Today we prune transport handlers in TransportService when a node is disconnected.
This can cause connections to starve in the TransportService if the connection is
opened as a short living connection ie. without sharing the connection to a node
via registering in the transport itself. This change now moves to pruning based
on the connections cache key to ensure we notify handlers as soon as the connection
is closed for all connections not just for registered connections.
Relates to #24632
Relates to #24575
Relates to #24557
- Removes clusterState, getInitialClusterState and getMinimumMasterNodes methods from Discovery interface.
- Sets PingContextProvider in ZenPing constructor
- Renames state in ZenDiscovery to committedState
This allows other plugins to use a client to call the functionality
that is in the core modules without duplicating the logic.
Plugins can now safely send the request and response classes via the
client even if the requests are executed locally. All relevant classes
are loaded by the core classloader such that plugins can share them.
This is re-adds this commit that was revered in 952feb58e4
This commit adds support for histogram and date_histogram agg compound order by refactoring and reusing terms agg order code. The major change is that the Terms.Order and Histogram.Order classes have been replaced/refactored into a new class BucketOrder. This is a breaking change for the Java Transport API. For backward compatibility with previous ES versions the (date)histogram compound order will use the first order. Also the _term and _time aggregation order keys have been deprecated; replaced by _key.
Relates to #20003: now that all these aggregations use the same order code, it should be easier to move validation to parse time (as a follow up PR).
Relates to #14771: histogram and date_histogram aggregation order will now be validated at reduce time.
Closes#23613: if a single BucketOrder that is not a tie-breaker is added with the Java Transport API, it will be converted into a CompoundOrder with a tie-breaker.
This allows other plugins to use a client to call the functionality
that is in the core modules without duplicating the logic.
Plugins can now safely send the request and response classes via the
client even if the requests are executed locally. All relevant classes
are loaded by the core classloader such that plugins can share them.
Adds tests for reindex-from-remote for the latest 2.4, 1.7, and
0.90 releases. 2.4 and 1.7 are fairly popular versions but 0.90
is a point of pride.
This fixes any issues those tests revealed.
Closes#23828Closes#24520
This adds parsing to all implementations of SingleBucketAggregations. They are mostly similar, so they share the common
base class `ParsedSingleBucketAggregation` and the shared base test `InternalSingleBucketAggregationTestCase`.
There are now three public static method to build instances of
PreConfiguredTokenFilter and the ctor is private. I chose static
methods instead of constructors because those allow us to change
out the implementation returned if we so desire.
Relates to #23658
This PR introduces a subproject in test/fixtures that contains a Vagrantfile used for standing up a
KRB5 KDC (Kerberos). The PR also includes helper scripts for provisioning principals, a few
changes to the HDFS Fixture to allow it to interface with the KDC, as well as a new suite of
integration tests for the HDFS Repository plugin.
The HDFS Repository plugin senses if the local environment can support the HDFS Fixture
(Windows is generally a restricted environment). If it can use the regular fixture, it then tests if
Vagrant is installed with a compatible version to determine if the secure test fixtures should be
enabled. If the secure tests are enabled, then we create a Kerberos KDC fixture, tasks for adding
the required principals, and an HDFS fixture configured for security. A new integration test task is
also configured to use the KDC and secure HDFS fixture and to run a testing suite that uses
authentication. At the end of the secure integration test the fixtures are torn down.
Adds a new "icu_collation" field type that exposes lucene's
ICUCollationDocValuesField. ICUCollationDocValuesField is the replacement
for ICUCollationKeyFilter which has been deprecated since Lucene 5.
This commit renames ScriptEngineService to ScriptEngine. It is often
confusing because we have the ScriptService, and then
ScriptEngineService implementations, but the latter are not services as
we see in other places in elasticsearch.
File scripts have 2 related settings: the path of file scripts, and
whether they can be dynamically reloaded. This commit deprecates those
settings.
relates #21798
Today we rely on background syncs to relay the global checkpoint under
the mandate of the primary to its replicas. This means that the global
checkpoint on a replica can lag far behind the primary. The commit moves
to inlining global checkpoints with replication requests. When a
replication operation is performed, the primary will send the latest
global checkpoint inline with the replica requests. This keeps the
replicas closer in-sync with the primary.
However, consider a replication request that is not followed by another
replication request for an indefinite period of time. When the replicas
respond to the primary with their local checkpoint, the primary will
advance its global checkpoint. During this indefinite period of time,
the replicas will not be notified of the advanced global
checkpoint. This necessitates a need for another sync. To achieve this,
we perform a global checkpoint sync when a shard falls idle.
Relates #24513
This changes the way we register pre-configured token filters so that
plugins can declare them and starts to move all of the pre-configured
token filters out of core. It doesn't finish the job because doing
so would make the change unreviewably large. So this PR includes
a shim that keeps the "old" way of registering pre-configured token
filters around.
The Lowercase token filter is special because there is a "special"
interaction between it and the lowercase tokenizer. I'm not sure
exactly what to do about it so for now I'm leaving it alone with
the intent of figuring out what to do with it in a followup.
This also renames these pre-configured token filters from
"pre-built" to "pre-configured" because that seemed like a more
descriptive name.
This is a part of #23658
Now that indices have a single type by default, we can move to the next step
and identify documents using their `_id` rather than the `_uid`.
One notable change in this commit is that I made deletions implicitly create
types. This helps with the live version map in the case that documents are
deleted before the first type is introduced. Otherwise there would be no way
to differenciate `DELETE index/foo/1` followed by `PUT index/foo/1` from
`DELETE index/bar/1` followed by `PUT index/foo/1`, even though those are
different if versioning is involved.
In order to make MockLogAppender (utility to test logging) available outside
of es-core move MockLogAppender from test core-tests to test framework. As
package names do not change, no need to change clients.
Changes the scope of the AllocationService dependency injection hack so that it is at least contained to the AllocationService and does not leak into the Discovery world.
Async shard fetching only uses the node id to correlate responses to requests. This can lead to a situation where a response from an earlier request is mistaken as response from a new request when a node is restarted. This commit adds unique round ids to correlate responses to requests.
TransportService and RemoteClusterService are closely coupled already today
and to simplify remote cluster integration down the road it can be a direct
dependency of TransportService. This change moves RemoteClusterService into
TransportService with the goal to make it a hidden implementation detail
of TransportService in followup changes.
This commit cleans up some cases where a list or map was being
constructed, and then an existing collection was copied into the new
collection. The clean is to instead use an appropriate constructor to
directly copy the existing collection in during collection
construction. The advantage of this is that the new collection is sized
appropriately.
Relates #24409
Separates cluster state publishing from applying cluster states:
- ClusterService is split into two classes MasterService and ClusterApplierService. MasterService has the responsibility to calculate cluster state updates for actions that want to change the cluster state (create index, update shard routing table, etc.). ClusterApplierService has the responsibility to apply cluster states that have been successfully published and invokes the cluster state appliers and listeners.
- ClusterApplierService keeps track of the last applied state, but MasterService is stateless and uses the last cluster state that is provided by the discovery module to calculate the next prospective state. The ClusterService class is still kept around, which now just delegates actions to ClusterApplierService and MasterService.
- The discovery implementation is now responsible for managing the last cluster state that is used by the consensus layer and the master service. It also exposes the initial cluster state which is used by the ClusterApplierService. The discovery implementation is also responsible for adding the right cluster-level blocks to the initial state.
- NoneDiscovery has been renamed to TribeDiscovery as it is exclusively used by TribeService. It adds the tribe blocks to the initial state.
- ZenDiscovery is synchronized on state changes to the last cluster state that is used by the consensus layer and the master service, and does not submit cluster state update tasks anymore to make changes to the disco state (except when becoming master).
Control flow for cluster state updates is now as follows:
- State updates are sent to MasterService
- MasterService gets the latest committed cluster state from the discovery implementation and calculates the next cluster state to publish
- MasterService submits the new prospective cluster state to the discovery implementation for publishing
- Discovery implementation publishes cluster states to all nodes and, once the state is committed, asks the ClusterApplierService to apply the newly committed state.
- ClusterApplierService applies state to local node.
This adds the `index.mapping.single_type` setting, which enforces that indices
have at most one type when it is true. The default value is true for 6.0+ indices
and false for old indices.
Relates #15613
This commit fixes some inconsistencies in long GC disruption where we
mixed stopping and suspending when the action we are performing on
threads is suspending which is distinct from stopping a thread.
The one argument ctor for `Script` creates a script with the
default language but most usages of are for testing and either
don't care about the language or are for use with
`MockScriptEngine`. This replaces most usages of the one argument
ctor on `Script` with calls to `ESTestCase#mockScript` to make
it clear that the tests don't need the default scripting language.
I've also factored out some copy and pasted script generation
code into a single place. I would have had to change that code
to use `mockScript` anyway, so it was easier to perform the
refactor.
Relates to #16314
We can leak disrupted threads here since we never wait for them to
complete after freeing them from their loops. This commit addresses this
by joining on disrupted threads, and addresses fallout from trying to
join here.
Relates #24338
Another step down the road to dropping the
lucene-analyzers-common dependency from core.
Note that this removes some tests that no longer compile from
core. I played around with adding them to the analysis-common
module where they would compile but we already test these in
the tests generated from the example usage in the documentation.
I'm not super happy with the way that `requriesAnalysisSettings`
works with regards to plugins. I think it'd be fairly bug-prone
for plugin authors to use. But I'm making it visible as is for
now and I'll rethink later.
A part of #23658
Most of these settings should always be pulled from the repository
settings. A couple were leftover that should be moved to client
settings. The path style access setting should be removed altogether.
This commit adds deprecations for all of these existing settings, as
well as adding new client specific settings for max retries and
throttling.
relates #24143
Creates a new task `namingConventionsMain`, that runs on the
`buildSrc` and `test:framework` projects and fails the build if
any of the classes in the main artifacts are named like tests or
are non-abstract subclasses of ESTestCase.
It also fixes the three tests that would cause it to fail.
`tests.enable_mock_modules` is a documented but unrespected / unused
option to disable all mock modules / pluings during test runs. This
will basically site-step mock assertions like check-index on shard closing.
This can speed up test-execution dramatically on nodes with slow disks etc.
Relates to #24304
If the user explicitly configured path.data to include
default.path.data, then we should not fail the node if we find indices
in default.path.data. This commit addresses this.
Relates #24285
The unwrap method was leftover from support javascript and python. Since
those languages are removed in 6.0, this commit removes the unwrap
feature from scripts.
Today we might promote a primary and recover from store where after translog
recovery the local checkpoint is still behind the maximum sequence ID seen.
To fill the holes in the sequence ID history this PR adds a utility method
that fills up all missing sequence IDs up to the maximum seen sequence ID
with no-ops.
Relates to #10708
Start moving built in analysis components into the new analysis-common
module. The goal of this project is:
1. Remove core's dependency on lucene-analyzers-common.jar which should
shrink the dependencies for transport client and high level rest client.
2. Prove that analysis plugins can do all the "built in" things by moving all
"built in" behavior to a plugin.
3. Force tests not to depend on any oddball analyzer behavior. If tests
need anything more than the standard analyzer they can use the mock
analyzer provided by Lucene's test infrastructure.
This change adds an index setting to define how the documents should be sorted inside each Segment.
It allows any numeric, date, boolean or keyword field inside a mapping to be used to sort the index on disk.
It is not allowed to use a `nested` fields inside an index that defines an index sorting since `nested` fields relies on the original sort of the index.
This change does not add early termination capabilities in the search layer. This will be added in a follow up.
Relates #6720
This change simplifies how the rest test runner finds test files and
removes all leniency. Previously multiple prefixes and suffixes would
be tried, and tests could exist inside or outside of the classpath,
although outside of the classpath never quite worked. Now only classpath
tests are supported, and only one resource prefix is supported,
`/rest-api-spec/tests`.
closes#20240
We want to upgrade to Lucene 7 ahead of time in order to be able to check whether it causes any trouble to Elasticsearch before Lucene 7.0 gets released. From a user perspective, the main benefit of this upgrade is the enhanced support for sparse fields, whose resource consumption is now function of the number of docs that have a value rather than the total number of docs in the index.
Some notes about the change:
- it includes the deprecation of the `disable_coord` parameter of the `bool` and `common_terms` queries: Lucene has removed support for coord factors
- it includes the deprecation of the `index.similarity.base` expert setting, since it was only useful to configure coords and query norms, which have both been removed
- two tests have been marked with `@AwaitsFix` because of #23966, which we intend to address after the merge
In Elasticsearch 5.3.0 a bug was introduced in the merging of default
settings when the target setting existed as an array. When this bug
concerns path.data and default.path.data, we ended up in a situation
where the paths specified in both settings would be used to write index
data. Since our packaging sets default.path.data, users that configure
multiple data paths via an array and use the packaging are subject to
having shards land in paths in default.path.data when that is very
likely not what they intended.
This commit is an attempt to rectify this situation. If path.data and
default.path.data are configured, we check for the presence of indices
there. If we find any, we log messages explaining the situation and fail
the node.
Relates #24099
Some systems like GCE rely on a plaintext file containing credentials.
Rather than extract the information out of that credentials file and
store each peace individually in the keystore, it is cleaner to just
store the entire file.
This commit adds support to the keystore wrapper for secure file
settings. These are settings that contain an entire file that would
normally be stored on the local filesystem. Retrieving the file returns
an input stream to the file contents. This also adds a `add-file`
command to the keystore cli.
In order to support both strings and files as values for settings, the
metadata format of the keystore has also been updated (with backcompat)
to keep a map of setting name to type.
This commit adds support for replacing a stashed value within a header of a REST test. This is
useful for requests that may want to use a value previously obtained within a header.
We had a couple of unfortunate field name collisions in our CI, where the json duplicate check tripped. Increasing the minimum length of randomly generated field names should decrease the chance of this issue happening again.
This change adds secure settings for access/secret keys and proxy
username/password to ec2 discovery. It adds the new settings with the
prefix `discovery.ec2`, copies other relevant ec2 client settings to the
same prefix, and deprecates all other settings (`cloud.aws.*` and
`cloud.aws.ec2.*`). Note that this is simpler than the client configs
in repository-s3 because discovery is only initialized once for the
entire node, so there is no reason to complicate the configuration with
the ability to have multiple sets of client settings.
relates #22475
This test was sporadically failing for the following reason:
- 4 nodes (nodes 0, 1, 2, and 3) running with `minimum_master_nodes` set to 3
- we stop 2 nodes (node 0 and 3)
- wait for cluster block to be in place on all nodes
- start 2 nodes (node 4 and node 5) and do a `prepareHealth().setWaitForNodes("4")`
- then do a search request
The search request runs into the `ClusterBlockException` as the `prepareHealth().setWaitForNodes("4")` check succeeds on a cluster state that has
nodes 1, 2, 3, and 4, i.e., only one of the two new nodes has joined the cluster and only one of the two dead nodes was removed by the master
(removing the dead nodes only happens after there are again `minimum_master_nodes` nodes in the cluster).
