Simplifies allocation for snapshot-backed shards by always making the recovery source "from snapshot" for those
snapshot-backed shards (instead of "recover from local or from empty store"). Also let's the balancer pick a node which
to allocate the snapshot-backed shard to (which takes number of shards on each node into account unlike the current
implementation which just picks whatever node we are allowed to allocate to, with no notion of "balancing" at all).
Currently, if an incorrectly formatted date is passed as a null_value for a date field mapper
configuration, you get a vague error:
Failed to parse mapping [_doc]: cannot parse empty date
Similarly, if you pass an incorrect format, you get the error:
Failed to parse mapping [_doc]: Invalid format [...]
This commit improves both these errors by including the mapper name and parameter that
are misconfigured.
Fixes#61712
This replaces a specialized bit set implementation used in cardinality
with our standard `BitArray` which works exactly the same way. Its also
tracked by `BigArrays` which is great!
BytesRefHashTests and LongObjectHashMapTests currently extend ESSingleNodeTestCase,
which builds an entire node just to run some unit tests over entirely in-memory data
structures. This commit converts them both to extend ESTestCase.
FetchSubPhase has two 'execute' methods, one which takes all hits to be examined,
and one which takes a single HitContext. It's not obvious which one should be implemented
by a given sub-phase, or if implementing both is a possibility; nor is it obvious that we first
run the hitExecute methods of all subphases, and then subsequently call all the
hitsExecute methods.
This commit reworks FetchSubPhase to replace these two variants with a processor class,
`FetchSubPhaseProcessor`, that is returned from a single `getProcessor` method. This
processor class has two methods, `setNextReader()` and `process`. FetchPhase collects
processors from all its subphases (if a subphase does not need to execute on the current
search context, it can return `null` from `getProcessor`). It then sorts its hits by docid, and
groups them by lucene leaf reader. For each reader group, it calls `setNextReader()` on
all non-null processors, and then passes each doc id to `process()`.
Implementations of fetch sub phases can divide their concerns into per-request, per-reader
and per-document sections, and no longer need to worry about sorting docs or dealing with
reader slices.
FetchSubPhase now provides a FetchSubPhaseExecutor that exposes two methods,
setNextReader(LeafReaderContext) and execute(HitContext). The parent FetchPhase collects all
these executors together (if a phase should not be executed, then it returns null here); then
it sorts hits, and groups them by reader; for each reader it calls setNextReader, and then
execute for each hit in turn. Individual sub phases no longer need to concern themselves with
sorting docs or keeping track of readers; global structures can be built in
getExecutor(SearchContext), per-reader structures in setNextReader and per-doc in execute.
This commit adds a test to MapperTestCase that explicitly checks that a mapper can
serialize all its default values, and that this serialization can then be re-parsed. Note that
the test is disabled for non-parametrized mappers as their serialization may in some cases
output parameters that are not accepted. Gradually moving all mappers to parametrized
form will address this.
The commit also contains a fix to keyword mappers, which were not correctly serializing
the similarity parameter; this partially addresses #61563. It also enables `null` as a
value for `null_value` on `scaled_float`, as a follow-up to #61798
We frequently use `long`s with `BitArray` in aggs and right now we have
to assert that the `long` fits in an `int`. This adds support for `long`
to `BitArray` so we don't need those assertions.
Search could leak memory if global ordinals were calculated as part of
a search with low level cancellation enabled. QueryPhase registers a
cancellation on the reader that is never removed, which ends up being
referenced from the global ordinals cache entry. This keeps an indirect
reference to the search context. A significant leak can occur when a
heavy aggregation (cardinality for instance) is used and a failure occurs
during search, in particular if the pages backing the hyperlog++ structure
are not recycled when it is closed.
This commit also fixes an issue with an unclosed resource and request
breaker adjustment in the cardinality aggregation.
This commit generalizes how QueryPhaseResultConsumer is initialized.
The query phase always uses this consumer so it doesn't need to be hidden behind
an abstract class.
Several field mappers have a null_value parameter, that allows you to specify a placeholder
value to insert into a document if the incoming value for that field is null. The default value
for this is always null, meaning "add no placeholder". However, we explicitly bar users from
setting this parameter directly to null (done in #7978, in order to fix an NPE).
This exclusion means that if a mapper is serialized with include_defaults, then we either need
to special-case null_value to ensure that it is not output when it holds the default value, or
we find that the resulting serialized form cannot be used to create a mapping. This stops us
doing some useful generic testing of mappers.
