Unfollow should be allowed / disallowed on a per index level instead of
cluster level.
Also renamed `create_follow_index` index privilege to
`manage_follow_index` privilege and include unfollow and close APIs.
This commit modifies the follow stats API response structure to more
clearly highlight meaning of the higher level fields. In particular,
previously the response had a top-level key for each index. Instead, we
nest the indices under an "indices" field which is now an array. The
values in this array are objects containing two fields: "index" which is
the name of the follower index, and "shards" which is an array where
each value in the array is the follower stats for that shard. That is,
we have gone from:
{
"bar": [
{
"shard_id": 0...
}...
]...
}
to
{
"indices": [
{
"index": "bar",
"shards": [
{
"shard_id": 0...
}...
]
}...
}
The unfollow API changes a follower index into a regular index, so that it will accept write requests from clients.
For the unfollow api to work the index follow needs to be stopped and the index needs to be closed.
Closes#33931
Prior to following an index in the follow API, check whether current
user has sufficient privileges in the leader cluster to read and
monitor the leader index.
Also check this in the create and follow API prior to creating the
follow index.
Also introduced READ_CCR cluster privilege that include the minimal
cluster level actions that are required for ccr in the leader cluster.
So a user can follow indices in a cluster, but not use the ccr admin APIs.
Closes#33553
Co-authored-by: Jason Tedor <jason@tedor.me>
* Renamed CCR APIs
Renamed:
* `/{index}/_ccr/create_and_follow` to `/{index}/_ccr/follow`
* `/{index}/_ccr/unfollow` to `/{index}/_ccr/pause_follow`
* `/{index}/_ccr/follow` to `/{index}/_ccr/resume_follow`
Relates to #33931
Instead of having one constructor that accepts all arguments, all parameters
should be provided via setters. Only leader and follower index are required
arguments. This makes using this class in tests and transport client easier.
The following stats are being kept track of:
1) The total number of times that auto following a leader index succeed.
2) The total number of times that auto following a leader index failed.
3) The total number of times that fetching a remote cluster state failed.
4) The most recent 256 auto follow failures per auto leader index
(e.g. create_and_follow api call fails) or cluster alias
(e.g. fetching remote cluster state fails).
Each auto follow run now produces a result that is being used to update
the stats being kept track of in AutoFollowCoordinator.
Relates to #33007
When executing CCR REST tests it is going to be expected after global
checkpoint polling goes in that shard changes tasks can still be pending
at the end of the test. One way to deal with this is to set a low
timeout on these polls, but then that means we are not executing our
REST tests with our default production settings and instead would be
using an unrealistic low timeout. Alternatively, since we expect these
tasks to be there, we can not count them against the test. That is what
this commit does.
This commit moves these REST tests (possibly temporarily) to a
sub-project of ccr. We do this (again, possibly temporarily) to keep
them within the ccr sub-project yet there are changes within 6.x that
prevent these from being in the top-level project (the cluster formation
tasks are trying to install x-pack-ccr into the
integ-test-zip). Therefore, we isolate these for now until we can
understand why there are differences between 6.x and master.
For correctness we need to verify whether the history uuid of the leader
index shards never changes while that index is being followed.
* The history UUIDs are recorded as custom index metadata in the follow index.
* The follow api validates whether the current history UUIDs of the leader
index shards are the same as the recorded history UUIDs.
If not the follow api fails.
* While a follow index is following a leader index; shard follow tasks
on each shard changes api call verify whether their current history uuid
is the same as the recorded history uuid.
Relates to #30086
Co-authored-by: Nhat Nguyen <nhat.nguyen@elastic.co>
This is a new index privilege that the user needs to have in the follow cluster.
This privilege is required in addition to the `manage_ccr` cluster privilege in
order to execute the create and follow api.
Closes#33555
In the multi-cluster-with-non-compliant-license tests, we try to write
out a java.policy to a temporary directory. However, if this temporary
directory does not already exist then writing the java.policy file will
fail. This commit ensures that the temporary directory exists before we
attempt to write the java.policy file.
This commit adds license checks for the auto-follow implementation. We
check the license on put auto-follow patterns, and then for every
coordination round we check that the local and remote clusters are
licensed for CCR. In the case of non-compliance, we skip coordination
yet continue to schedule follow-ups.
Auto Following Patterns is a cross cluster replication feature that
keeps track whether in the leader cluster indices are being created with
names that match with a specific pattern and if so automatically let
the follower cluster follow these newly created indices.
This change adds an `AutoFollowCoordinator` component that is only active
on the elected master node. Periodically this component checks the
the cluster state of remote clusters if there new leader indices that
match with configured auto follow patterns that have been defined in
`AutoFollowMetadata` custom metadata.
This change also adds two new APIs to manage auto follow patterns. A put
auto follow pattern api:
```
PUT /_ccr/_autofollow/{{remote_cluster}}
{
"leader_index_pattern": ["logs-*", ...],
"follow_index_pattern": "{{leader_index}}-copy",
"max_concurrent_read_batches": 2
... // other optional parameters
}
```
and delete auto follow pattern api:
```
DELETE /_ccr/_autofollow/{{remote_cluster_alias}}
```
The auto follow patterns are directly tied to the remote cluster aliases
configured in the follow cluster.
