The `cluster.unsafe_initial_master_node_count` setting was introduced as a
temporary measure while the design of `cluster.initial_master_nodes` was being
finalised. This commit removes this temporary setting, replacing it with usages
of `cluster.initial_master_nodes` where appropriate.
This commit adds a unique id to cluster blocks, so that they can be uniquely
identified if needed. This is important for the Close Index API where multiple
concurrent closing requests can be executed at the same time. By adding a
UUID to the cluster block, we can generate unique "closing block" that can
later be verified on shards and then checked again from the cluster state
before closing the index. When the verification on shard is done, the closing
block is replaced by the regular INDEX_CLOSED_BLOCK instance.
If something goes wrong, calling the Open Index API will remove the block.
Related to #33888
This commit is the first in a series which will culminate with
fully-functional shard history retention leases.
Shard history retention leases are aimed at preventing shard history
consumers from having to fallback to expensive file copy operations if
shard history is not available from a certain point. These consumers
include following indices in cross-cluster replication, and local shard
recoveries. A future consumer will be the changes API.
Further, index lifecycle management requires coordinating with some of
these consumers otherwise it could remove the source before all
consumers have finished reading all operations. The notion of shard
history retention leases that we are introducing here will also be used
to address this problem.
Shard history retention leases are a property of the replication group
managed under the authority of the primary. A shard history retention
lease is a combination of an identifier, a retaining sequence number, a
timestamp indicating when the lease was acquired or renewed, and a
string indicating the source of the lease. Being leases they have a
limited lifespan that will expire if not renewed. The idea of these
leases is that all operations above the minimum of all retaining
sequence numbers will be retained during merges (which would otherwise
clear away operations that are soft deleted). These leases will be
periodically persisted to Lucene and restored during recovery, and
broadcast to replicas under certain circumstances.
This commit is merely putting the basics in place. This first commit
only introduces the concept and integrates their use with the soft
delete retention policy. We add some tests to demonstrate the basic
management is correct, and that the soft delete policy is correctly
influenced by the existence of any retention leases. We make no effort
in this commit to implement any of the following:
- timestamps
- expiration
- persistence to and recovery from Lucene
- handoff during primary relocation
- sharing retention leases with replicas
- exposing leases in shard-level statistics
- integration with cross-cluster replication
These will occur individually in follow-up commits.
The initialization of a suite scope cluster had some sideffects on
subsequent runs which causes issues when tests must be reproduced.
This moves the suite scope initialization to a privte random context.
Closes#36202
In Lucene 8 searches can skip non-competitive hits if the total hit count is not requested.
It is also possible to track the number of hits up to a certain threshold. This is a trade off to speed up searches while still being able to know a lower bound of the total hit count. This change adds the ability to set this threshold directly in the track_total_hits search option. A boolean value (true, false) indicates whether the total hit count should be tracked in the response. When set as an integer this option allows to compute a lower bound of the total hits while preserving the ability to skip non-competitive hits when enough matches have been collected.
Relates #33028
Now that we unwrap mappings in DocumentMapperParser#extractMappings, it is not
necessary for the mapping definition to always be nested under the type. This
leniency around the mapping format was added in 2341825358.
With the upcoming cross-cluster search alternate execution mode, the CCS
node will be able to split a CCS request into multiple search requests,
one per remote cluster involved. In order to do that, the CCS node has
to be able to signal to each remote cluster that such sub-requests are
part of a CCS request. Each cluster does not know about the other
clusters involved, and does not know either what alias it is given in
the CCS node, hence the CCS coordinating node needs to be able to provide
the alias as part of the search request so that it is used as index prefix
in the returned search hits.
The cluster alias is a notion that's already supported in the search shards
iterator and search shard target, but it is currently used in CCS as both
index prefix and connection lookup key when fanning out to all the shards.
With CCS alternate execution mode the provided cluster alias needs to be
used only as index prefix, as shards are local to each cluster hence no
cluster alias should be used for connection lookups.
The local cluster alias can be set to the SearchRequest at the transport layer
only, and its constructor/getter methods are package private.
Relates to #32125
Today InternalTestClusterTests is still using zen1.
