This adds 2 testcases that test if a shard goes idle
pending (uncommitted) segments are committed and unreferenced
files will be freed.
Relates to #29482
Control max size and count of warning headers
Add a static persistent cluster level setting
"http.max_warning_header_count" to control the maximum number of
warning headers in client HTTP responses.
Defaults to unbounded.
Add a static persistent cluster level setting
"http.max_warning_header_size" to control the maximum total size of
warning headers in client HTTP responses.
Defaults to unbounded.
With every warning header that exceeds these limits,
a message will be logged in the main ES log,
and any more warning headers for this response will be
ignored.
Unlike the `indices.create`, `indices.get_mapping` and `indices.put_mapping`
APIs, the index APIs do not need the `include_type_name` option, they can work
work with and without types withouth knowing whether types are being used.
Internally, `_doc` is used as a type if no type is provided, like for the
`indices.put_mapping` API.
This change adds the current primary term to the header of the current
translog file. Having a term in a translog header is a prerequisite step
that allows us to trim translog operations given the max valid seq# for
that term.
This commit also updates tests to conform the primary term invariant
which guarantees that all translog operations in a translog file have
its terms at most the term stored in the translog header.
This commit moves the `TimeValue` class into the elasticsearch-core project.
This allows us to use this class in many of our other projects without relying
on the entire `server` jar.
Relates to #28504
* Decouple TimeValue from Elasticsearch server classes
This commit decouples the `TimeValue` class from the other server classes. This
is in preperation to move `TimeValue` into the `elasticsearch-core` jar,
allowing us to use it from projects that cannot depend on the elasticsearch-core
library.
Relates to #28504
The skeleton of ElasticsearchMergePolicy is quite similar to
MergePolicyWrapper. This commit therefore makes ElasticsearchMergePolicy
inherited from MergePolicyWrapper instead of MergePolicy.
Currently, a flush stats contains only the total flush which is the sum
of manual flush (via API) and periodic flush (async triggered when the
uncommitted translog size is exceeded the flush threshold). Sometimes,
it's useful to know these two numbers independently. This commit tracks
and returns a periodic flush count in a flush stats.
This adds an `include_type_name` option to the `indices.create`,
`indices.get_mapping` and `indices.put_mapping` APIs, which defaults to `true`.
When set to `false`, then mappings will be returned directly in the body of
the `indices.get_mapping` API, without keying them by the type name, the
`indices.create` will expect mappings directly under the `mappings` key, and
the `indices.put_mapping` will use `_doc` as a type name and fail if a `type`
is provided explicitly.
Relates #15613
Today we expose a mutable list of documents in ParseContext via
ParseContext#docs(). This, on the one hand places knowledge how
to access nested documnts in multiple places and on the other
allows for potential illegal access to nested only docs after
the docs are reversed. This change restricts the access and
streamlines nested / non-root doc access.
This change validates that the `_search` request does not have trailing
tokens after the main object and fails the request with a parsing exception otherwise.
Closes#28995
Some features have been deprecated since `6.0` like the `_parent` field or the
ability to have multiple types per index. This allows to remove quite some
code, which in-turn will hopefully make it easier to proceed with the removal
of types.
Today when a user runs a CLI tool with standard input closed and no tty
attached, the result from reading is null and this usually leads to a
null pointer exception when we try to parse this input. This arises for
example when the user runs the plugin installer through a Docker
container without leaving standard input open and attaching a tty
(docker exec <container ID> bin/elasticsearch-plugin install). When we
try to read that the user accepts the plugin requiring additional
security permissions we will get back null. This commit addresses this
for all cases by throwing an illegal state exception. The solution for
the user is leave standard input open and attach a tty (or, for some
tools, use batch mode).
#29409 removed the nearlyEquals() double comparison snippet, which
makes these tests very flaky because they can generate very large or
very small doubles which don't work well with absolute error comparison.
We need to either refactor these tests to guarantee they stay in a small
range (which could be difficult due to holt/holt-winters) or re-implement
the more robust double comparison.
Tracking issue: #29456
This commit simplifies the exception handling in
TranslogWriter#closeWithTragicEvent. When invoking this method, the
inner close method could throw an exception which we always catch and
suppress into the exception that led us to tragically close. This commit
moves that repeated logic into closeWithTragicException and now callers
simply need to catch, invoke closeWithTragicException, and rethrow.
* Remove copy-pasted code
We had two instances of copy-pasted code with a bad license from
another website. The code was doing something rather simple, and
that functionality already exists within junit. This PR simply leverages
the junit functionality.
`BaseRandomBinaryDocValuesRangeQueryTestCase.testRandomBig` should only run with
nightly tests. It doesn't make sense to make it part of every test run.
`UUIDTests` had a slow test for compression, which I made a bit faster by
decreasing the number of indexed docs.
This commit fixes the formatting of the values in the composite
aggregation response. `date` fields should return timestamp as longs
when used in a `terms` source and `ip` fields should always be formatted as strings.
This commit also fixes the parsing of the `after` key for these field types.
Finally, this commit disables the index optimization for the `ip` field and any source that provides a `missing` value.
This commit simplifies the invocations to
Translog#closeOnTragicEvent. This method already catches all possible
exceptions and suppresses the non-AlreadyClosedExceptions into the
exception that triggered the invocation. Therefore, there is no need for
callers to do this same logic (which would never execute).
* Move Streams.copy into elasticsearch-core and make a multi-release jar
This moves the method `Streams.copy(InputStream in, OutputStream out)` into the
`elasticsearch-core` project (inside the `o.e.core.internal.io` package). It
also makes this class into a multi-release class where the Java 9 equivalent
uses `InputStream#transferTo`.
This is a followup from
https://github.com/elastic/elasticsearch/pull/29300#discussion_r178147495
* Move ObjectParser into the x-content lib
This moves `ObjectParser`, `AbstractObjectParser`, and
`ConstructingObjectParser` into the libs/x-content dependency. This decoupling
allows them to be used for parsing for projects that don't want to depend on the
entire Elasticsearch jar.
Relates to #28504
* Move Tuple into elasticsearch-core
This allows us to use Tuple from other projects that don't want to rely on the
entire Elasticsearch jar.
I have also added very simple tests, since there were none.
Relates tangentially to #28504
Today we close the translog write tragically if we experience any I/O
exception on a write. These tragic closes lead to use closing the
translog and failing the engine. Yet, there is one case that is missed
which is when we touch the write channel during a read (checking if
reading from the writer would put us past what has been flushed). This
commit addresses this by closing the writer tragically if we encounter
an I/O exception on the write channel while reading. This becomes
interesting when we consider that this method is invoked from the engine
through the translog as part of getting a document from the
translog. This means we have to consider closing the translog here as
well which will cascade up into us finally failing the engine.
Note that there is no semantic change to, for example, primary/replica
resync and recovery. These actions will take a snapshot of the translog
which syncs the translog to disk. If an I/O exception occurs during the
sync we already close the writer tragically and once we have synced we
do not ever read past the position that was synced while taking the
snapshot.
* Fixes query_string query equals timezone check
This change fixes a bug where two `QueryStringQueryBuilder`s were found
to be equal if they had the same timezone set even if the query string
in the builders were different
Closes#29403
* Adds mutate function to QueryStringQueryBuilderTests
* iter
Fixes instances of
- Equals methods without type check
- Equals methods where the field of `this` was compared to the same
field of `this` instead of the `that` object that is compared to
Since #26542 the NodeVersionAllocationDecider tries to explain its NO decisions
as follows:
... may not support codecs or postings formats for a newer Lucene version
However, this message often appears during a rolling upgrade, and experience
has shown that it seems to cause more confusion and worry than it needs to.
This change fixes that by removing the explanation again, reducing the message
to a statement of fact about the respective nodes' versions.
Additionally, the same wording was used for version incompatibilities when
allocating a primary (vs its previous location) and a replica (vs its primary).
