The date_histogram internally converts obsolete timezones (such as
"Canada/Mountain") into their modern equivalent ("America/Edmonton").
But rollup just stored the TZ as provided by the user.
When checking the TZ for query validation we used a string comparison,
which would fail due to the date_histo's upgrading behavior.
Instead, we should convert both to a TimeZone object and check if their
rules are compatible.
The `ignore_malformed` option currently works on numeric fields only when the
bad value isn't a string value but not if it is a boolean. In this case we get a
parsing error from the xContent parser which we need to catch in addition to the
field mapper.
Closes#11498
Today the `?preference=custom_string_value` search preference will only change
its choice of a shard copy if something changes the `IndexShardRoutingTable`
for that specific shard. Users can use this behaviour to route searches to a
consistent set of shard copies, which means they can reliably hit copies with
hot caches, and use the other copies only for redundancy in case of failure.
However we do not assert this property anywhere, so we might break it in
future.
This commit adds a test that shows that searches are routed consistently even
if other indices are created/rebalanced/deleted.
Relates https://discuss.elastic.co/t/176598, #41115, #26791
Today we always trim unsafe commits (whose max_seq_no >= global
checkpoint) before starting a read-write or read-only engine. This is
mandatory for read-write engines because they must start with the safe
commit. This is also fine for read-only engines since most of the cases
we should have exactly one commit after closing an index (trimming is a
noop). However, this is dangerous for following indices which might have
more than one commits when they are being closed.
With this change, we move the trimming logic to the ctor of InternalEngine
so we won't trim anything if we are going to open a read-only engine.
Currently enabling profiling disables top-hits optimizations, which is
unfortunate: it would be nice to be able to notice the difference in method
counts and timings depending on whether total hit counts are requested.
`Node#close` is pretty hard to rely on today:
- it might swallow exceptions
- it waits for 10 seconds for threads to terminate but doesn't signal anything
if threads are still not terminated after 10 seconds
This commit makes `IOException`s propagated and splits `Node#close` into
`Node#close` and `Node#awaitClose` so that the decision what to do if a node
takes too long to close can be done on top of `Node#close`.
It also adds synchronization to lifecycle transitions to make them atomic. I
don't think it is a source of problems today, but it makes things easier to
reason about.
Today we check if an index has broken settings when checking if an index
needs to be upgraded. However, it can be the case that an index setting
became broken even if an index is already upgraded to the current
version if the user removed a plugin (or downgraded from the default
distribution to the non-default distribution) while on the same version
of Elasticsearch. In this case, some registered settings would go
missing and the index would now be broken. Yet, we miss this check and
instead of archiving the settings, the index becomes unassigned due to
the missing settings. This commit addresses this by checking for broken
settings whether or not the index is upgraded.
One of the two #getCorrections methods is only used in tests, so we can move
it and any of the required helper methods to that test. Also reducing the
visibility of several methods to package private since the class isn't used
elsewhere outside the package.
Today we erroneously look for a node setting called `readonly` when deciding
whether or not to create a missing directory in a filesystem repository. This
change fixes this by using the repository setting instead.
Closes#41009
Relates #26909
CURRENT_DATE/CURRENT_TIME/CURRENT_TIMESTAMP can be used as SQL keywords
(without parentheses) and therefore there is a special rule in the
grammar to accommodate this.
Previously, this rule was also catching the parenthesised version of those functions too,
not allowing the {fn <functionName>()} to be used. E.g.:
{fn current_time(2)} or {fn current_timestamp()}
Now, the grammar rule catches only the keyword versions and all the parenthesised
versions go through the normal function resolution. As a consequence the validation
of the precision is moved from the parser lever (ExpressionBuilder) to the function
implementations.
Fixes: #41240
(cherry picked from commit bfbc9f140144b5a35aa29008b58bf58074419853)
* fix the packer cache script
This PR disabled the explicit pull since it seems this always tries to
work with a registry.
Functionality will not be affected since we will still build the images
on pull.
When the same alias points to multiple indices we can write to only one index
with `is_write_index` value `true`. The special handling in case of the put
mapping request(to resolve authorized indices) has a check on indices size
for a concrete index. If multiple indices existed then it marked the request
as unauthorized.
The check has been modified to consider write index flag and only when the
requested index matches with the one with write index alias, the alias is considered
for authorization.
Closes#40831
In `TransportRolloverAction` before doing rollover we resolve
source index name (write index) from the alias in the rollover request.
Before evaluating the conditions and executing rollover action, we
retrieve stats, but to do so we used the source index name
resolved from the alias instead of alias from the index.
This fails when the user is assigned a role with index privilege on the
alias instead of the concrete index. This commit fixes this by using
the alias from the request.
After this change, verified that when we retrieve all the stats (including write + read indexes)
we are considering only source index.
Closes#40771
When specifying a limit over an agg sorting, the limit will be pushed
down to the grouping which affects the custom sorting. This commit fixes
that and restricts the limit only to sorting.
Fix#40984
(cherry picked from commit da3726528d9011b05c0677ece6d11558994eccd9)
Although the translation rule was implemented in the `Optimizer`,
the rule was not added in the list of rules to be executed.
Relates to #41195
Follows #37936
(cherry picked from commit f426a339b77af6008d41cc000c9199fe384e9269)
The unified highlighter returns the first sentence of the text when number_of_fragments
is set to 0 (full highlighting). This is a legacy of the removed postings highlighter
that was based on sentence break only. This commit changes this behavior in order
to respect the provided no_match_size value when number_of_fragments is set to 0.
This means that the behavior will be consistent for any value of the number_of_fragments option.
