extract all clauses from a conjunction query.
When clauses from a conjunction are extracted the number of clauses is
also stored in an internal doc values field (minimum_should_match field).
This field is used by the CoveringQuery and allows the percolator to
reduce the number of false positives when selecting candidate matches and
in certain cases be absolutely sure that a conjunction candidate match
will match and then skip MemoryIndex validation. This can greatly improve
performance.
Before this change only a single clause was extracted from a conjunction
query. The percolator tried to extract the clauses that was rarest in order
(based on term length) to attempt less candidate queries to be selected
in the first place. However this still method there is still a very high
chance that candidate query matches are false positives.
This change also removes the influencing query extraction added via #26081
as this is no longer needed because now all conjunction clauses are extracted.
https://www.elastic.co/guide/en/elasticsearch/reference/6.x/percolator.html#_influencing_query_extractionCloses#26307
If an out of memory error is thrown while merging, today we quietly
rewrap it into a merge exception and the out of memory error is
lost. Instead, we need to rethrow out of memory errors, and in fact any
fatal error here, and let those go uncaught so that the node is torn
down. This commit causes this to be the case.
Relates #27265
The warnings headers have a fairly limited set of valid characters
(cf. quoted-text in RFC 7230). While we have assertions that we adhere
to this set of valid characters ensuring that our warning messages do
not violate the specificaion, we were neglecting the possibility that
arbitrary user input would trickle into these warning headers. Thus,
missing here was tests for these situations and encoding of characters
that appear outside the set of valid characters. This commit addresses
this by encoding any characters in a deprecation message that are not
from the set of valid characters.
Relates #27269
Only tests should use the single argument Environment constructor. To
enforce this the single arg Environment constructor has been replaced with
a test framework factory method.
Production code (beyond initial Bootstrap) should always use the same
Environment object that Node.getEnvironment() returns. This Environment
is also available via dependency injection.
Prior to this change if the `bwcTest` task is run then it would create
task for each version, but each task in reality would use wireCompatVersions - 1
ES version. So we were not actually testing against 5.6.x versions in the
6.x and 6.0 branches.
This commit adjusts the assertions for the sequence number BWC tests to
account for the fact that sometimes these tests are run in
mixed-clusters with 5.6 nodes (that do not understand sequence numbers),
and sometimes these tests are run in mixed-cluster with 6.0+ nodes (that
all understood sequence numbers).
Relates #27251
Windows handles trying to read a file that does not exist because a
component of the path is not a directory differently than other OS
handle this situation. This commit adjusts these assertions for Windows.
Finder creates these files if you browse a directory there. These files
are really annoying, but it's an incredible pain for users that these
files are created unbeknownst to them, and then they get in the way of
Elasticsearch starting. This commit adds leniency on macOS only to skip
these files.
Relates #27108
Today all these API calls have a sideeffect of making documents visible
to search requests. While this is sometimes desired it's an unnecessary sideeffect
and now that we have an internal (engine-private) index reader (#26972) we artificially
add a refresh call for bwc. This change removes this sideeffect in 7.0.
The rolling-upgrade test was only writing the "minimum_master_nodes" setting to the configuration file of the old nodes, but not the upgraded ones.
Also changes the value of "minimum_master_nodes" from "number_of_nodes" to "(number_of_nodes / 2) + 1".
Today we return a `String[]` that requires copying values for every
access. Yet, we already store the setting as a list so we can also directly
return the unmodifiable list directly. This makes list / array access in settings
a much cheaper operation especially if lists are large.
The shard preference _primary, _replica and its variants were useful
for the asynchronous replication. However, with the current impl, they
are no longer useful and should be removed.
Closes#26335
The single shard optimization that we have in our search api changes the type of response returned by the query transport action name based on the shard search request. if the request goes to one shard, we will do query and fetch at the same time, hence the response will be different. The proxying layer used in cross cluster search was not aware of this distinction, which causes serialization issues every time a cross cluster search request goes to a single shard and goes through a gateway node which has to forward the shard request to a data node. The coordinating node would then expect a QueryFetchSearchResult while the gateway would return a QuerySearchResult.