This commit fixes it.
Two types of changes were required:
1. Explicitly pass file discovery host provider setting. It's done in
ESIntegTestCase as a part of the Zen2 feature and should be done here
as well.
2. For the test, that uses autoManageMinMasterNodes = false perform
cluster bootstrap.
Today the routing of a SourceToParse is assigned in a separate step
after the object is created. We can easily forget to set the routing.
With this commit, the routing must be provided in the constructor of
SourceToParse.
Relates #36921
This is a follow-up to some discussions around #36399. Currently we have
relatively confusing compression behavior where compression can be
configured for requests based on transport.compress or a specific
setting for a remote cluster. However, we can only compress responses
based on transport.compress as we do not know where a request is
coming from (currently).
This commit modifies the behavior to NEVER compress responses based on
settings. Instead, a response will only be compressed if the request was
compressed. This commit also updates the documentation to more clearly
described transport level compression.
This commit modifies ESSingleNodeTestCase and ESIntegTestCase and
several concrete test classes to use node names when bootstrapping the
cluster.
Today ClusterBootstrapService.INITIAL_MASTER_NODE_COUNT_SETTING
setting is used to bootstrap clusters in tests. Instead, we want to use
ClusterBootrstapService.INITIAL_MASTER_NODES_SETTING and get rid of
the former setting eventually.
There were two main problems when refactoring InternalTestCluster:
1. Nodes are created one-by-one in buildNode method. And node.name
is created in this method as well. It's not suitable for bootstrapping,
because we need to have the names of all master eligible nodes in
advance, before creating the node with bootstrapping configuration set.
We address this issue by separating buildNode into two methods:
getNodeSettings and buildNode. We first iterate over all nodes to
get nodes settings, then change the setting for the bootstrapping node
and then proceed with building the node.
2. If autoManageMinMasterNodes = false, there is no way for the test to
set the list of bootstrapping nodes because node names are not known in
advance. This problem is solved by adding updateNodesSettings method
to NodeConfigurationSource and ESIntegTestCase (which could be
overridden by concrete integration test class). Once we have the list
of settings for all nodes, the integration test class is allowed to
update it. In our case, we update the
ClusterBootrstapService.INITIAL_MASTER_NODES_SETTING setting.
Single-node discovery is not persisting cluster states, which was caused by a recent 7.0-only
refactoring. This commit ensures that the cluster state is properly persisted when using single-node
discovery and adds a corresponding test.
This is related to #36652. In 7.0 we plan to deprecate a number of
settings that make reference to the concept of a tcp transport. We
mostly just have a single transport type now (based on tcp). Settings
should only reference tcp if they are referring to socket options. This
commit updates the settings in the docs. And removes string usages of
the old settings. Additionally it adds a missing remote compress setting
to the docs.
This commit removes the originalSettings member from Node. It was only
needed to allows test clusters to recreate the node in certain
situations. Instead, the test cluster now keeps track of these settings.
In order for CCS alternate execution mode (see #32125) to be able to do the final reduction step on the CCS coordinating node, we need to serialize additional info in the transport layer as part of each `SearchHit`. Sort values are already present but they are formatted according to the provided `DocValueFormat` provided. The CCS node needs to be able to reconstruct the lucene `FieldDoc` to include in the `TopFieldDocs` and `CollapseTopFieldDocs` which will feed the `mergeTopDocs` method used to reduce multiple search responses (one per cluster) into one.
This commit adds such information to the `SearchSortValues` and exposes it through a new getter method added to `SearchHit` for retrieval. This info is only serialized at transport and never printed out at REST.
This commit exposes lucene's LatLonShape field as the
default type in GeoShapeFieldMapper. To use the new
indexing approach, simply set "type" : "geo_shape" in
the mappings without setting any of the strategy, precision,
tree_levels, or distance_error_pct parameters. Note the
following when using the new indexing approach:
* geo_shape query does not support querying by
MULTIPOINT.
* LINESTRING and MULTILINESTRING queries do not
yet support WITHIN relation.
* CONTAINS relation is not yet supported.
The tree, precision, tree_levels, distance_error_pct,
and points_only parameters are deprecated.