This commit fixes the issue by reusing a method from InternalTestCluster that checks that the right nodes have rejoined the cluster.
ESTestCase has methods to shuffle xContent keys given a builder or a parser. Shuffling wasn't actually doing what was expected but rather reordering the keys in their natural ordering, hence the output was always the same at every run. Corrected that and added tests, also fixed a couple of tests that were affected by this fix.
When executing an index operation on the primary shard,
`TransportShardBulkAction` first parses the document, sees if there are any
mapping updates that needs to be applied, and then updates the mapping on the
master node. It then re-parses the document to make sure that the mappings have
been applied and propagated.
This adds a check that skips the second parsing of the document in the event
there was not a mapping update applied in the first case.
Fixes a performance regression introduced in #23665
This commit renames the random ASCII helper methods in ESTestCase. This
is because this method ultimately uses the random ASCII methods from
randomized runner, but these methods actually only produce random
strings generated from [a-zA-Z].
Relates #23886
the test reduce the wait for initial cluster state to 0, causing multiple nodes to be start while elections are going on. This means there is a chance of a split election which shouldn't cause the test to time out.
This commit adds a single node discovery type. With this discovery type,
a node will elect itself as master and never form a cluster with another
node.
Relates #23595
It starts nodes in any order and thus it disabled the wait for first cluster state at node start up time
the later is required for the auto management logic.
Closes#23728
The method Boolean#getBoolean is dangerous. It is too easy to mistakenly
invoke this method thinking that it is parsing a string as a
boolean. However, what it actually does is get a system property with
the specified string, and then attempts to use usual crappy boolean
parsing in the JDK to parse that system property as boolean with
complete leniency (it parses every input value into either true or
false); that is, this method amounts to invoking
Boolean#parseBoolean(String) on the result of
System#getProperty(String). Boo. This commit bans usage of this method.
Relates #23864
This commit changes the listener passed to sendMessage from a Runnable
to a ActionListener.
This change also removes IOException from the sendMessage signature.
That signature is misleading as it allows implementers to assume an
exception will be thrown in case of failure. That does not happen due
to Netty's async nature.
When executing an update request, the request timeout is not transferred
to the index/delete request executed on behalf of the update
request. This leads to update requests not timing out when they should
(e.g., if not all shards are available when the request specifies
wait_for_shards=all with a small timeout). This commit causes the
index/delete requests to honor the update request timeout.
Relates #23825
After the removal of the joda time hack we used to have, we can cleanup
the codebase handling in security, jarhell and plugins to be more picky
about uniqueness. This was originally in #18959 which was never merged.
closes#18959
Search took time uses an absolute clock to measure elapsed time, and
then tries to deal with the complexities of using an absolute clock for
this purpose. Instead, we should use a high-precision monotonic relative
clock that is designed exactly for measuring elapsed time. This commit
modifies the search infrastructure to use a relative clock for measuring
took time, but still provides an absolute clock for the components of
search that require a real clock (e.g., index name expression
resolution, etc.).
Relates #23662
Currently the task manager is tied to the transport and can only create tasks based on TransportRequests. This commit enables task manager to support tasks created by non-transport services such as the persistent tasks service.
Throw error when skip or do sections are malformed, such as they don't start with the proper token (START_OBJECT). That signals bad indentation, which would be ignored otherwise. Thanks (or due to) our pull parsing code, we were still able to properly parse the sections, yet other runners weren't able to.
Closes#21980
* [TEST] fix indentation in matrix_stats yaml tests
* [TEST] fix indentation in painless yaml test
* [TEST] fix indentation in analysis yaml tests
* [TEST] fix indentation in generated docs yaml tests
* [TEST] fix indentation in multi_cluster_search yaml tests
Today when resetting the deprecation logger after a test is torn down,
we attach a new thread context to the deprecation logger. This thread
context is never cleared and we are left with a thread context attached
to the deprecation logger for every test method that ran in the same
JVM. This commit adds a flag when resetting the deprecation logger to
not attach a new thread context when the test is being torn down.
Relates #23441
This commit fixes the date format in warning headers. There is some
confusion around whether or not RFC 1123 requires two-digit
days. However, the warning header specification very clearly relies on a
format that requires two-digit days. This commit removes the usage of
RFC 1123 date/time format from Java 8, which allows for one-digit days,
in favor of a format that forces two-digit days (it's otherwise
identical to RFC 1123 format, it is just fixed width).
Relates #23418
This commit adds a convenience method for simultaneously asserting
settings deprecations and other warnings and fixes some tests where
setting deprecations and general warnings were present.
Previously, cluster.routing.allocation.same_shard.host was not a dynamic
setting and could not be updated after startup. This commit changes the
behavior to allow the setting to be dynamically updatable. The
documentation already states that the setting is dynamic so no
documentation changes are required.
Closes#22992
The warning header used by Elasticsearch for delivering deprecation
warnings has a specific format (RFC 7234, section 5.5). The format
specifies that the warning header should be of the form
warn-code warn-agent warn-text [warn-date]
Here, the warn-code is a three-digit code which communicates various
meanings. The warn-agent is a string used to identify the source of the
warning (either a host:port combination, or some other identifier). The
warn-text is quoted string which conveys the semantic meaning of the
warning. The warn-date is an optional quoted date that can be in a few
different formats.
This commit corrects the warning header within Elasticsearch to follow
this specification. We use the warn-code 299 which means a
"miscellaneous persistent warning." For the warn-agent, we use the
version of Elasticsearch that produced the warning. The warn-text is
unchanged from what we deliver today, but is wrapped in quotes as
specified (this is important as a problem that exists today is that
multiple warnings can not be split by comma to obtain the individual
warnings as the warnings might themselves contain commas). For the
warn-date, we use the RFC 1123 format.
Relates #23275
This allows to set content-type together with the body itself. At the moment it is always json, but this change allows makes it easier to randomize it later
Console.readText may return null in certain cases. This commit fixes a
bug in Terminal.promptYesNo which assumed a non-null return value. It
also adds a test for this, and modifies mock terminal to be able to
handle null input values.
In #23253 we added an the ability to incrementally reduce search results.
This change exposes the parameter to control the batch since and therefore
the memory consumption of a large search request.
Today all query results are buffered up until we received responses of
all shards. This can hold on to a significant amount of memory if the number of
shards is large. This commit adds a first step towards incrementally reducing
aggregations results if a, per search request, configurable amount of responses
are received. If enough query results have been received and buffered all so-far
received aggregation responses will be reduced and released to be GCed.
This commit cleans up some parsing tests added from the High Level Rest Client: IndexResponseTests, DeleteResponseTests, UpdateResponseTests, BulkItemResponseTests.
These tests are now more uniform with the others test-from-to-XContent tests we have, they now shuffle the XContent fields before parsing, the asserting method for parsed objects does not used a Map<String, Object> anymore, and buggy equals/hasCode methods in ShardInfo and ShardInfo.Failure have been removed.
This commit enforces the requirement of Content-Type for the REST layer and removes the deprecated methods in transport
requests and their usages.
While doing this, it turns out that there are many places where *Entity classes are used from the apache http client
libraries and many of these usages did not specify the content type. The methods that do not specify a content type
explicitly have been added to forbidden apis to prevent more of these from entering our code base.
Relates #19388
With #22977, network disruption also disconnects nodes from the transport service. That has the side effect that when the disruption is healed, the disconnected node stay disconnected until the `NodeConnectionsService` restores the connection. This can take too long for the tests. This PR adds logic to the cluster healing to restore connections immediately.
See https://elasticsearch-ci.elastic.co/job/elastic+elasticsearch+master+multijob-unix-compatibility/os=debian/611/console for an example failure.
When nested objects are present in the mappings, many queries get deoptimized
due to the need to exclude documents that are not in the right space. For
instance, a filter is applied to all queries that prevents them from matching
non-root documents (`+*:* -_type:__*`). Moreover, a filter is applied to all
child queries of `nested` queries in order to make sure that the child query
only matches child documents (`_type:__nested_path`), which is required by
`ToParentBlockJoinQuery` (the Lucene query behing Elasticsearch's `nested`
queries).
These additional filters slow down `nested` queries. In 1.7-, the cost was
somehow amortized by the fact that we cached filters very aggressively. However,
this has proven to be a significant source of slow downs since 2.0 for users
of `nested` mappings and queries, see #20797.
This change makes the filtering a bit smarter. For instance if the query is a
`match_all` query, then we need to exclude nested docs. However, if the query
is `foo: bar` then it may only match root documents since `foo` is a top-level
field, so no additional filtering is required.
Another improvement is to use a `FILTER` clause on all types rather than a
`MUST_NOT` clause on all nested paths when possible since `FILTER` clauses
are more efficient.
Here are some examples of queries and how they get rewritten:
```
"match_all": {}
```
This query gets rewritten to `ConstantScore(+*:* -_type:__*)` on master and
`ConstantScore(_type:AutomatonQuery {\norg.apache.lucene.util.automaton.Automaton@4371da44})`
with this change. The automaton is the complement of `_type:__*` so it matches
the same documents, but is faster since it is now a positive clause. Simplistic
performance testing on a 10M index where each root document has 5 nested
documents on average gave a latency of 420ms on master and 90ms with this change
applied.
```
"term": {
"foo": {
"value": "0"
}
}
```
This query is rewritten to `+foo:0 #(ConstantScore(+*:* -_type:__*))^0.0` on
master and `foo:0` with this change: we do not need to filter nested docs out
since the query cannot match nested docs. While doing performance testing in
the same conditions as above, response times went from 250ms to 50ms.
```
"nested": {
"path": "nested",
"query": {
"term": {
"nested.foo": {
"value": "0"
}
}
}
}
```
This query is rewritten to
`+ToParentBlockJoinQuery (+nested.foo:0 #_type:__nested) #(ConstantScore(+*:* -_type:__*))^0.0`
on master and `ToParentBlockJoinQuery (nested.foo:0)` with this change. The
top-level filter (`-_type:__*`) could be removed since `nested` queries only
match documents of the parent space, as well as the child filter
(`#_type:__nested`) since the child query may only match nested docs since the
`nested` object has both `include_in_parent` and `include_in_root` set to
`false`. While doing performance testing in the same conditions as above,
response times went from 850ms to 270ms.
I encountered several cases of duplicate field names when generating random
fields using the RandomObjects helper. This leads to invalid json in some tests,
so increasing the minimum field name length to four to make this less likely to
happen.
When Netty decodes a bad HTTP request, it marks the decoder result on
the HTTP request as a failure, and reroutes the request to GET
/bad-request. This either leads to puzzling responses when a bad request
is sent to Elasticsearch (if an index named "bad-request" does not exist
then it produces an index not found exception and otherwise responds
with the index settings for the index named "bad-request"). This commit
addresses this by inspecting the decoder result on the HTTP request and
dispatching the request to a bad request handler preserving the initial
cause of the bad request and providing an error message to the client.
Relates #23153
This commit adds a new method to the TransportChannel that provides access to the version of the
remote node that the response is being sent on and that the request came from. This is helpful
for serialization of data attached as headers.
The traces callback is only called after responses are set. This can lead to concurrent issues where the trace is notified of previously sent responses if it was added after the response was sent (enabling further execution of the test) but before the tracer call backs are called.
EvillPeerRecoveryIT checks scenario where recovery is happening while there are on going indexing operation that already have been assigned a seq# . This is fairly hard to achieve and the test goes through a couple of hoops via the plugin infra to achieve that. This PR extends the unit tests infra to allow for those hoops to happen in unit tests. This allows the test to be moved to RecoveryDuringReplicationTests
Relates to #22484
We have a bunch of interfaces that have only a single implementation
for 6 years now. These interfaces are pretty useless from a SW development
perspective and only add unnecessary abstractions. They also require
lots of casting in many places where we expect that there is only one
concrete implementation. This change removes the interfaces, makes
all of the classes final and removes the duplicate `foo` `getFoo` accessors
in favor of `getFoo` from these classes.
Elasticsearch v5.0.0 uses allocation IDs to safely allocate primary shards whereas prior versions of ES used a version-based mode instead. Elasticsearch v5 still has support for version-based primary shard allocation as it needs to be able to load 2.x shards. ES v6 can drop the legacy support.
#22194 gave us the ability to open low level temporary connections to remote node based on their address. With this use case out of the way, actual full blown connections should validate the node on the other side, making sure we speak to who we think we speak to. This helps in case where multiple nodes are started on the same host and a quick node restart causes them to swap addresses, which in turn can cause confusion down the road.
Secure settings from the elasticsearch keystore were not yet validated.
This changed improves support in Settings so that secure settings more
seamlessly blend in with normal settings, allowing the existing settings
validation to work. Note that the setting names are still not validated
(yet) when using the elasticsearc-keystore tool.
As part of #22116 we are going to forbid usage of api
java.net.URL#openStream(). However in a number of places across the
we use this method to read files from the local filesystem. This commit
introduces a helper method openFileURLStream(URL url) to read files
from URLs. It does specific validation to only ensure that file:/
urls are read.
Additionlly, this commit removes unneeded method
FileSystemUtil.newBufferedReader(URL, Charset). This method used the
openStream () method which will soon be forbidden. Instead we use the
Files.newBufferedReader(Path, Charset).
This is in order to trigger listeners for disconnect events, most importantly the NodeFaultDetection. MockTransportService now does slightly a better job at mimicking real life failures: connecting to already connected node will be a noop (we don't detect any errors here in production either) and failing to send will cause the target node to be disconnected.
This is the cause of failure in https://elasticsearch-ci.elastic.co/job/elastic+elasticsearch+5.2+multijob-unix-compatibility/os=debian/72
When a node receives a new cluster state from the master, it opens up connections to any new node in the cluster state. That has always been done serially on the cluster state thread but it has been a long standing TODO to do this concurrently, which is done by this PR.
This is spin off of #22828, where an extra handshake is done whenever connecting to a node, which may slow down connecting. Also, the handshake is done in a blocking fashion which triggers assertions w.r.t blocking requests on the cluster state thread. Instead of adding an exception, I opted to implement concurrent connections which both side steps the assertion and compensates for the extra handshake.
This commit upgrades the checkstyle configuration from version 5.9 to
version 7.5, the latest version as of today. The main enhancement
obtained via this upgrade is better detection of redundant modifiers.
Relates #22960
This change adds a strict mode for xcontent parsing on the rest layer. The strict mode will be off by default for 5.x and in a separate commit will be enabled by default for 6.0. The strict mode, which can be enabled by setting `http.content_type.required: true` in 5.x, will require that all incoming rest requests have a valid and supported content type header before the request is dispatched. In the non-strict mode, the Content-Type header will be inspected and if it is not present or not valid, we will continue with auto detection of content like we have done previously.
