This commit mutes a ton of Painless lambda tests on JDK 9. This commit
did not attempt to discover exactly which tests are failing, but instead
just blanket muted all tests in LambdaTests, FunctionRefTests, and
AugmentationTests.
Relates #23473
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
Fixes Painless to properly implement scripts that return primitives
and void. Adds some simple tests that we emit sane opcodes and some
other tests that we implement primitives as expected.
Mostly this is just a fix following up from #22983 but there is one
thing I did really worth talking about, I think. So, before this script
Painless scripts could only ever return Object and they did would always
return null for paths that didn't return any values. Now that they
can return primitives the question is "what should Painless return
from paths that don't return any values?" And I answered that with
"whatever the JLS default value is". So 0/0L/0f/0d/false.
Generalizes three previously hard coded things in painless into
generic concepts:
1. The "main method" is no longer hardcoded to:
```
public abstract Object execute(Map<String, Object> params,
Scorer scorer, LeafDocLookup doc, Object value);
```
Instead Painless's compiler takes an interface and implements it. It looks like:
```
public interface SomeScript {
// Argument names we expose to Painless scripts
String[] ARGUMENTS = new String[] {"a", "b"};
// Method implemented by Painless script. Must be named execute but can have any parameters or return any value.
Object execute(String a, int b);
// Is the "a" argument used by the script?
boolean uses$a();
}
SomeScript script = scriptEngine.compile(SomeScript.class, null, "the_script_here", emptyMap());
Object result = script.execute("a", 1);
```
`PainlessScriptEngine` now compiles all scripts to the new
`GenericElasticsearchScript` interface by default for compatibility
with the rest of Elasticsearch until it is able to use this new
ability.
2. `_score` and `ctx` are no longer hardcoded to be extracted from
`#score` and `params` respectively. Instead Painless's default
implementation of Elasticsearch scripts uses the `uses$_score` and
`uses$ctx` methods to determine if it is used and gives them
dummy values if they are not used.
3. Throwing the `ScriptException` is now handled by the Painless
script itself. That way Painless doesn't have to leak the metadata
that is required to build the fancy stack trace. And all painless scripts
get the fancy stack trace.
Today all search phases are inner classes of AbstractSearchAsyncAction or one of it's
subclasses. This makes unit testing of these classes practically impossible. This commit
Extracts `DfsQueryPhase` and `FetchSearchPhase` or of the code that composes the actual
query execution types and moves most of the fan-out and collect code into an `InitialSearchPhase`
class that can be used to build initial search phases (phases that retry on shards). This will
make modification to these classes simpler and allows to easily compose or add new search phases
down the road if additional roundtrips are required.
Painless can cast anything into the magic type `def` but it
really shouldn't try to cast **nothing** into `def`. That causes
the byte code generation library to freak out a little.
Closes#22908
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
We were incorrectly resolving qualified method references at run
time when invoked on `def`. This lead to errors like
`The struct with name [org] has not been defined.` when attempting
```
doc.date.dates.stream().map(
org.joda.time.ReadableDateTime::centuryOfEra
).collect(Collectors.toList())
```
Implemented by wrapping an array of reused `ModuleDateTime`s that
we grow when needed. The `ModuleDateTime`s are reused when we
move to the next document.
Also improves the error message returned when attempting to modify
the `ScriptdocValues`, removes a couple of allocations, and documents
that the date functions are available in Painless.
Relates to #22162
Currently, stored scripts use a namespace of (lang, id) to be put, get, deleted, and executed. This is not necessary since the lang is stored with the stored script. A user should only have to specify an id to use a stored script. This change makes that possible while keeping backwards compatibility with the previous namespace of (lang, id). Anywhere the previous namespace is used will log deprecation warnings.
The new behavior is the following:
When a user specifies a stored script, that script will be stored under both the new namespace and old namespace.
