Today we log and swallow exceptions during cluster state application, but such
an exception should not occur. This commit adds assertions of this fact, and
updates the Javadocs to explain it.
Relates #47038
Currently in production instances of Elasticsearch we set a couple of
system properties by default. We currently do not apply all of these
system properties in tests. This commit applies these properties in the
tests.
Today `GatewayMetaState` implements `PersistedState` but it's an error to use
it as a `PersistedState` before it's been started, or if the node is
master-ineligible. It also holds some fields that are meaningless on nodes that
do not persist their states. Finally, it takes responsibility for both loading
the original cluster state and some of the high-level logic for writing the
cluster state back to disk.
This commit addresses these concerns by introducing a more specific
`PersistedState` implementation for use on master-eligible nodes which is only
instantiated if and when it's appropriate. It also moves the fields and
high-level persistence logic into a new `IncrementalClusterStateWriter` with a
more appropriate lifecycle.
Follow-up to #46326 and #46532
Relates #47001
Previously, queries on the _index field were not able to specify index aliases.
This was a regression in functionality compared to the 'indices' query that was
deprecated and removed in 6.0.
Now queries on _index can specify an alias, which is resolved to the concrete
index names when we check whether an index matches. To match a remote shard
target, the pattern needs to be of the form 'cluster:index' to match the
fully-qualified index name. Index aliases can be specified in the following query
types: term, terms, prefix, and wildcard.
This commit replaces the SearchContext used in AbstractQueryTestCase with
a QueryShardContext in order to reduce the visibility of search contexts.
Relates #46523
API spec now use an object for the documentation field. _common was not updated yet. This commit updates _common.json and its corresponding parser.
Closes#46744
Co-Authored-By: Tomas Della Vedova <delvedor@users.noreply.github.com>
When using auto-generated IDs + the ingest drop processor (which looks to be used by filebeat
as well) + coordinating nodes that do not have the ingest processor functionality, this can lead
to a NullPointerException.
The issue is that markCurrentItemAsDropped() is creating an UpdateResponse with no id when
the request contains auto-generated IDs. The response serialization is lenient for our
REST/XContent format (i.e. we will send "id" : null) but the internal transport format (used for
communication between nodes) assumes for this field to be non-null, which means that it can't
be serialized between nodes. Bulk requests with ingest functionality are processed on the
coordinating node if the node has the ingest capability, and only otherwise sent to a different
node. This means that, in order to reproduce this, one needs two nodes, with the coordinating
node not having the ingest functionality.
Closes#46678
This adds an assert to make sure we're not leaking
index-N blobs on the shard level to the repo consistency checks.
It is ok to have a single redundant index-N blob in a failure scenario
but additional index-N should always be cleaned up before adding more.
This commit adds support for resumable uploads to the internal HTTP
server used in GoogleCloudStorageBlobStoreRepositoryTests. This
way we can also test the behavior of the Google's client when the
service returns server errors in response to resumable upload requests.
The BlobStore implementation for GCS has the choice between 2
methods to upload a blob: resumable and multipart. In the current
implementation, the client executes a resumable upload if the blob
size is larger than LARGE_BLOB_THRESHOLD_BYTE_SIZE,
otherwise it executes a multipart upload. This commit makes this
logic overridable in tests, allowing to randomize the decision of
using one method or the other.
The commit add support for single request resumable uploads
and chunked resumable uploads (the blob is uploaded into multiple
2Mb chunks; each chunk being a resumable upload). For this last
case, this PR also adds a test testSnapshotWithLargeSegmentFiles
which makes it more probable that a chunked resumable upload is
executed.
Reenable this test since it was fixed by #45689 in production
code (specifically, the fact that we write the `snap-` blobs
without overwrite checks now).
Only required adding the assumed blocking on index file writes
to test code to properly work again.
* Closes#25281
There were some issues with the Azure implementation requiring
permissions to list all containers ue to a container exists
check. This was caught in CI this time, but going forward we
should ensure that CI is executed using a token that does not
allow listing containers.
Relates #43288
* Write metadata during snapshot finalization after segment files to prevent outdated metadata in case of dynamic mapping updates as explained in #41581
* Keep the old behavior of writing the metadata beforehand in the case of mixed version clusters for BwC reasons
* Still overwrite the metadata in the end, so even a mixed version cluster is fixed by this change if a newer version master does the finalization
* Fixes#41581
There's nothing wrong in the logs from these failures. I think 30
seconds might not be enough to relocate shards with many documents as CI
is quite slow. This change increases the timeout to 60 seconds for these
relocation tests. It also dumps the hot threads in case of timed out.
Closes#46526Closes#46439
This change delays the creation of the SubSearchContext for nested and parent/child inner_hits
to the fetch sub phase in order to ensure that a SearchContext can built entirely from a
QueryShardContext. This commit also adds a validation step to the inner hits builder that ensures that we fail the request early if the inner hits path is invalid.
Relates #46523
This commit replaces the `SearchContext` with the `QueryShardContext` when building aggregator factories. Aggregator factories are part of the `SearchContext` so they shouldn't require a `SearchContext` to create them.
The main changes here are the signatures of `AggregationBuilder#build` that now takes a `QueryShardContext` and `AggregatorFactory#createInternal` that passes the `SearchContext` to build the `Aggregator`.
Relates #46523
* More Efficient Ordering of Shard Upload Execution (#42791)
* Change the upload order of of snapshots to work file by file in parallel on the snapshot pool instead of merely shard-by-shard
* Inspired by #39657
* Cleanup BlobStoreRepository Abort and Failure Handling (#46208)
This change adds an IndexSearcher and the node's BigArrays in the QueryShardContext.
It's a spin off of #46527 as this change is required to allow aggregation builder to solely use the
query shard context.
Relates #46523
Today we load the metadata from disk while constructing the node. However there
is no real need to do so, and this commit moves that code to run later while
the node is starting instead.
We are seeing requests take more than the default 30s
which leads to requests being retried and returning
unexpected failures like e.g. "index already exists"
because the initial requests that timed out, worked
out functionally anyway.
=> double the timeout to reduce the likelihood of
the failures described in #46091
=> As suggested in the issue, we should in a follow-up
turn off retrying all-together probably
This commit removes the usage of MockGoogleCloudStoragePlugin in
GoogleCloudStorageBlobStoreRepositoryTests and replaces it by a
HttpServer that emulates the Storage service. This allows the repository
tests to use the real Google's client under the hood in tests and will allow
us to test the behavior of the snapshot/restore feature for GCS repositories
by simulating random server-side internal errors.
The HTTP server used to emulate the Storage service is intentionally simple
and minimal to keep things understandable and maintainable. Testing full
client options on the server side (like authentication, chunked encoding
etc) remains the responsibility of the GoogleCloudStorageFixture.
Today the `DiskThresholdDecider` attempts to account for already-relocating
shards when deciding how to allocate or relocate a shard. Its goal is to stop
relocating shards onto a node before that node exceeds the low watermark, and
to stop relocating shards away from a node as soon as the node drops below the
high watermark.
The decider handles multiple data paths by only accounting for relocating
shards that affect the appropriate data path. However, this mechanism does not
correctly account for _new_ relocating shards, which are unwittingly ignored.