This commit permits null as a parameter value for null_value, and changes the tests to check
that it is a) permissible and b) applied without throwing errors. As part of the testing changes,
a new base class MapperServiceTestCase is refactored from MapperTestCase, holding
the various helper methods related to building mappings but not the single-mapper specific
abstract methods.
Closes#58823
Fixes wrong NaN comparison in error message generator in GeoPolygonDecomposer and PolygonBuilder.
Supersedes #48207
Co-authored-by: Pedro Luiz Cabral Salomon Prado <pedroprado010@users.noreply.github.com>
The recursive data.path FilePermission check is an extremely hot
codepath in Elasticsearch. Unfortunately the FilePermission check in
Java is extremely allocation heavy. As it iterates through different
file permissions, it allocates byte arrays for each Path component that
must be compared. This PR improves the situation by adding the recursive
data.path FilePermission it its own PermissionsCollection object which
is checked first.
The change #57936 introduced a dedicated thread pool for reads in system indices.
It also introduced a potential NPE in the case the index to read in not yet present in
the cluster state. This commit fixes that bug by using the getIndexSafe() instead of
just index() method when retrieving the index's metadata so that an INFE is thrown
if the index does not exist.
We had a bug here were we put a `null` value into the shard
assignment mapping when reassigning work after a snapshot delete
had gone through. This only affects partial snaphots but essentially
dead-locks the snapshot process.
Closes#61762
System indices can be snapshotted and are therefore potential candidates
to be mounted as searchable snapshot indices. As of today nothing
prevents a snapshot to be mounted under an index name starting with .
and this can lead to conflicting situations because searchable snapshot
indices are read-only and Elasticsearch expects some system indices
to be writable; because searchable snapshot indices will soon use an
internal system index (#60522) to speed up recoveries and we should
prevent the system index to be itself a searchable snapshot index
(leading to some deadlock situation for recovery).
This commit introduces a changes to prevent snapshots to be mounted
as a system index.
This reworks `CardinalityUpperBound` to support precise estimates while
maintaining most of the public API. This will allow us to make more
informed choices about the data structures that we use in aggregations.
None of those interesting choices come as part of this change, but they
are more possible with it.
Backport of #61474.
Part of #46106. Simplify the implementation of deprecation logging by
relying of log4j more completely, and implementing additional behaviour
through custom appenders and filters.
The fact that the data node is already blocked on writing
data files did not guarantee that the cluster state that made
the data node start snapshotting is already applied on master.
This could lead to races where the get snapshots action still
runs based on a state without the snapshot in it, tripping the assertion.
Much safer to handle this by waiting on the non-blocking snapshot create
to return, which guarantees that the CS has been applied on master.
Closes#61541
This commit enhances the verbose output for the
`_ingest/pipeline/_simulate?verbose` api. Specifically
this adds the following:
* the pipeline processor is now included in the output
* the conditional (if) and result is now included in the output iff it was defined
* a status field is always displayed. the possible values of status are
* `success` - if the processor ran with out errors
* `error` - if the processor ran but threw an error that was not ingored
* `error_ignored` - if the processor ran but threw an error that was ingored
* `skipped` - if the process did not run (currently only possible if the if condition evaluates to false)
* `dropped` - if the the `drop` processor ran and dropped the document
* a `processor_type` field for the type of processor (e.g. set, rename, etc.)
* throw a better error if trying to simulate with a pipeline that does not exist
closes#56004
This commit adds the functionality to allocate newly created indices on nodes in the "hot" tier by
default when they are created.
This does not break existing behavior, as nodes with the `data` role are considered to be part of
the hot tier. Users that separate their deployments by using the `data_hot` (and `data_warm`,
`data_cold`, `data_frozen`) roles will have their data allocated on the hot tier nodes now by
default.
This change is a little more complicated than changing the default value for
`index.routing.allocation.include._tier` from null to "data_hot". Instead, this adds the ability to
have a plugin inject a setting into the builder for a newly created index. This has the benefit of
allowing this setting to be visible as part of the settings when retrieving the index, for example:
```
// Create an index
PUT /eggplant
// Get an index
GET /eggplant?flat_settings
```
Returns the default settings now of:
```json
{
"eggplant" : {
"aliases" : { },
"mappings" : { },
"settings" : {
"index.creation_date" : "1597855465598",
"index.number_of_replicas" : "1",
"index.number_of_shards" : "1",
"index.provided_name" : "eggplant",
"index.routing.allocation.include._tier" : "data_hot",
"index.uuid" : "6ySG78s9RWGystRipoBFCA",
"index.version.created" : "8000099"
}
}
}
```
After the initial setting of this setting, it can be treated like any other index level setting.