Take for example script 'A' with lang 'L0' and data 'D0'. If we add script 'A' to the empty set, the scripts map will be ["A" -- D0, "A#L0" -- D0]. If a script 'A' with lang 'L1' and data 'D1' is then added, the scripts map will be ["A" -- D1, "A#L1" -- D1, "A#L0" -- D0].
When a user deletes a stored script, that script will be deleted from both the new namespace (if it exists) and the old namespace.
Take for example a scripts map with {"A" -- D1, "A#L1" -- D1, "A#L0" -- D0}. If a script is removed specified by an id 'A' and lang null then the scripts map will be {"A#L0" -- D0}. To remove the final script, the deprecated namespace must be used, so an id 'A' and lang 'L0' would need to be specified.
When a user gets/executes a stored script, if the new namespace is used then the script will be retrieved/executed using only 'id', and if the old namespace is used then the script will be retrieved/executed using 'id' and 'lang'
Adds "Appending B. Painless API Reference", a reference of all classes
and methods available from Painless. Removes links to java packages
because they contain methods that we don't expose and don't contain
methods that we do expose (the ones in Augmentation). Instead this
generates a list of every class and every exposed method using the same
type information available to the
interpreter/compiler/whatever-we-call-it. From there you can jump to
the relevant docs.
Right now you build all the asciidoc files by running
```
gradle generatePainlessApi
```
These files are expected to be committed because we build the docs
without running `gradle`.
Also changes the output of `Debug.explain` so that it is easy to
search for the class in the generated reference documentation.
You can also run it in an IDE safely if you pass the path to the
directory in which to generate the docs as the first parameter. It'll
blow away the entire directory an recreate it from scratch so be careful.
And then you can build the docs by running something like:
```
../docs/build_docs.pl --out ../built_docs/ --doc docs/reference/index.asciidoc --open
```
That is, if you have checked out https://github.com/elastic/docs in
`../docs`. Wait a minute or two and your browser will pop open in with
all of Elasticsearch's reference documentation. If you go to
`http://localhost:8000/painless-api-reference.html` you can see this
list. Or you can get there by following the links to `Modules` and
`Scripting` and `Painless` and then clicking the link in the paragraphs
below titled `Appendix B. Painless API Reference`.
I like having these in asciidoc because we can deep link to them from the
rest of the guide with constructs like
`<<painless-api-reference-Object-hashCode-0>>` and
`<<painless-api-reference->>` and we get link checking. Then the only
brittle link maintenance bit is the link generation for javadoc. Which
sucks. But I think it is important that we link to the methods directly
so they are easy to find.
Relates to #22720
move "es." internal headers to separate metadata set in ElasticsearchException and stop returning them as response headers
Closes#17593
* [TEST] remove ESExceptionTests, move its methods to ElasticsearchExceptionTests or ExceptionSerializationTests
This commit adds a SpecialPermission constant and uses that constant
opposed to introducing new instances everywhere.
Additionally, this commit introduces a single static method to check that
the current code has permission. This avoids all the duplicated access
blocks that exist currently.
We don't want to expose `String#getBytes` which is required for
`Base64.getEncoder.encode` to work because we're worried about
character sets. This adds `encodeBase64` and `decodeBase64`
methods to `String` in Painless that are duals of one another
such that:
`someString == someString.encodeBase64().decodeBase64()`.
Both methods work with the UTF-8 encoding of the string.
Closes#22648
1. Escape sequences we're working. For example `\\` is now correctly
interpreted as `\` instead of `\\`. Same with `\'` being `'` and
`\"` being `"`.
2. `'` delimited strings weren't allowed to contain `"`s but it looked
like they were intended to support it. Now they do.
3. Improves the error message when the script contains an invalid
escape sequence inside a string to include a list of the valid
escape sequences.
Closes#22372
* 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.
If a bug occurs in painless compilation (not from a user, but from the
painless infrastructure), a VerifyError may be thrown when compiling the
broken generated class. This commit wraps VerifyErrors in
ScriptException so that useful information is returned to the user,
which can be passed on to the ES team for analysis.