The content type header is parsed to the matching XContentType value with the only exception being for plain text requests. This value is then passed on with the content bytes so that we can reduce the number of places where we need to auto-detect the content type.
As part of this, many transport requests and builders were updated to provide methods that
accepted the XContentType along with the bytes and the methods that would rely on auto-detection have been deprecated.
In the non-strict mode, deprecation warnings are issued whenever a request with body doesn't provide the Content-Type header.
See #19388
This commit change ElasticsearchException.failureFromXContent() method so that it now parses root causes which were ignored before, and adds them as suppressed exceptions of the returned exception.
The seq# base recovery logic relies on rolling back lucene to remove any operations above the global checkpoint. This part of the plan is not implemented yet but have to have these guarantees. Instead we should make the seq# logic validate that the last commit point (and the only one we have) maintains the invariant and if not, fall back to file based recovery.
This commit adds a test that creates situation where rollback is needed (primary failover with ops in flight) and fixes another issue that was surfaced by it - if a primary can't serve a seq# based recovery request and does a file copy, it still used the incoming `startSeqNo` as a filter.
Relates to #22484 & #10708
With the new secure settings, methods like getAsMap() no longer work
correctly as a means of checking for empty settings, or the total size.
This change converts the existing uses of that method to use methods
directly on Settings. Note this does not update the implementations to
account for SecureSettings, as that will require a followup which
changes how secure settings work.
Also adds many `equals` and `hashCode` implementations and moves
the failure printing in `MatchAssertion` into a common spot and
exposes it over `assertEqualsWithErrorMessageFromXContent` which
does an object equality test but then uses `toXContent` to print
the differences.
Relates to #22278
This moves the building blocks for delete by query into core. This
should enabled two thigns:
1. Plugins other than reindex to implement "bulk by scroll" style
operations.
2. Plugins to directly call delete by query. Those plugins should
be careful to make sure that task cancellation still works, but
this should be possible.
Notes:
1. I've mostly just moved classes and moved around tests methods.
2. I haven't been super careful about cohesion between these core
classes and reindex. They are quite interconnected because I wanted
to make the change as mechanical as possible.
Closes#22616
* S3 repository: Add named configurations
This change implements named configurations for s3 repository as
proposed in #22520. The access/secret key secure settings which were
added in #22479 are reverted, and the only secure settings are those
with the new named configs. All other previously used settings for the
connection are deprecated.
closes#22520
Also adds many `equals` and `hashCode` implementations and moves
the failure printing in `MatchAssertion` into a common spot and
exposes it over `assertEqualsWithErrorMessageFromXContent` which
does an object equality test but then uses `toXContent` to print
the differences.
Relates to #22278
This commit introduces sequence-number-based recovery. When a replica
has fallen out of sync, rather than performing a file-based recovery we
first attempt to replay operations since the last local checkpoint on
the replica. To do this, at the start of recovery the replica tells the
primary what its local checkpoint is. The primary will then wait for all
operations between that local checkpoint and the current maximum
sequence number to complete; this is to ensure that there are no gaps in
the operations that will be replayed from the primary to the
replica. This is a best-effort attempt as we currently have no
guarantees on the primary that these operations will be available; if we
are not able to replay all operations in the desired range, we just
fallback to file-based recovery. Later work will strengthen the
guarantees.
Relates #22484
* Add top hits collapsing to search request
The field collapsing is done with a custom top docs collector that "collapse" search hits with same field value.
The distributed aspect is resolve using the two passes that the regular search uses. The first pass "collapse" the top hits, then the coordinating node merge/collapse the top hits from each shard.
```
GET _search
{
"collapse": {
"field": "category",
}
}
```
This change also adds an ExpandCollapseSearchResponseListener that intercepts the search response and expands collapsed hits using the CollapseBuilder#innerHit} options.
The retrieval of each inner_hits is done by sending a query to all shards filtered by the collapse key.
```
GET _search
{
"collapse": {
"field": "category",
"inner_hits": {
"size": 2
}
}
}
```
To effectively allow a plugin to intercept a transport handler it needs
to know if the handler must be executed even if there is a rejection on the
thread pool in the case the wrapper forks a thread to execute the actual handler.
Today we try to be smart and make a generic decision if an exception should
be treated as a document failure but in some cases concurrency in the index writer
make this decision very difficult since we don't have a consistent state in the case
another thread is currently failing the IndexWriter/InternalEngine due to a tragic event.
This change simplifies the exception handling and makes specific decisions about document failures
rather than using a generic heuristic. This prevent exceptions to be treated as document failures
that should have failed the engine but backed out of failing since since some other thread has
already taken over the failure procedure but didn't finish yet.
* S3 repository: Deprecate specifying credentials through env vars and sys props
This is a follow up to #22479, where storing credentials secure way was
added.
Today we do not preserve response headers if they are present on a transport protocol
response. While preserving these headers is not always desired, in the most cases we
should pass on these headers to have consistent results for depreciation headers etc.
yet, this hasn't been much of a problem since most of the deprecations are detected early
ie. on the coordinating node such that this bug wasn't uncovered until #22647
This commit allow to optionally preserve headers when a context is restored and also streamlines
the context restore since it leaked frequently into the callers thread context when the callers
context wasn't restored again.
Previously, certain settings that could take multiple comma delimited
values would pick up incorrect values for all entries but the first if
each comma separated value was followed by a whitespace character. For
example, the multi-value "A,B,C" would be correctly parsed as
["A", "B", "C"] but the multi-value "A, B, C" would be incorrectly parsed
as ["A", " B", " C"].
This commit allows a comma separated list to have whitespace characters
after each entry. The specific settings that were affected by this are:
cluster.routing.allocation.awareness.attributes
index.routing.allocation.require.*
index.routing.allocation.include.*
index.routing.allocation.exclude.*
cluster.routing.allocation.require.*
cluster.routing.allocation.include.*
cluster.routing.allocation.exclude.*
http.cors.allow-methods
http.cors.allow-headers
For the allocation filtering related settings, this commit also provides
validation of each specified entry if the filtering is done by _ip,
_host_ip, or _publish_ip, to ensure that each entry is a valid IP
address.
Closes#22297
Today we have quite some abstractions that are essentially providing a simple
dispatch method to the plugins defining a `HttpServerTransport`. This commit
removes `HttpServer` and `HttpServerAdaptor` and introduces a simple `Dispatcher` functional
interface that delegate to `RestController` by default.
Relates to #18482
All the language clients support a special ignore parameter that doesn't get passed to elasticsearch with the request, but used to indicate which error code should not lead to an exception if returned for a specific request.
Moving this to the low level REST client will allow the high level REST client to make use of it too, for instance so that it doesn't have to intercept ResponseExceptions when the get api returns a 404.
TransportInterceptors are commonly used to enrich requests with headers etc.
which requires access the the thread context. This is not always easily possible
since threadpools are hard to access for instance if the interceptor is used on a transport client.
This commit passes on the thread context to all the interceptors for further consumption.
Closes#22585
ClusterService and TransportService expect the local discovery node to be set
before they are started but this requires manual interaction and is error prone since
to work absolutely correct they should share the same instance (same ephemeral ID).
TransportService also has 2 modes of operation, mainly realted to transport client vs. internal
to a node. This change removes the mode where we don't maintain a local node and uses a dummy local
node in the transport client since we don't bind to any port in such a case.
Local discovery node instances are now managed by the node itself and only suppliers and factories that allow
creation only once are passed to TransportService and ClusterService.
There was still small race in MockTcpTransport where channesl that are concurrently
closing are not yet removed from the reference tracking causing tests to fail. Compared to
the other races before this is a rather small windown and requires very very short test durations.
Today there are several races / holes in TcpTransport and MockTcpTransport
that can allow connections to be opened and remain unclosed while the actual
transport implementation is closed. A recently added assertions in #22554 exposes
these problems. This commit fixes several issues related to missed locks or channel
creations outside of a lock not checking if the resource is still open.
There are some parameters that are accepted by each and every api we expose. Those (pretty, source, error_trace and filter_path) are not explicitly listed in the spec of every api, rather whitelisted in clients test runners so that they are always accepted. The `human` flag has been treated up until now as a parameter that's accepted by only some stats and info api, but that doesn't reflect reality as es core treats it exactly like `pretty` (relevant especially now that we validate params and throw exception when we find one that is not supported). Furthermore, the human flag has effect on every api that outputs a date, time, percentage or byte size field. For instance the tasks api outputs a date field although they don't have the human flag explicitly listed in their spec. There are other similar cases. This commit removes the human flag from the rest spec and makes it an always accepted query_string param.
TcpTransport has an actual mechanism to stop resources in subclasses.
Instead of overriding `doStop` subclasses should override `stopInternal`
that is executed under the connection lock guaranteeing that there is no
concurrency etc.
Relates to #22554
* Settings: Make s3 repository sensitive settings use secure settings
This change converts repository-s3 to use the new secure settings. In
order to support the multiple ways we allow aws creds to be configured,
it also moves the main methods for the keystore wrapper into a
SecureSettings interface, in order to allow settings prefixing to work.
The low level TCP handshake can cause channel / connection leaks if it's interrupted
since the caller doesn't close the channel / connection if the handshake was not successful.
This commit fixes the channel leak and adds general test infrastructure to detect channel leaks
in the future.
This commit adds the parsing fromXContent() methods to the IndexResponse class. The method is based on a ObjectParser because it is easier to use when parsing parent abstract classes like DocWriteResponse.
It also changes the ReplicationResponse.ShardInfo so that it now implements ToXContentObject. This way, the ShardInfo.fromXContent() method can be used by the IndexResponse's ObjectParser.
The NodeConnectionsService currently determines which nodes to connect to / disconnect from by inspecting cluster state changes and connecting to added nodes / disconnecting from removed nodes. When a master steps down (for example due to another master-eligible node shutting down which brings the number of master-eligible nodes below minimum_master_master), and the connection to other existing nodes was dropped while pinging, however, the connection to these nodes is not re-established while publishing the first cluster state that establishes the node as master.
This commit changes the NodeConnectionsService connect / disconnect logic to always rely on the state that is to be / was published, looking not only at the added / removed nodes, but validating that exactly all nodes that are currently registered in NodeConnectionsService are connected (corresponds to a NOOP if the node is already connected).
Right now closing a shard looks like it strands refresh listeners,
causing tests like
`delete/50_refresh/refresh=wait_for waits until changes are visible in search`
to fail. Here is a build that fails:
https://elasticsearch-ci.elastic.co/job/elastic+elasticsearch+multi_cluster_search+multijob-darwin-compatibility/4/console
This attempts to fix the problem by implements `Closeable` on
`RefreshListeners` and rejecting listeners when closed. More importantly
the act of closing the instance flushes all pending listeners
so we shouldn't have any stranded listeners on close.
Because it was needed for testing, this also adds the number of
pending listeners to the `CommonStats` object and all API to which
that flows: `_cat/nodes`, `_cat/indices`, `_cat/shards`, and
`_nodes/stats`.
This is related to #22116. A logIfNecessary() call makes a call to
NetworkInterface.getInterfaceAddresses() requiring SocketPermission
connect privileges. By moving this to bootstrap the logging call can be
made before installing the SecurityManager.
Today we execute the low level handshake on the TCP layer in #connectToNode.
If #openConnection is used directly, which is truly expert, no handshake is executed
which allows connecting to nodes that are not necessarily compatible. This change
moves the handshake to #openConnection to prevent bypassing this logic.
This integrates the mocksocket jar with elasticsearch tests. Mocksocket wraps actions requiring SocketPermissions in doPrivilege blocks. This will eventually allow SocketPermissions to be assigned to the mocksocket jar opposed to the entire elasticsearch codebase.
Notifications for request tracing are invoked concurrently and can still
be in flight once a tracer is installed in the test. This can lead to side-effects
since the test relied on exact invocations. This commit adds action filtering
to the test tracer to only count invocations for the relevant actions.
Closes#22418
this commit adds full support for proxy nodes on the search layer.
This allows to connection only to a small set of nodes on a remote cluster
to exectue the search. The nodes will proxy the request to the correct node in the
cluster while the coordinting node doesn't need to be connected to the target node.
There could be an issue creating the REST clients and/or making the first request to the external cluster. If that happens, the blacklist has already been assigned and the following tests will fail because of an assertion that checks that the blacklist is not already assigned when the contexts are not.
Today we silently ignore invalid test logging annotations. This commit
rejects these annotations, failing the processing of the annotation and
aborting the test.
This commit adds a test for applying logging levels in hierarchical
order, and addresses an issue with restoring the logging levels at the
end of a test or suite.
This commit factors out the cluster state update tasks that are published (ClusterStateUpdateTask) from those that are not (LocalClusterUpdateTask), serving as a basis for future refactorings to separate the publishing mechanism out of ClusterService.
We have to sort the logger names so they wouldn't override each other. Processing org.elasticsearch:DEBUG after org.elasticsearch.transport:TRACE resets the setting of the later
This change is the first towards providing the ability to store
sensitive settings in elasticsearch. It adds the
`elasticsearch-keystore` tool, which allows managing a java keystore.
The keystore is loaded upon node startup in Elasticsearch, and used by
the Setting infrastructure when a setting is configured as secure.
There are a lot of caveats to this PR. The most important is it only
provides the tool and setting infrastructure for secure strings. It does
not yet provide for keystore passwords, keypairs, certificates, or even
convert any existing string settings to secure string settings. Those
will all come in follow up PRs. But this PR was already too big, so this
at least gets a basic version of the infrastructure in.
The two main things to look at. The first is the `SecureSetting` class,
which extends `Setting`, but removes the assumption for the raw value of the
setting to be a string. SecureSetting provides, for now, a single
helper, `stringSetting()` to create a SecureSetting which will return a
SecureString (which is like String, but is closeable, so that the
underlying character array can be cleared). The second is the
`KeyStoreWrapper` class, which wraps the java `KeyStore` to provide a
simpler api (we do not need the entire keystore api) and also extend
the serialized format to add metadata needed for loading the keystore
with no assumptions about keystore type (so that we can change this in
the future) as well as whether the keystore has a password (so that we
can know whether prompting is necessary when we add support for keystore
passwords).
* Remove a checked exception, replacing it with `ParsingException`.
* Remove all Parser classes for the yaml sections, replacing them with static methods.
* Remove `ClientYamlTestFragmentParser`. Isn't used any more.
* Remove `ClientYamlTestSuiteParseContext`, replacing it with some static utility methods.
I did not rewrite the parsers using `ObjectParser` because I don't think it is worth it right now.
This adds test classes that can be used to test the wire serialisation and (optionally) the XContent serialisation of objects that implement Streamable/Writeable and ToXContent.