This new setting is *not* set on a new index if any of the following is true:
- The index is created with an `index.routing.allocation.include.<anything>` setting
- The index is created with an `index.routing.allocation.exclude.<anything>` setting
- The index is created with an `index.routing.allocation.require.<anything>` setting
- The index is created with a null `index.routing.allocation.include._tier` value
- The index was created from an existing source metadata (shrink, clone, split, etc)
Relates to #60848
Runtime fields need to have a SearchLookup available, when building their fielddata implementations, so that they can look up other fields, runtime or not.
To achieve that, we add a Supplier<SearchLookup> argument to the existing MappedFieldType#fielddataBuilder method.
As we introduce the ability to look up other fields while building fielddata for mapped fields, we implicitly add the ability for a field to require other fields. This requires some protection mechanism that detects dependency cycles to prevent stack overflow errors.
With this commit we also introduce detection for cycles, as well as a limit on the depth of the references for a runtime field. Note that we also plan on introducing cycles detection at compile time, so the runtime cycles detection is a last resort to prevent stack overflow errors but we hope that we can reject runtime fields from being registered in the mappings when they create a cycle in their definition.
Note that this commit does not introduce any production implementation of runtime fields, but is rather a pre-requisite to merge the runtime fields feature branch.
This is a breaking change for MapperPlugins that plug in a mapper, as the signature of MappedFieldType#fielddataBuilder changes from taking a single argument (the index name), to also accept a Supplier<SearchLookup>.
Relates to #59332
Co-authored-by: Nik Everett <nik9000@gmail.com>
Errors from bad mappings at index creation are currently logged at DEBUG level, which
can make it difficult to work out what's going on if the index is being auto-created. This
commit ups the log level to INFO for auto-created indices, and includes some more
information in the log message.
Today the `CoordinatorTests` run the publication process as a single
atomic action; however in production it appears possible that another
master may be elected, publish its state, then fail, then we win another
election, all in between the time we sampled our previous cluster state
and started to publish the one we first thought of.
This violates the `assertClusterStateConsistency()` assertion that
verifies the cluster state update event matches the states we actually
published and applied.
This commit adjusts the tests to run the publication process more
asynchronously so as to allow time for this behaviour to occur. This
should eventually result in a reproduction of the failure in #61437 that
will let us analyse what's really going on there and help us fix it.
Today we use `long` to represent the number of parts of a blob. There's
no need for this extra range, it forces us to do some casting elsewhere,
and indeed when snapshotting we iterate over the parts using an `int`
which would be an infinite loop in case of overflow anyway:
for (int i = 0; i < fileInfo.numberOfParts(); i++) {
This commit changes the representation of the number of parts of a blob
to an `int`.
We convert longs to ints using `Math.toIntExact` in places where we're
sure there will be no overflow, but this doesn't explain the intent of
these conversions very well. This commit introduces a dedicated method
for these conversions, and adds an assertion that we never overflow.
This commit removes the tasks module that only existed to define the
tasks result index, `.tasks`, as a system index. The definition for
the tasks results system index descriptor is moved to the
`SystemIndices` class with a check that no other plugin or module
attempts to define an entry with the same source.
Additionally, this change also makes the pattern for the tasks result
index a wildcard pattern since we will need this when the index is
upgraded (reindex to new name and then alias that to .tasks).
Backport of #61540
DeprecationLogger's constructor should not create two loggers. It was
taking parent logger instance, changing its name with a .deprecation
prefix and creating a new logger.
Most of the time parent logger was not needed. It was causing Log4j to
unnecessarily cache the unused parent logger instance.
depends on #61515
backports #58435
Backport to add case insensitive support for regex queries.
Forks a copy of Lucene’s RegexpQuery and RegExp from Lucene master.
This can be removed when 8.7 Lucene is released.
Closes#59235
Splitting DeprecationLogger into two. HeaderWarningLogger - responsible for adding a response warning headers and ThrottlingLogger - responsible for limiting the duplicated log entries for the same key (previously deprecateAndMaybeLog).