This means that we may evict far too many shards from a node above the high
watermark, and may relocate far too many shards onto a node causing it to blow
right past the low watermark and potentially other watermarks too.
There are in fact two distinct issues that this PR fixes. New incoming shards
have an unknown data path until the `ClusterInfoService` refreshes its
statistics. New outgoing shards have a known data path, but we fail to account
for the change of the corresponding `ShardRouting` from `STARTED` to
`RELOCATING`, meaning that we fail to find the correct data path and treat the
path as unknown here too.
This PR also reworks the `MockDiskUsagesIT` test to avoid using fake data paths
for all shards. With the changes here, the data paths are handled in tests as
they are in production, except that their sizes are fake.
Fixes#45177
AbstractSimpleTransportTestCase.testTransportProfilesWithPortAndHost
expects a host to only have a single IPv4 loopback address, which isn't
necessarily the case. Allow for >= 1 address.
Backport of #45901.
We recently added a check to `ESIntegTestCase` in order to verify that
no http channels are being tracked when we close clusters and the
REST client. Close listeners though are invoked asynchronously, hence
this check may fail if we assert before the close listener that removes
the channel from the map is invoked.
With this commit we add an `assertBusy` so we try and wait for the map
to be empty.
Closes#45914Closes#45955
Today we create new engines under IndexShard#mutex. This is not ideal
because it can block the cluster state updates which also execute under
the same mutex. We can avoid this problem by creating new engines under
a separate mutex.
Closes#43699
This commit namespaces the existing processors setting under the "node"
namespace. In doing so, we deprecate the existing processors setting in
favor of node.processors.
In internal test clusters tests we check that wiping all indices was acknowledged
but in REST tests we didn't.
This aligns the behavior in both kinds of tests.
Relates #45605 which might be caused by unacked deletes that were just slow.
This PR introduces a mechanism to cancel a search task when its corresponding connection gets closed. That would relief users from having to manually deal with tasks and cancel them if needed. Especially the process of finding the task_id requires calling get tasks which needs to call every node in the cluster.
The implementation is based on associating each http channel with its currently running search task, and cancelling the task when the previously registered close listener gets called.
* It appears this test that is specific to how the BSD network stack works
does randomly fail on Windows => disabling it since it's not clear that it
should work on Windows in a stable way
* Fixes#45777
Most of our CLI tools use the Terminal class, which previously did not provide methods for writing to standard output. When all output goes to standard out, there are two basic problems. First, errors and warnings are "swallowed" in pipelines, making it hard for a user to know when something's gone wrong. Second, errors and warnings are intermingled with legitimate output, making it difficult to pass the results of interactive scripts to other tools.
This commit adds a second set of print commands to Terminal for printing to standard error, with errorPrint corresponding to print and errorPrintln corresponding to println. This leaves it to developers to decide which output should go where. It also adjusts existing commands to send errors and warnings to stderr.
Usage is printed to standard output when it's correctly requested (e.g., bin/elasticsearch-keystore --help) but goes to standard error when a command is invoked incorrectly (e.g. bin/elasticsearch-keystore list-with-a-typo | sort).
* Repository Cleanup Endpoint (#43900)
* Snapshot cleanup functionality via transport/REST endpoint.
* Added all the infrastructure for this with the HLRC and node client
* Made use of it in tests and resolved relevant TODO
* Added new `Custom` CS element that tracks the cleanup logic.
Kept it similar to the delete and in progress classes and gave it
some (for now) redundant way of handling multiple cleanups but only allow one
* Use the exact same mechanism used by deletes to have the combination
of CS entry and increment in repository state ID provide some
concurrency safety (the initial approach of just an entry in the CS
was not enough, we must increment the repository state ID to be safe
against concurrent modifications, otherwise we run the risk of "cleaning up"
blobs that just got created without noticing)
* Isolated the logic to the transport action class as much as I could.
It's not ideal, but we don't need to keep any state and do the same
for other repository operations
(like getting the detailed snapshot shard status)
Adjusts the cluster cleanup routine in ESRestTestCase to clean up SLM
test cases, and optionally wait for all snapshots to be deleted.
Waiting for all snapshots to be deleted, rather than failing if any are
in progress, is necessary for tests which use SLM policies because SLM
policies may be in the process of executing when the test ends.
Changes the order of parameters in Geometries from lat, lon to lon, lat
and moves all Geometry classes are moved to the
org.elasticsearch.geomtery package.
Backport of #45332Closes#45048
* Update the REST API specification
This patch updates the REST API spefication in JSON files to better encode deprecated entities,
to improve specification of URL paths, and to open up the schema for future extensions.
Notably, it changes the `paths` from a list of strings to a list of objects, where each
particular object encodes all the information for this particular path: the `parts` and the `methods`.
Among the benefits of this approach is eg. encoding the difference between using the `PUT` and `POST`
methods in the Index API, to either use a specific document ID, or let Elasticsearch generate one.
Also `documentation` becomes an object that supports an `url` and also a `description` which is a
new field.
* Adapt YAML runner to new REST API specification format
The logic for choosing the path to use when running tests has been
simplified, as a consequence of the path parts being listed under each
path in the spec. The special case for create and index has been removed.
Also the parsing code has been hardened so that errors are thrown earlier
when the structure of the spec differs from what expected, and their
error messages should be more helpful.
Moves methods added in #44213 and uses them to configure the port range
for `ExternalTestCluster` too.
These were still using `9300-9400` ( teh default ) and running into
races.
* Introduce Spatial Plugin (#44389)
Introduce a skeleton Spatial plugin that holds new licensed features coming to
Geo/Spatial land!
* [GEO] Refactor DeprecatedParameters in AbstractGeometryFieldMapper (#44923)
Refactor DeprecatedParameters specific to legacy geo_shape out of
AbstractGeometryFieldMapper.TypeParser#parse.
* [SPATIAL] New ShapeFieldMapper for indexing cartesian geometries (#44980)
Add a new ShapeFieldMapper to the xpack spatial module for
indexing arbitrary cartesian geometries using a new field type called shape.
The indexing approach leverages lucene's new XYShape field type which is
backed by BKD in the same manner as LatLonShape but without the WGS84
latitude longitude restrictions. The new field mapper builds on and
extends the refactoring effort in AbstractGeometryFieldMapper and accepts
shapes in either GeoJSON or WKT format (both of which support non geospatial
geometries).
Tests are provided in the ShapeFieldMapperTest class in the same manner
as GeoShapeFieldMapperTests and LegacyGeoShapeFieldMapperTests.
Documentation for how to use the new field type and what parameters are
accepted is included. The QueryBuilder for searching indexed shapes is
provided in a separate commit.
* [SPATIAL] New ShapeQueryBuilder for querying indexed cartesian geometry (#45108)
Add a new ShapeQueryBuilder to the xpack spatial module for
querying arbitrary Cartesian geometries indexed using the new shape field
type.
The query builder extends AbstractGeometryQueryBuilder and leverages the
ShapeQueryProcessor added in the previous field mapper commit.