This change separates these two cases so they can have separate, clearer
wording.
Fixes#29228
This change fixes the handling of the `quote_field_suffix` option on `query_string`
query. The expansion was not applied to default fields query.
Closes#29324
`action.master.force_local` was only ever used internally and never documented. It was one of those settings that were
automatically added to a tribe node, to make sure that cluster state read operations would work locally rather than failing when trying to forward the request to the master (as the tribe node never had a master).
Given that we recently removed the tribe node, we can also remove this setting.
Today when you input a byte size setting that is out of bounds for the
setting, you get an error message that indicates the maximum value of
the setting. The problem is that because we use ByteSize#toString, we
end up with a representation of the value that does not really tell you
what the bound is. For example, if the bound is 2^31 - 1 bytes, the
output would be 1.9gb which does not really tell you want the limit as
there are many byte size values that we format to the same 1.9gb with
ByteSize#toString. We have a method ByteSize#getStringRep that uses the
input units to the value as the output units for the string
representation, so we end up with no loss if we use this to report the
bound. This commit does this.
Before doing any kind of validation on a new mapping, we should first do the multi-type validation in
order to provide better error messages. For #29313, this means that the exception message will be
Rejecting mapping update to [range_index_new] as the final mapping would have more than 1 type:
[_doc, mytype]
instead of
[expected_attendees] is defined as an object in mapping [mytype] but this name is already used for
a field in other types
Today we report thread pool info using a common object. This means that
we use a shared set of terminology that is not consistent with the
terminology used to the configure thread pools. This holds in particular
for the minimum and maximum number of threads in the thread pool where
we use the following terminology:
thread pool info | fixed | scaling
min core size
max max size
A previous change addressed this for the nodes info API. This commit
changes the display of thread pool info in the cat thread pool API too
to be dependent on the type of the thread pool so that we can align the
terminology in the output of thread pool info with the terminology used
to configure a thread pool.
Today we reply on `IndexWriter#hasDeletions` to check if an index
contains "update" operations. However, this check considers both deletes
and updates. This commit replaces that check by tracking and checking
Lucene operations explicitly. This would provide us stronger assertions.
Correctly setup classpath/dependencies and fix checkstyle task that was partly broken because delayed setup of Java9 sourcesets. This also cleans packaging of META-INF. It also prepares forbiddenapis 2.6 upgrade
relates #29292
This improves the way similarities are plugged in in order to:
- reject the classic similarity on 7.x indices and emit a deprecation
warning otherwise
- reject unkwown parameters on 7.x indices and emit a deprecation
warning otherwise
Even though this breaks the plugin API, I'd like to backport to 7.x so
that users can get deprecation warnings when they are doing something
that will become unsupported in the future.
Closes#23208Closes#29035
This moves the `Nullable` annotation into the elasticsearch-core project, so it
may be used without relying entirely on the server jar. This will allow us to
decouple more pieces to make them smaller.
In addition, there were two different `Nullable` annotations, these have all
been moved to the ES version rather than the inject version.
We have seen exceptions bubble up to the uncaught exception handler. Checking the blocks can
lead for example to IndexNotFoundException when the indices are resolved. In order to make
TransportMasterNodeAction more resilient against such expected exceptions, this code change
wraps the execution of doStart() into a try catch and informs the listener in case of failures.
DiskThresholdDecider currently assumes that the source index of a resize operation (e.g. shrink)
is available, and throws an IndexNotFoundException otherwise, thereby breaking any kind of shard
allocation. This can be quite harmful if the source index is deleted during a shrink, or if the source
index is unavailable during state recovery.
While this behavior has been partly fixed in 6.1 and above (due to #26931), it relies on the order in
which AllocationDeciders are executed (i.e. that ResizeAllocationDecider returns NO, ensuring that
DiskThresholdDecider does not run, something that for example does not hold for the allocation
explain API).
This change adds a more complete fix, and also solves the situation for 5.6.
* Pass script level params into scripted metric aggs (#28819)
Now params that are passed at the script level and at the aggregation level
are merged and can both be used in the aggregation scripts. If there are
any conflicts, aggregation level params will win. This may be followed
by another change detecting that case and throwing an exception to
disallow such conflicts.
* Disallow duplicate parameter names between scripted agg and script (#28819)
If a scripted metric aggregation has aggregation params and script params
which have the same name, throw an IllegalArgumentException when merging
the parameter lists.
I am not sure why we have this leniency for HTTP max content length, it
has been there since the beginning
(5ac51ee93f) with no explanation of its
source. That said, our philosophy today is different than the philosophy
of the past where Elasticsearch would be quite lenient in its handling
of settings and today we aim for predictability for both users and
us. This commit removes leniency in the parsing of
http.max_content_length.
* Begin moving XContent to a separate lib/artifact
This commit moves a large portion of the XContent code from the `server` project
to the `libs/xcontent` project. For the pieces that have been moved, some
helpers have been duplicated to allow them to be decoupled from ES helper
classes. In addition, `Booleans` and `CheckedFunction` have been moved to the
`elasticsearch-core` project.
This decoupling is a move so that we can eventually make things like the
high-level REST client not rely on the entire ES jar, only the parts it needs.
There are some pieces that are still not decoupled, in particular some of the
XContent tests still remain in the server project, this is because they test a
large portion of the pluggable xcontent pieces through
`XContentElasticsearchException`. They may be decoupled in future work.
Additionally, there may be more piecese that we want to move to the xcontent lib
in the future that are not part of this PR, this is a starting point.
Relates to #28504
Fix a couple of minor things in the InternalEngine:
* Rename loadOrGenerateHistoryUUID to reflect that it always generates a UUID
* Move .acquire() call next to the associated try {} block.
Removes a set of assertions in the test framework that verified that
Streamable objects could be serialized and deserialized across different
versions. When this was discussed the consensus was that this approach
has not caught many bugs in a long time and that serialization testing of
objects was best left to their respective unit and integration tests.
This commit also removes a transport interceptor that was used in
ESIntegTestCase tests to make these assertions about objects coming in
or off the wire.
The parsing code for script query currently silently skips by any tokens
it does not know about within its parsing loop. The only token it does
not catch is an array, which means pasing multiple scripts in via an
array will cause the last script to be parsed and one, silently dropping
the others. This commit adds validation that arrays are not seen while
parsing.
Since #29260, unsafe commits must be trimmed before opening an engine.
This makes the engine constructor follow Lucene standard semantics and
use the last commit. However, we haven't fully applied this change in some
tests.
Relates #29260
As follow up to #28245 , this PR removes the logic for selecting the
right start commit from the Engine constructor in favor of explicitly
trimming them in the Store, before the engine is opened. This makes the
constructor in engine follow standard Lucene semantics and use the last
commit.
Relates #28245
Relates #29156
Due to special treatment for the 0xFFFFFF... value in GeoHashUtils'
encodeLatLon method, the hashcode for lat 90, lon 180 is incorrectly
encoded as `"000000000000"` instead of "zzzzzzzzzzzz". This commit
removes the special treatment and fixes the issue.
Closes#22163
When deleting a snapshot, it is not necessary to load and to parse the
global metadata of the snapshot to delete. Now indices are stored in
the snapshot metadata file, we have all the information to resolve the
shards files to delete.
This commit removes the readSnapshotMetaData() method that was used to
load both global and index metadata files. Test coverage should be
enough as SharedClusterSnapshotRestoreIT already contains several
deletion tests.
Related to #28934
Today we have a few problems with how we handle bad requests:
- handling requests with bad encoding
- handling requests with invalid value for filter_path/pretty/human
- handling requests with a garbage Content-Type header
There are two problems:
- in every case, we give an empty response to the client
- in most cases, we leak the byte buffer backing the request!
