While the parser allowed changing field type settings, these would never
have been serialized. So this change simply removes parsing using
parseField. Backcompat will still work if a user uploads old settings
(they just would never have worked anyways, so we continue ignoring
them with 1.x, and 2.x will now error).
see #8143closes#9914
To support the `_recovery` API, the recovery process keeps track of current progress in a class called RecoveryState. This class currently have some issues, mostly around concurrency (see #6644 ). This PR cleans it up as well as other issues around it:
- Make the Index subsection API cleaner:
- remove redundant information - all calculation is done based on the underlying file map
- clearer definition of what is what: total files, vs reused files (local files that match the source) vs recovered files (copied over). % based progress is reported based on recovered files only.
- cleaned up json response to match other API (sadly this breaks the structure). We now properly report human values for dates and other units.
- Add more robust unit testing
- Detail flag was passed along as state (it's now a ToXContent param)
- State lookup during reporting is now always done via the IndexShard , no more fall backs to many other classes.
- Cleanup APIs around time and move the little computations to the state class as opposed to doing them out of the API
I also improved error messages out of the REST testing infra for things I run into.
Closes#6644Closes#9811
The number of current pending tasks is useful to detect and overloaded master. This commit adds it to the cluster health API. The complete list can be retrieved from the dedicated pending tasks API.
It also adds rest tests for the cluster health variants.
Closes#9877
The plus sign is not treated correctly in encoding and can lead
to problems, if the search request is encoded as HTTP parameter
instead of the HTTP body.
Relates #9769
Using '_cat/segments' or the indices segments api without matching any index
now returns empty result instead of throwing IndexMissingException.
Closes#9219
Whenever we have an api that supports GET with a body, we always support the POST method too, as well as providing the body as a query_string parameter called `source`. Our REST spec should reflect this convention. FIxed them and introduced a hard check at parse time in our Java REST tests runner, which will cause the tests to fail if spec are not compliant.
Closes#9629
The percolate api doesn't parse the encoded body provided as `source` query string parameter, when percolating an existing document. Fixed and added REST test that would have caught this since we randomly use GET + encoded `source` param instead of GET + request body in our java runner (the perl runner does the same too).
Closes#9628
The `full` option and `FlushType.NEW_WRITER` only exists to allow
realtime changes to two settings (`index.codec` and `index.concurrency`).
Those settings are very expert and don't really need to be updateable
in realtime.
Until now, there was no possibility to expose infos about configured
transport profiles. This commit adds the ability to expose those
information in the TransportInfo class.
The channel was well as the netty pipeline handler now also contain
the profile they were configured for, as this information cannot be
extracted elsewhere.
In addition, each profile now can set its own publish host and port,
which might be needed in case of portforwarding or using docker.
Closes#9134
Adding missing support for the multi-index query parameters 'ignore_unavailable',
'allow_no_indices' and 'expand_wildcards' to '_cluster/state' API. These
parameters are supposed to be supported for APIs that work across multiple indices.
So far overwriting the default settings per REST call was not possible which is
fixed here.
Closes#5229Closes#9295
Today we give the HTTP status back within the HTTP response itself and within the JSON response as well:
```sh
curl localhost:9200/
```
```js
{
"status" : 200,
"name" : "Red Wolf",
"version" : {
"number" : "2.0.0",
"build_hash" : "6837a61d8a646a2ac7dc8da1ab3c4ab85d60882d",
"build_timestamp" : "2014-08-19T13:55:56Z",
"build_snapshot" : true,
"lucene_version" : "4.9"
},
"tagline" : "You Know, for Search"
}
```
The header indicates to how many shard copies (primary and replicas shards) a write was supposed to go to, to how many
shard copies to write succeeded and potentially captures shard failures if writing into a replica shard fails.
For async writes it also includes the number of shards a write is still pending.
Closes#7994
This fix ensures that calls to the GET alias/mappings/settings/warmers APIs return the aliases/mappings/settings/warmers object even if there is no content within them.. This make them consistent with the GET Index API docs and the breaking changes in 1.4 docs
Closes#9148
Add a new ignore_idle_threads boolean option (default true) to
/_nodes/hot_threads, to filter out threads in known idle places like
waiting on a socket select or on pulling the next task from an empty
queue.
Closes#8985Closes#8908
This commit adds support for version and version_type to the Term Vectors API.
This could be useful in the following case whereby the user gets a document
and later wants to generate its TVs. With version, this would ensure that only
the TVs of that particular document are generated, and error out if the
document has been updated in between.
Closes#7480
Adds a `ignore_like` parameter to the MLT Query, which simply tells the
algorithm to skip all the terms from the given documents. This could be useful
in order to better guide nearest neighbor search by telling the algorithm to
never explore the space spanned by the given `ignore_like` docs. In essence we
are interested about the characteristic of a given item, but not of the ones
provided by `ignore_like`, thereby forcing the algorithm to go deeper in its
selection of terms. Note that this is different than simply performing a must
not boolean query on the unliked items. The syntax is exactly the same as the
`like` parameter.
Closes#8674
Today, Elasticsearch has a separate merge thread pool checking once
per second (by default) if any merges are necessary, but this is no
longer necessary since we can and do now tell Lucene's
ConcurrentMergeScheduler never to "hard pause" threads when merges
fall behind, since we do our own index throttling.
This change goes back to letting Lucene launch merges as needed, and
removes these two expert settings:
index.merge.force_async_merge
index.merge.async_interval
Now merges kick off immediately instead of waiting up to 1 second
before running.
Closes#8643
We speak of the term vectors of a document, where each field has an associated
stored term vector. Since by default we are requesting all the term vectors of
a document, the HTTP request endpoint should rather be called `_termvectors`
instead of `_termvector`. The usage of `_termvector` is now deprecated, as
well as the transport client call to termVector and prepareTermVector.
Closes#8484
Fixed behaviour where two representations of the default index analyzer weren't being treated as equivalent. Added REST test to confirm fix.
Closes#2716
If a shard (e.g. replica) gets initialized after we indexed the document it gets refreshed internally and we find the doc and its term_vectors, thus the test fails
We currently use the djb2 hash function in order to compute the shard a
document should go to. Unfortunately this hash function is not very
sophisticated and you can sometimes hit adversarial cases, such as numeric ids
on 33 shards.
Murmur3 generates hashes with a better distribution, which should avoid the
adversarial cases.
Here are some examples of how 100000 incremental ids are distributed to shards
using either djb2 or murmur3.
5 shards:
Murmur3: [19933, 19964, 19940, 20030, 20133]
DJB: [20000, 20000, 20000, 20000, 20000]
3 shards:
Murmur3: [33185, 33347, 33468]
DJB: [30100, 30000, 39900]
33 shards:
Murmur3: [2999, 3096, 2930, 2986, 3070, 3093, 3023, 3052, 3112, 2940, 3036, 2985, 3031, 3048, 3127, 2961, 2901, 3105, 3041, 3130, 3013, 3035, 3031, 3019, 3008, 3022, 3111, 3086, 3016, 2996, 3075, 2945, 2977]
DJB: [0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 900, 900, 900, 900, 1000, 1000, 10000, 10000, 10000, 10000, 9100, 9100, 9100, 9100, 9000, 9000, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0]
Even if djb2 looks ideal in some cases (5 shards), the fact that the
distribution of its hashes has some patterns can raise issues with some shard
counts (eg. 3, or even worse 33).
Some tests have been modified because they relied on implementation details of
the routing hash function.
Close#7954