These test classes will enable classes sich as InternalAggregation (or at least its implementations) to be tested in a consistent way when is comes to testing serialisation.
As the translog evolves towards a full operations log as part of the
sequence numbers push, there is a need for the translog to be able to
represent operations for which a sequence number was assigned, but the
operation did not mutate the index. Examples of how this can arise are
operations that fail after the sequence number is assigned, and gaps in
this history that arise when an operation is assigned a sequence number
but the operation never completed (e.g., a node crash). It is important
that these operations appear in the history so that they can be
replicated and replayed during recovery as otherwise the history will be
incomplete and local checkpoints will not be able to advance. This
commit introduces a no-op to the translog to set the stage for these
efforts.
Relates #22291
The `UnicastZenPing` shows it's age and is the result of many small changes. The current state of affairs is confusing and is hard to reason about. This PR cleans it up (while following the same original intentions). Highlights of the changes are:
1) Clear 3 round flow - no interleaving of scheduling.
2) The previous implementation did a best effort attempt to wait for ongoing pings to be sent and completed. The pings were guaranteed to complete because each used the total ping duration as a timeout. This did make it hard to reason about the total ping duration and the flow of the code. All of this is removed now and ping should just complete within the given duration or not be counted (note that it was very handy for testing, but I move the needed sync logic to the test).
3) Because of (2) the pinging scheduling changed a bit, to give a chance for the last round to complete. We now ping at the beginning, 1/3 and 2/3 of the duration.
4) To offset for (3) a bit, incoming ping requests are now added to on going ping collections.
5) UnicastZenPing never establishes full blown connections (but does reuse them if there). Relates to #22120
6) Discovery host providers are only used once per pinging round. Closes#21739
7) Usage of the ability to open a connection without connecting to a node ( #22194 ) and shorter connection timeouts helps with connections piling up. Closes#19370
8) Beefed up testing and sped them up.
9) removed light profile from production code
If we conditionally do random things, e.g. initialize a node only after the first test, we have to make sure that we unconditionally create a new seed calling random.nextLong(), then initialize the node under a private randomness context. This makes sure that any random usage through Randomness.get() will retrieve the proper random instance through RandomizedContext.current().getRandom(). When running under private randomness, the context will return the Random instance that was created with the provided seed (forked from the main random instance) rather than the main Random that's exposed to tests as well. Otherwise tests become non repeatable because that initialization part happens only before the first executed test.
Introduces `XContentParser#namedObject which works a little like
`StreamInput#readNamedWriteable`: on startup components register
parsers under names and a superclass. At runtime we look up the
parser and call it to parse the object.
Right now the parsers take a context object they use to help with
the parsing but I hope to be able to eliminate the need for this
context as most what it is used for at this point is to move
around parser registries which should be replaced by this method
eventually. I make no effort to do so in this PR because it is
big enough already. This is meant to the a start down a road that
allows us to remove classes like `QueryParseContext`,
`AggregatorParsers`, `IndicesQueriesRegistry`, and
`ParseFieldRegistry`.
The goal here is to reduce the amount of plumbing required to
allow parsing pluggable things. With this you don't have to pass
registries all over the place. Instead you must pass a super
registry to fewer places and use it to wrap the reader. This is
the same tradeoff that we use for NamedWriteable and it allows
much, much simpler binary serialization. We think we want that
same thing for xcontent serialization.
The only parsing actually converted to this method is parsing
`ScoreFunctions` inside of `FunctionScoreQuery`. I chose this
because it is relatively self contained.
* Internal: Refactor SettingCommand into EnvironmentAwareCommand
This change renames and changes the behavior of SettingCommand to have
its primary method take in a fully initialized Environment for
elasticsearch instead of just a map of settings. All of the subclasses
of SettingCommand already did this at some point, so this just removes
duplication.
We are currenlty checking that no deprecation warnings are emitted in our query tests. That can be moved to ESTestCase (disabled in ESIntegTestCase) as it allows us to easily catch where our tests use deprecated features and assert on the expected warnings.
We return deprecation warnings as response headers, besides logging them. Strict parsing mode stayed around, but was only used in query tests, though we also introduced checks for deprecation warnings there that don't need strict parsing anymore (see #20993).
We can then safely remove support for strict parsing mode. The final goal is to remove the ParseFieldMatcher class, but there are many many users of it. This commit prepares the field for the removal, by deprecating ParseFieldMatcher and making it effectively not needed. Strict parsing is removed from ParseFieldMatcher, and strict parsing is replaced in tests where needed with deprecation warnings checks.
Note that the setting to enable strict parsing was never ported to the new settings infra hance it cannot be set in production. It is really only used in our own tests.
Relates to #19552
Rename the method to assertToXContentEquivalent to highlight that it's tailored to ToXContent comparisons.
Rather than parsing into a map and replacing byte[] in both those maps, add custom equality assertions that recursively walk maps and lists and call Arrays.equals whenever a byte[] is encountered.
Moved field values `toXContent` logic to `GetField` (from `GetResult`), which outputs its own fields, and can also parse them now. Also added `fromXContent` to `GetResult` and `GetResponse`.
The start object and end object for `GetResponse` output have been moved to `GetResult#toXContent`, from the corresponding rest action. This makes it possible to have `toXContent` and `fromXContent` completely symmetric, as parsing requires looping till an end object is found which is weird when the corresponding `toXContent` doesn't print that out.
This also introduces the foundation for testing retrieval of _source and stored field values.
This commit makes mapping updates atomic when multiple types in an index are updated. Mappings for an index are now applied in a single atomic operation, which also allows to optimize some of the cross-type updates and checks.
Sequence BWC logic consists of two elements:
1) Wire level BWC using stream versions.
2) A changed to the global checkpoint maintenance semantics.
For the sequence number infra to work with a mixed version clusters, we have to consider situation where the primary is on an old node and replicas are on new ones (i.e., the replicas will receive operations without seq#) and also the reverse (i.e., the primary sends operations to a replica but the replica can't process the seq# and respond with local checkpoint). An new primary with an old replica is a rare because we do not allow a replica to recover from a new primary. However, it can occur if the old primary failed and a new replica was promoted or during primary relocation where the source primary is treated as a replica until the master starts the target.
1) Old Primary & New Replica - this case is easy as is taken care of by the wire level BWC. All incoming requests will have their seq# set to `UNASSIGNED_SEQ_NO`, which doesn't confuse the local checkpoint logic (keeping it at `NO_OPS_PERFORMED`)
2) New Primary & Old replica - this one is trickier as the global checkpoint service currently takes all in sync replicas into consideration for the global checkpoint calculation. In order to deal with old replicas, we change the semantics to say all *new node* in sync replicas. That means the replicas on old nodes don't count for the global checkpointing. In this state the seq# infra is not fully operational (you can't search on it, because copies may miss it) but it is maintained on shards that can support it. The old replicas will have to go through a file based recovery at some point and will get the seq# information at that point. There is still an edge case where a new primary fails and an old replica takes over. I'lll discuss this one with @ywelsch as I prefer to avoid it completely.
This PR also re-enables the BWC tests which were disabled. As such it had to fix any BWC issue that had crept in. Most notably an issue with the removal of the `timestamp` field in #21670.
The commit also includes a fix for the default value of the seq number field in replicated write requests (it was 0 but should be -2), that surface some other minor bugs which are fixed as well.
Last - I added some debugging tools like more sane node names and forcing replication request to implement a `toString`
With this commit we enable the Jackson feature 'STRICT_DUPLICATE_DETECTION'
by default for all XContent types (not only JSON).
We have also changed the name of the system property to disable this feature
from `es.json.strict_duplicate_detection` to the now more appropriate name
`es.xcontent.strict_duplicate_detection`.
Relates elastic/elasticsearch#19614
Relates elastic/elasticsearch#22073
In #22094 we introduce a test-only setting to simulate transport
impls that don't support handshakes. This commit implements the same logic
without a setting.
This commit touches addresses issues related to recovery and sequence numbers:
- A sequence number can be assigned and a Lucene commit created with a
maximum sequence number at least as large as that sequence number,
yet the operation corresponding to that sequence number can be
missing from both the Lucene commit and the translog. This means that
upon recovery the local checkpoint will be stuck at or below this
missing sequence number. To address this, we force the local
checkpoint to the maximum sequence number in the Lucene commit when
opening the engine. Note that there can still be gaps in the history
in the translog but we do not address those here.
- The global checkpoint is transferred to the target shard at the end
of peer recovery.
- Additionally, we reenable the relocation integration tests.
Lastly, this work uncovered some bugs in the assignment of sequence
numbers on replica operations:
- setting the sequence number on replica write requests was missing,
very likely introduced as a result of resolving merge conflicts
- handling operations that arrive out of order on a replica and have a
version conflict with a previous operation were never marked as
processed
Relates #22212
Some expert users like UnicastZenPing today establishes real connections to nodes during it's ping
phase that can be used by other parts of the system. Yet, this is potentially dangerous
and undesirable unless the nodes have been fully verified and should be connected to in the
case of a cluster state update or if we join a newly elected master. For use-cases like this, this change adds the infrastructure to manually handle connections that are not publicly available on the node ie. should not be managed by `Transport`/`TransportSerivce`
Sends the `error_trace` parameter with all requests sent by the
yaml test framework, including the doc snippet tests. This can be
overridden by settings `error_trace: false`. While this drift's
core's handling of the yaml tests from the client's slightly this
should only be a problem for tests that rely on the default value,
both of which I've fixed by setting the value explicitly.
This also escapes `\n` and `\t` in the `Stash dump on failure` so
the `stack_trace` is more readable.
Also fixes `RestUpdateSettingsAction` to not think of the `error_trace`
parameter as a setting.
`ClusterService` is responsible of updating the cluster state on every node (as a response to an API call on the master and when non-masters receive a new state from the master). When a new cluster state is processed, it is made visible via the `ClusterService#state` method and is sent to series of listeners. Those listeners come in two flavours - one is to change the state of the node in response to the new cluster state (call these cluster state appliers), the other is to start a secondary process. Examples for the later include an indexing operation waiting for a shard to be started or a master node action waiting for a master to be elected.
The fact that we expose the state before applying it means that samplers of the cluster state had to worry about two things - working based on a stale CS and working based on a future, i.e., "being applied" CS. The `ClusterStateStatus` was used to allow distinguishing between the two. Working with a stale cluster state is not avoidable. How this PR changes things to make sure consumers don't need to worry about future CS, removing the need for the status and simplifying the waiting logic.
This change does come with a price as "cluster state appliers" can't sample the cluster state from `ClusterService` whenever they want as the cluster state isn't exposed yet. However, recent clean ups made this is situation easier and this PR takes the last steps to remove such sampling. This also helps clarify the "information flow" and helps component separation (and thus potential unit testing). It also adds an assertion that will trigger if the cluster state is sampled by such listeners.
Note that there are still many "appliers" that could be made a simpler, unrestricted "listener" but this can be done in smaller bits in the future. The commit also makes it clear what the `appliers` and what the `listeners` are by using dedicated interfaces.
Also, since I had to change the listener types I went ahead and changed the data structure for temporary/timeout listeners (used for the observer) so addition and removal won't be an O(n) operation.
Since #22094 has been back-ported to 5.2 we can remove all BWC layers from master since all supported version will handle handshake requests.
Relates to #22094
Today sending a message on a closed channel doesn't throw an exception. The channel
might just swallow the exception and informs the internal async exception handler
that a channel got disconnected. This change adds a safety check that we fail
the handshake if we registered a handler but the channel has been closed already
for instance due to a reset by peer.
Low level handshake code doesn't handle situations gracefully if the connection
is concurrently closed or reset by peer. This commit adds the relevant code to
fail the handshake if the connection is closed.
In order to start clusters with min master nodes set without setting `discovery.initial_state_timeout`, #21846 has changed the way we start nodes. Instead to the previous serial start up, we now always start the nodes in an async fashion (internally). This means that starting a cluster is unsafe without `min_master_nodes` being set. We should therefore make it mandatory.
With this commit we enable the Jackson feature 'STRICT_DUPLICATE_DETECTION'
by default. This ensures that JSON keys are always unique. While this has
a performance impact, benchmarking has indicated that the typical drop in
indexing throughput is around 1 - 2%.
As a last resort, we allow users to still disable strict duplicate checks
by setting `-Des.json.strict_duplicate_detection=false` which is
intentionally undocumented.
Closes#19614
This commit enables CLI commands to be closeable and installs a runtime
shutdown hook to ensure that if the JVM shuts down (as opposed to
aborting) the close method is called.
It is not enough to wrap uses of commands in main methods in
try-with-resources blocks as these will not run if, say, the virtual
machine is terminated in response to SIGINT, or system shutdown event.
Relates #22126
Today we rely on the version that the API user passes in together with the DiscoveryNode. This commit introduces a low level handshake where nodes exchange their version to be used with the transport protocol that is executed every time a connection to a node is established. This, on the one hand allows to change the wire protocol based on the version we are talking to even without a full cluster restart. Today we would need to carry on a BWC layer across major versions but with a handshake we can rely on the fact that the latest version of the previous minor executes a handshake and uses the latest protocol version across all communication with the N+1 version nodes.
This change is yet fully backwards compatible, a followup PR will remove the BWC in 6.0 once this has been back-ported to the 5.x branch
Starts to centralize creation of the `XContentParser` in
`protected final` methods on `ESTestCase`. The idea is to enable
adding `NamedXContentRegistry` relatively easily by giving tests
a single place they can override to define the
`NamedXContentRegistry`. Since `NamedXContentRegistry` doesn't
exist yet neither does the override point.
This doesn't attempt to migrate all the tests to calling the
new methods to build the parsers. I wanted to make this so we
could review the concept and then I'll merge a followup to
migrate the tests.
Plugins also have the need to provide better OOTB experience by configuring
defaults unless the plugin is used in _production_ mode. This change exposes
the bootstrap check infrastructure as part of the plugin API to allow plugins
to specify / install their own bootstrap checks if necessary.
Our query DSL supports empty queries (`{}`), which have a different meaning depending on the query that holds it, either ignored, match_all or match_none. We deprecated the support for empty queries in 5.0, where we log a deprecation warning wherever they are used.
The way we supported it once we moved query parsing to the coordinating node was having an Optional<QueryBuilder> return type in all of our parse methods (called fromXContent). See #17624. The central place for this was QueryParseContext#parseInnerQueryBuilder. We can now remove all the optional return types and simply throw an exception whenever an empty query is found.
This change allows specifying alias/wildcard expression in indices_boost.
And added another format for specifying indices_boost. It accepts array of index name and boost pair.
If an index is included in multiple aliases/wildcard expressions, the first match will be used.
With new format, old format is marked as deprecated.
