There used to be a null check for _field_names mapper not existing. This
was recently removed. However, there is a corner case when the mapper
may be missing: when no types or docs exist at all in the index.
This change adds back a null check and just returns no docs.
The current ExceptionsHelper.unwrapCause(exception) requires the incoming exception to support ElasticsearchWrapperException , which TranslogRecoveryPerformer.BatchOperationException doesn't implement. I opted for a more generic solution
We had to make CompressedXContent.equals decompress data to fix some
correctness issues which had the downside of making equals() slow. Now we store
a crc32 alongside compressed data which should help avoid decompress data in
most cases.
Close#11247
Now that mapping updates are sync and done before indexing we don't really need the waiting component. Also, removed many places were they were used as safe guard against delayed mapping updates, which are now not needed.
While we had initially planned to keep rivers around in 2.0 to ease migration,
keeping support for rivers is challenging as it conflicts with other important
changes that we want to bring to 2.0 like synchronous dynamic mappings updates.
Nothing impossible to fix, but it would increase the complexity of how we
deal with dynamic mappings updates and manage rivers, while handling dynamic
mappings updates correctly is important for resiliency and rivers are on the go.
So removing rivers in 2.0 may well be a better trade-off.
These methods are now all in MappedFieldType. This removes the remaining
callers of the methods on FieldMapper, and cuts down the FieldMapper
API to no longer include them.
The MapperService is the "index wide view" of mappings. Methods on it
are used at query time to lookup how to query a field. This
change reduces the exposed api so that any information returned
is limited to that api exposed by MappedFieldType. In the future,
MappedFieldType will be guaranteed to be the same across all
document types for a given field.
Note CompletionFieldType needed some more settings moved to it. Other
than that, this change is almost purely cosmetic.
The shard can potentially not be deleted if the obsever that checks for the shard
STARTED is not registered because the registering is delayed by the disruption.
If the sum of delays is more than 10s then the wait for shard deletion will time out.
The ResourceWatcher used settings prefixed `watcher.`, which
potentially could clash with the watcher plugin.
In order to prevent confusion, the settings have been renamed to
`resource.reload` prefixes.
This also uses the deprecation logging infrastructure introduced
in #11033 to log deprecated settings and their alternative at
startup.
Closes#11175
In case a developer gets a list of ids from another data source,
it does not make a lot of sense, to convert it to an array first,
and then internally in IdsQueryBuilder elasticsearch creates a
list out of this.
Closes#5089
In order for exists queries to use the null value for
a field, null value needs to be part of the field type (should
differ between document types). This change moves null value
into the field type, as well as simplifies the null value
methods available to remove supportsNullValue().
#11363 introduced a retry logic for the case where we have to wait on a mapping update during the translog replay phase of recovery. The retry throws or recovery stats off as it may count ops twice.
There are different ways to register custom query parsers through plugins, a couple of them work per index via index settings, which is probably even too flexible. There also three different ways to add a global custom query parser through either IndicesQueriesModule or IndicesQueriesRegistry. This commit consolidates the registration of custom query parsers via IndicesQueriesModule#addQuery(Class<? extends QueryParser>). The complexity of supporting parsers per index is not needed hence it got removed. Also the other ways of registering global custom parsers are dropped in favour of the one mentioned above.
Closes#11481