Closes#26833
Since `#getAsMap` exposes internal representation we are trying to remove it
step by step. This commit is cleaning up some xcontent writing as well as
usage in tests
The ensure green approach to avoid allocation delays caused problems with other indices created by other tests which didn't use ensure green in the various cluster stages. This aligns testHistoryUUIDIsGenerated to use the same approach used by the other test.
This commit increases the amount of time to wait for green to accound for unassigned shards that
have been delayed. The default delay is 60s, so we need to wait longer than that. Previously, the
wait would timeout at 30s due to the rest client and the default for the cluster health api.
Closes#26742
The test starts with two old nodes and creates indices (without waiting for green, which is fixed here too). Then it restarts one of the nodes and waits for it to join the cluster. This wait condition only uses wait for yellow as our generic infra doesn't how many nodes are there in total. Once the restarted node is part of the cluster (mixed mode) the second old node is restarted. If indices are not fully allocated when that happens, the shards will go into delayed unassigned mode. If the recovery of the replica never completed we may end up with corrupted / no secondary copy on the node. This will cause the shards to be delayed for 1m before being reassigned and the test will time out.
It is the exciting return of the global checkpoint background
sync. Long, long ago, in snapshot version far, far away we had and only
had a global checkpoint background sync. This sync would fire
periodically and send the global checkpoint from the primary shard to
the replicas so that they could update their local knowledge of the
global checkpoint. Later in time, as we sped ahead towards finalizing
the initial version of sequence IDs, we realized that we need the global
checkpoint updates to be inline. This means that on a replication
operation, the primary shard would piggy back the global checkpoint with
the replication operation to the replicas. The replicas would update
their local knowledge of the global checkpoint and reply with their
local checkpoint. However, this could allow the global checkpoint on the
primary to advance again and the replicas would fall behind in their
local knowledge of the global checkpoint. If another replication
operation never fired, then the replicas would be permanently behind. To
account for this, we added one more sync that would fire when the
primary shard fell idle. However, this has problems:
- the shard idle timer defaults to five minutes, a long time to wait
for the replicas to learn of the new global checkpoint
- if a replica missed the sync, there was no follow-up sync to catch
them up
- there is an inherent race condition where the primary shard could
fall idle mid-operation (after having sent the replication request to
the replicas); in this case, there would never be a background sync
after the operation completes
- tying the global checkpoint sync to the idle timer was never natural
To fix this, we add two additional changes for the global checkpoint to
be synced to the replicas. The first is that we add a post-operation
sync that only fires if there are no operations in flight and there is a
lagging replica. This gives us a chance to sync the global checkpoint to
the replicas immediately after an operation so that they are always kept
up to date. The second is that we add back a global checkpoint
background sync that fires on a timer. This timer fires every thirty
seconds, and is not configurable (for simplicity). This background sync
is smarter than what we had previously in the sense that it only sends a
sync if the global checkpoint on at least one replica is lagging that of
the primary. When the timer fires, we can compare the global checkpoint
on the primary to its knowledge of the global checkpoint on the replicas
and only send a sync if there is a shard behind.
Relates #26591
The `fielddata` field and the use of the `_name` field in the short syntax of the range
query have been deprecated in 5.0 and can be removed.
The same goes for the deprecated `score_mode` field in HasParentQueryBuilder,
the deprecated `like_text`, `ids` and `docs` parameter in the `more_like_this` query,
the deprecated query name in the short version of the `regexp` query, and several
deprecated alternative field names in other query builders.
Restoring a shard from snapshot throws the primary back in time violating assumptions and bringing the validity of global checkpoints in question. To avoid problems, we should make sure that a shard that was restored will never be the source of an ops based recovery to a shard that existed before the restore. To this end we have introduced the notion of `histroy_uuid` in #26577 and required that both source and target will have the same history to allow ops based recoveries. This PR make sure that a shard gets a new uuid after restore.
As suggested by @ywelsch , I derived the creation of a `history_uuid` from the `RecoverySource` of the shard. Store recovery will only generate a uuid if it doesn't already exist (we can make this stricter when we don't need to deal with 5.x indices). Peer recovery follows the same logic (note that this is different than the approach in #26557, I went this way as it means that shards always have a history uuid after being recovered on a 6.x node and will also mean that a rolling restart is enough for old indices to step over to the new seq no model). Local shards and snapshot force the generation of a new translog uuid.