These problems are caused by a broader problem: poor handling preparing
the request for handling, or the channel to write to when the response
is ready. This commit addresses these issues by taking a unified
approach to all of them that ensures that:
- we respond to the client with the exception that blew us up
- we do not leak the byte buffer backing the request
We historically removed reading from the transaction log to get consistent
results from _GET calls. There was also the motivation that the read-modify-update
principle we apply should not be hidden from the user. We still agree on the fact
that we should not hide these aspects but the impact on updates is quite significant
especially if the same documents is updated before it's written to disk and made serachable.
This change adds back the ability to read from the transaction log but only for update calls.
Calls to the _GET API will always do a refresh if necessary to return consistent results ie.
if stored fields or DocValues Fields are requested.
Closes#26802
When the `BulkProcessor` is used with the high-level REST client, a scheduler is internally created that allows to schedule tasks. Such scheduler is not exposed to users and needs to be closed once the `BulkProcessor` is closed. There are two ways to close the `BulkProcessor` though, one is the ordinary `close` method and the other one is `awaitClose`. The former closes the scheduler while the latter doesn't, leaving threads lingering.
DocumentParser: The checks for Text and Keyword were masked by the
earlier check for String, which they are child classes of. As String
field types are no longer supported, this check can be removed.
Restoring a snapshot, or getting the status of finished
snapshots, currently always load the global state metadata
file from the repository even if it not required. This
slows down the restore process (or listing statuses process)
and can also be an issue if the global state cannot be
deserialized (because it has unknown customs for example).
This commit splits the Repository.getSnapshotMetadata()
method into two distincts methods: getGlobalMetadata()
and getIndexMetadata() that are now called only when needed.
* Decouple NamedXContentRegistry from ElasticsearchException
This commit decouples `NamedXContentRegistry` from using either
`ElasticsearchException`, `ParsingException`, or `UnknownNamedObjectException`.
This will allow us to move NamedXContentRegistry to its own lib as part of the
xcontent extraction work.
Relates to #28504
HttpInfo is passed the maxContentLength as a parameter, but this value should
never be negative. This fixes the test to only pass a positive random value.
* Remove all dependencies from XContentBuilder
This commit removes all of the non-JDK dependencies from XContentBuilder, with
the exception of `CollectionUtils.ensureNoSelfReferences`. It adds a third
extension point around dealing with time-based fields and formatters to work
around the Joda dependency.
This decoupling allows us to be able to move XContentBuilder to a separate lib
so it can be available for things like the high level rest client.
Relates to #28504
In 5.2 `ignore_unmapped` was added to `inner_hits` in order to ignore invalid mapping.
This value was automatically set to the value defined in the parent query (`nested`, `has_child`, `has_parent`) but the refactoring of the parent/child in 5.6 removed this behavior unintentionally.
This commit restores this behavior but also makes sure that we always automatically enforce this value when the query builder is used directly (previously this was only done by the XContent deserialization).
Closes#29071
The default timeout (eg. 10 seconds) may not be enough for CI to
re-allocate shards after the partion is healed. This commit increases
the timeout to 30 seconds and enables logging in order to have more
detailed information in case this test failed again.
Closes#29060
In #testPruneOnlyDeletesAtMostLocalCheckpoint, we create a new engine
but mistakenly use the same translog directory of the existing engine.
This prevents translog files from cleaning up when closing the engines.
ERROR 0.12s J2 | InternalEngineTests.testPruneOnlyDeletesAtMostLocalCheckpoint <<< FAILURES!
> Throwable #1: java.io.IOException: could not remove the following files (in the order of attempts):
> translog-primary-060/translog-2.tlog: java.io.IOException: access denied:
This commit makes sure to use a separate directory for each engine in
this tes.
When processing an append-only operation, primary knows that operations
can only conflict with another instance of the same operation. This is
true as the id was freshly generated. However this property doesn't hold
for replicas. As soon as an auto-generated ID was indexed into the
primary, it can be exposed to a search and users can issue a follow up
operation on it. In extremely rare cases, the follow up operation can be
arrived and processed on a replica before the original append-only
request. In this case we can't simply proceed with the append-only
request and blindly add it to the index without consulting the version
map.
The following scenario can cause difference between primary and
replica.
1. Primary indexes an auto-gen-id doc. (id=X, v=1, s#=20)
2. A refresh cycle happens on primary
3. The new doc is picked up and modified - say by a delete by query
request - Primary gets a delete doc (id=X, v=2, s#=30)
4. Delete doc is processed first on the replica (id=X, v=2, s#=30)
5. Indexing operation arrives on the replica, since it's an auto-gen-id
request and the retry marker is lower, we put it into lucene without
any check. Replica has a doc the primary doesn't have.
To deal with a potential conflict between an append-only operation and a
normal operation on replicas, we need to rely on sequence numbers. This
commit maintains the max seqno of non-append-only operations on replica
then only apply optimization for an append-only operation only if its
seq# is higher than the seq# of all non-append-only.
Once a document is deleted and Lucene is refreshed, we will not be able
to look up the `version/seq#` associated with that delete in Lucene. As
conflicting operations can still be indexed, we need another mechanism
to remember these deletes. Therefore deletes should still be stored in
the Version Map, even after Lucene is refreshed. Obviously, we can't
remember all deletes forever so a trimming mechanism is needed.
Currently, we remember deletes for at least 1 minute (the default GC
deletes cycle) and clean them periodically. This is, at the moment, the
best we can do on the primary for user facing APIs but this arbitrary
time limit is problematic for replicas. Furthermore, we can't rely on
the primary and replicas doing the trimming in a synchronized manner,
and failing to do so results in the replica and primary making different
decisions.
The following scenario can cause inconsistency between
primary and replica.
1. Primary index doc (index, id=1, v2)
2. Network packet issue causes index operation to back off and wait
3. Primary deletes doc (delete, id=1, v3)
4. Replica processes delete (delete, id=1, v3)
5. 1+ minute passes (GC deletes runs replica)
6. Indexing op is finally sent to the replica which no processes it
because it forgot about the delete.
We can reply on sequence-numbers to prevent this issue. If we prune only
deletes whose seqno at most the local checkpoint, a replica will
correctly remember what it needs. The correctness is explained as
follows:
Suppose o1 and o2 are two operations on the same document with seq#(o1)
< seq#(o2), and o2 arrives before o1 on the replica. o2 is processed
normally since it arrives first; when o1 arrives it should be discarded:
1. If seq#(o1) <= LCP, then it will be not be added to Lucene, as it was
already previously added.
2. If seq#(o1) > LCP, then it depends on the nature of o2:
- If o2 is a delete then its seq# is recorded in the VersionMap,
since seq#(o2) > seq#(o1) > LCP, so a lookup can find it and
determine that o1 is stale.
- If o2 is an indexing then its seq# is either in Lucene (if
refreshed) or the VersionMap (if not refreshed yet), so a
real-time lookup can find it and determine that o1 is stale.
In this PR, we prefer to deploy a single trimming strategy, which
satisfies both requirements, on primary and replicas because:
- It's simpler - no need to distinguish if an engine is running at
primary mode or replica mode or being promoted.
- If a replica subsequently is promoted, user experience is fully
maintained as that replica remembers deletes for the last GC cycle.
However, the version map may consume less memory if we deploy two
different trimming strategies for primary and replicas.
testUnassignedShardAndEmptyNodesInRoutingTable and that test is as old as time and does a very bogus thing.
it is an IT test which extracts the GatewayAllocator from the node and tells it to allocated unassigned
shards, while giving it a conjured cluster state with no nodes in it (it uses the DiscoveryNodes.EMPTY_NODES.
This is never a cluster state we want to reroute on (we always have at least master node in it).
I'm going to just delete the test as I don't think it adds much value.
Closes#21463
#28245 has introduced the utility class`EngineDiskUtils` with a set of methods to prepare/change
translog and lucene commit points. That util class bundled everything that's needed to create and
empty shard, bootstrap a shard from a lucene index that was just restored etc.
