for both the http and
transport implementations. Since these these threads should never
perform blocking operations, these threads could be shared. This commit
modifies the nio-transport to have 0 http workers be default. If the
default configs are used, this will cause the http transport to be run
on the transport worker threads. The http worker setting will still exist
in case the user would like to configure dedicated workers. Additionally,
this commmit deletes dedicated acceptor threads. We have never had these
for the netty transport and they can be added back if a need is
determined in the future.
The integ tests currently use the raw zip project name as the
distribution type. This commit simplifies this specification to be
"default" or "oss". Whether zip or tar is used should be an internal
implementation detail of the integ test setup, which can (in the future)
be platform specific.
This change adds a way to customize how phrase prefix queries should be created
on field types. The match phrase prefix query is exposed in field types in order
to allow optimizations based on the options set on the field.
For instance the text field uses the configured prefix field (if available) to
build a span near that mixes the original field and the prefix field on the last
position.
This change also contains a small refactoring of the match/multi_match query that
simplifies the interactions between the builders.
Closes#31921
The AbstracLifecycleComponent used to extend AbstractComponent, so it had to pass settings to the constractor of its supper class.
It no longer extends the AbstractComponent so there is no need for this constructor
There is also no need for AbstracLifecycleComponent subclasses to have Settings in their constructors if they were only passing it over to super constructor.
This is part 1. which will be backported to 6.x with a migration guide/deprecation log.
part 2 will have this constructor removed in 7
relates #35560
relates #34488
We recently migrated suggestions to `Writeable`. That allows us to also
clean up empty constructors and methods that called them as they are no
longer needed. They are replaced by constructors that accept a
`StreamInput` instance.
Today, a setting can declare that its validity depends on the values of other
related settings. However, the validity of a setting is not always checked
against the correct values of its dependent settings because those settings'
correct values may not be available when the validator runs.
This commit separates the validation of a settings updates into two phases,
with separate methods on the `Setting.Validator` interface. In the first phase
the setting's validity is checked in isolation, and in the second phase it is
checked again against the values of its related settings. Most settings only
use the first phase, and only the few settings with dependencies make use of
the second phase.
* There is no point in hsyncing after every individual write since there is only value in completely written blobs for restores, this is ensures by the `SYNC` flag already and there is no need for separately invoking `hsync` after individual writes
Today the routing of a SourceToParse is assigned in a separate step
after the object is created. We can easily forget to set the routing.
With this commit, the routing must be provided in the constructor of
SourceToParse.
Relates #36921
Today the default databases bundled with ingest-geoip are treated as
configuration files that we unbundle into the Elasticsearch
configuration directory. This can cause problems for users using our
Docker images if they bind mount over the configuration
directory. Additionally, it creates complexity when trying to convert
ingest-geoip to a module. This commit moves these databases out of the
configuration directory and instead loads from the plugin
directory. Further, custom databases can still be put into the
configuration directory.
Today we try to load the ingest-geoip databases lazily. Currently they
are loaded as soon as any pipeline that uses an ingest-geoip processor
is created. This is not lazy enough. For example, we could only load the
databases the first time that they are actually used. This would ensure
that we load the minimal set of data to support an in-use pipeline
(instead of *all* of the data). This can come up in a couple of
ways. One is when a subset of the database is used (e.g., the city
database versus the country database versus the ASN database). Another
is when the plugins are installed on non-ingest nodes (e.g., master-only
nodes); we would never use the database in this case yet they are
currently being loaded occupying ~60 MB of the heap. This commit makes
the ingest-geoip databases as lazy as possible.
Co-authored-by: Martijn van Groningen <martijn.v.groningen@gmail.com>
This commit add support for using sequence numbers to power [optimistic concurrency control](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Optimistic_concurrency_control)
in the delete and index transport actions and requests. A follow up will come with adding sequence
numbers to the update and get results.
Relates #36148
Relates #10708
This commit updates our transport settings for 7.0. It generally takes a
few approaches. First, for normal transport settings, it usestransport.
instead of transport.tcp. Second, it uses transport.tcp, http.tcp,
or network.tcp for all settings that are proxies for OS level socket
settings. Third, it marks the network.tcp.connect_timeout setting for
removal. Network service level settings are only settings that apply to
both the http and transport modules. There is no connect timeout in
http. Fourth, it moves all the transport settings to a single class
TransportSettings similar to the HttpTransportSettings class.
This commit does not actually remove any settings. It just adds the new
renamed settings and adds todos for settings that will be deprecated.
Includes the following:
* Reversion of doc-values changes in LUCENE-8374; we are interested in seeing if this
has an effect on benchmarks for node-stats and index-stats
* More improvements to docvalues updates
Currently our handshake requests do not include a version. This is
unfortunate as we cannot rely on the stream version since it is not the
sending node's version. Instead it is the minimum compatibility version.
The handshake request is currently empty and we do nothing with it. This
should allow us to add data to the request without breaking backwards
compatibility.