Relates #10708Closes#26544
The new ops based recovery, introduce as part of #10708, is based on the assumption that all operations below the global checkpoint known to the replica do not need to be synced with the primary. This is based on the guarantee that all ops below it are available on primary and they are equal. Under normal operations this guarantee holds. Sadly, it can be violated when a primary is restored from an old snapshot. At the point the restore primary can miss operations below the replica's global checkpoint, or even worse may have total different operations at the same spot. This PR introduces the notion of a history uuid to be able to capture the difference with the restored primary (in a follow up PR).
The History UUID is generated by a primary when it is first created and is synced to the replicas which are recovered via a file based recovery. The PR adds a requirement to ops based recovery to make sure that the history uuid of the source and the target are equal. Under normal operations, all shard copies will stay with that history uuid for the rest of the index lifetime and thus this is a noop. However, it gives us a place to guarantee we fall back to file base syncing in special events like a restore from snapshot (to be done as a follow up) and when someone calls the truncate translog command which can go wrong when combined with primary recovery (this is done in this PR).
We considered in the past to use the translog uuid for this function (i.e., sync it across copies) and thus avoid adding an extra identifier. This idea was rejected as it removes the ability to verify that a specific translog really belongs to a specific lucene index. We also feel that having a history uuid will serve us well in the future.
Removing several occurrences of this typo in the docs and javadocs, seems to be
a common mistake. Corrections turn up once in a while in PRs, better to correct
some of this in one sweep.
This commit refactors the bootstrap checks into a single result object
that encapsulates whether or not the check passed, and a failure message
if the check failed. This simpifies the checks, and enables the messages
to more easily be based on the state used to discern whether or not the
check passed.
Relates #26637
This exposes the node settings and the persistent part of the cluster state to the
bootstrap checks to allow plugins to enforce certain preconditions based on the
recovered state.
There is a bug in Log4j on JDK 9 for walking the stack to find where a
log line is coming from. This bug is impacting some of our testing, so
this commit marks these tests as skippable only on JDK 9 until the bug
is fixed upstream.
Relates #26467
The current script service has a script compilation limit for a one
minute window. This is set to a small default value of 15. Instead of
increasing that default value, this commit introduces a new setting
that allows to configure a rate per time unit, so that the script service can deal with bursts better.
The new setting is named `script.max_compilations_rate`,
requires a nonnegative number and a positive time value.
The default is `75/5m`, which is equivalent to the existing 15 per minute.
This commit adds writing build metadata to the `check` command for each
bwc project. This ensures the files will be written if doing a general
`gradle check`, which is what CI intake jobs do. In later jobs like
bwcTest, the extra bwc-release-snapshot info is needed.
Note this commit also has a little cleanup of the output for the bwc
checkout, as it was plastering a git warning, instead of the real info
we care about (the refspec and commit that were used).
When creating the keystore explicitly (from executing
elasticsearch-keystore create) or implicitly (for plugins that require
the keystore to be created on install) on an Elasticsearch package
installation, we are running as the root user. This leaves
/etc/elasticsearch/elasticsearch.keystore having the wrong ownership
(root:root) so that the elasticsearch user can not read the keystore on
startup. This commit adds setgid to /etc/elasticsearch on package
installation so that when executing this directory (as we would when
creating the keystore), we will end up with the correct ownership
(root:elasticsearch). Additionally, we set the permissions on the
keystore to be 660 so that the elasticsearch user via its group can read
this file on startup.
Relates #26412
At current, we do not feel there is enough of a reason to shade the low
level rest client. It caused problems with commons logging and IDE's
during the brief time it was used. We did not know exactly how many
users will need this, and decided that leaving shading out until we
gather more information is best. Users can still shade the jar
themselves. For information and feeback, see issue #26366.
Closes#26328
This reverts commit 3a20922046.
This reverts commit 2c271f0f22.
This reverts commit 9d10dbea39.
This reverts commit e816ef89a2.