Tests are provided in ShapeQueryTests in the same manner as
GeoShapeQueryTests and docs are updated to explain how the query works.
We should not hold Engine#writeLock while executing
assertConsistentHistoryBetweenTranslogAndLuceneIndex
for this check might acquire Engine#readLock.
Relates #45461
We should capture max_seq_no after snapshotting translog and Lucene;
otherwise, that max_seq_no can be smaller some operation in translog or
Lucene. With this change, we also hold the Engine#writeLock during this
check so that no indexing can happen.
Closes#45454
Today, if an operation-based peer recovery occurs, we won't trim
translog but leave it as is. Some unacknowledged operations existing in
translog of that replica might suddenly reappear when it gets promoted.
With this change, we ensure trimming translog above the starting
sequence number of phase 2. This change can allow us to read translog
forward.
Today if a shard is not fully allocated we maintain a retention lease for a
lost peer for up to 12 hours, retaining all operations that occur in that time
period so that we can recover this replica using an operations-based recovery
if it returns. However it is not always reasonable to perform an
operations-based recovery on such a replica: if the replica is a very long way
behind the rest of the replication group then it can be much quicker to perform
a file-based recovery instead.
This commit introduces a notion of "reasonable" recoveries. If an
operations-based recovery would involve copying only a small number of
operations, but the index is large, then an operations-based recovery is
reasonable; on the other hand if there are many operations to copy across and
the index itself is relatively small then it makes more sense to perform a
file-based recovery. We measure the size of the index by computing its number
of documents (including deleted documents) in all segments belonging to the
current safe commit, and compare this to the number of operations a lease is
retaining below the local checkpoint of the safe commit. We consider an
operations-based recovery to be reasonable iff it would involve replaying at
most 10% of the documents in the index.
The mechanism for this feature is to expire peer-recovery retention leases
early if they are retaining so much history that an operations-based recovery
using that lease would be unreasonable.
Relates #41536
Elasticsearch does not grant Netty reflection access to get Unsafe. The
only mechanism that currently exists to free direct buffers in a timely
manner is to use Unsafe. This leads to the occasional scenario, under
heavy network load, that direct byte buffers can slowly build up without
being freed.
This commit disables Netty direct buffer pooling and moves to a strategy
of using a single thread-local direct buffer for interfacing with sockets.
This will reduce the memory usage from networking. Elasticsearch
currently derives very little value from direct buffer usage (TLS,
compression, Lucene, Elasticsearch handling, etc all use heap bytes). So
this seems like the correct trade-off until that changes.
Adds a tighter threshold for logging a warning about slowness in the
`MasterService` instead of relying on the cluster service's 30-second warning
threshold. This new threshold applies to the computation of the cluster state
update in isolation, so we get a warning if computing a new cluster state
update takes longer than 10 seconds even if it is subsequently applied quickly.
It also applies independently to the length of time it takes to notify the
cluster state tasks on completion of publication, in case any of these
notifications holds up the master thread for too long.
Relates #45007
Backport of #45086
This commit applies a normalization process to environment paths, both
in how they are stored internally, also their settings values. This
normalization is done via two means:
- we make the paths absolute
- we remove redundant name elements from the path (what Java calls
"normalization")
This change ensures that when we compare and refer to these paths within
the system, we are using a common ground. For example, prior to the
change if the data path was relative, we would not compare it correctly
to paths from disk usage. This is because the paths in disk usage were
being made absolute.
Uses JDK 11's per-socket configuration of TCP keepalive (supported on Linux and Mac), see
https://bugs.openjdk.java.net/browse/JDK-8194298, and exposes these as transport settings.
By default, these options are disabled for now (i.e. fall-back to OS behavior), but we would like
to explore whether we can enable them by default, in particular to force keepalive configurations
that are better tuned for running ES.
This adjusts the `buckets_path` parser so that pipeline aggs can
select specific buckets (via their bucket keys) instead of fetching
the entire set of buckets. This is useful for bucket_script in
particular, which might want specific buckets for calculations.
It's possible to workaround this with `filter` aggs, but the workaround
is hacky and probably less performant.
- Adjusts documentation
- Adds a barebones AggregatorTestCase for bucket_script
- Tweaks AggTestCase to use getMockScriptService() for reductions and
pipelines. Previously pipelines could just pass in a script service
for testing, but this didnt work for regular aggs. The new
getMockScriptService() method fixes that issue, but needs to be used
for pipelines too. This had a knock-on effect of touching MovFn,
AvgBucket and ScriptedMetric
Currently in the transport-nio work we connect and bind channels on the
a thread before the channel is registered with a selector. Additionally,
it is at this point that we set all the socket options. This commit
moves these operations onto the event-loop after the channel has been
registered with a selector. It attempts to set the socket options for a
non-server channel at registration time. If that fails, it will attempt
to set the options after the channel is connected. This should fix
#41071.
Today we recover a replica by copying operations from the primary's translog.
However we also retain some historical operations in the index itself, as long
as soft-deletes are enabled. This commit adjusts peer recovery to use the
operations in the index for recovery rather than those in the translog, and
ensures that the replication group retains enough history for use in peer
recovery by means of retention leases.
Reverts #38904 and #42211
Relates #41536
Backport of #45136 to 7.x.
* Stop Passing Around REST Request in Multiple Spots
* Motivated by #44564
* We are currently passing the REST request object around to a large number of places. This works fine since we simply copy the full request content before we handle the rest itself which is needlessly hard on GC and heap.
* This PR removes a number of spots where the request is passed around needlessly. There are many more spots to optimize in follow-ups to this, but this one would already enable bypassing the request copying for some error paths in a follow up.
Adds a `waitForEvents(Priority.LANGUID)` to the cluster health request in
`ESIntegTestCase#waitForRelocation()` to deal with the case that this health
request returns successfully despite the fact that there is a pending reroute task which
will relocate another shard.
Relates #44433Fixes#45003
* Create S3 Third Party Test Task that Covers the S3 CLI Tool
* Adjust snapshot cli test tool tests to work with real S3
* Build adjustment
* Clean up repo path before testing
* Dedup the logic for asserting path contents by using the correct utility method here that somehow became unused
Today closing a `ClusterNode` in an `AbstractCoordinatorTestCase` uses
`onNode()` so has no effect if the node is not in the current list of nodes.
It also discards the `Runnable` it creates without having run it, so has no
effect anyway.
This commit makes these tests much stricter about properly closing the nodes
started during `Coordinator` tests, by tracking the persisted states that are
opened, and adds an assertion to catch the trappy requirement that the closing
node still belongs to the cluster.
Replaying operations from the local translog must never fail as those
operations were processed successfully on the primary before and the
mapping is up to update already. This change removes leniency during
resetting engine from translog in IndexShard and InternalEngine.
We currently block the transport thread on startup, which has caused test failures. I think this is
some kind of deadlock situation. I don't think we should even block a transport thread, and
there's also no need to do so. We can just reject requests as long we're not fully set up. Note
that the HTTP layer is only started much later (after we've completed full start up of the
transport layer), so that one should be completely unaffected by this.