In order to safely do these manipulations, the util methods acquired the IndexWriter's lock. That
would sometime fail due to concurrent shard store fetching or other short activities that require the
files not to be changed while they read from them.
Since there is no way to wait on the index writer lock, the `Store` class has other locks to make
sure that once we try to acquire the IW lock, it will succeed. To side step this waiting problem, this
PR folds `EngineDiskUtils` into `Store`. Sadly this comes with a price - the store class doesn't and
shouldn't know about the translog. As such the logic is slightly less tight and callers have to do the
translog manipulations on their own.
Some source files seem to have the execute bit (a+x) set, which doesn't
really seem to hurt but is a bit odd. This change removes those, making
the permissions similar to other source files in the repository.
This change refactors the composite aggregation to add an execution mode that visits documents in the order of the values
present in the leading source of the composite definition. This mode does not need to visit all documents since it can early terminate
the collection when the leading source value is greater than the lowest value in the queue.
Instead of collecting the documents in the order of their doc_id, this mode uses the inverted lists (or the bkd tree for numerics) to collect documents
in the order of the values present in the leading source.
For instance the following aggregation:
```
"composite" : {
"sources" : [
{ "value1": { "terms" : { "field": "timestamp", "order": "asc" } } }
],
"size": 10
}
```
... can use the field `timestamp` to collect the documents with the 10 lowest values for the field instead of visiting all documents.
For composite aggregation with more than one source the execution can early terminate as soon as one of the 10 lowest values produces enough
composite buckets. For instance if visiting the first two lowest timestamp created 10 composite buckets we can early terminate the collection since it
is guaranteed that the third lowest timestamp cannot create a composite key that compares lower than the one already visited.
This mode can execute iff:
* The leading source in the composite definition uses an indexed field of type `date` (works also with `date_histogram` source), `integer`, `long` or `keyword`.
* The query is a match_all query or a range query over the field that is used as the leading source in the composite definition.
* The sort order of the leading source is the natural order (ascending since postings and numerics are sorted in ascending order only).
If these conditions are not met this aggregation visits each document like any other agg.
This enhancement adds Z value support (source only) to geo_shape fields. If vertices are provided with a third dimension, the third dimension is ignored for indexing but returned as part of source. Like beofre, any values greater than the 3rd dimension are ignored.
closes#23747
This commit removes type-casts in logging in the server component (other
components will be done later). This also adds a parameterized message
test which would catch breaking-changes related to lambdas in Log4J.
While working on #27799, we find that it might make sense to change BroadcastResponse from ToXContentFragment to ToXContentObject, seeing that it's rather a complete XContent object and also the other Responses are normally ToXContentObject.
By doing this, we can also move the XContent build logic of BroadcastResponse's subclasses, from Rest Layer to the concrete classes themselves.
Relates to #3889
In #28350, we fixed an endless flushing loop which may happen on
replicas by tightening the relation between the flush action and the
periodically flush condition.
1. The periodically flush condition is enabled only if it is disabled
after a flush.
2. If the periodically flush condition is enabled then a flush will
actually happen regardless of Lucene state.
(1) and (2) guarantee that a flushing loop will be terminated. Sadly,
the condition 1 can be violated in edge cases as we used two different
algorithms to evaluate the current and future uncommitted translog size.
- We use method `uncommittedSizeInBytes` to calculate current
uncommitted size. It is the sum of translogs whose generation at least
the minGen (determined by a given seqno). We pick a continuous range of
translogs since the minGen to evaluate the current uncommitted size.
- We use method `sizeOfGensAboveSeqNoInBytes` to calculate the future
uncommitted size. It is the sum of translogs whose maxSeqNo at least
the given seqNo. Here we don't pick a range but select translog one by
one.
Suppose we have 3 translogs `gen1={#1,#2}, gen2={}, gen3={#3} and
seqno=#1`, `uncommittedSizeInBytes` is the sum of gen1, gen2, and gen3
while `sizeOfGensAboveSeqNoInBytes` is the sum of gen1 and gen3. Gen2 is
excluded because its maxSeqno is still -1.
This commit removes both `sizeOfGensAboveSeqNoInBytes` and
`uncommittedSizeInBytes` methods, then enforces an engine to use only
`sizeInBytesByMinGen` method to evaluate the periodically flush condition.
Closes#29097
Relates ##28350
This commit removes some parameters deprecated in 6.x (or 5.x):
`use_dismax`, `split_on_whitespace`, `all_fields` and `lowercase_expanded_terms`.
Closes#25551
This commit decouples `BytesRef`, `Releaseable`, and `TimeValue` from
XContentBuilder, and paves the way for doupling `ByteSizeValue` as well. It
moves much of the Lucene and Joda encoding into a new SPI extension that is
loaded by XContentBuilder to know how to encode these values.
Part of doing this also allows us to make JSON encoding strict, as we no longer
allow just any old object to be passed (in the past it was possible to get json
that was `"field": "java.lang.Object@d8355a8"` if no one was careful about what
was passed in).
Relates to #28504
This commit adds a new setting `cluster.persistent_tasks.allocation.enable`
that can be used to enable or disable the allocation of persistent tasks.
The setting accepts the values `all` (default) or `none`. When set to
none, the persistent tasks that are created (or that must be reassigned)
won't be assigned to a node but will reside in the cluster state with
a no "executor node" and a reason describing why it is not assigned:
```
"assignment" : {
"executor_node" : null,
"explanation" : "persistent task [foo/bar] cannot be assigned [no
persistent task assignments are allowed due to cluster settings]"
}
```
We discussed and agreed to include the synced-flush change in 6.3.0+ but
not in 5.6.9. We will re-evaluate the urgency and importance of the
issue then decide which versions that the change should be included.
The assumption here is that we will no longer be making a release from
the 6.1 branch. Since we assume that all versions on this branch are
actually released, we do not want to leave behind any versions that
would require a snapshot build. We do have a test that verifies that all
released versions are present here, so if another release is performed
from the 6.1 branch, that test will fail and we will know to add the
version constant at that time.
This will reject mapping updates to the `_default_` mapping with 7.x indices
and still emit a deprecation warning with 6.x indices.
Relates #15613
Supersedes #28248
I misunderstood how the bwc versions works. If we backport to 5.x, we
need to backport to all supported 6.*. This commit corrects the BWC
versions for PreSyncedFlushResponse.
Relates #29103
* Remove BytesArray and BytesReference usage from XContentFactory
This removes the usage of `BytesArray` and `BytesReference` from
`XContentFactory`. Instead, a regular `byte[]` should be passed. To assist with
this a helper has been added to `XContentHelper` that will preserve the offset
and length from the underlying BytesReference.
This is part of ongoing work to separate the XContent parts from ES so they can
be factored into their own jar.
Relates to #28504
* Add pluggable XContentBuilder writers and human readable writers
This adds the ability to use SPI to plug in writers for XContentBuilder. By
implementing the XContentBuilderProvider class we can allow Elasticsearch to
plug in different ways to encode types to JSON.
Important caveat for this, we should always try to have the class implement
`ToXContentFragment` first, however, in the case of classes from our
dependencies (think Joda classes or Lucene classes) we need a way to specify
writers for these classes.
This also makes the human-readable field writers generic and pluggable, so that
we no longer need to tie XContentBuilder to things like `TimeValue` and
`ByteSizeValue`. Contained as part of this moves all the TimeValue human
readable fields to the new `humanReadableField` method. A future commit will
move the `ByteSizeValue` calls over to this method.
Relates to #28504
This removes the `Text` and `Geopoint` special handling from `XContentBuilder`.
Instead, these classes now implement `ToXContentFragment` and render themselves
accordingly.
This allows us to further decouple XContentBuilder from Elasticsearch-specific
classes so it can be factored into a standalone lib at a later time.