Closes#41066
Yet another improvement to SYS TABLES on differentiating between table
types specified as '%' and '' while maintaining legacy support for null
Fix#40775
(cherry picked from commit 6dbca5edd335eb1da8e7825389a15e5fe45397d4)
* Adds Bulk delete API to blob container
* Implement bulk delete API for S3
* Adjust S3Fixture to accept both path styles for bulk deletes since the S3 SDK uses both during our ITs
* Closes#40250
Today the blended term query detects if a term exists in a field by looking at the term statistics in the index.
However the value to indicate that a term has no occurence in a field have changed in Lucene. A non-existing term now returns
a doc and total term frequency of 0. Because of this disrepancy the blended term query picks 0 as the minimum frequency for a term
even if other fields have documents for this terms. This confuses the term queries that the blending creates since some of them
contain a custom state that indicates a frequency of 0 even though the term has some occurence in the field. For these terms an exception
is thrown because the term query always checks that the term state's frequency is greater than 0 if there are documents associate to it.
This change fixes this bug by ignoring terms with a doc freq of 0 when the blended term query picks the minimum term frequency among the
requested fields.
Closes#41118
`TransportReplicationAction.AsyncPrimaryAction#createReplicatedOperation`
exists so it can be overridden in tests. This commit re-works these tests to
use a real `ReplicationOperation` and inlines the now-unnecessary method.
Relates #40706.
Today we fail to join a Zen2 cluster if the cluster UUID does not match our
own, but we do not perform the same validation when joining a Zen1 cluster.
This means that a Zen2 node will pass join validation and be added to a Zen1
cluster but will reject all cluster states from the master.
Relates #37775
Currently we throw an error when a range querys minimum value exceeds the
maximum value due to the fact that they are neighbouring values and both upper
and lower value are excluded from the interval.
Since this is a condition that the user usually doesn't specify conciously (at
least in the case of float and double values its difficult to see which values
are adjacent) we should ignore those "wrong" intervals and create a
MatchNoDocsQuery in those cases.
We should still throw errors with an actionable message if the user specifies
the query interval in a way that min value > max value. This PR adds those
checks and tests for those cases.
Closes#40937
Traditionally we have [recommended](https://www.elastic.co/guide/en/beats/filebeat/current/monitoring.html) that Beats send their monitoring data to the **production** Elasticsearch cluster. Beats do this by calling the `POST _monitoring/bulk` API. When Security is enabled this API call requires the `cluster:admin/xpack/monitoring/bulk` privilege. The built-in `beats_system` role has this privilege.
[Going forward](https://github.com/elastic/beats/pull/9260), Beats will be able to send their monitoring data directly to the **monitoring** Elasticsearch cluster. Beats will do this by calling the regular `POST _bulk` API. When Security is enabled this API call requires the `indices:data/write/bulk` privilege. Further, the call has to be able to create any indices that don't exist.
This PR expands the built-in `beats_system` role's privileges. Specifically, it adds index-level `write` and `create_index` privileges for `.monitoring-beats-*` indices.
This will allow Beats users to continue using the `beats_system` role for the new direct monitoring route when Security is enabled.
This is related to #36652. We intend to deprecate a number of transport
settings in 7.x and remove them in 8.0. This commit removes the string
usages of these settings.
Usage of the ILM Move to Step API can result in some very odd
situations, and for diagnosing problems arising from these situations it
would be nice to have a record of when this API was called with what
parameters.
Also, adds a dedicated logger for TransportMoveToStepAction,
rather than using the (deprecated) inherited one.
This PR makes a few clarifications to the docs for the `enabled` setting:
- Replace references to 'mapping type' with 'mapping' or 'mapping definition'.
- In code examples, clarify that the disabled fields have type `object`.
- Add a section on how disabled fields can hold non-object data.
This commit removes xpack dependencies of many xpack qa modules.
(for some qa modules this will require some more work)
The reason behind this change is that qa rest modules should not depend
on the x-pack plugins, because the plugins are an implementation detail and
the tests should only know about the rest interface and qa cluster that is
being tested.
Also some qa modules rely on xpack plugins and hlrc (which is a valid
dependency for rest qa tests) creates a cyclic dependency and this is
something that we should avoid. Also Eclipse can't handle gradle cyclic
dependencies (see #41064).
* don't copy xpack-core's plugin property into the test resource of qa
modules. Otherwise installing security manager fails, because it tries
to find the XPackPlugin class.
With the 7.0.0 release, we switched to download the packages instead of
using locally built ones.
This PR fixes the artifact names to include the architecture as
introduced in the 7.0.0 release.
This section should be at the same sub-level as other sections in the
auto date-histogram docs, otherwise it is rendered on to another page
and is confusing for users to understand what it's in reference to.
Pipelines require single-valued agg or a numeric to be returned.
If they don't get that, they throw an exception. Unfortunately, this
exception text is very confusing to users because it usually arises
from pathing "through" multiple terms aggs. The final target is a numeric,
but it's the intermediary aggs that cause the problem.
This commit adds the current agg name to the exception message
so the user knows which "level" is the issue.
Values higher than 100% are now allowed to accommodate use
cases where swapping has been determined to be acceptable.
Anomaly detector jobs only use their full model memory
during background persistence, and this is deliberately
staggered, so with large numbers of jobs few will generally
be persisting state at the same time. Settings higher than
available memory are only recommended for OEM type
situations where a wrapper tightly controls the types of
jobs that can be created, and each job alone is considerably
smaller than what each node can handle.
Full text queries ignore unmapped fields since https://github.com/elastic/elasticsearch/issues/41022
even if all fields in the query are unmapped.
This change makes sure that we ignore unmapped fields only if they are mixed
with mapped fields and returns a MatchNoDocsQuery otherwise.
Closes#41022