Closes#4756
Today we connect and publish the nodes connection before we execute a
handshake with the node we connect to. In the case of connecting to a node
that won't pass the handshake this connection is already `published` and other
code paths can use it. This commit detaches the connection and the publish of the
connection such that `TransportService` can do a handshake before actually connect
and publish the connection.
* Remove 2.0 prerelease version constants
This is a start to addressing #21887. This removes:
* pre 2.0 snapshot format support
* automatic units addition to cluster settings
* bwc check for delete by query in pre 2.0 indexes
If you write a yaml test with a `warnings` section in a `do` block
that doesn't also have a corresponding `skip` section for `warnings`
then client test runners that don't support `warnings` will fail.
This causes the elasticsearch build to fail so we catch these errors
earlier.
Related to #21811
This commit enhances the allocator decision result objects (namely,
AllocateUnassignedDecision, MoveDecision, and RebalanceDecision)
to enable them to be used directly by the cluster allocation explain API. In
particular, this commit does the following:
- Adds serialization and toXContent methods to the response objects,
which will form the explain API responses.
- Moves the calculation of the final explanation to the response
object itself, removing it from the responsibility of the allocators.
- Adds shard store information to the NodeAllocationResult, so that
store information is available for each node, when explaining a
shard allocation by the PrimaryShardAllocator or the ReplicaShardAllocator.
- Removes RebalanceDecision in favor of using MoveDecision for both
moving and rebalancing shards.
- Removes NodeRebalanceResult in favor of using NodeAllocationResult.
- Changes the notion of weight ranking to be relative to the current node,
instead of an absolute weight that doesn't convey any added value to the
API user and can be confusing.
- Introduces a new enum AllocationDecision to convey the decision type,
which enables conveying unassigned, moving, and rebalancing scenarios
with more detail as opposed to just Decision.Type and AllocationStatus.
We had tests for the regular factories, but not for the pre-built ones, that
ship by default without requiring users to define them in the analysis settings.
Since the removal of local discovery of #https://github.com/elastic/elasticsearch/pull/20960 we rely on minimum master nodes to be set in our test cluster. The settings is automatically managed by the cluster (by default) but current management doesn't work with concurrent single node async starting. On the other hand, with `MockZenPing` and the `discovery.initial_state_timeout` set to `0s` node starting and joining is very fast making async starting an unneeded complexity. Test that still need async starting could, in theory, still do so themselves via background threads.
Note that this change also removes the usage of `INITIAL_STATE_TIMEOUT_SETTINGS` as the starting of nodes is done concurrently (but building them is sequential)
Changes the default socket and connection timeouts for the rest
client from 10 seconds to the more generous 30 seconds.
Defaults reindex-from-remote to those timeouts and make the
timeouts configurable like so:
```
POST _reindex
{
"source": {
"remote": {
"host": "http://otherhost:9200",
"socket_timeout": "1m",
"connect_timeout": "10s"
},
"index": "source",
"query": {
"match": {
"test": "data"
}
}
},
"dest": {
"index": "dest"
}
}
```
Closes#21707
We don't use the test infra nor do we run the tests. They might all be
entirely out of date. We also have a different BWC test infra in-place.
This change removes all of the legacy infra.
Today we can easily join a cluster that holds an index we don't support since
we currently allow rolling upgrades from 5.x to 6.x. Along the same lines we don't check if we can support an index based on the nodes in the cluster when we open, restore or metadata-upgrade and index. This commit adds
additional safety that fails cluster state validation, open, restore and /or upgrade if there is an open index with an incompatible index version created in the cluster.
Realtes to #21670
Timeouts are global today across all connections this commit allows to specify
a connection timeout per node such that depending on the context connections can
be established with different timeouts.
Relates to #19719
Currently we have these logs for integration tests only.
This adds the following log at the start:
```
logger.info("[{}]: before test", getTestName());
```
and this is logged at the end, but before any clean up done in sub classes
```
logger.info("[{}]: after test", getTestName());
```
For the record, I also had to remove the geo-hash cell and geo-distance range
queries to make the code compile. These queries already throw an exception in
all cases with 5.x indices, so that does not hurt any more.
I also had to rename all 2.x bwc indices from `index-${version}` to
`unsupported-${version}` to make `OldIndexBackwardCompatibilityIT`
happy.
Lucene 6.2 added index and query support for numeric ranges. This commit adds a new RangeFieldMapper for indexing numeric (int, long, float, double) and date ranges and creating appropriate range and term queries. The design is similar to NumericFieldMapper in that it uses a RangeType enumerator for implementing the logic specific to each type. The following range types are supported by this field mapper: int_range, float_range, long_range, double_range, date_range.
Lucene does not provide a DocValue field specific to RangeField types so the RangeFieldMapper implements a CustomRangeDocValuesField for handling doc value support.
When executing a Range query over a Range field, the RangeQueryBuilder has been enhanced to accept a new relation parameter for defining the type of query as one of: WITHIN, CONTAINS, INTERSECTS. This provides support for finding all ranges that are related to a specific range in a desired way. As with other spatial queries, DISJOINT can be achieved as a MUST_NOT of an INTERSECTS query.
The Transport#connectToNodeLight concepts is confusing and not very flexible.
neither really testable on a unittest level. This commit cleans up the code used
to connect to nodes and simplifies transport implementations to share more code.
This also allows to connect to nodes with custom profiles if needed, for instance
future improvements can be added to connect to/from nodes that are non-data nodes without
dedicated bulks and recovery connections.
In the past we ran yaml tests against an internal cluster, which would get restarted after each test failure, hence the client objects needed to eventually be refreshed before each test. That is why we had the initClient method to re-initialize the YamlTestClient in the execution context. We ended up though re-initializing the client unconditionally, which is not needed.
Also, ESRestTestCase recreates the RestClient against the external cluster before each test, which is not needed given that nothing changes in the external cluster.
This commit removes the initClient method from the yaml tests execution context. The YamlTestClient can be eagerly created before the first yaml test runs and then re-used in subsequent tests. Also api calls to check for nodes versions etc. are moved out of YamlTestClient to ESClientYamlSuiteTestCase. Also the RestClient is now initialized in ESRestTestCase before the first test runs, and kept around afterwards as a static member.
Basically each subclass of EsRestTestCase will have its own RestClient instance, but the client will be shared across the different tests within the same class. The yaml test suite is just a special suite, composed of 600+ tests that are loaded from files, which will share the same client instance.
This change should speed tests up as well, as we don't recreate the RestClient before each single test, and we don't call _cat/nodes either before each single test.
TransportAddress used to be customizable per transport but this has been removed
a while ago. Therefore we can remove all usage of this method as well.
Relates to #20695
The disruption type LongGCDisruption simulates GCs on a node by suspending all the threads of that node. If the suspended threads are in a code section with shared JVM locks, however, it can prevent the other nodes from doing their thing. The class LongGCDisruption has a list of class names for which we know that this can occur. Whenever a test using the GC disruption type fails in mysterious ways, it becomes a long guessing game to find the offending class. This commit adds code to LongGCDisruption to automatically detect these situations, fail the test early and report the offending class and all relevant context.
Today when handling unreleased versions for backwards compatilibity
support, we scatted version constants across the code base and add some
asserts to support removing these constants when the version in question
is actually released. This commit improves this situation, enabling us
to just add a single unreleased version constant that can be renamed
when the version is actually released. This should make maintenance of
these versions simpler.
Relates #21760
* Scripting: Remove groovy scripting language
Groovy was deprecated in 5.0. This change removes it, along with the
legacy default language infrastructure in scripting.
The `error_trace` parameter turns on the `stack_trace` field
in errors which returns stack traces.
Removes documentation for `camelCase` because it hasn't worked
in a while....
Documents the internal parameters used to render stack traces as
internal only.
Closes#21708
Today there is no way to get notified if a node is disconnected. Client code
must poll the TransportClient constantly to detect that a node is not connected
anymore in order to react and add new nodes or notify altering etc. For instance
if a hostname gets resolved to an IP but that host is disconnected clients want
to reconnect by resolving the hostname again which is a common situation in cloud
environments.
Closes#21424
Today we eagerly resolve unicast hosts. This means that if DNS changes,
we will never find the host at the new address. Moreover, a single host
failng to resolve causes startup to abort. This commit introduces lazy
resolution of unicast hosts. If a DNS entry changes, there is an
opportunity for the host to be discovered. Note that under the Java
security manager, there is a default positive cache of infinity for
resolved hosts; this means that if a user does want to operate in an
environment where DNS can change, they must adjust
networkaddress.cache.ttl in their security policy. And if a host fails
to resolve, we warn log the hostname but continue pinging other
configured hosts.
When doing DNS resolutions for unicast hostnames, we wait until the DNS
lookups timeout. This appears to be forty-five seconds on modern JVMs,
and it is not configurable. If we do these serially, the cluster can be
blocked during ping for a lengthy period of time. This commit introduces
doing the DNS lookups in parallel, and adds a user-configurable timeout
for these lookups.
Relates #21630
* Add support for merging custom meta data in tribe node
Currently, when any underlying cluster has custom metadata
(via plugin), tribe node does not store custom meta data in its
cluster state. This is because the tribe node has no idea how to
select the appropriate custom metadata from one or many custom
metadata (corresponding to the number of underlying clusters).
This change adds an interface that custom metadata implementations
can extend to add support for merging mulitple custom metadata of
the same type for storing in the tribe state.
Relates to #20544
Supersedes #20791
* Simplify updating tribe state
* Add tests for merging multiple custom metadata types in tribe node
* cleanup merging custom md logic in tribe service
* master: (22 commits)
Add proper toString() method to UpdateTask (#21582)
Fix `InternalEngine#isThrottled` to not always return `false`. (#21592)
add `ignore_missing` option to SplitProcessor (#20982)
fix trace_match behavior for when there is only one grok pattern (#21413)
Remove dead code from GetResponse.java
Fixes date range query using epoch with timezone (#21542)
Do not cache term queries. (#21566)
Updated dynamic mapper section
Docs: Clarify date_histogram bucket sizes for DST time zones
Handle release of 5.0.1
Fix skip reason for stats API parameters test
Reduce skip version for stats API parameter tests
Strict level parsing for indices stats
Remove cluster update task when task times out (#21578)
[DOCS] Mention "all-fields" mode doesn't search across nested documents
InternalTestCluster: when restarting a node we should validate the cluster is formed via the node we just restarted
Fixed bad asciidoc in boolean mapping docs
Fixed bad asciidoc ID in node stats
Be strict when parsing values searching for booleans (#21555)
Fix time zone rounding edge case for DST overlaps
...
There have been reports that the query cache did not manage to speed up search
requests when the query includes a large number of different sub queries since
a single request may manage to exhaust the whole history (256 queries) while
the query cache only starts caching queries once they appear multiple times in
the history (#16031). On the other hand, increasing the size of the query cache
is a bit controversial (#20116) so this pull request proposes a different
approach that consists of never caching term queries, and not adding them to the
history of queries either. The reasoning is that these queries should be fast
anyway, regardless of caching, so taking them out of the equation should not
cause any slow down. On the other hand, the fact that they are not added to the
cache history anymore means that other queries have greater chances of being
cached.
#20960 removed `LocalDiscovery` and we now use `ZenDiscovery` in all our tests. To keep cluster forming fast, we are using a `MockZenPing` implementation which uses static maps to return instant results making master election fast. Currently, we don't set `minimum_master_nodes` causing the occasional split brain when starting multiple nodes concurrently and their pinging is so fast that it misses the fact that one of the node has elected it self master. To solve this, `InternalTestCluster` is modified to behave like a true cluster and manage and set `minimum_master_nodes` correctly with every change to the number of nodes.
Tests that want to manage the settings themselves can opt out using a new `autoMinMasterNodes` parameter to the `ClusterScope` annotation.
Having `min_master_nodes` set means the started node may need to wait for other nodes to be started as well. To combat this, we set `discovery.initial_state_timeout` to `0` and wait for the cluster to form once all node have been started. Also, because a node may wait and ping while other nodes are started, `MockZenPing` is adapted to wait rather than busy-ping.
This changes adds a test discovery (which internally uses the existing
mock zenping by default). Having the mock the test framework selects be a discovery
greatly simplifies discovery setup (no more weird callback to a Node
method).
Today when a node starts, we create dynamic socket permissions based on
the configured HTTP ports and transport ports. If no ports are
configured, we use the default port ranges. When a tribe node starts, a
tribe node creates an internal node client for connecting to each remote
cluster. If neither an explicit HTTP port nor transport ports were
specified, the default port ranges are large enough for the tribe node
and its internal node clients. If an explicit HTTP port or transport
port was specified for the tribe node, then socket permissions for those
ports will be created, but not for the internal node clients. Whether
the internal node clients have explicit ports specified, or attempt to
bind within the default range, socket permissions for these will not
have been created and the internal node clients will hit a permissions
issue when attempting to bind. This commit addresses this issue by also
accounting for tribe nodes when creating the dynamic socket
permissions. Additionally, we add our first real integration test for
tribe nodes.
This commit enables real BWC testing against a 5.1 snapshot. All
REST tests plus rolling upgrade test now run against a mixed version
cross major version cluster.
* master:
Hack around cluster service and logging race
Do not prematurely shutdown Log4j
Support decimal constants with trailing [dD] in painless (#21412)
In painless suggest a long constant if int won't do (#21415)
Account for different paths for sysctl utilities
[TEST] testRebalancePossible() may not have an assigned node id
Tests: Disable merge in SearchCancellationTests
Tests: clean search scroll at the end of SearchCancellationIT
When a node closes, we shutdown logging as the last statement. This
statement must be last lest any subsequent attempts to log will blow up
by running into security permissions. Yet, in the case of a tribe node
this isn't enough. The first internal tribe node to close will shutdown
logging, and subsequent node closes will blow up with the aforementioned
problem. This commit migrate the Log4j shutdown to occur as part of the
shutdown hook that closes the node, after all nodes have
closed. Consequently, we can remove a hack in the test infrastructure to
prevent Log4j shutdowns when internal test nodes close and instead just
register a single shutdown hook that runs when the test JVM exits.
Relates #21519
* master:
ShardActiveResponseHandler shouldn't hold to an entire cluster state
Ensures cleanup of temporary index-* generational blobs during snapshotting (#21469)
Remove (again) test uses of onModule (#21414)
[TEST] Add assertBusy when checking for pending operation counter after tests
Revert "Add trace logging when aquiring and releasing operation locks for replication requests"
Allows multiple patterns to be specified for index templates (#21009)
[TEST] fixes rebalance single shard check as it isn't guaranteed that a rebalance makes sense and the method only tests if rebalance is allowed
Document _reindex with random_score
* master: (516 commits)
Avoid angering Log4j in TransportNodesActionTests
Add trace logging when aquiring and releasing operation locks for replication requests
Fix handler name on message not fully read
Remove accidental import.
Improve log message in TransportNodesAction
Clean up of Script.