This commit removes the keystore creation on elasticsearch startup, and
instead adds a plugin property which indicates the plugin needs the
keystore to exist. It does still make sure the keystore.seed exists on
ES startup, but through an "upgrade" method that loading the keystore in
Bootstrap calls.
closes#26309
By making RestHighLevelClient Closeable, its close method will close the internal low-level REST client instance by default, which simplifies the way most users interact with the high-level client.
Its constructor accepts now a RestClientBuilder, which clarifies that the low-level REST client is internally created and managed.
It is still possible to provide an already built `RestClient` instance, but that can only be done by subclassing `RestHighLevelClient` and calling the protected constructor that accepts a `RestClient`. In such case a consumer has also to be provided, which controls what has to be done when the high-level client gets done.
Closes#26086
This commit makes the security code aware of the Java 9 FilePermission changes (see #21534) and allows us to remove the `jdk.io.permissionsUseCanonicalPath` system property.
We previously explicitly set the HOSTNAME environment variable so that
${HOSTNAME} could be used a placeholder for defining the node.name in
elasticsearch.yml. We removed explicitly setting this because bash
defines HOSTNAME. The problem is that bash defines HOSTNAME as a bash
variable, not as an environment variable. Therefore, to restore the
previous behavior, we export the bash value for HOSTNAME as an
environment variable named HOSTNAME. For consistency between Windows and
the Unix-like systems, we also define HOSTNAME with a value equal to the
environment variable COMPUTERNAME on Windows.
Relates #26262
We previously added a RuntimeDirectory directive to the systemd service
file for Elasticsearch. This commit adds a packaging test for the
situation that this directive was intended to address.
Relates #26229
Our documentation for the API is:
```
The _upgrade API is no longer useful and will be removed.
Instead, see Reindex to upgrade.
```
Given that, I don't think we need to test the API anymore.
Closes#25311
The environment variable CONF_DIR was previously inconsistently used in
our packaging to customize the location of Elasticsearch configuration
files. The importance of this environment variable has increased
starting in 6.0.0 as it's now used consistently to ensure Elasticsearch
and all secondary scripts (e.g., elasticsearch-keystore) all use the
same configuration. The name CONF_DIR is there for legacy reasons yet
it's too generic. This commit renames CONF_DIR to ES_PATH_CONF.
Relates #26197
This commit adds the nio transport as an option in place of the mock tcp
transport for tests. Each test will only use one transport type. The
transport type is decided by a random boolean generated inside of the
`ESTestCase` class.
This commit updates the version for master to 7.0.0-alpha1. It also adds
the 6.1 version constant, and fixes many tests, as well as marking some
as awaits fix.
Closes#25893Closes#25870
When ES starts up we verify we can write to all data folders and that they support atomic moves. We do so by creating and deleting temp files. If for some reason the files was successfully created but not successfully deleted, we still shut down correctly but subsequent start attempts will fail with a file already exists exception.
This commit makes sure to first clean any existing temporary files.
Superseeds #21007
We set some limits in the service file for Elasticsearch when installed
as a service on systemd-based systems. This commit adds a packaging test
that these limits are indeed set correctly.
Relates #25976
This commit removes some useless empty lines checks from the evil JNA
tests. These empty lines checks are useless because if the lines are
actually empty, the for loop will never be entered and we will hit the
fail condition at the bottom as intended anyway.
This commit adds a bootstrap check for the maximum file size, and
ensures the limit is set correctly when Elasticsearch is installed as a
service on systemd-based systems.
Relates #25974
This commit removes a rolling upgrade test for scripting that is totally
busted yet is preventing builds from succeeding. We elect to remove this
test as opposed to skipping the test as:
- it has beeen being skipped for months with no apparent loss
- it appears to need significant work to get to an unbusted state
This commit cleans up a few items with the script packaging:
- remove the now dead elasticsearch.in.sh script
- add assertions for the existence elasticsearch-env and
elasticsearch-keystore
The Writeble representation is less heavy to parse and that will benefit percolate performance and throughput.
The query builder's binary format has now the same bwc guarentees as the xcontent format.
Added a qa test that verifies that percolator queries written in older versions are still readable by the current version.