Closes#41745
Today the processors setting is permitted to be set to more than the
number of processors available to the JVM. The processors setting
directly sizes the number of threads in the various thread pools, with
most of these sizes being a linear function in the number of
processors. It doesn't make any sense to set processors very high as the
overhead from context switching amongst all the threads will overwhelm,
and changing the setting does not control how many physical CPU
resources there are on which to schedule the additional threads. We have
to draw a line somewhere and this commit deprecates setting processors
to more than the number of available processors. This is the right place
to draw the line given the linear growth as a function of processors in
most of the thread pools, and that some are capped at the number of
available processors already.
Adds an API to clone an index. This is similar to the index split and shrink APIs, just with the
difference that the number of primary shards is kept the same. In case where the filesystem
provides hard-linking capabilities, this is a very cheap operation.
Indexing cloning can be done by running `POST my_source_index/_clone/my_target_index` and it
supports the same options as the split and shrink APIs.
Closes#44128
* Switch from using docvalue_fields to extracting values from _source
where applicable. Doing this means parsing the _source and handling the
numbers parsing just like Elasticsearch is doing it when it's indexing
a document.
* This also introduces a minor limitation: aliases type of fields that
are NOT part of a tree of sub-fields will not be able to be retrieved
anymore. field_caps API doesn't shed any light into a field being an
alias or not and at _source parsing time there is no way to know if a
root field is an alias or not. Fields of the type "a.b.c.alias" can be
extracted from docvalue_fields, only if the field they point to can be
extracted from docvalue_fields. Also, not all fields in a hierarchy of
fields can be evaluated to being an alias.
(cherry picked from commit 8bf8a055e38f00df5f49c8d97f632f69d6e00c2c)
Removes unnecessary now timeline decompositions from shape builders
and deprecates ShapeBuilders in QueryBuilder in favor of libs/geo
shapes.
Relates to #40908
* The tests were creating the corruption and asserting its existence not on the repository base path but on a clean path.
As a result the consistency assertion on the repository wouldn't see the corruption ever an pass even if the cleanup was broken for repositories that have a non-root base path
* Fix this test randomly failing when running into async translog persistence edge case and failing to successfully close index
* Also, slightly improve debug logging on close failure
* Closes#44681
Switches to more robust way of generating random test geometries by
reusing lucene's GeoTestUtil. Removes duplicate random geometry
generators by moving them to the test framework.
Closes#37278
Add more logging to indexRandom
Seems that asynchronous indexing from indexRandom sometimes indexes
the same document twice, which will mess up the expected score calculations.
For example, indexing:
{ "index" : {"_id" : "1" } }
{"important" :"phrase match", "less_important": "nothing important"}
{ "index" : {"_id" : "2" } }
{"important" :"nothing important", "less_important" :"phrase match"}
Produces the expected scores: 13.8 for doc1, and 1.38 for doc2
indexing:
{ "index" : {"_id" : "1" } }
{"important" :"phrase match", "less_important": "nothing important"}
{ "index" : {"_id" : "2" } }
{"important" :"nothing important", "less_important" :"phrase match"}
{ "index" : {"_id" : "3" } }
{"important" :"phrase match", "less_important": "nothing important"}
Produces scores: 9.4 for doc1, and 1.96 for doc2 which are found in the
error logs.
Relates to #43144
This commit converts all remaining TransportRequest and
TransportResponse classes to implement Writeable, and disallows
Streamable implementations.
relates #34389
* Expose index age in ILM explain output
This adds the index's age to the ILM explain output, for example:
```
{
"indices" : {
"ilm-000001" : {
"index" : "ilm-000001",
"managed" : true,
"policy" : "full-lifecycle",
"lifecycle_date" : "2019-07-16T19:48:22.294Z",
"lifecycle_date_millis" : 1563306502294,
"age" : "1.34m",
"phase" : "hot",
"phase_time" : "2019-07-16T19:48:22.487Z",
... etc ...
}
}
}
```
This age can be used to tell when ILM will transition the index to the
next phase, based on that phase's `min_age`.
Resolves#38988
* Expose age in getters and in HLRC
A tool to work with snapshots.
Co-authored by @original-brownbear.
This commit adds snapshot tool and the single command cleanup, that
cleans up orphaned files for S3.
Snapshot tool lives in x-pack/snapshot-tool.
(cherry picked from commit fc4aed44dd975d83229561090f957a95cc76b287)
Today we reroute the cluster as part of the process of starting a shard, which
runs at `URGENT` priority. In large clusters, rerouting may take some time to
complete, and this means that a mere trickle of shard-started events can cause
starvation for other, lower-priority, tasks that are pending on the master.
However, it isn't really necessary to perform a reroute when starting a shard,
as long as one occurs eventually. This commit removes the inline reroute from
the process of starting a shard and replaces it with a deferred one that runs
at `NORMAL` priority, avoiding starvation of higher-priority tasks.
Backport of #44433 and #44543.
Today we have an annotation for controlling logging levels in
tests. This annotation serves two purposes, one is to control the
logging level used in tests, when such control is needed to impact and
assert the behavior of loggers in tests. The other use is when a test is
failing and additional logging is needed. This commit separates these
two concerns into separate annotations.
The primary motivation for this is that we have a history of leaving
behind the annotation for the purpose of investigating test failures
long after the test failure is resolved. The accumulation of these stale
logging annotations has led to excessive disk consumption. Having
recently cleaned this up, we would like to avoid falling into this state
again. To do this, we are adding a link to the test failure under
investigation to the annotation when used for the purpose of
investigating test failures. We will add tooling to inspect these
annotations, in the same way that we have tooling on awaits fix
annotations. This will enable us to report on the use of these
annotations, and report when stale uses of the annotation exist.
Large histories can be problematic and have the linearizability checker occasionally run OOM. As it's
very difficult to bound the size of the histories just right, this PR will let it instead run for 10 seconds
on large histories and then abort.
Closes#44429
* We only use this method in one place in production code and can replace that with a read -> remove it to simplify the interface
* Keep it as an implementation detail in the Azure repository
Registering a channel with a selector is a required operation for the
channel to be handled properly. Currently, we mix the registeration with
other setup operations (ip filtering, SSL initiation, etc). However, a
fail to register is fatal. This PR modifies how registeration occurs to
immediately close the channel if it fails.
There are still two clear loopholes for how a user can interact with a
channel even if registration fails. 1. through the exception handler.
2. through the channel accepted callback. These can perhaps be improved
in the future. For now, this PR prevents writes from proceeding if the
channel is not registered.
* Add Snapshot Lifecycle Management (#43934)
* Add SnapshotLifecycleService and related CRUD APIs
This commit adds `SnapshotLifecycleService` as a new service under the ilm
plugin. This service handles snapshot lifecycle policies by scheduling based on
the policies defined schedule.
This also includes the get, put, and delete APIs for these policies
Relates to #38461
* Make scheduledJobIds return an immutable set
* Use Object.equals for SnapshotLifecyclePolicy
* Remove unneeded TODO
* Implement ToXContentFragment on SnapshotLifecyclePolicyItem
* Copy contents of the scheduledJobIds
* Handle snapshot lifecycle policy updates and deletions (#40062)
(Note this is a PR against the `snapshot-lifecycle-management` feature branch)
This adds logic to `SnapshotLifecycleService` to handle updates and deletes for
snapshot policies. Policies with incremented versions have the old policy
cancelled and the new one scheduled. Deleted policies have their schedules
cancelled when they are no longer present in the cluster state metadata.