This commit fixes a test bug introduced with #36597. This caused some
test failure as stored field values comparisons would not work when CBOR
xcontent type was used.
Closes#29080
This commit add support for using sequence numbers to power [optimistic concurrency control](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Optimistic_concurrency_control)
in the delete and index transport actions and requests. A follow up will come with adding sequence
numbers to the update and get results.
Relates #36148
Relates #10708
This commit updates our transport settings for 7.0. It generally takes a
few approaches. First, for normal transport settings, it usestransport.
instead of transport.tcp. Second, it uses transport.tcp, http.tcp,
or network.tcp for all settings that are proxies for OS level socket
settings. Third, it marks the network.tcp.connect_timeout setting for
removal. Network service level settings are only settings that apply to
both the http and transport modules. There is no connect timeout in
http. Fourth, it moves all the transport settings to a single class
TransportSettings similar to the HttpTransportSettings class.
This commit does not actually remove any settings. It just adds the new
renamed settings and adds todos for settings that will be deprecated.
SearchSortValuesTests extends now `AbstractSerializingTestCase` which removes some code duplication and standardizes the way we test `fromXContent`, serialization and equals/hashcode.
Also, we were never creating `SearchSortValues` through their public constructor that accept an array of `DocValueFormat` together with the array of raw sort values. That is covered now, which involved some conversion from `BytesRef` to String in the test.
Also, the previous test was not using doing any equality check against the original and parsed versions in `testFromXContent` due to values being parsed with different types in some cases, which is now covered by converting those values using a new method added to `RandomObjects`. The code was already there as part of `randomStoredFieldValues`, but it is now exposed to be used in other scenarios.
In order for CCS alternate execution mode (see #32125) to be able to do the final reduction step on the CCS coordinating node, we need to serialize additional info in the transport layer as part of the `SearchHits`, specifically:
- lucene `SortField[]` which contains info about the fields that sorting was performed on and their type, which depends on mappings (that the CCS node does not know about)
- collapse field (`String`) that field collapsing was executed on, if requested
- collapse values (`Object[]`) that field collapsing was based on, if requested
This info is needed to be able to reconstruct the `TopFieldDocs` or `CollapseFieldTopDocs` in the CCS coordinating node to feed the `mergeTopDocs` method and reduce multiple search responses received (one per cluster) into one.
This commit adds such information to the `SearchHits` class. It's nullable info that is not serialized through the REST layer. `SearchPhaseController` sets such info at the end of the hits reduction phase.
* Enable parallel restore operations
* Add uuid to restore in progress entries to uniquely identify them
* Adjust restore in progress entries to be a map in cluster state
* Added tests for:
* Parallel restore from two different snapshots
* Parallel restore from a single snapshot to different indices to test uuid identifiers are correctly used by `RestoreService` and routing allocator
* Parallel restore with waiting for completion to test transport actions correctly use uuid identifiers
The commit changes how indices are closed in the MetaDataIndexStateService.
It now uses a 3 steps process where writes are blocked on indices to be closed,
then some verifications are done on shards using the TransportVerifyShardBeforeCloseAction
added in #36249, and finally indices states are moved to CLOSE and their routing
tables removed.
The closing process also takes care of using the pre-7.0 way to close indices if the
cluster contains mixed version of nodes and a node does not support the TransportVerifyShardBeforeCloseAction. It also closes unassigned indices.
Related to #33888
This commit add support to engine operations for resolving and verifying the sequence number and
primary term of the last modification to a document before performing an operation. This is
infrastructure to move our (optimistic concurrency control)[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Optimistic_concurrency_control] API to use sequence numbers instead of internal versioning.
Relates #36148
Relates #10708
There are certain BootstrapCheck checks that may need access environment-specific
values. Watcher's EncryptSensitiveDataBootstrapCheck passes in the node's environment
via a constructor to bypass the shortcoming in BootstrapContext. This commit
pulls in the node's environment into BootstrapContext.
Another case is found in #36519, where it is useful to check the state of the
data-path. Since PathUtils.get and Paths.get are forbidden APIs, we rely on
the environment to retrieve references to things like node data paths.