Introducing A ThrottlingAndHeaderWarningLogger which is a base for other common logging usages where both response warning header and logging throttling was needed.
relates #55699
relates #52369
backports #55941
* Faster `equals` for `BytesArray` which is nice since with this change we use it for the search cache
* Lighter `StreamInput` for `BytesArray` that should save memory and some indirection relative to the one on the abstract bytes reference
* Lighter `writeTo` implementation
* Build a `BytesArray` instead of a PagedBytesReference whenever possible to save indirection and memory
This is mostly motivated by the performance issues we are seeing around the GET mappings
REST API which (in case of a large number of indices) will create decompressing streams in a hot loop
which takes a significant amount of time for the system calls involved in instantiating deflaters
and inflaters.
Also, this fixes a leaked deflater when deserializing cached repository data.
This method might have materialize all the bytes in a reference into a fresh `byte[]`.
Using the stream is much safer and only trivially more expensive + in most cases we now run the fast path via `BytesArray` anyway.
This optimization is more relevant in the context of CCR. When a node in
the follower cluster leaves, we reallocate the shard-follow tasks on
that node to other nodes. The new tasks will overwhelm the follower
cluster with many put-mapping, update-settings requests, although most
of them are noop. This change detects and optimizes the noop
update-settings requests.
This continues #61301, migrating all of the mappers in `server` to the
new `MapperTestCase` which is nicer than `FieldMapperTestCase` because
it doesn't depend on all of Elasticsearch.
It's unnecessary (and adds one string comparison to every request) to special
case the favicon so I added it as a normal REST handler to simplify the code.
Wrapping a `BytesArray` in a `StreamInput` for deserialization is inefficient.
This forces Jackson to internally buffer (i.e. copy) all bytes from the `BytesArray`
before deserializing, adding overhead for copying the bytes and managing the buffers.
This commit fixes a number of spots where `BytesArray` is the most common type of
`BytesReference` to special case this type and parse it more efficiently.
Also improves parsing `String`s to use the more efficient direct `String` parsing APIs.
Today a remote cluster connection comprises a `PING` and a `REG`
channel. The `PING` channel is only used for health checks between the
elected master and the members of its own cluster, so is unused in a
remote cluster connection. This commit removes this unused connection.
For large responses to the get mappings request, the serialization
to XContent can be extremely slow (serializing mappings is expensive since
we have to decompress and deserialize the mapping source).
To not introduce instability on the IO thread handling the get mappings response
we should move the serialization to the management pool.
The trade-off of introducing one or two new context switches for responses that are
small enough to not cause trouble on the transport thread to prevent instability
in case of a large number of mappings in the cluster seems worth it.
It is not realistic to drop messages without eventually failing.
To retain the coverage of long pauses this PR adjusts the blackholed
behavior to fail a send after 24h (which is assumed to be longer than any
timeout in the system) instead of never.
Closes#61034
Before when a value was copied to a field through a parent field or `copy_to`,
we parsed it using the `FieldMapper` from the source field. Instead we should
parse it using the target `FieldMapper`. This ensures that we apply the
appropriate mapping type and options to the copied value.
To implement the fix cleanly, this PR refactors the value parsing strategy. Now
instead of looking up values directly, field mappers produce a helper object
`ValueFetcher`. The value fetchers are responsible for almost all aspects of
fetching, including looking up the right paths in the _source.
The PR is fairly big but each commit can be reviewed individually.
Fixes#61033.
Previously we didn't retain the requested fields when performing a shallow copy
of the search source. This meant that when a search was rewritten, we could drop
the requested fields and fail to return them in the response.
Saving some cycles here and there on the IO loop:
* Don't instantiate new `Runnable` to execute on `SAME` in a few spots
* Don't instantiate complicated wrapped stream for empty messages
* Stop instantiating almost never used `ClusterStateObserver` in two spots
* Some minor cleanup and preventing pointless `Predicate<>` instantiation in transport master node action
In addition, this commit converts ScaledFloatFieldMapper as it was relying
on a number of static values taken from NumberFieldMapper that had changed
or been removed.
This switches a few tests for field mappers from `ESSingleNodeTestCase`
to `ESTestCase` because, in general, we prefer to avoid
`ESSingleNodeTestCase` when we can because it is slow and "big". "Big"
here means that it pulls in an entire node, making it difficult to
reason about what you are testing.
We have to set the recovery setting to `0` if we don't want throttling
from recoveries. Otherwise the randomized value used for this setting in
tests can lead to throttling unexpectedly.