Relates to #38461
* Take a snapshot for the policy when the SLM policy is triggered (#40383)
(This is a PR for the `snapshot-lifecycle-management` branch)
This commit fills in `SnapshotLifecycleTask` to actually perform the
snapshotting when the policy is triggered. Currently there is no handling of the
results (other than logging) as that will be added in subsequent work.
This also adds unit tests and an integration test that schedules a policy and
ensures that a snapshot is correctly taken.
Relates to #38461
* Record most recent snapshot policy success/failure (#40619)
Keeping a record of the results of the successes and failures will aid
troubleshooting of policies and make users more confident that their
snapshots are being taken as expected.
This is the first step toward writing history in a more permanent
fashion.
* Validate snapshot lifecycle policies (#40654)
(This is a PR against the `snapshot-lifecycle-management` branch)
With the commit, we now validate the content of snapshot lifecycle policies when
the policy is being created or updated. This checks for the validity of the id,
name, schedule, and repository. Additionally, cluster state is checked to ensure
that the repository exists prior to the lifecycle being added to the cluster
state.
Part of #38461
* Hook SLM into ILM's start and stop APIs (#40871)
(This pull request is for the `snapshot-lifecycle-management` branch)
This change allows the existing `/_ilm/stop` and `/_ilm/start` APIs to also
manage snapshot lifecycle scheduling. When ILM is stopped all scheduled jobs are
cancelled.
Relates to #38461
* Add tests for SnapshotLifecyclePolicyItem (#40912)
Adds serialization tests for SnapshotLifecyclePolicyItem.
* Fix improper import in build.gradle after master merge
* Add human readable version of modified date for snapshot lifecycle policy (#41035)
* Add human readable version of modified date for snapshot lifecycle policy
This small change changes it from:
```
...
"modified_date": 1554843903242,
...
```
To
```
...
"modified_date" : "2019-04-09T21:05:03.242Z",
"modified_date_millis" : 1554843903242,
...
```
Including the `"modified_date"` field when the `?human` field is used.
Relates to #38461
* Fix test
* Add API to execute SLM policy on demand (#41038)
This commit adds the ability to perform a snapshot on demand for a policy. This
can be useful to take a snapshot immediately prior to performing some sort of
maintenance.
```json
PUT /_ilm/snapshot/<policy>/_execute
```
And it returns the response with the generated snapshot name:
```json
{
"snapshot_name" : "production-snap-2019.04.09-rfyv3j9qreixkdbnfuw0ug"
}
```
Note that this does not allow waiting for the snapshot, and the snapshot could
still fail. It *does* record this information into the cluster state similar to
a regularly trigged SLM job.
Relates to #38461
* Add next_execution to SLM policy metadata (#41221)
* Add next_execution to SLM policy metadata
This adds the next time a snapshot lifecycle policy will be executed when
retriving a policy's metadata, for example:
```json
GET /_ilm/snapshot?human
{
"production" : {
"version" : 1,
"modified_date" : "2019-04-15T21:16:21.865Z",
"modified_date_millis" : 1555362981865,
"policy" : {
"name" : "<production-snap-{now/d}>",
"schedule" : "*/30 * * * * ?",
"repository" : "repo",
"config" : {
"indices" : [
"foo-*",
"important"
],
"ignore_unavailable" : true,
"include_global_state" : false
}
},
"next_execution" : "2019-04-15T21:16:30.000Z",
"next_execution_millis" : 1555362990000
},
"other" : {
"version" : 1,
"modified_date" : "2019-04-15T21:12:19.959Z",
"modified_date_millis" : 1555362739959,
"policy" : {
"name" : "<other-snap-{now/d}>",
"schedule" : "0 30 2 * * ?",
"repository" : "repo",
"config" : {
"indices" : [
"other"
],
"ignore_unavailable" : false,
"include_global_state" : true
}
},
"next_execution" : "2019-04-16T02:30:00.000Z",
"next_execution_millis" : 1555381800000
}
}
```
Relates to #38461
* Fix and enhance tests
* Figured out how to Cron
* Change SLM endpoint from /_ilm/* to /_slm/* (#41320)
This commit changes the endpoint for snapshot lifecycle management from:
```
GET /_ilm/snapshot/<policy>
```
to:
```
GET /_slm/policy/<policy>
```
It mimics the ILM path only using `slm` instead of `ilm`.
Relates to #38461
* Add initial documentation for SLM (#41510)
* Add initial documentation for SLM
This adds the initial documentation for snapshot lifecycle management.
It also includes the REST spec API json files since they're sort of
documentation.
Relates to #38461
* Add `manage_slm` and `read_slm` roles (#41607)
* Add `manage_slm` and `read_slm` roles
This adds two more built in roles -
`manage_slm` which has permission to perform any of the SLM actions, as well as
stopping, starting, and retrieving the operation status of ILM.
`read_slm` which has permission to retrieve snapshot lifecycle policies as well
as retrieving the operation status of ILM.
Relates to #38461
* Add execute to the test
* Fix ilm -> slm typo in test
* Record SLM history into an index (#41707)
It is useful to have a record of the actions that Snapshot Lifecycle
Management takes, especially for the purposes of alerting when a
snapshot fails or has not been taken successfully for a certain amount of
time.
This adds the infrastructure to record SLM actions into an index that
can be queried at leisure, along with a lifecycle policy so that this
history does not grow without bound.
Additionally,
SLM automatically setting up an index + lifecycle policy leads to
`index_lifecycle` custom metadata in the cluster state, which some of
the ML tests don't know how to deal with due to setting up custom
`NamedXContentRegistry`s. Watcher would cause the same problem, but it
is already disabled (for the same reason).
* High Level Rest Client support for SLM (#41767)
* High Level Rest Client support for SLM
This commit add HLRC support for SLM.
Relates to #38461
* Fill out documentation tests with tags
* Add more callouts and asciidoc for HLRC
* Update javadoc links to real locations
* Add security test testing SLM cluster privileges (#42678)
* Add security test testing SLM cluster privileges
This adds a test to `PermissionsIT` that uses the `manage_slm` and `read_slm`
cluster privileges.
Relates to #38461
* Don't redefine vars
* Add Getting Started Guide for SLM (#42878)
This commit adds a basic Getting Started Guide for SLM.
* Include SLM policy name in Snapshot metadata (#43132)
Keep track of which SLM policy in the metadata field of the Snapshots
taken by SLM. This allows users to more easily understand where the
snapshot came from, and will enable future SLM features such as
retention policies.
* Fix compilation after master merge
* [TEST] Move exception wrapping for devious exception throwing
Fixes an issue where an exception was created from one line and thrown in another.
* Fix SLM for the change to AcknowledgedResponse
* Add Snapshot Lifecycle Management Package Docs (#43535)
* Fix compilation for transport actions now that task is required
* Add a note mentioning the privileges needed for SLM (#43708)
* Add a note mentioning the privileges needed for SLM
This adds a note to the top of the "getting started with SLM"
documentation mentioning that there are two built-in privileges to
assist with creating roles for SLM users and administrators.