This bug would cause a VerifyError when scripts using the === operator
were comparing a def type against a primitive type since the primitive
type wasn't being appropriately boxed.
NOTE: The result of `?.` and `?:` can't be assigned to primitives. So
`int[] someArray = null; int l = someArray?.length` and
`int s = params.size ?: 100` don't work. Do
`def someArray = null; def l = someArray?.length` and
`def s = params.size ?: 100` instead.
Relates to #21748
You can use `Debug.explain(someObject)` in painless to throw an
`Error` that can't be caught by painless code and contains an
object's class. This is useful because painless's sandbox doesn't
allow you to call `someObject.getClass()`.
Closes#20263
This should make debugging painless' analysis and code generation a
little easier.
The `toString` implementations mirror the AST somewhat, and look like
`(SSource (SReturn (ENumeric 1)))`.
Implements a null coalescing operator in painless that looks like `?:`. This form was chosen to emulate Groovy's `?:` operator. It is different in that it only coalesces null values, instead of Groovy's `?:` operator which coalesces all falsy values. I believe that makes it the same as Kotlin's `?:` operator. In other languages this operator looks like `??` (C#) and `COALESCE` (SQL) and `:-` (bash).
This operator is lazy, meaning the right hand side is only evaluated at all if the left hand side is null.
This adds support to painless for decimal constants with trailing `d` or
`D` to make it compatible with Java. It already supported integer
constants with a trailing `d` or `D` but this adds tests for it.
Closes#21116
In painless we prefer explicit types over implicit ones whereas
groovy is the other way around. Take this groovy code:
```
> 86400000.class
java.lang.Integer
> 864000000000.class
java.lang.Long
```
Painless accepts `86400000` just fine because that is a valid `int`
in the jvm. It rejects `864000000000` as an invlid `int` constant
because, in painless as in java, `long` constants always end in `L`
or `l`.
To ease the transition from groovy to painless, this changes the
compilation error returned from these invalid constants from:
```
Invalid int constant [864000000000].
```
to
```
Invalid int constant [864000000000]. If you want a long constant then change it to [864000000000L].
```
Inspired by #21313
Null safe dereferences make handling null or missing values shorter.
Compare without:
```
if (ctx._source.missing != null && ctx._source.missing.foo != null) {
ctx._source.foo_length = ctx.source.missing.foo.length()
}
```
To with:
```
Integer length = ctx._source.missing?.foo?.length();
if (length != null) {
ctx._source.foo_length = length
}
```
Combining this with the as of yet unimplemented elvis operator allows
for very concise defaults for nulls:
```
ctx._source.foo_length = ctx._source.missing?.foo?.length() ?: 0;
```
Since you have to start somewhere, we started with null safe dereferenes.
Anyway, this is a feature borrowed from groovy. Groovy allows writing to
null values like:
```
def v = null
v?.field = 'cat'
```
And the writes are simply ignored. Painless doesn't support this at this
point because it'd be complex to implement and maybe not all that useful.
There is no runtime cost for this feature if it is not used. When it is
used we implement it fairly efficiently, adding a jump rather than a
temporary variable.
This should also work fairly well with doc values.
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.
Java 9's exception message when lists have an out of bounds index
is much better than java 8 but the painless code asserted on the
java 8 message. Now it'll accept either.
I'm tempted to weaken the assertion but I like asserting that the
message is readable.
Adds support for indexing into lists and arrays with negative
indexes meaning "counting from the back". So for if
`x = ["cat", "dog", "chicken"]` then `x[-1] == "chicken"`.
This adds an extra branch to every array and list access but
some performance testing makes it look like the branch predictor
successfully predicts the branch every time so there isn't a
in execution time for this feature when the index is positive.
When the index is negative performance testing showed the runtime
is the same as writing `x[x.length - 1]`, again, presumably thanks
to the branch predictor.
Those performance metrics were calculated for lists and arrays but
`def`s get roughly the same treatment though instead of inlining
the test they need to make a invoke dynamic so we don't screw up
maps.