This commit fixes tests for environment-aware commands. A previous
change added a check that es.path.conf is not null. The problem is that
this system property is not being set in tests so this check trips every
single time. To fix this, we move the check into a method that can be
overridden, and then override this method in relevant places in tests to
avoid having to set the property in tests. We also add a test that this
check works as expected.
Today when we aggregate on the `_index` field the cross cluster search
alias is not taken into account. Neither is it respected when we search
on the field. This change adds support for cluster alias when the cluster
alias is present on the `_index` field.
Closes#25606
This commit removes all external dependencies from the rest client jar
and shades them in an 'org.elasticsearch.client' package within the jar
using shadowJar gradle plugin. All projects that depended on the
existing jar have been converted to using the 'org.elasticsearch.client'
package prefixes to interact with the rest client.
Closes#25208
This commit introduces the elasticsearch-env script. The purpose of this
script is threefold:
- vastly simplify the various scripts used in Elasticsearch
- provide a script that can be included in other scripts in the
Elasticsearch ecosystem (e.g., plugins)
- correctly establish the environment for all scripts (e.g., so that
users can run `elasticsearch-keystore` from a package distribution
without having to worry about setting `CONF_DIR` first, otherwise the
keystore would be created in the wrong location)
Relates #25815
This commit removes legacy checks for unsupported an environment
variable and unsupported system properties. This environment variable
and these system properties have not been supported since 1.x so it is
safe to stop checking for the existence of these settings.
Relates #25809
Today if we search across a large amount of shards we hit every shard. Yet, it's quite
common to search across an index pattern for time based indices but filtering will exclude
all results outside a certain time range ie. `now-3d`. While the search can potentially hit
hundreds of shards the majority of the shards might yield 0 results since there is not document
that is within this date range. Kibana for instance does this regularly but used `_field_stats`
to optimize the indexes they need to query. Now with the deprecation of `_field_stats` and it's upcoming removal a single dashboard in kibana can potentially turn into searches hitting hundreds or thousands of shards and that can easily cause search rejections even though the most of the requests are very likely super cheap and only need a query rewriting to early terminate with 0 results.
This change adds a pre-filter phase for searches that can, if the number of shards are higher than a the `pre_filter_shard_size` threshold (defaults to 128 shards), fan out to the shards
and check if the query can potentially match any documents at all. While false positives are possible, a negative response means that no matches are possible. These requests are not subject to rejection and can greatly reduce the number of shards a request needs to hit. The approach here is preferable to the kibana approach with field stats since it correctly handles aliases and uses the correct threadpools to execute these requests. Further it's completely transparent to the user and improves scalability of elasticsearch in general on large clusters.
This commit removes the environment variable ES_JVM_OPTIONS that allows
the jvm.options file to sit separately from the rest of the config
directory. Instead, we use the CONF_DIR environment variable for custom
configuration location just as we do for the other configuration files.
Relates #25679
This commit reverts a rename of the systemd packaging tests. The rename
was done locally to speed up iteration of testing some changes against
systemd but was not reverted before pushing. This commit reverts this
change.
On Debian-based systems the install scripts are run with set -e meaning
that if there is an error in executing one of these scripts then the
script fails. If systemd-sysctl is masked then trying to restart the
systemd-sysctl service to pick up the changes to vm.max_map_count will
fail leading to the post-install script failing. Instead, we should
account for the possbility of failure here by not letting the command to
restart this service exit with non-zero status code. This commit does
this, and adds a test for this situation.
Relates #25657
We lost the cluster alias due to some special caseing in inner hits
and due to the fact that we didn't pass on the alias to the shard request.
This change ensures that we have the cluster alias present on the shard to
ensure all SearchShardTarget reads preserve the alias.
Relates to #25606
This commit enables the console appender for the settings deprecation
logger used in the deprecated settings logging test. This output will be
useful if this test fails again (it failed once mysteriously).
* Improved REST endpoint exception handling, see #15335
Also improved OPTIONS http method handling to better conform with the
http spec.