This means that the BootstrapContext will have the same Settings used in the
Environment, which currently differs from the Node's settings.
Currently TransportRequestOptions allows specific requests to request
compression. This commit removes this and always compresses based on the
settings. Additionally, it removes TransportResponseOptions as they
are unused.
This closes#36399.
* Fix CorruptFileIT to also take last DV generation into account
We currently only prune old .liv generations. With soft_deletes it's important
to also prune DV generations.
* Fix CorruptionUtils to skip the footer bytes after the checksum is read.
Today we read a broken checksum since we also checksum the 8 footer bytes that include
the checksum algorithm and the footer magic.
Closes#36526
`PageCacheRecycler` is the class that creates and holds pages of arrays
for various uses. `BigArrays` is just one user of these pages. This
commit moves the constants that define the page sizes for the recycler
to be on the recycler class.
Redeprecates the `/_xpack/rollup` endpoints in favor of `/_rollup`.
When we cleanup the rollup in a cluster containing 6.x nodes we need to
use `/_xpack/rollup` instead of `/_rollup` because the 6.x nodes don't
know about `/_rollup`. In those cases we must ignore the deprecation
warnings that the 7.0 node will return for the end point.
Closes#36044
Currently our handshake requests do not include a version. This is
unfortunate as we cannot rely on the stream version since it is not the
sending node's version. Instead it is the minimum compatibility version.
The handshake request is currently empty and we do nothing with it. This
should allow us to add data to the request without breaking backwards
compatibility.
This commit adds the version to the handshake request. Additionally, it
allows "future data" to be added to the request. This allows nodes to craft
a version compatible response. And will properly handle additional data in
future handshake requests. The proper handling of "future data" is useful
as this is the only request where we do not know the other node's version.
Finally, it renames the TcpTransportHandshaker to
TransportHandshaker.
This commit modifies BigArrays to take a circuit breaker name and
the circuit breaking service. The default instance of BigArrays that
is passed around everywhere always uses the request breaker. At the
network level, we want to be using the inflight request breaker. So this
change will allow that.
Additionally, as this change moves away from a single instance of
BigArrays, the class is modified to not be a Releasable anymore.
Releasing big arrays was always dispatching to the PageCacheRecycler,
so this change makes the PageCacheRecycler the class that needs to be
managed and torn-down.
Finally, this commit closes#31435 be making the serialization of
transport messages use the inflight request breaker. With this change,
we no longer push the global BigArrays instnace to the network level.
Added helper methods to ESRestTestCase for checking warnings in mixed and current-version-only clusters.
This is supported by a new VersionSpecificWarningsHandler class with associated unit test.
Closes#36251
1. CCR tests work without any changes
2. `testDanglingIndices` require changes the source code (added TODO).
3. `testIndexDeletionWhenNodeRejoins` because it's using just two
nodes, adding the node to exclusions is needed on restart.
4. `testCorruptTranslogTruncationOfReplica` starts dedicated master
one, because otherwise, the cluster does not form, if nodes are stopped
and one node is started back.
5. `testResolvePath` needs TEST cluster, because all nodes are stopped
at the end of the test and it's not possible to perform checks needed
by SUITE cluster.
6. `SnapshotDisruptionIT`. Without changes, the test fails because Zen2
retries snapshot creation as soon as network partition heals. This
results into the race between creating snapshot and test cleanup logic
(deleting index). Zen1 on the
other hand, also schedules retry, but it takes some time after network
partition heals, so cleanup logic executes latter and test passes. The
check that snapshot is eventually created is added to
the end of the test.
The following updates were made:
- Add a new untyped endpoint `{index}/_explain/{id}`.
- Add deprecation warnings to Rest*Action, plus tests in Rest*ActionTests.
- For each REST yml test, make sure there is one version without types, and another legacy version that retains types (called *_with_types.yml).
- Deprecate relevant methods on the Java HLRC requests/ responses.
- Update documentation (for both the REST API and Java HLRC).
Allow `auto_date_histogram` as a valid parent agg for derivative,
cumulative sum, moving average, moving function and serial
differencing pipeline aggregations.
