Today we use `index.routing.allocation.include._id` to filter the allocation
for the shrink target index. That has the sideeffect that the user has to
delete that setting / change it once the primary has been recovered (shrink is done)
This PR adds a dedicated filter that can only be set internally that only filters
allocation for unassigned shards.
This adds a low level primitive operations to shrink an existing
index into a new index with a single shard. This primitive expects
all shards of the source index to allocated on a single node. Once the target index is initializing on the shrink node it takes a snapshot of the source index shards and copies all files into the target indices data folder. An [optimization](https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/LUCENE-7300) coming in Lucene 6.1 will also allow for optional constant time copy if hard-links are supported by the filesystem. All mappings are merged into the new indexes metadata once the snapshots have been taken on the merge node.
To shrink an existing index all shards must be moved to a single node (one instance of each shard) and the index must be read-only:
```BASH
$ curl -XPUT 'http://localhost:9200/logs/_settings' -d '{
"settings" : {
"index.routing.allocation.require._name" : "shrink_node_name",
"index.blocks.write" : true
}
}
```
once all shards are started on the shrink node. the new index can be created via:
```BASH
$ curl -XPUT 'http://localhost:9200/logs/_shrink/logs_single_shard' -d '{
"settings" : {
"index.codec" : "best_compression",
"index.number_of_replicas" : 1
}
}'
```
This API will perform all needed check before the new index is created and selects the shrink node based on the allocation of the source index. This call returns immediately, to monitor shrink progress the recovery API should be used since all copy operations are reflected in the recovery API with byte copy progress etc.
The shrink operation does not modify the source index, if a shrink operation should
be canceled or if the shrink failed, the target index can simply be deleted and
all resources are released.
Adds infrastructure so `gradle :docs:check` will extract tests from
snippets in the documentation and execute the tests. This is included
in `gradle check` so it should happen on CI and during a normal build.
By default each `// AUTOSENSE` snippet creates a unique REST test. These
tests are executed in a random order and the cluster is wiped between
each one. If multiple snippets chain together into a test you can annotate
all snippets after the first with `// TEST[continued]` to have the
generated tests for both snippets joined.
Snippets marked as `// TESTRESPONSE` are checked against the response
of the last action.
See docs/README.asciidoc for lots more.
Closes#12583. That issue is about catching bugs in the docs during build.
This catches *some* bugs in the docs during build which is a good start.
Closes#17513
The current example in the documentation for Index Templates lacks any properties values. This is helpful to many devs that aren't sure how to take a regular Index Mapping and convert it to a template.
Use 'includeSegmentFileSizes' as the flag name to report disk usage.
Added test that verifies reported segment disk usage is growing accordingly after adding a document.
Documentation: Reference the new parameter as part of indices stats.
Warmers are now barely useful and will be removed in 3.0. Note that this only
removes the warmer API and query-based warmers. We still have warmers internally
for eg. global ordinals.
Close#15607
Resolves conflicts between parent routing and alias routing with the following rule:
* The parent routing is ignored if there is an alias routing that matches the request.
Closes#3068
This adds an API for force merging lucene segments. The `/_optimize` API is now
deprecated and replaced by the `/_forcemerge` API, which has all the same flags
and action, just a different name.
Closed indices are currently out of scope for snapshots and shard migration,
and can cause issues in managed environments – where closing an index does
not necessarily make sense, as it still consumes the managed environment's storage quota.
This commit adds an option to dynamically disable closing indices via node or cluster settings.
Closes#14168
This allows `path.shared_data` to be added to the security manager while
still allowing a custom `data_path` for indices using shadow replicas.
For example, configuring `path.shared_data: /tmp/foo`, then created an
index with:
```
POST /myindex
{
"index": {
"number_of_shards": 1,
"number_of_replicas": 1,
"data_path": "/tmp/foo/bar/baz",
"shadow_replicas": true
}
}
```
The index will then reside in `/tmp/foo/bar/baz`.
`path.shared_data` defaults to `null` if not specified.
Resolves#12714
Relates to #11065