Relates to #38461
* Mention that you can create snapshots for indices you can't read
* Fix REST tests for new number of cluster privileges
* Mute testThatNonExistingTemplatesAreAddedImmediately (#43951)
* Fix SnapshotHistoryStoreTests after merge
* Remove overridden newResponse functions that have been removed
* Fix compilation for backport
* Fix get snapshot output parsing in test
* [DOCS] Add redirects for removed autogen anchors (#44380)
* Switch <tt>...</tt> in javadocs for {@code ...}
* Prevent Confusing Blocked Thread Warnings in MockNioTransport
* We can run into a race where the stacktrace collection and subsequent logging happens after the thread has already unblocked thus logging a confusing stacktrace of wherever the transport thread was after it became unblocked
* Fixed this by comparing whether or not the recorded timestamp is still the same before and after the stacktrace was recorded and not logging if it already changed
Today the `BatchedRerouteService` submits its delayed reroute task at `HIGH`
priority, but in some cases a lower priority would be more appropriate. This
commit adds the facility to submit delayed reroute tasks at different
priorities, such that each submitted reroute task runs at a priority no lower
than the one requested. It does not change the fact that all delayed reroute
tasks are submitted at `HIGH` priority, but at least it makes this explicit.
Currently we loose information about whether a token list in an AnalyzeAction
response is null or an empty list, because we write a 0 value to the stream in
both cases and deserialize to a null value on the receiving side. This change
fixes this so we write an additional flag indicating whether the value is null
or not, followed by the size of the list and its content.
Closes#44078
This is a refactor to current JSON logging to make it more open for extensions
and support for custom ES log messages used inDeprecationLogger IndexingSlowLog , SearchSLowLog
We want to include x-opaque-id in deprecation logs. The easiest way to have this as an additional JSON field instead of part of the message is to create a custom DeprecatedMessage (extends ESLogMEssage)
These messages are regular log4j messages with a text, but also carry a map of fields which can then populate the log pattern. The logic for this lives in ESJsonLayout and ESMessageFieldConverter.
Similar approach can be used to refactor IndexingSlowLog and SearchSlowLog JSON logs to contain fields previously only present as escaped JSON string in a message field.
closes#41350
backport #41354
* The assertion added in #44214 is tripped by tests running dedicated
test clusters per test needlessly.This breaks existing tests like the one in #44245.
* Closes#44245
Today if a master-eligible node is converted to a master-ineligible node it may
remain in the voting configuration, meaning that the master node may count its
publish responses as an indication that it has properly persisted the cluster
state. However master-ineligible nodes do not properly persist the cluster
state, so it is not safe to count these votes.
This change adjusts `CoordinationState` to take account of this from a safety
point of view, and also adjusts the `Coordinator` to prevent such nodes from
joining the cluster. Instead, it triggers a reconfiguration to remove from the
voting configuration a node that now appears to be master-ineligible before
processing its join.
Backport of #43688, see #44260.
* Fix port range allocation with large worker IDs
Relates to #43983
The IDs gradle uses are incremented for the lifetime of the daemon which
can result in port ranges that are outside the valid range.
This change implements a modulo based formula to wrap the port ranges
when the IDs get too large.
Adresses #44134 but #44157 is also required to be able to close it.
Due to recent changes are done for converting `repository-hdfs` to test
clusters (#41252), the `integTestSecure*` tasks did not depend on
`secureHdfsFixture` which when running would fail as the fixture
would not be available. This commit adds the dependency of the fixture
to the task.
The `secureHdfsFixture` is a `AntFixture` which is spawned a process.
Internally it waits for 30 seconds for the resources to be made available.
For my local machine, it took almost 45 seconds to be available so I have
added the wait time as an input to the `AntFixture` defaults to 30 seconds
and set it to 60 seconds in case of secure hdfs fixture.
The integ test for secure hdfs was disabled for a long time and so
the changes done in #42090 to fix the tests are also done in this commit.
* Cleans up all root level temp., snap-%s.dat, meta-%s.dat blobs that aren't referenced by any snapshot to deal with dangling blobs left behind by delete and snapshot finalization failures
* The scenario that get's us here is a snapshot failing before it was finalized or a delete failing right after it wrote the updated index-(N+1) that doesn't reference a snapshot anymore but then fails to remove that snapshot
* Not deleting other dangling blobs since that don't follow the snap-, meta- or tempfile naming schemes to not accidentally delete blobs not created by the snapshot logic
* Follow up to #42189
* Same safety logic, get list of all blobs before writing index-N blobs, delete things after index-N blobs was written
* Fix ShrinkIndexIT
* Move this test suit to cluster scope. Currently, `testShrinkThenSplitWithFailedNode` stops a random node which randomly turns out to be the only shared master node so the cluster reset fails on account of the fact that no shared master node survived.
* Closes#44164
Simplifies AbstractSimpleTransportTestCase to use JVM-local ports and also adds an assertion so
that cases like #44134 can be more easily debugged. The likely reason for that one is that a test,
which was repeated again and again while always spawning a fresh Gradle worker (due to Gradle
daemon) kept increasing Gradle worker IDs, causing an overflow at some point.
* Improve Repository Consistency Check in Tests (#44099)
* Check that index metadata as well as snapshot metadata always exists
when referenced by other metadata
* Fix SnapshotResiliencyTests on ExtraFS (#44113)
* As a result of #44099 we're now checking more directories and have to
ignore the `extraN` folders for those like we do for indices already
* Closes#44112
* The incompatible snapshots logic was created to track 1.x snapshots that
became incompatible with 2.x
* It serves no purpose at this point
* It adds an additional GET request to every loading of
RepositoryData (from loading the incompatible snapshots blob)
* Add WARN Logging if Mock Network Accepts Huge Number of Connections
* As discussed, added warn logging to rule out endless accept loops for #43387
* Had to handle it by the relatively awkward override in the mock nio
because we don't have logging in the NIO module where
(`ServerChannelContext` lives)
The base classes for transport requests and responses currently
implement Streamable and Writeable. The writeTo method on these base
classes is implemented with an empty implementation. Not only does this
complicate subclasses to think they need to call super.writeTo, but it
also can lead to not implementing writeTo when it should have been
implemented, or extendiong one of these classes when not necessary,
since there is nothing to actually implement.
This commit removes the empty writeTo from these base classes, and fixes
subclasses to not call super and in some cases implement an empty
writeTo themselves.
relates #34389
AggregatorFactory was generic over itself, but it doesn't appear we
use this functionality anywhere (e.g. to allow the super class
to declare arguments/return types generically for subclasses to
override). Most places use a wildcard constraint, and even when a
concrete type is specified it wasn't used.
But since AggFactories are widely used, this led to
the generic touching many pieces of code and making type signatures
fairly complex
Today the `ClusterInfoService` requires the `DiskThresholdMonitor` at
construction time so that it can notify it when nodes report changes in their
disk usage, but this is awkward to construct: the `DiskThresholdMonitor`
requires a `RerouteService` which requires an `AllocationService` which comees
from the `ClusterModule` which requires the `ClusterInfoService`.