* Tidied up formatting and comments
See #15335
* Tests for #15335
* Cleaned up comments, added section number
* Swapped out tab indents for space indents
* Test class now extends ESSingleNodeTestCase
* Capture RestResponse so it can be examined in test cases
Simple addition to surface the RestResponse object so we can run tests
against it (see issue #15335).
* Refactored class name, included feedback
See #15335.
* Unit test for REST error handling enhancements
Randomizing unit test for enhanced REST response error handling. See
issue #15335 for more details.
* Cleaned up formatting
* New constructor to set HTTP method
Constructor added to support RestController test cases.
* Refactored FakeRestRequest, streamlined test case.
* Cleaned up conflicts
* Tests for #15335
* Added functionality to ignore or include path wildcards
See #15335
* Further enhancements to request handling
Refactored executeHandler to prioritize explicit path matches. See
#15335 for more information.
* Cosmetic fixes
* Refactored method handlers
* Removed redundant import
* Updated integration tests
* Refactoring to address issue #17853
* Cleaned up test assertions
* Fixed edge case if OPTIONS method randomly selected as invalid method
In this test, an OPTIONS method request is valid, and should not return
a 405 error.
* Remove redundant static modifier
* Hook the multiple PathTrie attempts into RestHandler.dispatchRequest
* Add missing space
* Correctly retrieve new handler for each Trie strategy
* Only copy headers to threadcontext once
* Fix test after REST header copying moved higher up
* Restore original params when trying the next trie candidate
* Remove OPTIONS for invalidHttpMethodArray so a 405 is guaranteed in tests
* Re-add the fix I already added and got removed during merge :-/
* Add missing GET method to test
* Add documentation to migration guide about breaking 404 -> 405 changes
* Explain boolean response, pull into local var
* fixup! Explain boolean response, pull into local var
* Encapsulate multiple HTTP methods into PathTrie<MethodHandlers>
* Add PathTrie.retrieveAll where all matching modes can be retrieved
Then TrieMatchingMode can be package private and not leak into RestController
* Include body of error with 405 responses to give hint about valid methods
* Fix missing usageService handler addition
I accidentally removed this :X
* Initialize PathTrieIterator modes with Arrays.asList
* Use "== false" instead of !
* Missing paren :-/
In the past global checkpoint syncing was done in the background based an interval set by an index setting. In order to set that setting something reasonable for a test, the master needed to know about the setting. Therefore the test didn't check global checkpoints if the master was old. These days the global checkpoint sync is inlined with indexing operations and that restriction is not needed.
In the rolling upgrade tests, there is a test to create an index with
replica shards and ensure that in the mixed cluster environment, the
cluster health is green before any other tests are executed. However,
there were two problems with this. First, if the replica shard was
residing on the restarted node, then delayed allocation will kick in and
cause the cluster health request to timeout after 1m. The fix to this
was to drastically lower the delayed allocation setting. Second, if the
primary exists on the higher version node, then the replica cannot be
assigned to the lower version node because recovery cannot happen from
lower lucene versions. The fix here was to wait for the cluster health
to be yellow instead of green in the mixed cluster environment. In the
fully upgraded cluster, the cluster health check waits for a green
cluster as before.
Closes#25185
In 6.x we prevent multiple types and default to `index.mapping.single_type: false`
This change removes the registered setting and ensures that it's preserved for
5.x indices.
Relates to #24961
This commit adds an LRU set to used to determine if a keyed deprecation
message should be written to the deprecation logs, or only added to the
response headers on the thread context.
Relates #25474
Currently QueryParseContext is only a thin wrapper around an XContentParser that
adds little functionality of its own. I provides helpers for long deprecated
field names which can be removed and two helper methods that can be made static
and moved to other classes. This is a first step in helping to remove
QueryParseContext entirely.
When a setting is deprecated, if that setting is used repeatedly we
currently emit a deprecation warning every time the setting is used. In
cases like hitting settings endpoints over and over against a node with
a lot of deprecated settings, this can lead to excessive deprecation
warnings which can crush a node. This commit ensures that a given
setting only sees deprecation logging at most once.
Relates #25457
This commit changes how we determine if there were any remote indices that a search should have
been executed against. Previously, we used the list of remote shard iterators but if the remote
index pattern resolved to no indices there would be no remote shard iterators even though the
request specified remote indices. The map of remote cluster names to the original indices is used
instead so that we can determine if there were remote indices even when there are no remote shard
iterators.