Closes#20870
* Scripting: Add support for booleans in scripts
Since 2.0, booleans have been represented as numeric fields (longs).
However, in scripts, this is odd, since you expect doing a comparison
against a boolean to work. While languages like groovy will auto convert
between booleans and longs, painless does not.
This changes the doc values accessor for boolean fields in scripts to
return Boolean objects instead of Long objects.
closes#20949
* Make Booleans final and remove wrapping of `this` for getValues()
Some objects like maps, iterables or arrays of objects can self-reference themselves. This is mostly due to a bug in code but the XContentBuilder should be able to detect such situations and throws an IllegalArgumentException instead of building objects over and over until a stackoverflow occurs.
closes#20540closes#19475
Update scripts might want to update the documents `_timestamp` but need a notion of `now()`.
Painless doesn't support any notion of now() since it would make scripts non-pure functions. Yet,
in the update case this is a valid value and we can pass it with the context together to allow the
script to record the timestamp the document was updated.
Relates to #17895
GeoDistance is implemented using a crazy enum that causes issues with the scripting modules. This commit moves all distance calculations to arcDistance and planeDistance static methods in GeoUtils. It also removes unnecessary distance helper methods from ScriptDocValues.GeoPoints.
This makes it obvious that these tests are for running the client yaml
suites. Now that there are other ways of running tests using the REST
client against a running cluster we can't go on calling the shared
client yaml tests "REST tests". They are rest tests, but they aren't
**the** rest tests.
This adds a header that looks like `Location: /test/test/1` to the
response for the index/create/update API. The requirement for the header
comes from https://www.w3.org/Protocols/rfc2616/rfc2616-sec10.htmlhttps://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7231#section-7.1.2 claims that relative
URIs are OK. So we use an absolute path which should resolve to the
appropriate location.
Closes#19079
This makes large changes to our rest test infrastructure, allowing us
to write junit tests that test a running cluster via the rest client.
It does this by splitting ESRestTestCase into two classes:
* ESRestTestCase is the superclass of all tests that use the rest client
to interact with a running cluster.
* ESClientYamlSuiteTestCase is the superclass of all tests that use the
rest client to run the yaml tests. These tests are shared across all
official clients, thus the `ClientYamlSuite` part of the name.
These are useful methods in groovy that give you control over
the replacements used:
```
'the quick brown fox'.replaceAll(/[aeiou]/,
m -> m.group().toUpperCase(Locale.ROOT))
```
Perviously we used token level lookbehind in the parser. That worked,
but only if the parser didn't have any ambiguity *at all*. Since the
parser has ambiguity it didn't work everywhere. In particular it failed
when parsing blocks in lambdas like `a -> {int b = a + 2; b * b}`.
This moves the hack from the parser into the lexer. There we can use
token lookbehind (same trick) to *insert* semicolons into the token
stream. This works much better for antlr because antlr's prediction
code can work with real tokens.
Also, the lexer is simpler than the parser, so if there is a place
to introduce a hack, that is a better place.
Painless: Add support for //m
Painless: Add support for //s
Painless: Add support for //i
Painless: Add support for //u
Painless: Add support for //U
Painless: Add support for //l
This means "literal" and is exposed for completeness sake with
the java api.
Painless: Add support for //c
c enables Java's CANON_EQ (canonical equivalence) flag which makes
unicode characters that are canonically equal match. Java's javadoc
gives "a\u030A" being equal to "\u00E5". That is that the "a" code
point followed by the "combining ring above" code point is equal to
the "a with combining ring above" code point.
Update docs and add multi-flag test
Whitelist most of the Pattern class.
Adds support for the find operator (=~) and the match operator (==~)
to painless's regexes. Also whitelists most of the Matcher class and
documents regex support in painless.
The find operator (=~) returns a boolean that is the result of building
a matcher on the lhs with the Pattern on the RHS and calling `find` on
it. Use it like this:
```
if (ctx._source.last =~ /b/)
```
The match operator (==~) returns boolean like find but instead of calling
`find` on the Matcher it calls `matches`.