Relates to #28504
This modifies xcontent serialization of Exceptions to contain suppressed
exceptions. If there are any suppressed exceptions they are included in
the exception response by default. The reasoning here is that they are
fairly rare but when they exist they almost always add extra useful
information. Take, for example, the response when you specify two broken
ingest pipelines:
```
{
"error" : {
"root_cause" : ...snip...
"type" : "parse_exception",
"reason" : "[field] required property is missing",
"header" : {
"processor_type" : "set",
"property_name" : "field"
},
"suppressed" : [
{
"type" : "parse_exception",
"reason" : "[field] required property is missing",
"header" : {
"processor_type" : "convert",
"property_name" : "field"
}
}
]
},
"status" : 400
}
```
Moreover, when suppressed exceptions come from 500 level errors should
give us more useful debugging information.
Closes#23392
After elastic/elasticsearch#29109, the `needsReassignment` method has
been moved to the PersistentTasksClusterService. This commit fixes
some compilation in tests I introduced.
This commit consists of small code cleanups and refactorings in the
persistent tasks framework. Most changes are in
PersistentTasksClusterService where some methods have been renamed
or merged together, documentation has been added, unused code removed
in order to improve readability of the code.
The method Translog#getMinGenerationForSeqNo does not modify the current
translog but only access, it therefore should acquire the readLock
instead of writeLock.
Today we report thread pool info using a common object. This means that
we use a shared set of terminology that is not consistent with the
terminology used to the configure thread pools. This holds in particular
for the minimum and maximum number of threads in the thread pool where
we use the following terminology:
thread pool info | fixed | scaling
min core size
max max size
This commit changes the display of thread pool info to be dependent on
the type of the thread pool so that we can align the terminology in the
output of thread pool info with the terminology used to configure a
thread pool.
A new engine now can have more than one empty translog since #28676.
This cause #testShouldPeriodicallyFlush failed because in the test we
asssume an engine should have one empty translog. This commit takes into
account the extra translog size of a new engine.
The serialization changes for rejected execution exceptions has been
backported to 6.x with the intention to appear in all versions since
6.3.0. Therefore, this BWC layer is no longer needed in master since
master would never speak to a node that does not speak the same
serialization.
The rejected execution handler API says that rejectedExecution(Runnable,
ThreadPoolExecutor) throws a RejectedExecutionException if the task must
be rejected due to capacity on the executor. We do throw something that
smells like a RejectedExecutionException (it is named
EsRejectedExecutionException) yet we violate the API because
EsRejectedExecutionException is not a RejectedExecutionException. This
has caused problems before where we try to catch RejectedExecution when
invoking rejectedExecution but this causes EsRejectedExecutionException
to go uncaught. This commit addresses this by modifying
EsRejectedExecutionException to extend
RejectedExecutionException.
The settings `indices.recovery.concurrent_streams` and
`indices.recovery.concurrent_small_file_streams` were removed in
f5e4cd4616. This commit removes their last traces
from the codebase.
Today the synced-flush always issues a new sync-id even though all
shards haven't been changed since the last seal. This causes active
shards to have different a sync-id from offline shards even though all
were sealed and no writes since then.
This commit adjusts not to renew sync-id if all active shards are sealed
with the same sync-id.
Closes#27838
The index prefix field is normally indexed as docs-only, given that it cannot
be used in phrases. However, in the case that the parent field has been indexed
with offsets, or has term-vector offsets, we should also store this in the index
prefix field for highlighting.
Note that this commit does not implement highlighting on prefix fields, but
rather ensures that future work can implement this without a backwards-break
in index data.
Closes#28994
The method `PersistentTasksClusterService.finishTask()` has been
modified since it was added and does not use any `removeOncompletion`
flag anymore. Its behavior is now similar to `removeTask()` and can be
replaced by this one. When a non existing task is removed, the cluster
state update task will fail and its `source` will still indicate
`finish persistent task`/`remove persistent task`.
* CLI Command: MultiCommand must close subcommands to release resources properly
- Changes are done to override the close method and call close on subcommands using IOUtils#close
- Unit Test
Closes#28953
Currently ESIndexLevelReplicationTestCase executes write operations
without acquiring index shard permit. This may prevent the primary term
on replica from being updated or cause a race between resync and
indexing on primary. This commit ensures that write operations are
always executed under shard permit like the production code.
Changes made in #28972 seems to have changed some assumptions about how
SMILE and CBOR write byte[] values and how this is tested. This changes
the generation of the randomized DocumentField values back to BytesArray
while expecting the JSON and YAML deserialisation to produce Base64
encoded strings and SMILE and CBOR to parse back BytesArray instances.
Closes#29080
I also had to make the test more lenient. This is due to the fact that
Lucene's RamUsageTester was changed in order not to reflect `java.*`
classes and the way that it estimates ram usage of maps is by assuming
it has similar memory usage to an `Object[]` array that stores all keys
and values. The implementation in `LiveVersionMap` tries to be slightly
more realistic by taking the load factor and linked lists into account,
so it usually gives a higher estimate which happens to be closer to
reality.
Closes#22548
Provide more actionable error message when installing an offline plugin
in the plugins directory, and the `plugins` directory for the node
contains plugin distribution.
Closes#27401
When parsing GetResponse it was possible that the equality check failed because
items in the map were in a different order (in the `.equals` implementation).
The Java API documentation for index administration currenty is wrong because
the PutMappingRequestBuilder#setSource(Object... source) an
CreateIndexRequestBuilder#addMapping(String type, Object... source) methods
delegate to methods that check that the input arguments are valid key/value
pairs. This changes the docs so the java api code examples are included from
documentation integration tests so we detect compile and runtime issues earlier.
Closes#28131
By the time the master branch is released the deprecated url
parameters in the `/_cache/clear` API will have been deprecated
for a couple of minor releases. Since master will be the next
major release we are fine with removing these parameters.
Currently we have a fairly complicated logic in the engine constructor logic to deal with all the
various ways we want to mutate the lucene index and translog we're opening.
We can:
1) Create an empty index
2) Use the lucene but create a new translog
3) Use both
4) Force a new history uuid in all cases.
This leads complicated code flows which makes it harder and harder to make sure we cover all the
corner cases. This PR tries to take another approach. Constructing an InternalEngine always opens
things as they are and all needed modifications are done by static methods directly on the
directory, one at a time.
* Decouple XContentBuilder from BytesReference
This commit removes all mentions of `BytesReference` from `XContentBuilder`.
This is needed so that we can completely decouple the XContent code and move it
into its own dependency.
While this change appears large, it is due to two main changes, moving
`.bytes()` and `.string()` out of XContentBuilder itself into static methods
`BytesReference.bytes` and `Strings.toString` respectively. The rest of the
change is code reacting to these changes (the majority of it in tests).
Relates to #28504
If the default java.io.tmpdir is used then the startup script creates
it, but if a custom java.io.tmpdir is used then the user must ensure it
exists before running Elasticsearch. If they forget then it can cause
errors that are hard to understand, so this change adds an explicit
check early in the bootstrap and reports a clear error if java.io.tmpdir
is not an accessible directory.
The REST status 503 means "I can not handle the request that you sent
me." However today we respond to a main request with a 503 when there
are certain cluster blocks despite still responding with an actual main
response. This is broken, we should respond with a 200 status. This
commit removes this silliness.
When converting the source for an indexing request to JSON, the
conversion can throw an I/O exception which we swallow and proceed with
logging to the slow log. The cause of the I/O exception is lost. This
commit changes this behavior and chooses to drop the entry from the slow
logs and instead lets an exception percolate up to the indexing
operation listener loop. Here, the exception will be caught and logged
at the warn level.