Closes#61311
With #60683 we stopped forcing aggregating all docs using a single
Aggregator which made some of our accuracy assumptions about the stats
aggregator incorrect. This adds a test that does the forcing and asserts
the old accuracy and adds a test without the forcing with much looser
accuracy guarantees.
Closes#61132
The FieldNamesFieldMapper field has different behaviour for indexes created in
clusters earlier than v6.1, and the code to deal with this was still using the vestigial
FieldType field of FieldMapper in its indexing path. This meant that documents
added after an upgrade were not correctly indexing their field names field. This
commit corrects the parseCreateField method to use the default field type.
Fixes#61305
Today a common reason for a `ShardLockObtainFailedException` is when a
shard is removed from a node and then assigned straight back to it again
before the node has had a chance to shut the previous shard instance
down. For instance, this can happen if a node briefly leaves the cluster
holding a primary with no in-sync replicas.
The message in this case is typically as follows:
obtaining shard lock timed out after 5000ms, previous lock details: [shard creation] trying to lock for [shard creation]
This is pretty hard to interpret, and doesn't raise the important
question: "why didn't the shard shut down sooner?"
With this change we reword the message a bit, report the age of the
shard lock, and adjust the details to report that the lock is held by a
closing shard:
obtaining shard lock for [starting shard] timed out after [5000ms], lock already held for [closing shard] with age [12345ms]
Relates #38807
We have seen a situation where the total search operations are higher
than expected. Unfortunately, we did not have enough info to figure it
out. This commit adds the failures to the error to provide more context
and adjusts the log level in case of failure to debug.
We only work with heap byte buffers at this point and those we can and do unwrap the
`byte[]` ourselves and use `BytesArray` instead of a needless level of indirection via `ByteBuffer`.
There is a corner case here in which during partial snapshot the index is
deleted right between starting the snapshot in the CS and the data node getting to work
on it, causing the data node the fail that shard snapshot and making the snapshot `PARTIAL`.
Closes#61208
Adds a method to make a random date `DateFormatter` pattern. We expect
this'll be useful for runtime fields to compate their formatting with
the standard date field.
Currently we occasionally can get ArithmeticException from parsing bad input
values on 'date' fields that are passed on even if 'ignore_malformed' is set.
This change adds this exception to the ones we already catch for malformed
values.
Closes#52634
Today we allocate a new `byte[]` for each document written to the
cluster state. Some of these documents may be quite large. We need a
buffer that's at least as large as the largest document, but there's no
need to use a fresh buffer for each document.
With this commit we re-use the same `byte[]` much more, only allocating
it afresh if we need a larger one, and using the buffer needed for one
round of persistence as a hint for the size needed for the next one.
The 7.x branch preserves the legacy discovery mechanism from 6.x purely
for running internal cluster tests; this mechanism is otherwise
completely untested and unsupported. However it is still technically
possible to use it outside of the test suite if you dig through the
source code to work out what settings need to be set. With this change
we make it impossible to use this mechanism in production.
Closes#61177
The ReloadSecureSettingsIT makes requests to the reload settings apis.
In 7.x, the client used from the integ test infrastructure may be a
transport client. In that case, the expected exception type, and causes
the test to fail (though it will hang indefinitely due to not counting
down the latch, see
https://github.com/elastic/elasticsearch/pull/60800). This commit adds
unwrapping of the remote exception to get the underlying expected
exception.
closes#51546
Use transport blocking to make relocation take forever instead of relying on the relocation to take long enough to clash with the snapshot.
Closes#61069
It is disastrous if we commit an incremental cluster state update
without having written the full state first. We assert that this doesn't
happen, but it is hard to fully test the myriad ways that things might
fail in a messy production environment. Given the disastrous
consequences it is worth erring on the side of caution in this area.
This commit fails invalid writes even if assertions are disabled.
This commit adds the `data_hot`, `data_warm`, `data_cold`, and `data_frozen` node roles to the
x-pack plugin. These roles are intended to be the base for the formalization of data tiers in
Elasticsearch.
These roles all act as data nodes (meaning shards can be allocated to them). Nodes with the existing
`data` role acts as though they have all of the roles configured (it is a hot, warm, cold, and
frozen node).