This commit adds the version to the handshake request. Additionally, it
allows "future data" to be added to the request. This allows nodes to craft
a version compatible response. And will properly handle additional data in
future handshake requests. The proper handling of "future data" is useful
as this is the only request where we do not know the other node's version.
Finally, it renames the TcpTransportHandshaker to
TransportHandshaker.
The different `DocValueFormat` implementors throw `UnsupportedOperationException` for methods that they don't support. That is perfectly fine, and quite common as not all implementors support all of the possible formats. This makes it hard though to trace back which implementors support which formats as they all implement the same methods.
This commit introduces default methods in the `DocValueFormat` interface so that all methods throw `UnsupportedOperationException` by default. This way implementors can override only the methods that they specifically support.
This commit modifies BigArrays to take a circuit breaker name and
the circuit breaking service. The default instance of BigArrays that
is passed around everywhere always uses the request breaker. At the
network level, we want to be using the inflight request breaker. So this
change will allow that.
Additionally, as this change moves away from a single instance of
BigArrays, the class is modified to not be a Releasable anymore.
Releasing big arrays was always dispatching to the PageCacheRecycler,
so this change makes the PageCacheRecycler the class that needs to be
managed and torn-down.
Finally, this commit closes#31435 be making the serialization of
transport messages use the inflight request breaker. With this change,
we no longer push the global BigArrays instnace to the network level.
Moves all remaining (rolling-upgrade and mixed-version) REST tests to use Zen2. To avoid adding
extra configuration, it relies on Zen2 being set as the default discovery type. This required a few
smaller changes in other tests. I've removed AzureMinimumMasterNodesTests which tests Zen1
functionality and dates from a time where host providers were not configurable and each cloud
plugin had its own discovery.type, subclassing the ZenDiscovery class. I've also adapted a few tests
which were unnecessarily adding addTestZenDiscovery = false for the same legacy reasons. Finally,
this also moves the unconfigured-node-name REST test to Zen2, testing the auto-bootstrapping
functionality in development mode when no discovery configuration is provided.
Add support for inlined user dictionary in Nori
This change adds a new option called `user_dictionary_rules` to the
Nori a tokenizer`. It can be used to set additional tokenization rules
to the Korean tokenizer directly in the settings (instead of using a file).
Closes#35842
Includes:
LUCENE-8594: DV update are broken for updates on new field
LUCENE-8590: Optimize DocValues update datastructures
LUCENE-8593: Specialize single value numeric DV updates
Relates #36286
This commit moves back to use explicit dependsOn for test tasks on
check. Not all tasks extending RandomizedTestingTask should be run by
check directly.
This commit changes the format of the `hits.total` in the search response to be an object with
a `value` and a `relation`. The `value` indicates the number of hits that match the query and the
`relation` indicates whether the number is accurate (in which case the relation is equals to `eq`)
or a lower bound of the total (in which case it is equals to `gte`).
This change also adds a parameter called `rest_total_hits_as_int` that can be used in the
search APIs to opt out from this change (retrieve the total hits as a number in the rest response).
Note that currently all search responses are accurate (`track_total_hits: true`) or they don't contain
`hits.total` (`track_total_hits: true`). We'll add a way to get a lower bound of the total hits in a
follow up (to allow numbers to be passed to `track_total_hits`).
Relates #33028
Closes#35435
- make it easier to add additional testing tasks with the proper configuration and add some where they were missing.
- mute or fix failing tests
- add a check as part of testing conventions to find classes not included in any testing task.
This commit upgrades netty. This will close#35360. Netty started
throwing an IllegalArgumentException if a CompositeByteBuf is
created with < 2 components. Netty4Utils was updated to reflect this
change.
This is related to #34405 and a follow-up to #34753. It makes a number
of changes to our current keepalive pings.
The ping interval configuration is moved to the ConnectionProfile.
The server channel now responds to pings. This makes the keepalive
pings bidirectional.
On the client-side, the pings can now be optimized away. What this
means is that if the channel has received a message or sent a message
since the last pinging round, the ping is not sent for this round.
A number of tokenfilters can produce multiple tokens at the same position. This
is a problem when using token chains to parse synonym files, as the SynonymMap
requires that there are no stacked tokens in its input.
This commit ensures that when used to parse synonyms, these tokenfilters either produce
a single version of their input token, or that they throw an error when mappings are
generated. In indexes created in elasticsearch 6.x deprecation warnings are emitted in place
of the error.
* asciifolding and cjk_bigram produce only the folded or bigrammed token
* decompounders, synonyms and keyword_repeat are skipped
* n-grams, word-delimiter-filter, multiplexer, fingerprint and phonetic throw errors
Fixes#34298
This commit removes the dedicated `setSoLinger` method. This simplifies
the `TcpChannel` interface. This method has very little effect as the
SO_LINGER is not set prior to the channels being closed in the abstract
transport test case. We still will set SO_LINGER on the
`MockNioTransport`. However we can do this manually.
