Most transport actions don't need to resolve index names. This commit
removes the index name resolver as a super constructor parameter for
TransportAction. The actions that do need the resolver then have a
member added to keep the resolver from their own constructor.
This pull request removes the relationship between the state
of persistent task (as stored in the cluster state) and the status
of the task (as reported by the Task APIs and used in various
places) that have been confusing for some time (#29608).
In order to do that, a new PersistentTaskState interface is added.
This interface represents the persisted state of a persistent task.
The methods used to update the state of persistent tasks are
renamed: updatePersistentStatus() becomes updatePersistentTaskState()
and now takes a PersistentTaskState as a parameter. The
Task.Status type as been changed to PersistentTaskState in all
places were it make sense (in persistent task customs in cluster
state and all other methods that deal with the state of an allocated
persistent task).
We should not allow the user to configure index patterns that also match
the index which stores the rollup index.
For example, it is quite natural for a user to specify `metricbeat-*`
as the index pattern, and then store the rollups in `metricbeat-rolled`.
This will start throwing errors as soon as the rollup index is created
because the indexer will try to search it.
Note: this does not prevent the user from matching against existing
rollup indices. That should be prevented by the field-level validation
during job creation.
Otherwise we could end up with persistent tasks metadata in the cluster that some of the nodes
might not understand in case where the cluster is during rolling upgrade from the default 6.2 to the
default 6.3 distribution.
Follow-up to #30743
This commit renames methods in the PersistentTasksService, to
make obvious that the methods send requests in order to change
the state of persistent tasks.
Relates to #29608.
* Refactors ClientHelper to combine header logic
This change removes all the `*ClientHelper` classes which were
repeating logic between plugins and instead adds
`ClientHelper.executeWithHeaders()` and
`ClientHelper.executeWithHeadersAsync()` methods to centralise the
logic for executing requests with stored security headers.
* Removes Watcher headers constant
When validating the search request, we make sure any date_histogram
aggregations have timezones that match the jobs. But we didn't
do any such validation on range queries.
While it wouldn't produce incorrect results, it would be confusing
to the user as no documents would match the aggregation (because we
add a filter clause on the timezone for the agg).
Now the user gets an exception up front, and some helpful text about
why the range query didnt match, and which timezones are acceptable