Relates to #33007
Co-authored-by: Jason Tedor jason@tedor.me
With features like CCR building on the CCS infrastructure, the settings
prefix search.remote makes less sense as the namespace for these remote
cluster settings than does a more general namespace like
cluster.remote. This commit replaces these settings with cluster.remote
with a fallback to the deprecated settings search.remote.
Welp, I broke this. I merged a change to auto-discover the CCR QA tests
by making :x-pack:plugin:ccr:check auto-discover the check tasks in the
qa sub-project. Yet, the check tasks for these sub-projects did not
depend on the necessary test tasks (as we were previously doing this
directly from the ccr build file. This commit fixes this!
This commit implements licensing for CCR. CCR will require a platinum
license, and administrative endpoints will be disabled when a license is
non-compliant.
For a new feature like CCR we will go without this extra layer of
indirection. This commit replaces all /_xpack/ccr/_(\S+) endpoints by
/_ccr/$1 endpoints.
The current shard follow mechanism is complex and does not give us easy ways the have visibility into the system (e.g. why we are falling behind).
The main reason why it is complex is because the current design is highly asynchronous. Also in the current model it is hard to apply backpressure
other than reducing the concurrent reads from the leader shard.
This PR has the following changes:
* Rewrote the shard follow task to coordinate the shard follow mechanism between a leader and follow shard in a single threaded manner.
This allows for better unit testing and makes it easier to add stats.
* All write operations read from the shard changes api should be added to a buffer instead of directly sending it to the bulk shard operations api.
This allows to apply backpressure. In this PR there is a limit that controls how many write ops are allowed in the buffer after which no new reads
will be performed until the number of ops is below that limit.
* The shard changes api includes the current global checkpoint on the leader shard copy. This allows reading to be a more self sufficient process;
instead of relying on a background thread to fetch the leader shard's global checkpoint.
* Reading write operations from the leader shard (via shard changes api) is a separate step then writing the write operations (via bulk shards operations api).
Whereas before a read would immediately result into a write.
* The bulk shard operations api returns the local checkpoint on the follow primary shard, to keep the shard follow task up to date with what has been written.
* Moved the shard follow logic that was previously in ShardFollowTasksExecutor to ShardFollowNodeTask.
* Moved over the changes from #31242 to make shard follow mechanism resilient from node and shard failures.
Relates to #30086
Today if a user omits the `_source` entirely or modifies the source
on indexing we have no chance to re-create the document after it has
been added. This is an issue for CCR and recovery based on soft deletes
which we are going to make the default. This change adds an additional
recovery source if the source is disabled or modified that is only kept
around until the document leaves the retention policy window.
This change adds a merge policy that efficiently removes this extra source
on merge for all document that are live and not in the retention policy window
anymore.
The old perform request methods on the REST client have been deprecated
in favor using request-flavored methods. This commit addresses the use
of these deprecated methods in the CCR test suite.
The TODOs in the rest actions was incorrect. The problem was that
these rest actions used `follow_index` as first named variable in the path
under which the rest actions were registered. Other candidate rest actions that
also have a named variable as first element in the path (but with a different
name) get resolved as rest parameters too and passed down to the rest
action that actually ends up getting executed.
In the case of the follow index api, a `index` parameter got passed down
to `RestFollowExistingAction`, but that param was never used. This caused the
follow index api call to fail, because of unused http parameters.
This change doesn't fixes that problem, but works around it by using
`index` as named variable for the follow index (instead of `follow_index`).
Relates to #30102
If security is enabled today with ccr then the follow index api will
fail with the fact that system user does not have privileges to use
the shard changes api. The reason that system user is used is because
the persistent tasks that keep the shards in sync runs in the background
and the user that invokes the follow index api only start those background
processes.
I think it is better that the system user isn't used by the persistent
tasks that keep shards in sync, but rather runs as the same user that
invoked the follow index api and use the permissions that that user has.
This is what this PR does, and this is done by keeping track of
security headers inside the persistent task (similar to how rollup does this).
This PR also adds a cluster ccr priviledge that allows a user to follow
or unfollow an index. Finally if a user that wants to follow an index,
it needs to have read and monitor privileges on the leader index and
monitor and write privileges on the follow index.
This commit adds an API to read translog snapshot from Lucene,
then cut-over from the existing translog to the new API in CCR.
Relates #30086
Relates #29530
The follow index api completely reuses CCS infrastructure that was exposed via:
https://github.com/elastic/elasticsearch/pull/29495
This means that the leader index parameter support the same ccs index
to indicate that an index resides in a different cluster.
I also added a qa module that smoke tests the cross cluster nature of ccr.
The idea is that this test just verifies that ccr can read data from a
remote leader index and that is it, no crazy randomization or indirectly
testing other features.