Today we break the cycle with a `LazilyInitializedRerouteService` which is
itself a little ugly. This commit replaces this with a more traditional
subject/observer relationship between the `ClusterInfoService` and the
`DiskThresholdMonitor`.
Since #42636 we no longer treat connections specially when simulating a
blackholed connection. This means that at the end of the safety phase we may
have just started a connection attempt which will time out, but the default
timeout is 30 seconds, much longer than the 2 seconds we normally allow for
post-safety-phase discovery. This commit adds time for such a connection
attempt to time out.
It also fixes some spurious logging of `this` that now refers to an object with
an unhelpful `toString()` implementation introduced in #42636.
Fixes#44073
In today's test suite indices mostly use the default value of `12h` for the
`index.soft_deletes.retention_lease.period` setting, which in the context of
the test suite essentially means "never expires". In fact, the tests should all
behave correctly even if the lease period is much shorter; tests that rely on
leases not expiring should configure their indices appropriately.
This commit randomises the lease expiry time for those indices created during
tests which do not set a specific value for this setting.
* Remove some obvious dead code
* Move assert methods that were only used in a single test class to the child they belong to
* Inline some redundant methods
* Use ability to list child "folders" in the blob store to implement recursive delete on all stale index folders when cleaning up instead of using the diff between two `RepositoryData` instances to cover aborted deletes
* Runs after ever delete operation
* Relates #13159 (fixing most of this issues caused by unreferenced indices, leaving some meta files to be cleaned up only)
This PR enables the indexing optimization using sequence numbers on
replicas. With this optimization, indexing on replicas should be faster
and use less memory as it can forgo the version lookup when possible.
This change also deactivates the append-only optimization on replicas.
Relates #34099
This commit converts the ConnectionManager's openConnection and connectToNode methods to
async-style. This will allow us to not block threads anymore when opening connections. This PR also
adapts the cluster coordination subsystem to make use of the new async APIs, allowing to remove
some hacks in the test infrastructure that had to account for the previous synchronous nature of the
connection APIs.
* Use unique ports per test worker
* Add test for system property
* check presence of tests.gradle
* Revert "check presence of tests.gradle"
This reverts commit 2fee7512a28f95c94c5bf7a3312e808f918a9510.
This commit changes the way we manage refreshes in the index engines.
Instead of relying on a SearcherManager, this change uses a ReaderManager that
creates ElasticsearchDirectoryReader when needed. Searchers are now created on-demand
(when acquireSearcher is called) from the current ElasticsearchDirectoryReader.
It also slightly changes the Engine.Searcher to extend IndexSearcher in order
to simplify the usage in the consumer.
This brings TokenizerFactory into line with CharFilterFactory and TokenFilterFactory,
and removes the need to pass around tokenizer names when building custom analyzers.
As this means that TokenizerFactory is no longer a functional interface, the commit also
adds a factory method to TokenizerFactory to make construction simpler.
This is a prerequisite of #42189:
* Add directory delete method to blob container specific to each implementation:
* Some notes on the implementations:
* AWS + GCS: We can simply exploit the fact that both AWS and GCS return blobs lexicographically ordered which allows us to simply delete in the same order that we receive the blobs from the listing request. For AWS this simply required listing without the delimiter setting (so we get a deep listing) and for GCS the same behavior is achieved by not using the directory mode on the listing invocation. The nice thing about this is, that even for very large numbers of blobs the memory requirements are now capped nicely since we go page by page when deleting.
* For Azure I extended the parallelization to the listing calls as well and made it work recursively. I verified that this works with thread count `1` since we only block once in the initial thread and then fan out to a "graph" of child listeners that never block.
* HDFS and FS are trivial since we have directory delete methods available for them
* Enhances third party tests to ensure the new functionality works (I manually ran them for all cloud providers)
* Add Ability to List Child Containers to BlobContainer (#42653)
* Add Ability to List Child Containers to BlobContainer
* This is a prerequisite of #42189
This adds a `rare_terms` aggregation. It is an aggregation designed
to identify the long-tail of keywords, e.g. terms that are "rare" or
have low doc counts.
This aggregation is designed to be more memory efficient than the
alternative, which is setting a terms aggregation to size: LONG_MAX
(or worse, ordering a terms agg by count ascending, which has
unbounded error).
This aggregation works by maintaining a map of terms that have
been seen. A counter associated with each value is incremented
when we see the term again. If the counter surpasses a predefined
threshold, the term is removed from the map and inserted into a cuckoo
filter. If a future term is found in the cuckoo filter we assume it
was previously removed from the map and is "common".
The map keys are the "rare" terms after collection is done.
Action is a class that encapsulates meta information about an action
that allows it to be called remotely, specifically the action name and
response type. With recent refactoring, the action class can now be
constructed as a static constant, instead of needing to create a
subclass. This makes the old pattern of creating a singleton INSTANCE
both misnamed and lacking a common placement.
This commit renames Action to ActionType, thus allowing the old INSTANCE
naming pattern to be TYPE on the transport action itself. ActionType
also conveys that this class is also not the action itself, although
this change does not rename any concrete classes as those will be
removed organically as they are converted to TYPE constants.
relates #34389
Today the `DiskThresholdMonitor` limits the frequency with which it submits
reroute tasks, but it might still submit these tasks faster than the master can
process them if, for instance, each reroute takes over 60 seconds. This causes
a problem since the reroute task runs with priority `IMMEDIATE` and is always
scheduled when there is a node over the high watermark, so this can starve any
other pending tasks on the master.
This change avoids further updates from the monitor while its last task(s) are
still in progress, and it measures the time of each update from the completion
time of the reroute task rather than its start time, to allow a larger window
for other tasks to run.
It also now makes use of the `RoutingService` to submit the reroute task, in
order to batch this task with any other pending reroutes. It enhances the
`RoutingService` to notify its listeners on completion.
Fixes#40174
Relates #42559
Introduces a new `ConsistentSecureSettingsValidatorService` service that exposes
a single public method, namely `allSecureSettingsConsistent`. The method returns
`true` if the local node's secure settings (inside the keystore) are equal to the
master's, and `false` otherwise. Technically, the local node has to have exactly
the same secure settings - setting names should not be missing or in surplus -
for all `SecureSetting` instances that are flagged with the newly introduced
`Property.Consistent`. It is worth highlighting that the `allSecureSettingsConsistent`
is not a consensus view across the cluster, but rather the local node's perspective
in relation to the master.
This change removes the ability to wrap an IndexSearcher in plugins. The IndexSearcherWrapper is replaced by an IndexReaderWrapper and allows to wrap the DirectoryReader only. This simplifies the creation of the context IndexSearcher that is used on a per request basis. This change also moves the optimization that was implemented in the security index searcher wrapper to the ContextIndexSearcher that now checks the live docs to determine how the search should be executed. If the underlying live docs is a sparse bit set the searcher will compute the intersection
betweeen the query and the live docs instead of checking the live docs on every document that match the query.
