This test verifies automatic cancellation of search requests on connection close.
It was previously not present in 7.x as the http client was subject do a bug which
made testing cancellation of requests impossible. Now that the bug is fixed upstream,
we can also backport this test
Add a section to both the low level and high level client documentation on asynchronous usage and `Cancellable` added for #44802
Co-Authored-By: Lee Hinman <dakrone@users.noreply.github.com>
This commits makes all the async methods in the high level client return the `Cancellable` object that the low level client now exposes.
Relates to #45379Closes#44802
The low-level REST client exposes a `performRequestAsync` method that
allows to send async requests, but today it does not expose the ability
to cancel such requests. That is something that the underlying apache
async http client supports, and it makes sense for us to expose.
This commit adds a return value to the `performRequestAsync` method,
which is backwards compatible. A `Cancellable` object gets returned,
which exposes a `cancel` public method. When calling `cancel`, the
on-going request associated with the returned `Cancellable` instance
will be cancelled by calling its `abort` method. This works throughout
multiple retries, though some special care was needed for the case where
`cancel` is called between different attempts (when one attempt has
failed and the consecutive one has not been sent yet).
Note that cancelling a request on the client side does not automatically
translate to cancelling the server side execution of it. That needs to be
specifically implemented, which is on the work for the search API (see #43332).
Relates to #44802
When waiting for no initializing shards we also have to wait for events
when we have more than one node in the cluster. When the primary is
started, there is a short period of time, where neither the primary nor
any of the replicas are initializing.
Closes#46535
Fixes that way linestrings that are crossing the antimeridian are
indexed due to a normalization bug these lines were decomposed into
a line segment that was stretching entire globe.
Fixes#43775
This makes the AllocatedPersistentTask#init() method protected so that
implementing classes can perform their initialization logic there,
instead of the constructor. Rollup's task is adjusted to use this
init method.
It also slightly refactors the methods to se a static logger in the
AllocatedTask instead of passing it in via an argument. This is
simpler, logged messages come from the task instead of the
service, and is easier for tests
In some cases (for example some AdoptOpenJDK builds), the java.vendor is
mistakenly populated as "Oracle Corporation" while the real value is
under "java.vendor.version". Since "java.vendor.version" is mandatory
since JDK 10, this commit changes to use "java.vendor.version" as the
favored system property to find the JVM vendor, and we fallback to
"java.vendor" if this is not populated (as happens in some Oracle
builds). Ugh.
DATE_TRUNC(<truncate field>, <date/datetime>) is a function that allows
the user to truncate a timestamp to the specified field by zeroing out
the rest of the fields. The function is implemented according to the
spec from PostgreSQL: https://www.postgresql.org/docs/current/functions-datetime.html#FUNCTIONS-DATETIME-TRUNCCloses: #46319
(cherry picked from commit b37e96712db1aace09f17b574eb02ff6b942a297)
The sql project uses a common set of security tests, which are run in
subprojects. Currently these are shared through a shared directory, but
this is not setup correctly to ensure it is built before tests run. This
commit changes the test classes to be an artifact of the sql/qa/security
project and makes the test runner use the built artifact (a directory of
classes) for tests.
closes#45866
Since the `IndicesSegmentsRequest` scatters to all shards for the index,
it's possible that some of the shards may fail. This adds failure
handling and logging (since this is a best-effort step in the first
place) for this case.
Many scalar functions try to find out the common type between their
arguments in order to set it as their return time, e.g.:
for `float + double` the common type which is set as the return type
of the + operation is `double`.
Previously, for data types TEXT and KEYWORD (string data types) there
was no common data type found and null was returned causing NPEs when
the function was trying to resolve the return data type.
Fixes: #46551
(cherry picked from commit 291017d69dfc810707c3c7c692f5a50af431b790)
* Minor improvement to the nested aggregation docs
* The attributes name and resellers.name were rather confusing,
especially since the first one was dynamically mapped and not shown
in the documentation (you had to read the test to see it). This
change introduces a unique name for the nested attribute and adds
the example document to the documentation.
* Change the index name from "index" to something more speaking.
* Update docs/reference/aggregations/bucket/nested-aggregation.asciidoc
Co-Authored-By: James Rodewig <james.rodewig@elastic.co>
* Update docs/reference/aggregations/bucket/nested-aggregation.asciidoc
Co-Authored-By: James Rodewig <james.rodewig@elastic.co>
* Update docs/reference/aggregations/bucket/nested-aggregation.asciidoc
Co-Authored-By: James Rodewig <james.rodewig@elastic.co>
This uses whatever the server retrieves, rather than hardcoded
"STOPPING" and "STOPPED" since the server may go to STOPPED before the
request is issued.