Closes#25426
This commit removes the default path settings for data and logs. With
this change, we now ship the packages with these settings set in the
elasticsearch.yml configuration file rather than going through the
default.path.data and default.path.logs dance that we went through in
the past.
Relates #25408
This commit removes path.conf as a valid setting and replaces it with a
command-line flag for specifying a non-default path for configuration.
Relates #25392
This removes the remaining usage of `mapping.single_type` from the parent join
module and moves it's bwc test to the mixed cluster tests
Relates to #24961
Relates to #20257
* Remove the setting from the yml tests and replace with tests using
`join` field. We can't use the setting in yml tests without lots of
backflips but we have `ReindexParentChildTests` for the coverage.
There weren't tests for `join` field with reindex before this. Adding
these tests discovered #25363.
* Remove the setting from `ReindexParentChildTests` and replace with
`index.version.created=V_5_6_0`. This test can be entirely removed
when legacy parent/child support is dropped from core.
* Port the yml tests that set _parent into integ tests so they
can set the index created version. These tests can be removed
when we drop support for _parent in core.
* Port a delete-by-query test for filtering based on type to an
`ESIntegTestCase` so it can use `index.version.created=5.6.0` to
setup documents of multiple types. This whole feature can be dropped
when we no longer support multiple types per index.
Relates to #24961
OldIndexBackwardsCompatibilityIT#testOldClusterStates tested whether global and index metadata could be read from data directory,
this can also be tested in full cluster qa test that checks cluster state via api.
Relates to #24939
Ports all of RepositoryUpgradabilityIT to qa:full-cluster-restart and ports as much of RestoreBackwardsCompatIT as possible into qa:full-cluster-restart.
This commit adds a gradle project, set inside the root build.gradle,
which controls all our bwc tests. This allows for seamless (ie no errant
CI failures) backporting of behavior.
In #25201, a setting was added to allow setting the retry timeout for the rest client under the
impression that this would allow requests to go longer than 30s. However, there is also a socket
timeout that needs to be set to greater than 30s, which this change adds a setting for.
This commit adds a setting to change the request timeout for the rest client. This is useful as the
default timeout is 30s, which is also the same default for calls like cluster health. If both are
the same then the response from the cluster health api will not be received as the client usually
times out first making test failures harder to debug.
Relates #25185
Duplicate data paths already fail to work because we would attempt to
take out a node lock on the directory a second time which will fail
after the first lock attempt succeeds. However, how this failure
manifests is not apparent at all and is quite difficult to
debug. Instead, we should explicitly reject duplicate data paths to make
the failure cause more obvious.
Relates #25178
We have a custom logger implementation known as a prefix logger that is
used to write every message by the logger with a given prefix. This is
useful for node-level, index-level, and shard-level messages where we
want to log the node name, index name, and shard ID, respectively, if
possible. The mechanism that we employ is that of a marker. Log4j has a
built-in facility for managing these markers, but its effectively a
memory leak because these markers are held in a map and can never be
released. This is problematic for us since indices and shards do not
necessarily have infinite life spans and so on a node where there are
many indices being creted and destroyed, this infinite lifespan can be a
problem indeed. To solve this, we use our own cache of markers. This is
necessary to prevent too many instances of the marker for the same
prefix from being created (just think of all the shard-level components
that exist in the system), and to workaround the effective leak in
Log4j. These markers are stored as weak references in a weak hash
map. It is these weak references that are unneeded. When a key is
removed from a weak hash map, the corresponding entry is placed on a
reference queue that is eventually cleared. This commit simplifies
prefix logger by removing this unnecessary weak reference wrapper.
Relates #22460
This commit adds back "id" as the key within a script to specify a
stored script (which with file scripts now gone is no longer ambiguous).
It also adds "source" as a replacement for "code". This is in an attempt
to normalize how scripts are specified across both put stored scripts and script usages, including search template requests. This also deprecates the old inline/stored keys.