Currently changing resources (like dictionaries, synonym files etc...) of search
time analyzers is only possible by closing an index, changing the underlying
resource (e.g. synonym files) and then re-opening the index for the change to
take effect.
This PR adds a new API endpoint that allows triggering reloading of certain
analysis resources (currently token filters) that will then pick up changes in
underlying file resources. To achieve this we introduce a new type of custom
analyzer (ReloadableCustomAnalyzer) that uses a ReuseStrategy that allows
swapping out analysis components. Custom analyzers that contain filters that are
markes as "updateable" will automatically choose this implementation. This PR
also adds this capability to `synonym` token filters for use in search time
analyzers.
Relates to #29051
GatewayIndexStateIT#testRecoverBrokenIndexMetadata replies on the
flushing on shutdown. This behaviour, however, can be randomly disabled
in MockInternalEngine.
Closes#43034
Adds support for the situation where only voting-only nodes are bootstrapped. In that case, they will
still try to become elected and bring full master nodes into the cluster.
Currently `AbstractQueryTestCase#testToQuery` checks the search context cachable
flag. This is a bit fragile due to the high randomization of query builders
performed by this general test. Also we might only rarely check the
"interesting" cases because they rarely get generated when fully randomizing the
query builder.
This change moved the general checks out ot #testToQuery and instead adds
dedicated cache tests for those query builders that exhibit something other than
the default behaviour.
Closes#43200
A voting-only master-eligible node is a node that can participate in master elections but will not act
as a master in the cluster. In particular, a voting-only node can help elect another master-eligible
node as master, and can serve as a tiebreaker in elections. High availability (HA) clusters require at
least three master-eligible nodes, so that if one of the three nodes is down, then the remaining two
can still elect a master amongst them-selves. This only requires one of the two remaining nodes to
have the capability to act as master, but both need to have voting powers. This means that one of
the three master-eligible nodes can be made as voting-only. If this voting-only node is a dedicated
master, a less powerful machine or a smaller heap-size can be chosen for this node. Alternatively, a
voting-only non-dedicated master node can play the role of the third master-eligible node, which
allows running an HA cluster with only two dedicated master nodes.
Closes#14340
Co-authored-by: David Turner <david.turner@elastic.co>
This refactors AggregatorTestCase to allow testing mock scripts.
The main change is to QueryShardContext. This was previously mocked,
but to get the ScriptService you have to invoke a final method
which can't be mocked.
Instead, we just create a mostly-empty QueryShardContext and populate
the fields that are needed for testing. It also introduces a few
new helper methods that can be overridden to change the default
behavior a bit.
Most tests should be able to override getMockScriptService() to supply
a ScriptService to the context, which is later used by the aggs.
More complicated tests can override queryShardContextMock() as before.
Adds a test to MaxAggregatorTests to test out the new functionality.
At the end of a peer recovery the primary wants to mark the replica as in-sync. For that the
persisted local checkpoint of the replica needs to have caught up with the global checkpoint on the
primary. If translog durability is set to ASYNC, this means that information about the persisted local
checkpoint can lag on the primary and might need to be explicitly fetched through a global
checkpoint sync action. Unfortunately, that action will only be triggered after 30 seconds, and, even
worse, will only run based on what the in-sync shard copies say (see
IndexShard.maybeSyncGlobalCheckpoint). As the replica has not been marked as in-sync yet, it is
not taken into consideration, and the primary might have its global checkpoint equal to the max seq
no, so it thinks nothing needs to be done.
Closes#43486
AggregatorTestCase will NPE if only a single, null MappedFieldType
is provided (which is required to simulate an unmapped field). While
it's possible to test unmapped fields by supplying other, non-related
field types... that's clunky and unnecessary. AggregatorTestCase
just needs to filter out null field types when setting up.
* For the issue in #43086 we were running into inactive shards because the random timestamps previously used would randomly make `org.elasticsearch.index.shard.IndexShard#checkIdle` see an incorrect+huge inactive time
* Also fixed one other spot in tests that passed `ms` instead of `ns` for the same timestamp on an index op to correctly use relative `ns`
* Closes#43086
Today the `DisruptibleMockTransport` always allows a connection to a node to be
established, and then fails requests sent to that node such as the subsequent
handshake. Since #42342, we log handshake failures on an open connection as a
warning, and this makes the test logs rather noisy. This change fails the
connection attempt first, avoiding these unrealistic warnings.
* The precision of the timestamps we get from the cached time thread is only 200ms by default resulting in a number of needless ~200ms slow network thread execution logs
* Fixed by making the warn threshold a function of the precision of the cached time thread found in the settings
Local and global checkpoints currently do not correctly reflect what's persisted to disk. The issue is
that the local checkpoint is adapted as soon as an operation is processed (but not fsynced yet). This
leaves room for the history below the global checkpoint to still change in case of a crash. As we rely
on global checkpoints for CCR as well as operation-based recoveries, this has the risk of shard
copies / follower clusters going out of sync.
This commit required changing some core classes in the system:
- The LocalCheckpointTracker keeps track now not only of the information whether an operation has
been processed, but also whether that operation has been persisted to disk.
- TranslogWriter now keeps track of the sequence numbers that have not been fsynced yet. Once
they are fsynced, TranslogWriter notifies LocalCheckpointTracker of this.
- ReplicationTracker now keeps track of the persisted local and persisted global checkpoints of all
shard copies when in primary mode. The computed global checkpoint (which represents the
minimum of all persisted local checkpoints of all in-sync shard copies), which was previously stored
in the checkpoint entry for the local shard copy, has been moved to an extra field.
- The periodic global checkpoint sync now also takes async durability into account, where the local
checkpoints on shards only advance when the translog is asynchronously fsynced. This means that
the previous condition to detect inactivity (max sequence number is equal to global checkpoint) is
not sufficient anymore.
- The new index closing API does not work when combined with async durability. The shard
verification step is now requires an additional pre-flight step to fsync the translog, so that the main
verify shard step has the most up-to-date global checkpoint at disposition.
With this change, we will rebuild the live version map and local
checkpoint using documents (including soft-deleted) from the safe commit
when opening an internal engine. This allows us to safely prune away _id
of all soft-deleted documents as the version map is always in-sync with
the Lucene index.
Relates #40741
Supersedes #42979
* introduce state to the REST API specification
* change state over to stability
* CCR is no GA updated to stable
* SQL is now GA so marked as stable
* Introduce `internal` as state for API's, marks stable in terms of lifetime but unstable in terms of guarantees on its output format since it exposes internal representations
* make setting a wrong stability value, or not setting it at all an error that causes the YAML test suite to fail
* update spec files to be explicit about their stability state
* Document the fact that stability needs to be defined
Otherwise the YAML test runner will fail (with a nice exception message)
* address check style violations
* update rest spec unit tests to include stability
* found one more test spec file not declaring stability, made sure stability appears after documentation everywhere
* cluster.state is stable, mark response in some way to denote its a key value format that can be changed during minors
* mark data frame API's as beta
* remove internal and private as states for an API
* removed the wrong enum values in the Stability Enum in the previous commit
(cherry picked from commit 61c34bbd92f8f7e5f22fa411c6b682b0ebd8a99d)