Today we can end up in a situation where the cluster state contains
unknown or invalid settings. This can happen easily during a rolling
upgrade. For example, consider two nodes that are on a version that
considers the setting foo.bar to be known and valid. Assume one of these
nodes is restarted on a higher version that considers foo.bar to now be
either unknown or invalid, and then the second node is restarted
too. Now, both nodes will be on a version that consider foo.bar to be
unknown or invalid yet this setting will still be contained in the
cluster state. This means that if a cluster settings update is applied
and we validate the settings update with the existing settings then
validation will fail. In such a state, the offending setting can not
even be removed. This commit helps out with this situation by archiving
any settings that are unknown or invalid at the time that a settings
update is applied. This allows the setting update to go through, and the
archived settings can be removed at a later time.
These can be seen at the debug level via cluster state update logging
but really they should be more visible like index creation and
deletion. This commit adds info-level logging for template puts and
deletes.
This interning is completely unnecessary because we look up the marker
by the prefix (value, not identity) anyway. This means that regardless
of the identity of the prefix, we end up with the same marker. That is
all that we really care about here.
As we have factored Elasticsearch into smaller libraries, we have ended
up in a situation that some of the dependencies of Elasticsearch are not
available to code that depends on these smaller libraries but not server
Elasticsearch. This is a good thing, this was one of the goals of
separating Elasticsearch into smaller libraries, to shed some of the
dependencies from other components of the system. However, this now
means that simple utility methods from Lucene that we rely on are no
longer available everywhere. This commit copies IOUtils (with some small
formatting changes for our codebase) into the fold so that other
components of the system can rely on these methods where they no longer
depend on Lucene.
The requiresKeystore flag was removed from PluginInfo in 6.3.0. This
commit fixes a pair of code comments that incorrectly refer to this
version as 7.0.0.
This commit removes the ability to specify that a plugin requires the
keystore and instead creates the keystore on package installation or
when Elasticsearch is started for the first time. The reason that we opt
to create the keystore on package installation is to ensure that the
keystore has the correct permissions (the package installation scripts
run as root as opposed to Elasticsearch running as the elasticsearch
user) and to enable removing the keystore on package removal if the
keystore is not modified.
While trying to reroute a shard to or from a non-data node (a node with ``node.data=false``), I encountered a null pointer exception. Though an exception is to be expected, the NPE was occurring because ``allocation.routingNodes()`` would not contain any non-data nodes, so when you attempt to do ``allocation.routingNodes.node(non-data-node)`` it would not find it, and thus error. This occurred regardless of whether I was rerouting to or from a non-data node.
This PR adds a check (as well as a test for these use cases) to return a legible, useful exception if the discovery node you are rerouting to or from is not a data node.
When an index writer encounters a tragic exception, it could be a
Throwable and not an Exception. Yet we blindly cast the tragic exception
to an Exception which can encounter a ClassCastException. This commit
addresses this by checking if the tragic exception is an Exception and
otherwise wrapping the Throwable in a RuntimeException if it is not. We
choose to wrap the Throwable instead of passing it around because
passing it around leads to changing a lot of places where we handle
Exception to handle Throwable instead. In general, we have tried to
avoid handling Throwable and instead let those bubble up to the uncaught
exception handler.
Log4j2 provides a wide range of logging methods. Our code typically only uses a subset of them. In particular, uses of the methods trace|debug|info|warn|error|fatal(Object) or trace|debug|info|warn|error|fatal(Object, Throwable) have all been wrong, leading to not properly logging the provided message. To prevent these issues in the future, the corresponding Logger methods have been blacklisted.
This commit restores the handling of tiebreaker for multi_match
cross fields query. This functionality was lost during a refactoring
of the multi_match query (#25115).
Fixes#28933
This commit makes the controller spawner also look under modules. It
also fixes a bug in module security policy loading where the module is a
meta plugin.
Today we check for a few cases where we should maybe die before failing
the engine (e.g., when a merge fails). However, there are still other
cases where a fatal error can be hidden from us (for example, a failed
index writer commit). This commit modifies the mechanism for failing the
engine to always check for a fatal error before failing the engine.
Today when requesting _all we return all nodes regardless of what other
node qualifiers are in the request. This is contrary to how the
remainder of the API behaves which acts as additive and subtractive
based on the qualifiers and their ordering. It is also contrary to how
the wildcard * behaves. This commit removes the special handling for
_all so that it behaves identical to the wildcard *.
Relates #28971
* Remove Booleans use from XContent and ToXContent
This removes the use of the `common.Boolean` class from two of the XContent
classes, so they can be decoupled from the ES code as much as possible.
Related to #28754, #28504
Today, failures from the primary-replica resync are ignored as the best
effort to not mark shards as stale during the cluster restart. However
this can be problematic if replicas failed to execute resync operations
but just fine in the subsequent write operations. When this happens,
replica will miss some operations from the new primary. There are some
implications if the local checkpoint on replica can't advance because of
the missing operations.
1. The global checkpoint won't advance - this causes both primary and
replicas keep many index commits
2. Engine on replica won't flush periodically because uncommitted stats
is calculated based on the local checkpoint
3. Replica can use a large number of bitsets to keep track operations seqno
However we can prevent this issue but still reserve the best-effort by
failing replicas which fail to execute resync operations but not mark
them as stale. We have prepared to the required infrastructure in #28049
and #28054 for this change.
Relates #24841
This change replaces the use of string concatenation with a call to
String.join(). String concatenation might be quadratic, unless the compiler can
optimise it away, whereas String.join() is more reliably linear. There can
sometimes be a large number of pending ClusterState update tasks and #28920
includes a report that this operation sometimes takes a long time.
At one point, modules and plugins were very different. But effectively
now they are the same, just from different directories. This commit
unifies the loading methods so they are simply two different
directories. Note that the main codepath to load plugin bundles had
duplication (was not calling getPluginBundles) since previous
refactorings to add meta plugins. Note this change also rewords the
primary exception message when a plugin descriptor is missing, as the
wording asking if the plugin was built before 2.0 isn't really
applicable anymore (it is highly unlikely someone tries to install a 1.x
plugin on any modern version).
This allows us to remove another dependency in the decoupling of the XContent
code. Rather than move this class over or decouple it, it can simply be removed.
Relates tangentially to #28504
These classes are used only in two places, and can be replaced by the
`CharArrayReader` and `CharArrayWriter`. The JDK can also perform lock biasing
and elision as well as escape analysis to optimize away non-contended locks,
rendering their lock-free implementations unnecessary.
Ingest has been failing to apply existing pipelines from cluster-state
into the in-memory representation that are no longer valid. One example of
this is a pipeline with a script processor. If a cluster starts up with scripting
disabled, these pipelines will not be loaded. Even though GETing a pipeline worked,
indexing operations claimed that this pipeline did not exist. This is because one
gets information from cluster-state and the other is from an in-memory data-structure.
Now, two things happen
1. suppress the exceptions until after other successful pipelines are loaded
2. replace failed pipelines with a placeholder pipeline
If the pipeline execution service encounters the stubbed pipeline, it is known that
something went wrong at the time of pipeline creation and an exception was thrown to
the user at some point at start-up.
closes#28269.
This switches the underlying byte output representation used by default in
`XContentBuilder` from `BytesStreamOutput` to a `ByteArrayOutputStream` (an
`OutputStream` can still be specified manually)
This is groundwork to allow us to decouple `XContent*` from the rest of the ES
core code so that it may be factored into a separate jar.
Since `BytesStreamOutput` was not using the recycling instance of `BigArrays`,
this should not affect the circuit breaking capabilities elsewhere in the
system.
Relates to #28504
* Factor UnknownNamedObjectException into its own class
This moves the inner class `UnknownNamedObjectException` from
`NamedXContentRegistry` into a top-level class. This is so that
`NamedXContentRegistry` doesn't have to depend on StreamInput and StreamOutput.
Relates to #28504
This reverts commit f057fc294a.
The rescorer does not resort the collapsed values inside the top docs
during rescoring. For this reason the Lucene rescorer is not compatible
with collapsing.