This commit is related to #32517. It allows an "sni_server_name"
attribute on a DiscoveryNode to be propagated to the server using
the TLS SNI extentsion. Prior to this commit, this functionality
was only support for the netty transport. This commit adds this
functionality to the security nio transport.
The ICU plugin provides the building blocks of an analysis chain, but doesn't actually have a prebuilt analyzer. It would be a better for users if there was a simple analyzer that they could use out of the box, and also something we can point to from the CJK Analyzer docs as a superior alternative.
Relates to #34285
This is related to #34483. It introduces a namespaced setting for
compression that allows users to configure compression on a per remote
cluster basis. The transport.tcp.compress remains as a fallback
setting. If transport.tcp.compress is set to true, then all requests
and responses are compressed. If it is set to false, only requests to
clusters based on the cluster.remote.cluster_name.transport.compress
setting are compressed. However, after this change regardless of any
local settings, responses will be compressed if the request that is
received was compressed.
With this change, `Version` no longer carries information about the qualifier,
we still need a way to show the "display version" that does have both
qualifier and snapshot. This is now stored by the build and red from `META-INF`.
This is related to #29023. Additionally at other points we have
discussed a preference for removing the need to unnecessarily block
threads for opening new node connections. This commit lays the groudwork
for this by opening connections asynchronously at the transport level.
We still block, however, this work will make it possible to eventually
remove all blocking on new connections out of the TransportService
and Transport.
Currently we create a new netty event loop group for client connections
and all server profiles. Each new group creates new threads for io
processing. This means 2 * num of processors new threads for each group.
A single group should be able to handle all io processing (for the
transports). This also brings the netty module inline with what we do
for nio.
Additionally, this PR renames the worker threads to be the same for
netty and nio.
Stop passing `Settings` to `AbstractComponent`'s ctor. This allows us to
stop passing around `Settings` in a *ton* of places. While this change
touches many files, it touches them all in fairly small, mechanical
ways, doing a few things per file:
1. Drop the `super(settings);` line on everything that extends
`AbstractComponent`.
2. Drop the `settings` argument to the ctor if it is no longer used.
3. If the file doesn't use `logger` then drop `extends
AbstractComponent` from it.
4. Clean up all compilation failure caused by the `settings` removal
and drop any now unused `settings` isntances and method arguments.
I've intentionally *not* removed the `settings` argument from a few
files:
1. TransportAction
2. AbstractLifecycleComponent
3. BaseRestHandler
These files don't *need* `settings` either, but this change is large
enough as is.
Relates to #34488
Drops the `Settings` member from `AbstractComponent`, moving it from the
base class on to the classes that use it. For the most part this is a
mechanical change that doesn't drop `Settings` accesses. The one
exception to this is naming threads where it switches from an invocation
that passes `Settings` and extracts the node name to one that explicitly
passes the node name.
This change doesn't drop the `Settings` argument from
`AbstractComponent`'s ctor because this change is big enough as is.
We'll do that in a follow up change.
Drops the `deprecationLogger` from `AbstractComponent`, moving it to
places where we need it. This saves us from building a bunch of
`DeprecationLogger`s that we don't need.
Relates to #34488
* Binding to `0` gives us free ports that are assigned sequentially by Linux making collisions much less likely compared to manually finding a free port in a range
* Closes#32208
After discussing on the team's FixItFriday, we concluded that
static final instance variables that are mutable should be lowercased.
Historically, DeprecationLogger was uppercased more frequently than lowercased.
This is related to #30876. The AbstractSimpleTransportTestCase initiates
many tcp connections. There are normally over 1,000 connections in
TIME_WAIT at the end of the test. This is because every test opens at
least two different transports that connect to each other with 13
channel connection profiles. This commit modifies the default
connection profile used by this test to 6. One connection for each
type, except for REG which gets 2 connections.
The contains syntax was added in #30874 but the skips were not properly
put in place.
The java runner has the feature so the tests will run as part of the
build, but language clients will be able to support it at their own
pace.
This change adds instance bindings to Painless. This binding allows a whitelisted
method to be called on an instance instantiated prior to script compilation.
Whitelisting must be done in code as there is no practical way to instantiate a
useful instance from a text file (see the tests for an example). Since an
instance can be shared by multiple scripts, each method called must be
thread-safe.
We throw parsing exception when an unknown array is found, but we don't when an unknown top-level field is found. This commit makes sure that unsupported top-level fields are not ignored in a do section.
Closes#34651
With this change, we apply the common test config automatically to all
newly created tasks instead of opting in specifically.
For plugin authors using the plugin externally this means that the
configuration will be applied to their RandomizedTestingTasks as well.
The purpose of the task is to simplify setup and make it easier to
change projects that use the `test` task but actually run integration
tests to use a task called `integTest` for clarity, but also because
we may want to configure and run them differently.
E.x. using different levels of concurrency.