This also includes a custom `AllocationDecider` that allows the user to configure the following
settings on a cluster level:
- `cluster.routing.allocation.require._tier`
- `cluster.routing.allocation.include._tier`
- `cluster.routing.allocation.exclude._tier`
And in index settings:
- `index.routing.allocation.require._tier`
- `index.routing.allocation.include._tier`
- `index.routing.allocation.exclude._tier`
Relates to #60848
Converting AllFieldMapper to parametrized form ended up not being run through BWC
testing, resulting in an incorrect implementation being committed. This commit fixes
the serialization, and adds unit tests as well as unmuting the BWC test that uncovered
the bug.
Fixes#60986
Elasticsearch currently blocks writes by default when a master is unavailable. The cluster.no_master_block setting allows
a user to change this behavior to also block reads when a master is unavailable. This PR introduces a way to now also still
allow writes when a master is offline. Writes will continue to work as long as routing table changes are not needed (as
those require the master for consistency), or if dynamic mapping updates are not required (as again, these require the
master for consistency).
Eventually we should switch the default of cluster.no_master_block to this new mode.
Today a snapshot repository verification ensures that all master-eligible and data nodes have write access to the
snapshot repository (and can see each other's data) since taking a snapshot requires data nodes and the currently
elected master to write to the repository. However, a dedicated voting-only master-eligible node is not a data node and
will never be the elected master so we should not require it to have write access to the repository.
Closes#59649
Repositories can't be unregistered when they are actively being used for snapshots or restores. Wildcard repository
deletes could silently bypass the "repo in use" checks however, which is now fixed.
This makes KeywordFieldMapper extend ParametrizedFieldMapper, with explicitly
defined parameters.
In addition, we add a new option to Parameter, restrictedStringParam, which
accepts a restricted set of string options.
The Query string parser was not delegating the construction of wildcard/regex queries to the underlying field type.
The wildcard field has special data structures and queries that operate on them so cannot rely on the basic regex/wildcard queries that were being used for other fields.
Closes#60957
Use thread-local buffers and deflater and inflater instances to speed up
compressing and decompressing from in-memory bytes.
Not manually invoking `end()` on these should be safe since their off-heap memory
will eventually be reclaimed by the finalizer thread which should not be an issue for thread-locals
that are not instantiated at a high frequency.
This significantly reduces the amount of byte copying and object creation relative to the previous approach
which had to create a fresh temporary buffer (that was then resized multiple times during operations), copied
bytes out of that buffer to a freshly allocated `byte[]`, used 4k stream buffers needlessly when working with
bytes that are already in arrays (`writeTo` handles efficient writing to the compression logic now) etc.
Relates #57284 which should be helped by this change to some degree.
Also, I expect this change to speed up mapping/template updates a little as those make heavy use of these
code paths.
This commit introduces a new thread pool, `system_read`, which is
intended for use by system indices for all read operations (get and
search). The `system_read` pool is a fixed thread pool with a maximum
number of threads equal to lesser of half of the available processors
or 5. Given the combination of both get and read operations in this
thread pool, the queue size has been set to 2000. The motivation for
this change is to allow system read operations to be serviced in spite
of the number of user searches.
In order to avoid a significant performance hit due to pattern matching
on all search requests, a new metadata flag is added to mark indices
as system or non-system. Previously created system indices will have
flag added to their metadata upon upgrade to a version with this
capability.
Additionally, this change also introduces a new class, `SystemIndices`,
which encapsulates logic around system indices. Currently, the class
provides a method to check if an index is a system index and a method
to find a matching index descriptor given the name of an index.
Relates #50251
Relates #37867
Backport of #57936
We accept _source values with multiple levels of arrays, such as
`"field": [[[1, 2]]]`. This PR ensures that field retrieval can handle nested
arrays by unwrapping the arrays before parsing the values.
Same as https://github.com/elastic/elasticsearch/pull/43288 for GCS.
We don't need to do the bucket exists check before using the repo, that just needlessly
increases the necessary permissions for using the GCS repository.
Because the 'fields' option loads from _source (which is a stored field), it is
not possible to retrieve 'fields' when stored_fields are disabled.
This also fixes#60912, where setting stored_fields: _none_ prevented the
_ignored fields from being loaded and caused a parsing exception.
This moves the `distance_feature` query building out of
`DistanceFeatureQueryBuilder` and into subclasses of `MappedFieldType`.
Without this we don't have a chance of supporting this for runtime
fields. In general I'm not sad to see the `instanceof`s go.
Co-authored-by: Elastic Machine <elasticmachine@users.noreply.github.com>