Since all these aggs share the same requirement (sequentially
ordered parent aggs), this commit also refactors to share
the same validation code so that any newly added aggs won't
be forgotten.
Closes#35578
This change adds a way to provide the content type of the rest serialization
tests when creating random instances. This is used by SearchHitsTests to ensure
that the internal members of the class are created with the same xContentType
and that equals can be used to compare an instances created from an XContent
view.
This allows you to plug the behavior that the LLRC uses to handle
warnings on a per request basis.
We entertained the idea of allowing you to set the warnings behavior to
strict mode on a per request basis but that wouldn't allow the high
level rest client to fail when it sees an unexpected warning.
We also entertained the idea of adding a list of "required warnings" to
the `RequestOptions` but that won't work well with failures that occur
*sometimes* like those we see in mixed clusters.
Adding a list of "allowed warnings" to the `RequestOptions` would work
for mixed clusters but it'd leave many of the assertions in our tests
weaker than we'd like.
This behavior plugging implementation allows us to make a "required
warnings" option when we need it and an "allowed warnings" behavior when
we need it.
I don't think this behavior is going to be commonly used by used outside
of the Elasticsearch build, but I expect they'll be a few commendably
paranoid folks who could use this behavior.
We support rolling upgrades from Zen1 by keeping the master as a Zen1 node
until there are no more Zen1 nodes in the cluster, using the following
principles:
- Zen1 nodes will never vote for Zen2 nodes
- Zen2 nodes will, while not bootstrapped, vote for Zen1 nodes
- Zen2 nodes that were previously part of a mixed cluster will automatically
(and unsafely) bootstrap themselves when the last Zen1 node leaves.
This is related to #35975. It implements a basic restore functionality
for the CcrRepository. When the restore process is kicked off, it
configures the new index as expected for a follower index. This means
that the index has a different uuid, the version is not incremented, and
the Ccr metadata is installed.
When the restore shard method is called, an empty shard is initialized.
In #34474, we added a new assertion to ensure that the
LocalCheckpointTracker is always consistent with Lucene index. However,
we reset LocalCheckpoinTracker in testDedupByPrimaryTerm cause this
assertion to be violated.
This commit removes resetCheckpoint from LocalCheckpointTracker and
rewrites testDedupByPrimaryTerm without resetting the local checkpoint.
Relates #34474
Today the InternalTestClusterTests sometimes set up a cluster with a single
master, start some other ndoes, shut the original master down, and then reset
the cluster. This doesn't really work, because the original master may be
stale. This change avoids shutting down the only master in this situation.
This commit changes the format of the `hits.total` in the search response to be an object with
a `value` and a `relation`. The `value` indicates the number of hits that match the query and the
`relation` indicates whether the number is accurate (in which case the relation is equals to `eq`)
or a lower bound of the total (in which case it is equals to `gte`).
This change also adds a parameter called `rest_total_hits_as_int` that can be used in the
search APIs to opt out from this change (retrieve the total hits as a number in the rest response).
Note that currently all search responses are accurate (`track_total_hits: true`) or they don't contain
`hits.total` (`track_total_hits: true`). We'll add a way to get a lower bound of the total hits in a
follow up (to allow numbers to be passed to `track_total_hits`).
Relates #33028
The shard deletion logic (triggered by IndicesStore), which also leads to index metadata deletion on
non-master-eligible data nodes, currently races against the new cluster state persistence logic
triggered by accepting cluster states. One thread is writing the index metadata while another one is
deleting the index metadata, leading to exceptions and assertions tripping (see below). The solution
proposed by this PR is to move the cluster state persistence of non-master-eligible nodes back to
the cluster applier service, just as it used to be for Zen1. This ensures that the index metadata
deletion logic, which is triggered by the shard deletion logic, runs on the same thread on which we
persist the cluster state.
Closes#35435
- make it easier to add additional testing tasks with the proper configuration and add some where they were missing.
- mute or fix failing tests
- add a check as part of testing conventions to find classes not included in any testing task.
