We have two similar tests with the same name, ContextAndHeaderTransportTests.
They shared lots of common code so I extracted much of it into
ActionRecordingPlugin, a plugin which records all action requests for later
inspection.
I also removed all the warnings from both tests. That made lang-mustache
compile cleanly without any custom -Xlint so I removed those. To remove
the warnings I had to add type parameters to ActionFilter which seemed
like a good idea anyway.
1. Gets guice out of the business of building ScoreFunctionParsers and
QueryParsers.
2. Moves QueryParser registration to SearchModule
3. Moves NamedWriteableRegistry construction out of guice and into Node and
TransportClient.
4. Moves shape registration into SearchModule so now all named writeable
registration is done in the SearchModule.
This is breaking for plugin authors. Instead of declaring new QueryParser
like:
```java
public void onModule(IndicesModule module) {
module.registerQueryParser(NewQueryParser.class);
}
```
you do it like:
```java
public void onModule(SearchModule module) {
module.registerQueryParser(NewQueryParser::new);
}
```
The QueryParser's argument no longer come from @Inject, now they come from
the declaration in the plugin. The above example is for a no-arg QueryParser.
Most of the QueryParsers in Elasticsearch are no-arg.
ScoreFunctionParsers have a similar but slightly different change. This:
```java
public void onModule(SearchModule module) {
module.registerFunctionScoreParser(NewFunctionScoreParser.class);
}
```
becomes
```java
public void onModule(SearchModule module) {
module.registerFunctionScoreParser(new NewFunctionScoreParser());
}
```
Since all known ScoreFunctionParsers have no arg constructors its simpler to
just build them at registration time rather than specify a supplier that is
used to build them later.
Site plugins used to be used for things like kibana and marvel, but
there is no longer a need since kibana (and marvel as a kibana plugin)
uses node.js. This change removes site plugins, as well as the flag for
jvm plugins. Now all plugins are jvm plugins.
* Added percolator field mapper that extracts the query terms and indexes these terms with the percolator query.
* At percolate time these extracted terms are used to query percolator queries that are like to be evaluated. This can significantly cut down the time it takes to percolate. Whereas before all percolator queries were evaluated if they matches with the document being percolated.
* Changes made to percolator queries are no longer immediately visible, a refresh needs to happen before the changes are visible.
* By default the percolate api only returns upto 10 matches instead of returning all matching percolator queries.
* Made percolate more modular, so that it is easier to add unit tests.
* Added unit tests for the percolator.
Closes#12664Closes#13646