Update Joda Time to version 2.9.5 (#21468)
Remove unused ClusterService dependency from SearchPhaseController (#21421)
Remove max_local_storage_nodes from elasticsearch.yml (#21467)
Wait for all reindex subtasks before rethrottling
Correcting a typo-Maan to Man-in README.textile (#21466)
Fix InternalSearchHit#hasSource to return the proper boolean value (#21441)
Replace all index date-math examples with the URI encoded form
Fix typos (#21456)
Adapt ES_JVM_OPTIONS packaging test to ubuntu-1204
Add null check in InternalSearchHit#sourceRef to prevent NPE (#21431)
Add VirtualBox version check (#21370)
Export ES_JVM_OPTIONS for SysV init
Skip reindex rethrottle tests with workers
Make forbidden APIs be quieter about classpath warnings (#21443)
...
This change was reverted after it caused random test failures. This was
due to a copy/paste error in the original PR which caused the mock
version of ClusterInfoService to be used whenever the mock *ZenPing* was
used, and the real ClusterInfoService to be used when MockZenPing was
not used.
Currently, pending operations can complete after tests with disruption scheme
completes. This commit waits for the pending operation counter to complete
after the tests are run
* Allows for an array of index template patterns to be provided to an
index template, and rename the field from 'template' to 'index_pattern'.
Closes#20690
We currently often use ensureGreen or ensureYellow to check whether the cluster is in a good state again after shutting down a node. With the change in #21092, however, it can happen that if the node that is stopped is the master node, another node will become master and publish a cluster state where it is master but where the node that was stopped hasn't been removed yet from the cluster state. It will only publish a second state thereafter where the old master is removed. If the ensureGreen/ensureYellow is timed just right, it will get to execute before the second cluster state update removing the old master and the condition ensureGreen / ensureYellow might not hold at that point anymore.
At one point in the past when moving out the rest tests from core to
their own subproject, we had multiple test classes which evenly split up
the tests to run. However, we simplified this and went back to a single
test runner to have better reproduceability in tests. This change
removes the remnants of that multiplexing support.
Adds support for `?slices=N` to reindex which automatically
parallelizes the process using parallel scrolls on `_uid`. Performance
testing sees a 3x performance improvement for simple docs
on decent hardware, maybe 30% performance improvement
for more complex docs. Still compelling, especially because
clusters should be able to get closer to the 3x than the 30%
number.
Closes#20624
Today if you start Elasticsearch with the status logger configured to
the warn level, or use a transport client with the default status logger
level, you will see warn messages about deprecation loggers being
created with different message factories and that formatting might be
broken. This happens because the deprecation logger is constructed using
the message factory from its parent, an artifact leftover from the first
Log4j 2 implementation that used a custom message factory. When that
custom message factory was removed, this constructor invocation should
have been changed to not explicitly use the message factory from the
parent. This commit fixes this invocation. However, we also had some
status checking to all tests to ensure that there are no warn status log
messages that might indicate a configuration problem with Log4j 2. These
assertions blow up badly without the fix for the deprecation logger
construction, and also caught a misconfiguration in one of the logging
tests.
Relates #21339
This is a bit funky to do with junit because we need per test state
but we only want to log it per suite. So we use a static flag that
we test per test and reset before every suite.
Our test infrastructure checks after running each test that there are no more in-flight requests on the shard level. Whenever the check fails, we only know that there were in-flight requests but don't know what requests were causing this issue. This commit adds the replication tasks that are still active at that moment to the assertion error.
Plugins: Remove pluggability of ZenPing
ZenPing is the part of zen discovery which knows how to ping nodes.
There is only one alternative implementation, which is just for testing.
This change removes the ability to add custom zen pings, and instead
hooks in the MockZenPing for tests through an overridden method in
MockNode. This also folds in the ZenPingService (which was really just a
single method) into ZenDiscovery, and removes the idea of having
multiple ZenPing instances. Finally, this was the last usage of the
ExtensionPoint classes, so that is also removed here.
This adds checks for expected warning headers to the query builder test
infrastructure. Tests that are adding deprecation warnings to the response
headers need to check those, otherwise the abstract base class for the test
class will complain at teardown.
Checks on static test state are run by an @After method in ESTestCase. Suite-scoped tests in ESIntegTestCase only shut down in an @AfterClass method, which executes after the @After method in ESTestCase. The suite-scoped cluster can thus still execute actions that will violate the checks in @After without those being caught. A subsequent test executing within the same JVM will fail these checks however when @After gets called for that test.
This commit adds an explicit call to check the static test state after the suite-scoped cluster has been shut down.
Today these two are considered mutual exclusive but they are not in
practice. For instance a mixed version cluster might not return a
given warning depending on which node we talk to but on the other hand
some runners might not even support warnings at all so the test might be
skipped either by version or by feature.
The `IndexService#newQueryShardContext()` method creates a QueryShardContext on
shard `0`, with a `null` reader and that uses `System.currentTimeMillis()` to
resolve `now`. This may hide bugs, since the shard id is sometimes used for
query parsing (it is used to salt random score generation in `function_score`),
passing a `null` reader disables query rewriting and for some use-cases, it is
simply not ok to rely on the current timestamp (eg. percolation). So this pull
request removes this method and instead requires that all call sites provide
these parameters explicitly.
Before publishing a cluster state the master connects to the nodes that are added in the cluster state. When publishing fails, however, it does not disconnect from these nodes, leaving NodeConnectionsService out of sync with the currently applied cluster state.
The `_cat/nodes` API might not be available in all clusters for instance
if they have authorization enabled. This change falls back to the previously
used method of using the '/' endpoint to fetch the nodes version, this is best
effort and will emit a warning.
Lucene 6.3 is expected to be released in the next weeks so it'd be good to give
it some integration testing. I had to upgrade randomized-testing too so that
both Lucene and Elasticsearch are on the same version.
Today we only use a single node to send requests to when we run REST tests.
In some cases we have more than one node (ie. in the BWC case) where we should
send requests to all nodes in a round-robin fashion. This change passes all
available node endpoints to the rest test.
Additionally, this change adds the setting of `discovery.zen.minimum_master_nodes`
to the cluster formation forcing the nodes to wait for all other nodes until the cluster
is formed. This allows for a more realistic master election and allows all master eligable
nodes to become master while before always the first node in the cluster became the master.
This also adds logging to each test run to log the master nodes version and the minimum node
version in the cluster to help debugging BWC test failures.
This fixes our cluster formation task to run REST tests against a mixed version cluster.
Yet, due to some limitations in our test framework `indices.rollover` tests are currently
disabled for the BWC case since they select the current master as the merge node which
happens to be a BWC node and we can't relocate all shards to it since the primaries are on
a higher version node. This will be fixed in a followup.
Closes#21142
Note: This has been cherry-picked from 5.0 and fixes several rest tests
as well as a BWC break in `OsStats.java`
The network disruption type "network delay" continues delaying existing requests even after the disruption has been cleared. This commit ensures that the requests get to execute right after the delay rule is cleared.
This commit fixes responses to HEAD requests so that the value of the
Content-Length is correct per the HTTP spec. Namely, the value of this
header should be equal to the Content-Length if the request were not a
HEAD request.
This commit also fixes a memory leak on HEAD requests to the main action
that arose from the bytes on a builder not being released due to them
being dropped on the floor to ensure that the response to the main
action did not have a body.
Relates #21123
Currently test that check that equals() and hashCode() are working as expected
for classes implementing them are quiet similar. This change moves common
assertions in this method to a common utility class. In addition, another common
utility function in most of these test classes that creates copies of input
object by running them through a StreamOutput and reading them back in, is moved
to ESTestCase so it can be shared across all these classes.
Closes#20629
Today the request interceptor can't support async calls since the response
of the async call would execute on a different thread ie. a client or listener
thread. This means in-turn that the intercepted handler is not executed with the
thread it was supposed to run and therefor can, if it's executing blocking
operations, potentially deadlock an entire server.
* Move all zen discovery classes into o.e.discovery.zen
This collapses sub packages of zen into zen. These all had just a couple
classes each, and there is really no reason to have the subpackages.
* fix checkstyle
`LocalDiscovery` is a discovery implementation that uses static in memory maps to keep track of current live nodes. This is used extensively in our tests in order to speed up cluster formation (i.e., shortcut the 3 second ping period used by `ZenDiscovery` by default). This is sad as that mean that most of the test run using a different discovery semantics than what is used in production. Instead of replacing the entire discovery logic, we can use a similar approach to only shortcut the pinging components.
During a recent merge from master, we lost the bridge from IndicesClusterStateService to the GlobalCheckpointService of primary shards, notifying them of changes to the current set of active/initializing shards. This commits add the bridge back (with unit tests). It also simplifies the GlobalCheckpoint tracking to use a simpler model (which makes use the fact that the global check point sync is done periodically).
The old integration CheckpointIT test is moved to IndexLevelReplicationTests. I also added similar assertions to RelocationsIT, which surfaced a bug in the primary relocation logic and how it plays with global checkpoint updates. The test is currently await-fixed and will be fixed in a follow up issue.
This commit changes the current REST API parser to make it fail and throw an exception when a REST specification file contains a duplicated parameters, or path, or method, or path part.
This is important to allow any test to use RandomQueryBuilder#createQuery()
since some of the query builders that are used in this test test the length
of the types array and otherwise will thow NPE if the test is not a subclass
of AbstractQueryTestCase.
The cache relies on the equals() method so we just need to make sure script
queries can never be equals, even to themselves in the case that a weight
is used to produce a Scorer on the same segment multiple times.
Closes#20763
Today we throw an assertion error if we release an AbstractArray more than once.
Yet, it's recommended to implement close methods such that they can be invoked
more than once. Guaranteed single release calls are hard to implement and some
situations might not be tested causing for instance `CircuitBreaker` to operate on
corrupted memory stats.
UpdateHelper, MetaDataIndexUpgradeService, and some recovery
stuff.
Move ClusterSettings to nullable ctor parameter of TransportService
so it isn't forgotten.
This change proposes the removal of all non-tcp transport implementations. The
mock transport can be used by default to run tests instead of local transport that has
roughly the same performance compared to TCP or at least not noticeably slower.
This is a master only change, deprecation notice in 5.x will be committed as a
separate change.
Today SearchContext expose the current context as a thread local which makes any kind of sane interface design very very hard. This PR removes the thread local entirely and instead passes the relevant context anywhere needed. This simplifies state management dramatically and will allow for a much leaner SearchContext interface down the road.
LongGCDisruption suspends and resumes node threads but respects several
`unsafe` class name patterns where it's unsafe to suspend. For instance
log4j uses a global lock so we can't suspend a thread that is currently
calling into log4j. The same is true for the security manager, it's similar
to log4j a shared resource between the test and the node that is _suspended_.
This change adds `java.lang.SecrityManager` to the unsafe patterns.
This prevents test framework deadlocking if a nodes thread is supended
while it's calling into the security manager that uses synchronized maps etc.
today it's not possible to use date-math efficiently with the `_rollover`
API. This change adds support for date-math in the target index as well as
support for preserving the math logic when an existing index that was created with
a date math expression all subsequent indices are created with the same expression.
The logging listener tests started failing after
953a8a959b when the tests are run with
tests.es.logger.level set to any level other than debug. This is because
these tests were based around the assumption that the default logging
level was info, which was the case before that commit fixed setting the
default logging level via that system property. This commit fixes these
failing tests by adjusting this assumption to account for the fact that
the default logging level could be different.
Pipe in the `tests.es.logger.level` system property to the log4j config file used in tests. We still default to info. Also adapts the logger name to use the first letter of packages.
Pipe in the `tests.es.logger.level` system property to the log4j config file used in tests. We still default to info. Also adapts the logger name to use the first letter of packages.
* master: (1199 commits)
[DOCS] Remove non-valid link to mapping migration document
Revert "Default `include_in_all` for numeric-like types to false"
test: add a test with ipv6 address
docs: clearify that both ip4 and ip6 addresses are supported
Include complex settings in settings requests
Add production warning for pre-release builds
Clean up confusing error message on unhandled endpoint
[TEST] Increase logging level in testDelayShards()
change health from string to enum (#20661)
Provide error message when plugin id is missing
Document that sliced scroll works for reindex
Make reindex-from-remote ignore unknown fields
Remove NoopGatewayAllocator in favor of a more realistic mock (#20637)
Remove Marvel character reference from guide
Fix documentation for setting Java I/O temp dir
Update client benchmarks to log4j2
Changes the API of GatewayAllocator#applyStartedShards and (#20642)
Removes FailedRerouteAllocation and StartedRerouteAllocation
IndexRoutingTable.initializeEmpty shouldn't override supplied primary RecoverySource (#20638)
Smoke tester: Adjust to latest changes (#20611)
...
Many of our unit tests instantiate an `AllocationService`, which requires having a `GatewayAllocator`. Today almost all of our test use a class called `NoopGatewayAllocator` which does nothing, effectively leaving all shard assignments to the balanced allocator. This is sad as it means we test a system that behaves differently than our production logic in very basic things. For example, a started primary that is lost will be assigned to a node that didn't use to have it.
This PR removes `NoopGatewayAllocator` in favor of a new `TestGatewayAllocator` that inherits the standard `GatewayAllocator` and overrides shard information fetching to return information based on historical assignments the allocator has done. The only exception is `BalanceConfigurationTests` which does test only the balancer and I opted to not have it work around the `GatewayAllocator` being in it's way.
Changes the API of GatewayAllocator#applyStartedShards and
GatewayAllocator#applyFailedShards to take both a RoutingAllocation
and a list of shards to apply. This allows better mock allocators
to be created as being done in #20637.
Closes#20642
Removes the FailedRerouteAllocation class and StartedRerouteAllocation
class, as they were just wrappers for RerouteAllocation that stored
started and failed shards, but these started and failed shards can
be passed in directly to the methods that needed them, removing the
need for this wrapper class and extra level of indirection.
Closes#20626
Today we hold on to all possible tokenizers, tokenfilters etc. when we create
an index service on a node. This was mainly done to allow the `_analyze` API to
directly access all these primitive. We fixed this in #19827 and can now get rid of
the AnalysisService entirely and replace it with a simple map like class. This
ensures we don't create a gazillion long living objects that are entirely useless since
they are never used in most of the indices. Also those objects might consume a considerable
amount of memory since they might load stopwords or synonyms etc.
Closes#19828
With the switch to Log4j 2 throughout our code base, the logger usage checker was temporarily disabled. This commit
adapts the checks to work with Log4j 2 and re-enables the Gradle checks.
Closes#20243
This commit changes the default behavior of `_flush` to block if other flushes are ongoing.
This also removes the use of `FlushNotAllowedException` and instead simply return immediately
by skipping the flush. Users should be aware if they set this option that the flush might or might
not flush everything to disk ie. no transactional behavior of some sort.