```
if (ctx._source.last ==~ /[^aeiou].*[aeiou]/)
```
Finally, if you want the actual matcher you do:
```
Matcher m = /[aeiou]/.matcher(ctx._source.last)
```
Registering a script engine or native scripts still uses Guice today
and is much more complicated than needed. This change moves to a pull
based model where script plugins have to implement a dedicated interface
`ScriptPlugin` and defines simple getter returning instances rather than
classes.
In 2.0 we added plugin descriptors which require defining a name and
description for the plugin. However, we still have name() and
description() which must be overriden from the Plugin class. This still
exists for classpath plugins. But classpath plugins are mainly for
tests, and even then, referring to classpath plugins with their class is
a better idea. This change removes name() and description(), replacing
the name for classpath plugins with the full class name.
Adds `/regex/` as a regex constructor. A couple of fun points:
1. This makes generic the idea of arbitrary stuff adding a constant.
Both SFunction and LRegex create a statically initialized constant.
Both go through Locals to do this because they LRegex isn't directly
iterable from SScript.
2. Differentiating `/` as-in-division from `/` as-in-start-of-regex
is hard. See:
http://www-archive.mozilla.org/js/language/js20-2002-04/rationale/syntax.html#regular-expressions
The javascript folks have a way, way tougher time of it then we do
because they have semicolon insertion. We have the much simpler
delimiter rules. Even with our simpler life we still have to add
a hack to get lexing `/regex/` to work properly. I chose to add
token-level lookbehind because it seems to be a pretty contained hack.
I considered and rejected lexer modes, a lexer member variable,
having the parser set variables on the lexer (this is a fairly common
solution for js, I believe), and moving regex parsing to the parser
level.
3. I've only added a very small subset of java.util.regex to the
whitelist because it is the subset I needed to test LRegex sanely.
More deserves to be added, and maybe more regex syntax like `=~` and
`==~`. Those can probably be added without too much pain.
Add `}` is statement delimiter but only in places where it is
otherwise a valid part of the syntax, specificall the end of a block.
We do this by matching but not consuming it. Antlr 4 doesn't have
syntax for this so we have to kind of hack it together by actually
matching the `}` and then seeking backwards in the token stream to
"unmatch" it. This looks reasonably efficient. Not perfect, but way
better than the alternatives.
I tried and rejected a few options:
1. Actually consuming the `}` and piping a boolean all through the
grammar from the last statement in a block to the delimiter. This
ended up being a rather large change and made the grammar way more
complicated.
2. Adding a semantic predicate to delimiter that just does the
lookahead. This doesn't work out well because it doesn't work (I
never figured out why) and because it generates an *amazing*
`adaptivePredict` which makes a super huge DFA. It looks super
inefficient.
Closes#18821
The painless whitelist has a lot of self-checking, in this case, it checks
for missing covariant overrides. It fails on java 9, because LocalDate.getEra()
now returns IsoEra instead of Era: https://bugs.openjdk.java.net/browse/JDK-8072746
To our checker, it thinks we were lazy with whitelisting :)
This means painless works on java 9 again
This removes the ScriptMode class entirely, which was an enum with two
options (ON and OFF) which essentially boiled down to true and false.
Now the boolean values are used instead.
Please note: The maps inside the pirvate singleton instance of Defininition are no longer unmodifiable, but nothing from the outside can modify it! All private :-)
Closes#18385
Squashed commit of the following:
commit b2819df4d392d69b86e5c96d358eb03424e67e02
Author: Robert Muir <rmuir@apache.org>
Date: Tue May 17 09:15:47 2016 -0400
add note about tuple
commit 85fcac6a0d0674da24535121eab23e2c407d683f
Author: Robert Muir <rmuir@apache.org>
Date: Mon May 16 23:39:25 2016 -0400
painless: add method overloading based on arity