It is important that all shards of a given index have the same
`indexCreatedVersionMajor` to Lucene, or eg. merging those shards is going to
be considered illegal. At the moment, we use the latest Lucene version when
creating a shard, which could cause shards to have different created versions
eg. in case of forced allocation. This commit makes sure to reuse the
appropriate Lucene version in order to avoid such issues.
Closes#33826
Today we configure the soft-deletes field iff soft-deletes enabled.
Although this choice was correct, it prevents an engine with
soft-deletes disabled from opening a Lucene index with soft-deletes.
Moreover, this change should not have any side-effect if a Lucene index
does not have any soft-deletes.
Relates #36141
This commit implements proper metadata recovery for Zen2.
GatewayService is responsible for the recovery. In Zen1 GatewayService
creates an instance of Gateway, that is used to reach out to other cluster
nodes, get their state and calculate the most up-to-date state based on
versions. After that Gateway performs upgrade and archival of
ClusterSettings and closes bad indices. Then recovered state is passed to GatewayService.GatewayRecoveryListener that mixes up current state
and restored state, removes state not recovered block, creates the
routing table and performs re-routing.
In Zen2 we should perform this kind of logic on cluster startup, except
mixing state (because there is nothing to mix) and opening routing table.
This commit refactors out all `ClusterUpdate` functions in a separate class
`ClusterStateUpdaters`, which is used by `Gateway` and `GatewayService`
in case of Zen1, and by `GatewayMetaState` and `GatewayService` in case of
Zen2.
This commit also switches all integration tests that are already using Zen2 from
InMemoryPersistedState to GatewayMetaState.
This test suite can stop all the shared master-eligible nodes, which breaks the
cluster since any non-shared master-eligible nodes are stopped first in the
reset process between tests.
Since this test suite can leave the cluster in this somewhat broken state, it
seems best that it uses a new cluster for each test.
When building a query Lucene distinguishes two cases, queries that require to produce a score and queries that only need to match. We cloned this mechanism in the QueryBuilders in order to be able to produce different queries based on whether they need to produce a score or not. However the only case in es that require this distinction is the BoolQueryBuilder that sets a different minimum_should_match when a `bool` query is built in a filter context..
This behavior doesn't seem right because it makes the matching of `should` clauses different when the score is not required.
Closes#35293
This fixes a failure of InternalTestClusterTests#testBeforeTest which checks
that the cluster is set up the same when starting from the same seed. Trappily,
using ESTestCase#randomIntBetween() is no good, we have to use
InternalTestCluster#random via RandomNumbers#randomIntBetween() instead.
Today, we allow all nodes in an integration test to bootstrap. However this
seems to lead to test failures due to post-election instability. The change
avoids this instability by only bootstrapping a single node in the cluster.
Empty buckets don't need to be added when performing an incremental reduction step, they can be added later in the final reduction step. This will allow us to later remove the max buckets limit when performing non final reduction.
This is a follow-up to #35144. That commit made the underlying
connection opening process in TcpTransport asynchronous. However the
method still blocked on the process being complete before returning.
This commit moves the blocking to the ConnectionManager level. This is
another step towards the top-level TransportService api being async.
This commit removes the `MockTcpTransport` as a transport option for
`ESIntegTestCase`. It is the first step in replacing the usages of
`MockTcpTransport` with `MockNioTransport`.
CompositeBytesReference#slice has two bugs:
- One that makes it fail if the reference is empty and an empty slice is
created, this is #35950 and is fixed by special-casing empty-slices.
- One performance bug that makes it always create a composite slice when
creating a slice that ends on a boundary, this is fixed by computing `limit`
as the index of the sub reference that holds the last element rather than
the next element after the slice.
Closes#35950
This is related to #34405 and a follow-up to #34753. It makes a number
of changes to our current keepalive pings.
The ping interval configuration is moved to the ConnectionProfile.
The server channel now responds to pings. This makes the keepalive
pings bidirectional.
On the client-side, the pings can now be optimized away. What this
means is that if the channel has received a message or sent a message
since the last pinging round, the ping is not sent for this round.
When wiping rollup jobs, if we are in a mixed cluster with < v7.0 nodes
we need to fall back to the deprecated endpoint because we may talk
to a 6.x node.