Closes#20569
This commit removes `ByteSizeValue`'s methods that are duplicated (ex: `mbFrac()` and `getMbFrac()`) in order to only keep the `getN` form.
It also renames `mb()` -> `getMb()`, `kb()` -> `getKB()` in order to be more coherent with the `ByteSizeUnit` method names.
This PR introduces backward compatibility index tests to test the rolling upgrade process amongst Elasticsearch instances within the same major version. The test executes in three phases. In the first phase, we form a cluster of 2 ES instances on an old version. In the second phase, we keep one of the nodes from the old cluster, kill the other node, but preserve its data directory and start an instance of the current version of ES using the same data directory as the killed instance. In the third phase, we kill the other old version ES instance from the first phase and launch a new instance, using the same data directory as the killed instance. Therefore, during phase 3, we have fully migrated and have all current versions of ES running. In each phase, we run REST tests that index documents and search them, ensuring at each stage that the documents from the previous phase are still there.
Note that because we haven't released a GA yet of 5.0, the tests currently don't start an old version cluster in the first phase. Once GA is released, this will be changed to make the backward compatibility version 5.0, while the current version in the cluster will be 5.x.
This change removes all guice interaction from Transport, HttpServerTransport,
HttpServer and TransportService. All these classes as well as their subclasses
or extended version configured via plugins are now created by using plain old
bloody java constructors. YAY!
Currently all the reroute-like methods of `AllocationService` return a result object of type `RoutingAllocation.Result`. The result object contains the new `RoutingTable` and `MetaData` plus an indication whether those were changed. The caller is then responsible of updating a cluster state with these. These means that things can easily go wrong and one can take one of these but not the other causing inconsistencies. We already have a utility method on the `ClusterState` builder that does but no one forces you to do so. Also 99% of the callers do the same thing: i.e., check if the result was changed and if so update the very same cluster state that was passed to `AllocationService`. This PR folds this pattern into `AllocationService` and changes almost all it's methods to return a new cluster state (potentially the original one). This saves some 500 lines of code.
The one exception here is the reroute API which executes allocation commands and potentially returns an explanation as well (next to the routing table and metadata). That API now returns a `CommandsResult` object which encapsulate a cluster state and the explanation.
TransportService is such a central part of the core server, replacing
it's implementation is risky and can cause serious issues. This change removes the ability to
plug in TransportService but allows registering a TransportInterceptor that enables
plugins to intercept requests on both the sender and the receiver ends. This is a commonly used
and overwritten functionality but encapsulates the custom code in a contained manner.
During a networking partition, cluster states updates (like mapping changes or shard assignments)
are committed if a majority of the masters node received the update correctly. This means that the current master has access to enough nodes in the cluster to continue to operate correctly. When the network partition heals, the isolated nodes catch up with the current state and get the changes they couldn't receive before. However, if a second partition happens while the cluster
is still recovering from the previous one *and* the old master is put in the minority side, it may be that a new master is elected which did not yet catch up. If that happens, cluster state updates can be lost.
This commit fixed 95% of this rare problem by adding the current cluster state version to `PingResponse` and use them when deciding which master to join (and thus casting the node's vote).
Note: this doesn't fully mitigate the problem as a cluster state update which is issued concurrently with a network partition can be lost if the partition prevents the commit message (part of the two phased commit of cluster state updates) from reaching any single node in the majority side *and* the partition does allow for the master to acknowledge the change. We are working on a more comprehensive fix but that requires considerate work and is targeted at 6.0.
The only repository we can be sure is safe to clean is `fs` so we clean
any snapshots in those repositories after each test. Other repositories
like url and azure tend to throw exceptions rather than let us fetch
their contents during the REST test. So we clean what we can....
Closes#18159
LongGCDisruption simulates a Long GC by suspending all threads belonging to a node. That's fine, unless those threads hold shared locks that can prevent other nodes from running. Concretely the logging infrastructure, which is shared between the nodes, can cause some deadlocks. LongGCDisruption has protection for this, but it needs to be updated to point at log4j2 classes, introduced in #20235
This commit also fixes improper handling of retry logic in LongGCDisruption and adds a protection against deadlocking the test code which activates the disruption (and uses logging too! :)).
On top of that we have some new, evil and nasty tests.
`TransportService#registerRequestHandler` allowed to register
handlers more than once and issues an annoying warn log message when
this happens. This change simple throws an exception to prevent regsitering
the same handler more than once. This commit also removes the ability
to remove request handlers.
Relates to #20468
After this change SearchModule doesn't subclass AbstractModule anymore and all wiring
happens in `Node.java`. As a side-effect several tests don't need a guice injector anymore.
This commit modifies the logger names within Elasticsearch to be the
fully-qualified class name as opposed removing the org.elasticsearch
prefix and dropping the class name. This change separates the root
logger from the Elasticsearch loggers (they were equated from the
removal of the org.elasticsearch prefix) and enables log levels to be
set at the class level (instead of the package level).
Relates #20457
Today we add a prefix when logging within Elasticsearch. This prefix
contains the node name, and index and shard-level components if
appropriate.
Due to some implementation details with Log4j 2 , this does not work for
integration tests; instead what we see is the node name for the last
node to startup. The implementation detail here is that Log4j 2 there is
only one logger for a name, message factory pair, and the key derived
from the message factory is the class name of the message factory. So,
when the last node starts up and starts setting prefixes on its message
factories, it will impact the loggers for the other nodes.
Additionally, the prefixes are lost when logging an exception. This is
due to another implementation detail in Log4j 2. Namely, since we log
exceptions using a parameterized message, Log4j 2 decides that that
means that we do not want to use the message factory that we have
provided (the prefix message factory) and so logs the exception without
the prefix.
This commit fixes both of these issues.
Relates #20429
This commit cuts over geo_point fields to use Lucene's new point-based LatLonPoint type for indexes created in 5.0. Indexes created prior to 5.0 continue to use their respective encoding type. Below is a description of the changes made to support the new encoding type:
* New indexes use a new LatLonPointFieldMapper which provides a parse method for the new type
* The new LatLonPoint parse method removes support for lat_lon and geohash parameters
* Backcompat testing for deprecated lat_lon and geohash parameters is added to all unit and integration tests
* LatLonPointFieldMapper provides DocValues support (enabled by default) which uses Lucene's new LatLonDocValuesField type
* New LatLonPoint field data classes are added for aggregation support (wraps LatLonPoint's Numeric Doc Values)
* MultiFields use the geohash as the string value instead of the lat,lon string making it easier to perform geo string queries on the geohash instead of a lat,lon comma delimited string.
Removed Features:
* With the removal of geohash indexing, GeoHashCellQuery support is removed for all new indexes (still supported on existing indexes)
* LatLonPoint does not support a Distance Range query because it is super inefficient. Instead, the geo_distance_range query should be accomplished using either the geo_distance aggregation, sorting by descending distance on a geo_distance query, or a boolean must not of the excluded distance (which is what the distance_range query did anyway).
TODO:
* fix/finish yaml changes for plugin and rest integration tests
* update documentation
This commit adds a -q/--quiet option to Elasticsearch so that it does not log anything in the console and closes stdout & stderr streams. This is useful for SystemD to avoid duplicate logs in both journalctl and /var/log/elasticsearch/elasticsearch.log while still allows the JVM to print error messages in stdout/stderr if needed.
closes#17220
In 5.x we allowed this with a deprecation warning. This removes the code
added for that deprecation, requiring the cluster name to not be in the
data path.
Resolves#20391
This change removes the guice dependency handling for SearchService and
several related classes like SearchTransportController and SearchPhaseController.
The latter two now have package private constructors and dependencies like FetchPhase
are now created by calling their constructors explicitly. This also cleans up several users
of the DefaultSearchContext and centralized it's creation inside SearchService.
Splits the PrimaryShardAllocator and ReplicaShardAllocator's decision
making for a shard from the implementation of that decision on the
routing table. This is a step toward making it easier to use the same
logic for the cluster allocation explain APIs.
Introduce a base class for unit tests that are based on real `IndexShard`s. The base class takes care of all the little details needed to create and recover shards.
This commit also moves `IndexShardTests` and `ESIndexLevelReplicationTestCase` to use the new base class. All tests in `IndexShardTests` that required a full node environment were moved to a new `IndexShardIT` suite.
Before, when there was a new cluster state to publish,
zen discovery would first update the set of nodes to
ping based on the new cluster state, then publish the new
cluster state. This is problematic because if the cluster
state failed to publish, then the set of nodes to ping
should not have been updated.
This commit fixes the issue by updating the set of
nodes to ping for fault detection only *after* the new
cluster state has been published.
Search section supports an ext section that is used to provide additional config needed from plugins. It is now tied to sub fetch phases because it is the only section that may need additional config, but there is no reason for the two to be tightly coupled.
It is now possible to register a searchExtParser independently from a sub fetch phase. All a search ext parser does is parsing some ext section of a search request, whose parsed resulting object is stored in the search context for later retrieval.
The context was an object where the parsed info are stored. That is more of what we call the builder since after the search refactoring. No need for generics in FetchSubPhaseParser then. Also the previous setHitsExecutionNeeded wasn't useful, it can be removed as well, given that once there is a parsed ext section, it will become a builder that can be retrieved by the sub fetch phase. The sub fetch phase is responsible for doing nothing in case the builder is not set, meaning that the fetch sub phase is plugged in but the request didn't have the corresponding section.
SearchParseElement is renamed to FetchSubPhaseParser and moved to the search.fetch package. Its parse method doesn't get the SearchContext as argument anymore, only the XContentParser, and the return type is what gets parsed (the fetch sub phase context which we may as well rename later).
It is the parser that initializes the FetchSubPhaseContext then. SearchService retrieves the parser by name, calls parse against it and stores the result of parsing by name. No need for FetchSubPhase.ContextFactory anymore, which can be removed.
Given that doc value fields is our own fetch sub phase, it doesn't need to be implemented like if it was plugged in from the outside. It doesn't need its own fetch sub phase context, but it can just be an instance member in SearchContext
Previously we would disable console logging in certain circumstances
(for example, if Elasticsearch is not in the foreground, or if
Elasticsearch is in the foreground but an exception was thrown during
bootstrap). This commit makes this handling work with Log4j 2. This will
prevent users from seeing double bootstrap check failure messages.
Relates #20387
By default, when an exception causes the JVM to terminate, the stack
trace is printed. In the case of failing bootstrap checks, this stack
trace is useless to the user, and might even distract them from seeing
that the bootstrap checks failed for reasons under their control. With
this commit, we cause the stack trace for a failing bootstrap check to
be truncated.
We also modify some methods to not declare that they throw the top level
checked exception type Exception, but instead explicitly declare the
exceptions that they throw. These exceptions are caught and wrapped in a
BootstrapException so that we can percolate only two exception types out
of Bootstrap#init as checked exception, BootstrapException and
NodeValidationException.
Relates #19989
This commit cleans most of the methods of XContentBuilder so that:
- Jackson's convenience methods are used instead of our custom ones (ie field(String,long) now uses Jackson's writeNumberField(String, long) instead of calling writeField(String) then writeNumber(long))
- null checks are added for all field names and values
- methods are grouped by type in the class source
- methods have the same parameters names
- duplicated methods like field(String, String...) and array(String, String...) are removed
- varargs methods now have the "array" name to reflect that it builds arrays
- unused methods like field(String,BigDecimal) are removed
- all methods now follow the execution path: field(String,?) -> field(String) then value(?), and value(?) -> writeSomething() method. Methods to build arrays also follow the same execution path.
Exposing lucene 6.x minhash tokenfilter
Generate min hash tokens from an incoming stream of tokens that can
be used to estimate document similarity.
Closes#20149
Jython shades `jansi` into it's classpath without changing it's package or
anything like that. This causes attempts to load native code on windows which
blows up tests. This change adds `log4j.skipJansi=true` system property to our
tests as well as to the JVM properties we set.
The BackgroundIndexer now uses auto-generated IDs randomly. This causes some problems
for tests that still rely on the fact that the IDs are increasing integers. This change
exposes all IDs via a Set<String> to iterate over for tests.
This commit configures test logging for Log4j 2. The default logger
configuration uses the console appender but at the error level, so most
tests are missing logging. Instead, this commit provides a configuration
for tests which is picked up from the classpath by Log4j 2 when it
initializes. However, this now means that we can no longer initialize
Log4j with a bare-bones configuration when tests run as doing so will
prevent Log4j 2 from attempting to configure logging via the
classpath. Consequently, we move this needed initialization (as
commented, to avoid a message about a status logger not being configured
when we are preparing to configure Log4j from properties files in the
config directory) to only run when we are explicitly configuring Log4j
from properties files.
Relates #20284
If elasticsearch controls the ID values as well as the documents
version we can optimize the code that adds / appends the documents
to the index. Essentially we an skip the version lookup for all
documents unless the same document is delivered more than once.
On the lucene level we can simply call IndexWriter#addDocument instead
of #updateDocument but on the Engine level we need to ensure that we deoptimize
the case once we see the same document more than once.
This is done as follows:
1. Mark every request with a timestamp. This is done once on the first node that
receives a request and is fixed for this request. This can be even the
machine local time (see why later). The important part is that retry
requests will have the same value as the original one.
2. In the engine we make sure we keep the highest seen time stamp of "retry" requests.
This is updated while the retry request has its doc id lock. Call this `maxUnsafeAutoIdTimestamp`
3. When the engine runs an "optimized" request comes, it compares it's timestamp with the
current `maxUnsafeAutoIdTimestamp` (but doesn't update it). If the the request
timestamp is higher it is safe to execute it as optimized (no retry request with the same
timestamp has been run before). If not we fall back to "non-optimzed" mode and run the request as a retry one
and update the `maxUnsafeAutoIdTimestamp` unless it's been updated already to a higher value
Relates to #19813
* master:
Avoid NPE in LoggingListener
Randomly use Netty 3 plugin in some tests
Skip smoke test client on JDK 9
Revert "Don't allow XContentBuilder#writeValue(TimeValue)"
[docs] Remove coming in 2.0.0
Don't allow XContentBuilder#writeValue(TimeValue)
[doc] Remove leftover from CONSOLE conversion
Parameter improvements to Cluster Health API wait for shards (#20223)
Add 2.4.0 to packaging tests list
Docs: clarify scale is applied at origin+offest (#20242)
* Params improvements to Cluster Health API wait for shards
Previously, the cluster health API used a strictly numeric value
for `wait_for_active_shards`. However, with the introduction of
ActiveShardCount and the removal of write consistency level for
replication operations, `wait_for_active_shards` is used for
write operations to represent values for ActiveShardCount. This
commit moves the cluster health API's usage of `wait_for_active_shards`
to be consistent with its usage in the write operation APIs.
