This moves several test classes that were part of the main root to the test root.
These were part of the main root due to limitations prior to whitelist
customization. Without whitelist customization these can be moved to a test
context and removed from the base whitelists as they should not be user
facing.
This commit is a correction of a doc bug in the docs for the ingest
date-index-name processor. The correct pattern is
yyyy-MM-dd'T'HH:mm:ss.SSSXX. This is due to the transition from Joda
time to Java time where Z does not mean the same thing between the two.
We previously found a bug in the JVM where AVX-512 instructions could
crash the JVM to crash with a segmentation fault. This bug impacted JDK
9 and JDK 10, but was most prominent on JDK 10 because AVX-512 was
enabled there by default. In JDK 11, this bug is reported fixed so this
commit restricts the disabling of AVX-512 to JDK 10 only. Since we no
longer support JDK 10 for any versions that this commit will be
integrated into (7.1, 8.0), we simply remove the disabling of this flag
from the JVM options.
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.
Command needs `?v` so user can see the column headers. Otherwise the instructions in the note about checking the init and relo columns don't make sense
* Add Kibana application privileges for monitoring and ml reserved roles
* Adding test for kibana-.kibana application explicitly
* Whoa there, fat fingered kibana and application...
* And I copied something from monitoring I shouldn't have...
* And actually doing what Yogesh recommended...
The `getIndexShard()` and `sendReplicaRequest()` methods in
TransportReplicationAction are effectively only used to customise some
behaviour in tests. However there are other ways to do this that do not cause
such an obstacle to separating the TransportReplicationAction into its two
halves (see #40706).
This commit removes these customisation points and injects the test-only
behaviour using other techniques.
The security index had a few "object" types with
"dynamic": true
However, this automatically creates a mapping for each field that is
created within those objects. This means that types are dynamically
inferred and "locked in" for future updates.
Instead we want "dynamic": false which will allow us to store a range
of fields in these nested objects and retrieve them from the source,
without creating mapping types for those fields.
Backport of: #40499
Many gradle projects specifically use the -try exclude flag, because
there are many cases where auto-closeable resource ignore is never
referenced in body of corresponding try statement. Suppressing this
warning specifically in each case that it happens using
`@SuppressWarnings("try")` would be very verbose.
This change removes `-try` from any gradle project and adds it to the
build plugin. Also this change removes exclude flags from gradle projects
that is already specified in build plugin (for example -deprecation).
Relates to #40366
Primary-replica resync in a mixed-cluster between 6.x and 5.6 can send
operations without sequence number to a replica which already processed
operations with sequence number. This leads to the failure of that
replica for we trip the sequence number assertion when writing resync
operations without sequence number to translog.
When translating the original aggregation for the rollup indices,
the timezone of the date histogram is validated against the rollup
job but the value is not copied in the newly created date_histogram.
Prior to this PR, there is a bug in ILM which does not allow ILM to stop
if one or more indices have an index.lifecycle.name which refers to
a policy that does not exist - the operation_mode will be stuck as
STOPPING until either the policy is created or the nonexistent
policy is removed from those indices.
This change allows ILM to stop in this case and makes the logging more
clear as to why ILM is not stopping.
This commit fixes a problem with BWC that was brought up in #40511. A
newer version of the code was emitting a new value for an enum to an
older version, and the older version could not handle that. It caused
the response to error. The MainResponse is now relaxed, and will accept
whatever values the server expose, and holds most of them as Strings
instead of complex objects.
Fixes#40511
We generate two pages with "funny" names:
* _changing_the_client_8217_s_initialization_code.html
* _changing_the_application_8217_s_code.html
The leading `_` comes from us not specifying the name of the page. The
`8217` comes about because of the single quote character. This is a
funny name, but it is the name that we have so we shouldn't change it
without putting in a redirect.
We're looking at switching these docs from being built with the
no-longer-maintained AsciiDoc project to being built with the
actively-maintained Asciidoctor project. Asciidoctor Doesn't include the
`8217`s in the generated ids. That is *better*, but we don't really want
to change the pages. Ultimately we'd prefer none of our pages start with
`_`, but that is a problem for a different time.
Anyway, this pins the ids to their "funny" id so it won't change when we
switch to Asciidoctor. We'll remove it later, when we have more fine
control of our redirects.
Drops the inline callouts from the painless reference book. These
callouts are incompatible with Asciidoctor and we'd very much like to
switch to Asciidoctor for building this book, partially because
Asciidoctor is actively developed and AsciiDoc is not, and partially
because it builds the book three times faster.
This change rejects an illegal combination of flush parameters where
force is true, but wait_if_ongoing is false. This combination is trappy
and should be forbidden.
Closes#36342
If there's an ongoing flush triggered by the translog flush threshold,
we may fail to execute a flush because waitIfOngoing is false by
default.
Relates to #36342
If a refresh, which is scheduled by the setting change, executes after
the index-2 operation and win the refresh race (i.e., maybeRefresh) with
the scheduledRefresh that we are going to check, then the latter will
return false.
Closes#39565
Relates #39462
PR #40387
By default, in integ tests we wait for the standalone cluster to start
by using the ant Get task to retrieve the cluster health endpoint.
However the ant task has no facilities for customising the trusted
CAs for a https resource, so if the integ test cluster has TLS enabled
on the http interface (using a custom CA) we need a separate utility
for that purpose.
Backport of: #40573
This change adds information about which UI path
(if any) created ML anomaly detector jobs to the
stats returned by the _xpack/usage endpoint.
Counts for the following possibilities are expected:
* ml_module_apache_access
* ml_module_apm_transaction
* ml_module_auditbeat_process_docker
* ml_module_auditbeat_process_hosts
* ml_module_nginx_access
* ml_module_sample
* multi_metric_wizard
* population_wizard
* single_metric_wizard
* unknown
The "unknown" count is for jobs that do not have a
created_by setting in their custom_settings.
Closes#38403
- Added square brackets for the optional argument of precision
- Fixed character to lower case after comma
(cherry picked from commit d2f6f3b9ce36875e2eb6145c50464b4d72f2b1df)
After `TIME` SQL data type is introduced, implement
`CURRENT_TIME/CURTIME` functions similarly to CURRENT_TIMESTAMP
that return the system's current time (only, without the date part).
Closes: #40468
(cherry picked from commit 9feede781409d0e264ce45951a25b28ff129b187)
A user reported that the same query that takes ~900ms when querying an index
pattern only takes ~50ms when only querying indices that have matches. The
query is a date range query and we confirmed that the `can_match` phase works
as expected. I was able to reproduce this issue locally with a single node: with
900 1-shard indices, a query to an index pattern that matches all indices runs
in ~90ms while a query to the only index that has matches runs in 0-1ms.
This ended up not being related to the `can_match` phase but to the cost of
resolving aliases when querying an index pattern that matches lots of indices.
In that case, we first resolve the index pattern to a list of concrete indices
and then for each concrete index, we check whether it was matched through an
alias, meaning we might have to apply alias filters. Unfortunately this second
per-index operation runs in linear time with the number of matched concrete
indices, which means that alias resolution runs in O(num_indices^2) overall.
So queries get exponentially slower as an index pattern matches more indices.
I reorganized alias resolution into a one-step operation that runs in linear
time with the number of matches indices, and then a per-index operation that
runs in linear time with the number of aliases of this index. This makes alias
resolution run is O(num_indices * num_aliases_per_index) overall instead. When
testing the scenario described above, the `took` went down from ~90ms to ~10ms.
It is still more than the 0-1ms latency that one gets when only querying the
single index that has data, but still much better than what we had before.
Closes#40248