Relates #27243
This removes the readFrom and writeTo methods from XContentType, instead using
the more generic `readEnum` and `writeEnum` methods. Luckily they are both
encoded exactly the same way, so there is no compatibility layer needed for
backwards compatibility.
Relates to #28504
* Remove BytesRef usage from XContentParser and its subclasses
This removes all the BytesRef usage from XContentParser in favor of directly
returning a CharBuffer (this was originally what was returned, it was just
immediately wraped in a BytesRef).
Relates to #28504
* Rename method after Ryan's feedback
* Wrap stream passed to createParser in try-with-resources
This wraps the stream (`.streamInput()`) that is passed to many of the
`createParser` instances in the enclosing (or a new) try-with-resources block.
This ensures the `BytesReference.streamInput()` is closed.
Relates to #28504
* Use try-with-resources instead of closing in a finally block
This change ensures that we ignore terms removed from the analysis rather than returning a match_no_docs query for the part
that contain the stop word. For instance a query like "the AND fox" should ignore "the" if it is considered as a stop word instead of
adding a match_no_docs query.
This change also fixes the analysis of prefix terms that start with a stop word (e.g. `the*`). In such case if `analyze_wildcard` is true and `the`
is considered as a stop word this part of the query is rewritten into a match_no_docs query. Since it's a prefix query this change forces the prefix query
on `the` even if it is removed from the analysis.
Fixes#28855Fixes#28856
Pruning tombstones is quite expensive since we have to walk though all
deletes in the live version map and acquire a lock on every value even though
it's impossible to prune it. This change does a pre-check if a delete is old enough
and if not it skips acquireing the lock.
Increase the default limit of `index.highlight.max_analyzed_offset` to 1M instead of previous 10K.
Enhance an error message when offset increased to include field name, index name and doc_id.
Relates to https://github.com/elastic/kibana/issues/16764
When virtual lock is not possible because JNA is unavailable, we log a
warning message. Yet, this log message refers to mlockall rather than
virtual lock, presumably because of a copy/paste error. This commit
fixes this issue.
This commit replaces `org.apache.logging.log4j.util.Supplier` by
`java.util.function.Supplier` in non-logging code. These usages are
neither incorrect nor wrong but rather than accidental. I think our
intention was to use the JDK's Supplier in these places.
* Reject regex search if regex string is too long (#28344)
* Add docs
* Introduce index level setting `index.max_regex_length`
to control the maximum length of the regular expression
Closes#28344
Today we have two test base classes that have a lot in common when it comes to testing wire and xcontent serialization: `AbstractSerializingTestCase` and `AbstractXContentStreamableTestCase`. There are subtle differences though between the two, in the way they work, what can be overridden and features that they support (e.g. insertion of random fields).
This commit introduces a new base class called `AbstractWireTestCase` which holds all of the serialization test code in common between `Streamable` and `Writeable`. It has two minimal subclasses called `AbstractWireSerializingTestCase` and `AbstractStreamableTestCase` which are specialized for `Writeable` and `Streamable`.
This commit also introduces a new test class called `AbstractXContentTestCase` for all of the xContent testing, which holds a testFromXContent method for parsing and rendering to xContent. This one can be delegated to from the existing `AbstractStreamableXContentTestCase` and `AbstractSerializingTestCase` so that we avoid code duplicate as much as possible and all these base classes offer the same functionalities in the same way. Having this last base class decoupled from the serialization testing may also help with the REST high-level client testing, as there are some classes where it's hard to implement equals/hashcode and this makes it possible to override `assertEqualInstances` for custom equality comparisons (also this base class doesn't require implementing equals/hashcode as it doesn't test such methods.
This commit fixes a bug that was introduced in PR #27415 for 6.1
and 7.0 where a change to support MULTIPOINT shapes mucked up
indexing of standalone points.
Previously the message reported when `node_concurrent_outgoing_recoveries`
resulted in a `THROTTLE` decision included the reporting node's ID rather than
that of the primary. This commit fixes that.
Fixes#28777.
This commit makes AcknowledgedResponse implement ToXContentObject, so that the response knows how to print its own content out to XContent, which allows us to remove AcknowledgedRestListener.
These tests need to be skipped. They cause plugins to be loaded which
causes a child classloader to be opened. We do not want to add the
permissions to be able to close a classloader solely for these tests,
and the JARs created in the test can not be deleted on Windows until the
classloader is closed. Since this will not happen before test teardown,
the test will fail on Windows. So, we skip these tests.
This allows us to save a bit of code, but also adds more coverage as it tests serialization which was missing in some of the existing tests. Also it requires implementing equals/hashcode and we get the corresponding tests for them for free from the base test class.
* Pass InputStream when creating XContent parser
Rather than passing the raw `BytesReference` in when creating the xcontent
parser, this passes the StreamInput (which is an InputStream), this allows us to
decouple XContent from BytesReference.
This also removes the use of `commons.Booleans` so it doesn't require more
external commons classes.
Related to #28504
* Undo boolean removal
* Enhance deprecation javadoc
Add support version and version_type in ingest pipelines
Add support for setting document version and version type in set
processor of an ingest pipeline.
* Remove log4j dependency from elasticsearch-core
This removes the log4j dependency from our elasticsearch-core project. It was
originally necessary only for our jar classpath checking. It is now replaced by
a `Consumer<String>` so that the es-core dependency doesn't have external
dependencies.
The parts of #28191 which were moved in conjunction (like `ESLoggerFactory` and
`Loggers`) have been moved back where appropriate, since they are not required
in the core jar.
This is tangentially related to #28504
* Add javadocs for `output` parameter
* Change @code to @link
Pruning tombstones is best effort and should not block if a key is currently
locked. This can cause a deadlock in rare situations if we switch of append
only optimization while heavily updating the same key in the engine
while the LiveVersionMap is locked. This is very rare since this code
patch only executed every 15 seconds by default since that is the interval
we try to prune the deletes in the version map.
Closes#28714
This commit fixes an issue with setting plugin.mandatory to include a
meta-plugin. The issue here is that the names that we collect are the
underlying plugins, not the meta-plugin. We should not use the
underlying plugins instead using the names of non-meta plugins and the
names of meta-plugins. This commit addresses this. The strategy here is
that when we look at the installed plugins on the filesystem, we keep
track of which ones are meta-plugins and carry this information up to
where check which plugins are installed against the mandatory plugins.
Relates #28710
Today we have several levels of indirection to acquire an Engine.Searcher.
We first acquire a the reference manager for the scope then acquire an
IndexSearcher and then create a searcher for the engine based on that.
This change simplifies the creation into a single method call instead of
3 different ones.
The node stats API enables filtlering the top-level stats for only
desired top-level stats. Yet, this was never enabled for adaptive
replica selection stats. This commit enables this. We also add setting
these stats on the request builder, and fix an inconsistent name in a
setter.
Relates #28721
We currently revisit the index deletion policy whenever the global
checkpoint has advanced enough. We should also revisit the deletion
policy after releasing the last snapshot of a snapshotting commit. With
this change, the old index commits will be cleaned up as soon as
possible.
Follow-up of #28140https://github.com/elastic/elasticsearch/pull/28140#discussion_r162458207
Today we maintain a copy of every delete in the live version maps. This is unnecessary
and might add quite some overhead if maps grow large. This change moves out the deletes
tracking into the tombstone map only and relies on the cleaning of tombstones when deletes
are collected.
The AdaptiveSelectionStats object serializes the clientOutgoingConnections map that's concurrently updated in SearchTransportService. Serializing the map consists of first writing the size of the map and then serializing the entries. If the number of entries changes while the map is being serialized, the size and number of entries go out of sync. The deserialization routine expects those to be in sync though.
Closes#28713
The acquireIndexCommit was separated into acquireSafeIndexCommit and
acquireLastIndexCommit, however the test was not updated accordingly.