This commit also changes `wait_for_relocating_shards` from a
numeric value to a simple boolean value `wait_for_no_relocating_shards`
to set whether the cluster health operation should wait for
all relocating shards to complete relocation.
* Addresses code review comments
* Don't be lenient if `wait_for_relocating_shards` is set
* master:
Increase visibility of deprecation logger
Skip transport client plugin installed on JDK 9
Explicitly disable Netty key set replacement
percolator: Fail indexing percolator queries containing either a has_child or has_parent query.
Make it possible for Ingest Processors to access AnalysisRegistry
Allow RestClient to send array-based headers
Silence rest util tests until the bogusness can be simplified
Remove unknown HttpContext-based test as it fails unpredictably on different JVMs
Tests: Improve rest suite names and generated test names for docs tests
Add support for a RestClient base path
This commit adds an empty test to ESLoggerUsageTests to avoid the test
suite from failing for having no tests after the existing tests were
marked as awaits fix in 1d197eddcc.
This commit modifies the call sites that allocate a parameterized
message to use a supplier so that allocations are avoided unless the log
level is fine enough to emit the corresponding log message.
Rest test suites are currently only the directory above the yaml test
file. That is confusing when there are more than one directory level
which contain yaml tests, as there are in generated docs tests. This
change makes rest tests use the full relative path to the rest test root
as the suite name, and also makes the test names for docs tests a little
clearer (that they are testing an example from a specific line number,
instead of just the line number as an opaque test name).
Removed null check for token, if we are outside the null it already means it is null.
Fixed typo in comment and remove leftover assignment to unused local variable.
This test is periodically failing. As I suspect that the GCDisruption scheme is somehow making the wrong node block on
its cluster state update thread, I've added some more logging and a thread dump once the given assertion triggers
again.
Adds an explicit recoverySource field to ShardRouting that characterizes the type of recovery to perform:
- fresh empty shard copy
- existing local shard copy
- recover from peer (primary)
- recover from snapshot
- recover from other local shards on same node (shrink index action)
Objects hierarchy must be tracked when entering/leaving an object so that it better knows if the "newField" has been inserted into an arbitrary holding object.
Can be reproduced with gradle :core:test -Dtests.seed=760F8BD0F7E46D45 -Dtests.class=org.elasticsearch.index.query.MoreLikeThisQueryBuilderTests -Dtests.method="testUnknownObjectException" -Dtests.security.manager=true -Dtests.locale=ko -Dtests.timezone=Etc/Zulu
When need to check the whole hierarchy of objects to know if the newly inserted "newField" object is part of an arbitrary holding object or not.
Reproduced with `gradle :modules:percolator:test -Dtests.seed=736B0B67DA7A3632 -Dtests.class=org.elasticsearch.percolator.PercolateQueryBuilderTests -Dtests.method="testUnknownObjectException" -Dtests.security.manager=true -Dtests.locale=es-ES -Dtests.timezone=ART`
This method fails when a randomized string value contains a double-quote. This commit changes the method so that it is not based on string concatenation anymore. It now use XContentGenerator & XContentParser to mutate the valid queries.
Related #19864
This change adds a special field named _none_ that allows to disable the retrieval of the stored fields in a search request or in a TopHitsAggregation.
To completely disable stored fields retrieval (including disabling metadata fields retrieval such as _id or _type) use _none_ like this:
````
POST _search
{
"stored_fields": "_none_"
}
````
Deprecates the optimize_bbox parameter on geodistance queries. This has no longer been needed since version 2.2 because lucene geo distance queries (postings and LatLonPoint) already optimize by bounding box.
This change converts AllocationDecider registration from push based on
ClusterModule to implementing with a new ClusterPlugin interface.
AllocationDecider instances are allowed to use only Settings and
ClusterSettings.
Adds a class that records changes made to RoutingAllocation, so that at the end of the allocation round other values can be more easily derived based on these changes. Most notably, it:
- replaces the explicit boolean flag that is passed around everywhere to denote changes to the routing table. The boolean flag is automatically updated now when changes actually occur, preventing issues where it got out of sync with actual changes to the routing table.
- records actual changes made to RoutingNodes so that primary term and in-sync allocation ids, which are part of index metadata, can be efficiently updated just by looking at the shards that were actually changed.
In addition to be an allocation decider, DiskThresholdDecider also
monitors the used disk in order to trigger a reroute when the thresholds
are crossed. This change splits out the settings for disk thresholds
into DiskThresholdSettings, and moves the monitoring to a new
DiskThresholdMonitor. DiskThresholdDecider is then in line with other
allocation deciders, needing only Settings and ClusterSettings for
construction, which will allow deguicing allocation deciders.
`LobObtainFailedException` should be reserved for on-disk locks that
Lucene attempts (like `write.lock`). This switches our in-memory
semaphore locks for shards to use a different exception. Additionally,
ShardLockObtainFailedException no longer subclasses IOException, since
no IO is being done is this case.
Resolves#19978
As the most complicated `FetchSubPhase` highlighting gets its own package
(`o.e.seach.fetch.subphase.highlight`. No other `FetchSubPhase`s get their
own package. Instead they all reside together in `o.e.search.fetch.subphase`.
Add package descriptions to `o.e.search.fetch` and subpackages.
This commit defaults the max local storage nodes to one. The motivation
for this change is that a default value greather than one is dangerous
as users sometimes end up unknowingly starting a second node and start
thinking that they have encountered data loss.
Relates #19964
This commit separates the description of the links in the network that are to be disrupted from the failure that is to be applied to the links (disconnect/unresponsive/delay). Previously we had subclasses for the various kind of network disruption schemes combining on one hand failure mode (disconnect/unresponsive/delay) as well as the network links to cut (two partitions / bridge partitioning) into a single class.
I also reduced the visibility of a couple classes and renamed/consolidated some
test classes for consistency, eg. removing the `Simple` prefix or using the
`<Type>FieldMapperTests` convention for testing field mappers.
testUnknownObjectException used to generate malformed json objects in some cases, due to the existence of arrays as it was not closing the injected object correctly. That is why the test was catching JsonParseException among the exception that are expected to be thrown. That is fixed by tracking where the new object is placed and placing its end object marker to the right level rather than always at the end.
Also introduced a mechanism to explicitly declare objects that won't cause any exception when they get additional objects injected, so that there is no need to override the method anymore as that caused copy pasting of the whole test method. This also makes sure that changes are reflected in tests, as those inner objects are not skipped but we actually check that what is declared is true (no exceptions get thrown when an additional object is added within them.
When compiling many dynamically changing scripts, parameterized
scripts (<https://www.elastic.co/guide/en/elasticsearch/reference/master/modules-scripting-using.html#prefer-params>)
should be preferred. This enforces a limit to the number of scripts that
can be compiled within a minute. A new dynamic setting is added -
`script.max_compilations_per_minute`, which defaults to 15.
If more dynamic scripts are sent, a user will get the following
exception:
```json
{
"error" : {
"root_cause" : [
{
"type" : "circuit_breaking_exception",
"reason" : "[script] Too many dynamic script compilations within one minute, max: [15/min]; please use on-disk, indexed, or scripts with parameters instead",
"bytes_wanted" : 0,
"bytes_limit" : 0
}
],
"type" : "search_phase_execution_exception",
"reason" : "all shards failed",
"phase" : "query",
"grouped" : true,
"failed_shards" : [
{
"shard" : 0,
"index" : "i",
"node" : "a5V1eXcZRYiIk8lecjZ4Jw",
"reason" : {
"type" : "general_script_exception",
"reason" : "Failed to compile inline script [\"aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa\"] using lang [painless]",
"caused_by" : {
"type" : "circuit_breaking_exception",
"reason" : "[script] Too many dynamic script compilations within one minute, max: [15/min]; please use on-disk, indexed, or scripts with parameters instead",
"bytes_wanted" : 0,
"bytes_limit" : 0
}
}
}
],
"caused_by" : {
"type" : "general_script_exception",
"reason" : "Failed to compile inline script [\"aaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa\"] using lang [painless]",
"caused_by" : {
"type" : "circuit_breaking_exception",
"reason" : "[script] Too many dynamic script compilations within one minute, max: [15/min]; please use on-disk, indexed, or scripts with parameters instead",
"bytes_wanted" : 0,
"bytes_limit" : 0
}
}
},
"status" : 500
}
```
This also fixes a bug in `ScriptService` where requests being executed
concurrently on a single node could cause a script to be compiled
multiple times (many in the case of a powerful node with many shards)
due to no synchronization between checking the cache and compiling the
script. There is now synchronization so that a script being compiled
will only be compiled once regardless of the number of concurrent
searches on a node.
Relates to #19396
Some random operations were conditionally performed in the before test, which made tests not repeatable. For instance take the seed chain to repeat a specific iteration and try to reproduce it, this conditional code would get executed in both cases when trying to isolate the failure, but not among the different iterations (as only the first method/iteration executes it), hence the failure will not reproduce.
Moved the random operations to beforeClass and left the non random part in the before method, which is needed as it depends on some method that can be overridden by subclasses.
This commit cleans up indices in a snapshot repository when all
snapshots containing the index are all deleted. Previously, empty
indices folders would lay around after all snapshots containing
them were deleted.
Adds `warnings` syntax to the yaml test that allows you to expect
a `Warning` header that looks like:
```
- do:
warnings:
- '[index] is deprecated'
- quotes are not required because yaml
- but this argument is always a list, never a single string
- no matter how many warnings you expect
get:
index: test
type: test
id: 1
```
These are accessible from the docs with:
```
// TEST[warning:some warning]
```
This should help to force you to update the docs if you deprecate
something. You *must* add the warnings marker to the docs or the build
will fail. While you are there you *should* update the docs to add
deprecation warnings visible in the rendered results.
AbstractQueryTestCase parses the main version of the query in strict mode, meaning that it will fail if any deprecated syntax is used. It should do the same for alternate versions (e.g. short versions). This is the way it is because the two alternate versions for ids query are both deprecated. Moved testing for those to a specific test method that isolates the deprecations and actually tests that the two are deprecated.
Our parsing code accepted up until now queries in the following form (note that the query starts with `[`:
```
{
"bool" : [
{
"must" : []
}
]
}
```
This would lead to a null pointer exception as most parsers assume that the field name ("must" in this example) is the first thing that can be found in a query if its json is valid, hence always non null while parsing. Truth is that the additional array layer doesn't make the json invalid, hence the following code fragment would cause NPE within ParseField, because null gets passed to `parseContext.isDeprecatedSetting`:
```
if (token == XContentParser.Token.FIELD_NAME) {
currentFieldName = parser.currentName();
} else if (parseContext.isDeprecatedSetting(currentFieldName)) {
// skip
} else if (token == XContentParser.Token.START_OBJECT) {
```
We could add null checks in each of our parsers in lots of places, but we rely on `currentFieldName` being non null in all of our parsers, and we should consider it a bug when these unexpected situations are not caught explicitly. It would be best to find a way to prevent such queries altogether without changing all of our parsers.
The reason why such a query goes through is that we've been allowing a query to start with either `[` or `{`. The only reason I found is that we accept `match_all : []`. This seems like an undocumented corner case that we could drop support for. Then we can be stricter and accept only `{` as start token of a query. That way the only next token that the parser can encounter if the json is valid (otherwise the json parser would barf earlier) is actually a field_name, hence the assumption that all our parser makes hold.
The downside of this is simply dropping support for `match_all : []`
Relates to #12887
Old:
```
> Throwable #1: java.lang.AssertionError: expected [2xx] status code but api [reindex] returned [400 Bad Request] [{"error":{"root_cause":[{"type":"parsing_exception","reason":"[reindex] failed to parse field [dest]","line":1,"col":25}],"type":"parsing_exception","reason":"[reindex] failed to parse field [dest]","line":1,"col":25,"caused_by":{"type":"illegal_argument_exception","reason":"[dest] unknown field [asdfadf], parser not found"}},"status":400}]
> at __randomizedtesting.SeedInfo.seed([9325F8C5C6F227DD:1B71C71F680E4A25]:0)
> at org.elasticsearch.test.rest.yaml.section.DoSection.execute(DoSection.java:119)
> at org.elasticsearch.test.rest.yaml.ESClientYamlSuiteTestCase.test(ESClientYamlSuiteTestCase.java:309)
> at java.lang.Thread.run(Thread.java:745)
```
New:
```
> Throwable #1: java.lang.AssertionError: Failure at [reindex/10_basic:12]: expected [2xx] status code but api [reindex] returned [400 Bad Request] [{"error":{"root_cause":[{"type":"parsing_exception","reason":"[reindex] failed to parse field [dest]","line":1,"col":25}],"type":"parsing_exception","reason":"[reindex] failed to parse field [dest]","line":1,"col":25,"caused_by":{"type":"illegal_argument_exception","reason":"[dest] unknown field [asdfadf], parser not found"}},"status":400}]
> at __randomizedtesting.SeedInfo.seed([444DEEAF47322306:CC19D175E9CE4EFE]:0)
> at org.elasticsearch.test.rest.yaml.ESClientYamlSuiteTestCase.executeSection(ESClientYamlSuiteTestCase.java:329)
> at org.elasticsearch.test.rest.yaml.ESClientYamlSuiteTestCase.test(ESClientYamlSuiteTestCase.java:309)
> at java.lang.Thread.run(Thread.java:745)
> Caused by: java.lang.AssertionError: expected [2xx] status code but api [reindex] returned [400 Bad Request] [{"error":{"root_cause":[{"type":"parsing_exception","reason":"[reindex] failed to parse field [dest]","line":1,"col":25}],"type":"parsing_exception","reason":"[reindex] failed to parse field [dest]","line":1,"col":25,"caused_by":{"type":"illegal_argument_exception","reason":"[dest] unknown field [asdfadf], parser not found"}},"status":400}]
> at org.elasticsearch.test.rest.yaml.section.DoSection.execute(DoSection.java:119)
> at org.elasticsearch.test.rest.yaml.ESClientYamlSuiteTestCase.executeSection(ESClientYamlSuiteTestCase.java:325)
> ... 37 more
```
Sorry for the longer stack trace, but I wanted to be sure I didn't throw
anything away by accident.
Currently any code that wants to added NamedWriteables to the
NamedWriteableRegistry can do so via guice injection of the registry,
and registering at construction time. However, this makes the registry
complex: it has both get and register methods synchronized, and there is
likely contention on the read side from multiple threads. The
registration has mostly already been contained to guice modules at node
construction time.
This change makes the registry immutable, taking all of the
NamedWriteable readers at construction time. It also allows plugins to
added arbitrary named writables that it may use in its own transport
actions.
conform with the requirements of the writeBlob method by
throwing a FileAlreadyExistsException if attempting to write
to a blob that already exists. This change means implementations
of BlobContainer should never overwrite blobs - to overwrite a
blob, it must first be deleted and then can be written again.
Closes#15579