Today the default for USE_ZEN2 is false and it is overridden in many places. By
defaulting it to true we can be sure that the only places in which Zen2 does
not work are those in which it is explicitly set to false.
This commit removes the dedicated `setSoLinger` method. This simplifies
the `TcpChannel` interface. This method has very little effect as the
SO_LINGER is not set prior to the channels being closed in the abstract
transport test case. We still will set SO_LINGER on the
`MockNioTransport`. However we can do this manually.
Today GatewayMetaState is capable of atomically storing MetaData to
disk. We've also moved fields that are needed to be persisted in Zen2
from ClusterState to ClusterState.MetaData.CoordinationMetaData.
This commit implements PersistedState interface.
version and currentTerm are persisted as a part of Manifest.
GatewayMetaState now implements both ClusterStateApplier and
PersistedState interfaces. We started with two descendants
Zen1GatewayMetaState and Zen2GatewayMetaState, but it turned
out to be not easy to glue it.
GatewayMetaState now constructs previousClusterState (including
MetaData) and previousManifest inside the constructor so that all
PersistedState methods are usable as soon as GatewayMetaState
instance is constructed. Also, loadMetaData is renamed to
getMetaData, because it just returns
previousClusterState.metaData().
Sadly, we don't have access to localNode (obtained from
TransportService in the constructor, so getLastAcceptedState
should be called, after setLocalNode method is invoked.
Currently, when deciding whether to write IndexMetaData to disk,
we're comparing current IndexMetaData version and received
IndexMetaData version. This is not safe in Zen2 if the term has changed.
So updateClusterState now accepts incremental write
method parameter. When it's set to false, we always write
IndexMetaData to disk.
Things that are not covered by GatewayMetaStateTests are covered
by GatewayMetaStatePersistedStateTests.
This commit also adds an option to use GatewayMetaState instead of
InMemoryPersistedState in TestZenDiscovery. However, by default
InMemoryPersistedState is used and only one test in PersistedStateIT
used GatewayMetaState. In order to use it for other tests, proper
state recovery should be implemented.
Today we have a way to atomically persist global MetaData and
IndexMetaData to disk when new ClusterState is received. All other
ClusterState fields are not persisted.
However, there are other parts of ClusterState that should be
persisted, namely:
version
term
lastCommittedConfiguration
lastAcceptedConfiguration
votingTombstones
version is changed frequently, other fields are not. We decided
to group term, lastCommittedConfiguration,
lastAcceptedConfiguration and votingTombstones into
CoordinationMetaData class and make CoordinationMetaData a field
inside MetaData.
MetaData.toXContent and MetaData.fromXContent should take care of
CoordinationMetaData.
version stays as a top level field in ClusterState and will be
persisted as part of Manifest in a follow-up commit.
Also MetaData.isGlobalStateEquals should be extended to include
coordinationMetaData in comparison.
This commit favors exposing getters, such as getTerm directly in
ClusterState to avoid massive code changes.
An example of CoordinationMetaState.toXContent:
{
"term": 1,
"last_committed_config": [
"TiIuBcbBtpuXyDDVHXeD",
"ZIAoVbkjjLPLUuYLaTkw"
],
"last_accepted_config": [
"OwkXbXZNOZPJqccdFHdz",
"LouzsGYwmQzpeQMrboZe",
"fCKGRZdjLTqzXAqPUtGL",
"pLoxshjpJXwDhbgjfYJy",
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}
- Moves disruption tests to Zen2
- Registers a few missing settings
- Removes .put(TestZenDiscovery.USE_ZEN2.getKey(), true) from tests where Zen2 is now enabled
by default through the parent test class
- Moves QuorumGatewayIT back to Zen1, as it is not stable with Zen2 as it currently relies on
dangling indices due to the lack of proper CS persistence, which triggers secondary failures
This commit adds a rest endpoint for freezing and unfreezing an index.
Among other cleanups mainly fixing an issue accessing package private APIs
from a plugin that got caught by integration tests this change also adds
documentation for frozen indices.
Note: frozen indices are marked as `beta` and available as a basic feature.
Relates to #34352