Relates #28271
Previously we introduced a new parameter to `acquireIndexCommit` to
allow acquire either a safe commit or a last commit. However with the
new parameters, callers can provide a nonsense combination - flush first
but acquire the safe commit. This commit separates acquireIndexCommit
method into two different methods to avoid that problem. Moreover, this
change should also improve the readability.
Relates #28038
* Remove deprecated createParser methods
This removes the final instances of the callers of `XContent.createParser` and
`XContentHelper.createParser` that did not pass in the `DeprecationHandler`. It
also removes the now-unused deprecated methods and fully removes any mention of
Log4j or LoggingDeprecationHandler from the XContent code.
Relates to #28504
* Add comments in JsonXContentGenerator
This test has a race condition. The action listener used to listen for
connections has a guard against being executed twice. However, this
listener can be executed twice. After on success is invoked the test
starts to tear down. At this point, the threads the test forked will
terminate and the remote cluster connection will be closed. However, a
thread forked to the management thread pool by the remote cluster
connection can still be executing and try to continue connecting. This
thread will be cancelled when the remote cluster connection is closed
and this leads to the action listener being invoked again. To address
this, we explicitly check that the reason that on failure was invoked
was cancellation, and we assert that the listener was already previously
invoked. Interestingly, this issue has always been present yet a recent
change (#28667) exposed errors that occur on tasks submitted to the
thread pool and were silently being lost.
Relates #28695
In order to allow us to gradually move to passing the deprecation handler is, we
need a shim that contains both the non-passed and passed version.
Relates to #28504
When we submit a task to a thread pool for asynchronous execution, we
are returned a future. Since we submitted to go asynchronous, these
futures are not inspected for failure (we would have to block a thread
to do that). While we have on failure handlers for exceptions that are
thrown during execution, we do not handle throwables that are not
exceptions and these end up silently lost. This commit adds a check
after the runnable returns that inspects the status of the future. If an
unhandled throwable occurred during execution, this throwable is
propogated out where it will land in the uncaught exception handler.
Relates #28667
We have code used in the networking layer to search for errors buried in
other exceptions. This code will be useful in other locations so with
this commit we move it to our exceptions helpers.
Relates #28691
Currently the Translog constructor is capable both of opening an existing translog and creating a
new one (deleting existing files). This PR separates these two into separate code paths. The
constructors opens files and a dedicated static methods creates an empty translog.
A recent change moved computing declared versions from using reflection
which occurred repeatedly to a lazily-initialized holder so that
declared versions are computed exactly once. This commit adds a comment
explaining the motivation for this change.
* Move more XContent.createParser calls to non-deprecated version
Part 2
This moves more of the callers to pass in the DeprecationHandler.
Relates to #28504
* Use parser's deprecation handler where appropriate
* Use logging handler in test that uses deprecated field on purpose
* Move more XContent.createParser calls to non-deprecated version
This moves more of the callers to pass in the DeprecationHandler.
Relates to #28504
* Use parser's deprecation handler where available
This method is called often enough (when computing minimum compatibility
versions) that the reflection and sort can be seen while profiling. This
commit addresses this issue by computing the declared versions exactly
once.
Relates #28661
If a tragic even happens while we are refreshing a searcher/reader the engine can open new files on a store that is already closed
For instance the following CI job failed because a merge was concurrently called on a failing shard:
https://elasticsearch-ci.elastic.co/job/elastic+elasticsearch+master+oracle-java10-periodic/84
This change increments the ref count of the store during a refresh in order to postpone the closing after a tragic event.
When installing a meta plugin we check the dependency of each sub plugin during the installation.
Though if the extended plugin is part of the meta plugin the installation fails because we only check for plugins that are
already installed. This change is a workaround that extracts all plugins (even those that are not fully installed yet) when the dependency check
is made during the installation. Note that this is how the plugin installation worked before https://github.com/elastic/elasticsearch/pull/28581.
This commit moves the semantic validation (like which version a plugin
was built for or which java version it is compatible with) from reading
a plugin descriptor, leaving the checks on the format of the descriptor
intact.
relates #28540
* NXYSignificanceHeuristic.java: implementation of equality would have
failed with a ClassCastException when comparing to another type.
Replaced with the Eclipse generated form.
Today we use the persisted global checkpoint to calculate the starting
seqno in peer-recovery. However we do not check whether the translog
actually belongs to the existing Lucene index when reading the global
checkpoint. In some rare cases if the translog does not match the Lucene
index, that recovering replica won't be able to complete its recovery.
This can happen as follows.
1. Replica executes a file-based recovery
2. Index files are copied to replica but crashed before finishing the recovery
3. Replica starts recovery again with seq-based as the copied commit is safe
4. Replica fails to open engine because translog and Lucene index are not matched
5. Replica won't be able to recover from primary
This commit enforces the translogUUID requirement when reading the
global checkpoint directly from the checkpoint file.
Relates #28435
This commit changes the state format that was previously passed in to
`MetaDataStateFormat` to always use Smile. This doesn't actually change the
format, since we have used Smile for writing the format since at least 5.0. This
removes the automatic detection of the state format when reading state, since
any state that could be processed in 6.x and 7.x would already have been written
in Smile format.
This is work towards removing the deprecated methods in the XContent code where
we do automatic content-type detection.
Relates to #28504
This commit forces the depth_first mode for `terms` aggregation that contain a sub-aggregation that need to access the score of the document
in a nested context (the `terms` aggregation is a child of a `nested` aggregation). The score of children documents is not accessible in
breadth_first mode because the `terms` aggregation cannot access the nested context.
Close#28394
* Search option terminate_after does not handle post_filters and aggregations correctly
This change fixes the handling of the `terminate_after` option when post_filters (or min_score) are used.
`post_filter` should be applied before `terminate_after` in order to terminate the query when enough document are accepted
by the post_filters.
This commit also changes the type of exception thrown by `terminate_after` in order to ensure that multi collectors (aggregations)
do not try to continue the collection when enough documents have been collected.
Closes#28411
The is a follow up to #28567 changing the method used to capture stack traces, as requested
during the review. Instead of creating a throwable, we explicitly capture the stack trace of the
current thread. This should Make Jason Happy Again ™️ .
Generalizing BWC building so that there is less code to modify for a release. This ensures we do not
need to think about what major or minor version is in the gradle code. It follows the general rules of the
elastic release structure. For more information on the rules, see the VersionCollection's javadoc.
This also removes the additional bwc snapshots that will never be released, such as 6.0.2, which were
being built and tested against every time we ran bwc tests.
Additionally, it creates 4 new projects that correspond to the different types of snapshots that may exist
for a given version. Its possible to now run those individual tasks to work out bwc logic whereas
previously it was impossible and the entire suite of bwc tests had to be run to work out any logic
changes in the build tools' bwc project. Please note that if the project does not make sense for the
version that is current, that an error will be thrown from that individual project if an attempt is made to
run it.
This should allow for automating the version bumps as well, since it removes all the hardcoded version
logic from the configs.
This removes all the server references to the deprecated `ParseField.match`
method in favor of the method that passes in the deprecation logger.
Relates to #28504
The bug was caused because the ScriptService had no reference to a ClusterState instance,
because it received the ClusterState after the PipelineStore. This only is the case
after a restart.
A bad side effect is that during a restart, any pipeline to be loaded after the pipeline that uses a stored script,
was never loaded, which caused many pipeline to be missing in bulk / index request api calls.
After copying over the Lucene segments during peer recovery, we call cleanupAndVerify which removes all other files in the directory and which then calls getMetadata to check if the resulting files are a proper index. There are two issues with this:
- the directory is not fsynced after the deletions, so that the call to getMetadata, which lists files in the directory, can get a stale view, possibly seeing a deleted corruption marker (which leads to the exception seen in #28435)
- failing to delete a corruption marker should result in a hard failure, as the shard is otherwise unusable.