This adds an option to `ClusterConfiguration` to preserve the
`shared` directory when starting up a new cluster and switches
the `qa:full-cluster-restart` tests to use it rather than
disable the clean shared task.
Relates to #24846
We're using Vagrant in more places now than before. This commit includes a plugin that verifies
the Vagrant and Virtualbox installations for projects that depend on them. This shared code
should fix up the errors we've seen from CI builds relating to the new Kerberos fixture.
* Adds nodes usage API to monitor usages of actions
The nodes usage API has 2 main endpoints
/_nodes/usage and /_nodes/{nodeIds}/usage return the usage statistics
for all nodes and the specified node(s) respectively.
At the moment only one type of usage statistics is available, the REST
actions usage. This records the number of times each REST action class is
called and when the nodes usage api is called will return a map of rest
action class name to long representing the number of times each of the action
classes has been called.
Still to do:
* [x] Create usage service to store usage statistics
* [x] Record usage in REST layer
* [x] Add Transport Actions
* [x] Add REST Actions
* [x] Tests
* [x] Documentation
* Rafactors UsageService so counts are done by the handlers
* Fixing up docs tests
* Adds a name to all rest actions
* Addresses review comments
We default to 0 replicas in the rolling restart scenario already to ensure
we test against worst case. Yet, this adds a dummy index to ensure we also
recover and index with replicas just fine.
The Lucene version expectation in the verify Lucene version test is
backwards, mixing up the expected and actual values. This commit
reorders them to fix this issue.
The Lucene version constants for 5.4.1 and 5.5.0 are wrong, they are
listed as 6.5.0 instead of 6.5.1. This commit fixes these issues, and
adds a test to ensure that this does not happen again.
Relates #24923
Removes the need for the `_UNRELEASED` suffix on versions by detecting if a version should be unreleased or not based on the versions around it. This should make it simpler to automate the task of adding a new version label.
These tests spin up two nodes of an older version of Elasticsearch,
create some stuff, shut down the nodes, start the current version,
and verify that the created stuff works.
You can run `gradle qa:full-cluster-restart:check` to run these
tests against the head of the previous branch of Elasticsearch
(5.x for master, 5.4 for 5.x, etc) or you can run
`gradle qa:full-cluster-restart:bwcTest` to run this test against
all "index compatible" versions, one after the other. For master
this is every released version in the 5.x.y version *and* the tip
of the 5.x branch.
I'd love to add more to these tests in the future but these
currently just cover the functionality of the `create_bwc_index.py`
script and start to cover the assertions in the
`OldIndexBackwardsCompatibilityIT` test.
This is a simple refactoring to move the context definitions into the
type that they use. While we have multiple context names for the same
class at the moment, this will eventually become one ScriptContext per
instance type, so the pattern of a static member on the interface called
CONTEXT can be used. This commit also moves the consolidated list of
contexts provided by core ES into ScriptModule.
As we work towards contexts implying the return type of compilation, we
first need ScriptContext to not be an enum. This commit removes the
Standard enum and Plugin subclass of ScriptContext.
ScriptEngine implementations have an overridable method to indicate they
are safe to use as inline scripts. Since groovy was removed fro 6.0,
there are no longer any implementations which used the default false
value. Furthermore, the value was not actually read anywhere. This
commit removes the method. The ScriptEngineRegistry was also no longer
necessary as it only was used to build a map from language to engine.
This commit renames the backwards-5.0 qa test to mixed-cluster and
creates a test within the project per wire compat version. Like with
rolling upgrade tests, the integTest task will run against the most
recent version, while all versions will be tested with the bwcTest task.
Now that we generate the versions list from Versions.java we can
drop the list of versions maintained for vagrant testing. One nice
thing that the vagrant testing did was to check if the list of
versions was out of date. This moves that test to the core
project.
This commit changes the rolling upgrade test to create a set of rest
test tasks per wire compat version. The most recent wire compat version
is always tested with the `integTest` task, and all versions can be
tested with `bwcTest`.
This commit expands the logic for version extraction from Version.java
to include a list of all versions for backcompat purposes. The tests
using bwcVersion are converted to use this list, but those tests
(rolling upgrade and backwards-5.0) are still not randomized; that will
happen in another followup.