Resolves#46528
This commit adds a wait/check for all running snapshots to be cleared
before taking another snapshot. The previous snapshot was successful but
had not yet been cleared from the cluster state, so the second snapshot
failed due to a `ConcurrentSnapshotException`.
Resolves#46508
After starting the analytics job and checking its state
the state can be any of "started", "reindexing" or
"analyzing" depending on how quickly the work is done.
When upgrading data nodes to a newer version before
master nodes there was a risk that a transform running
on an upgraded data node would index a document into
the new transforms internal index before its index
template was created. This would cause the index to
be created with entirely dynamic mappings.
This change introduces a check before indexing any
internal transforms document to ensure that the required
index template exists and create it if it doesn't.
Backport of #46553
This commit replaces the `SearchContext` with the `QueryShardContext` when building aggregator factories. Aggregator factories are part of the `SearchContext` so they shouldn't require a `SearchContext` to create them.
The main changes here are the signatures of `AggregationBuilder#build` that now takes a `QueryShardContext` and `AggregatorFactory#createInternal` that passes the `SearchContext` to build the `Aggregator`.
Relates #46523
* Fix Path comparisons for Windows tests
The test NodeEnvironmentTests#testCustonDataPaths worked just fine on
Darwin and Linux, but the comparison was breaking in Windows because one
path had the "C:\" prefix and the other one didn't. The simple fix is to
compare absolute paths rather than potentially relative ones.
Currently we allow `_field_names` fields to be disabled explicitely, but since
the overhead is negligible now we decided to keep it turned on by default and
deprecate the `enable` option on the field type. This change adds a deprecation
warning whenever this setting is used, going forward we want to ignore and finally
remove it.
Closes#27239
rename data frame transform plugin to transform:
- rename plugin data-frame to transform
- change all package names from o.e.*.dataframe.* to o.e.*.transform.*
- necessary changes to fix loading/testing
* More Efficient Ordering of Shard Upload Execution (#42791)
* Change the upload order of of snapshots to work file by file in parallel on the snapshot pool instead of merely shard-by-shard
* Inspired by #39657
* Cleanup BlobStoreRepository Abort and Failure Handling (#46208)
This commit replaces the `SearchContext` with the `QueryShardContext` when building collapsing conteext
Collapse context is part of the `SearchContext` so it shouldn't require a `SearchContext` to create one.
Relates #46523
This change adds an IndexSearcher and the node's BigArrays in the QueryShardContext.
It's a spin off of #46527 as this change is required to allow aggregation builder to solely use the
query shard context.
Relates #46523
Investigating the test failure reported in #45518 it appears that
the datafeed task was not found during a tast state update. There
are only two places where such an update is performed: when we set
the state to `started` and when we set it to `stopping`. We handle
`ResourceNotFoundException` in the latter but not in the former.
Thus the test reveals a rare race condition where the datafeed gets
requested to stop before we managed to update its state to `started`.
I could not reproduce this scenario but it would be my best guess.
This commit catches `ResourceNotFoundException` while updating the
state to `started` and lets the task terminate smoothly.
Closes#45518
Backport of #46495
We depend on file realms being unique in a number of places. Pre
7.0 this was enforced by the fact that the multiple realm types
with different name would mean identical configuration keys and
cause configuration parsing errors. Since we intoduced affix
settings for realms this is not the case any more as the realm type
is part of the configuration key.
This change adds a check when building realms which will explicitly
fail if multiple realms are defined with the same name.
Backport of #46253
Obviously we have to run the status request again to busy wait for
the `STARTED` state, just busy waiting on an existing response
won't do anything.
Closes#45917
This changes API-Key authentication to always fallback to the realm
chain if the API key is not valid. The previous behaviour was
inconsistent and would terminate on some failures, but continue to the
realm chain for others.
Backport of: #46538
This class has been using a logger configured for a different class for
quite a while. While the circumstance in which it logs is rare, it
should still use the correct logger.
This commit updates the eager_global_ordinals documentation to give more
background on what global ordinals are and when they are used. The docs also now
mention that global ordinal loading may be expensive, and describes the cases
where in which loading them can be avoided.