This new snapshot mostly brings a change to TopFieldCollector which can now
early terminate collection when trackTotalHits is `false`.
As a follow-up, we should replace our usage of
`EarlyTerminatingSortingCollector` with this new option.
The main highlight of this new snapshot is that it introduces the opportunity
for queries to opt out of caching. In case a query opts out of caching, not only
will it never be cached, but also no compound query that wraps it will be
cached.
Also include _type and _id for parent/child hits inside inner hits.
In the case of top_hits aggregation the nested search hits are
directly returned and are not grouped by a root or parent document, so
it is important to include the _id and _index attributes in order to know
to what documents these nested search hits belong to.
Closes#27053
The `delimited_payload_filter` is renamed to `delimited_payload`, the old name is
deprecated and should be replaced by `delimited_payload`.
Closes#21978
Today we require users to prepare their indices for split operations.
Yet, we can do this automatically when an index is created which would
make the split feature a much more appealing option since it doesn't have
any 3rd party prerequisites anymore.
This change automatically sets the number of routinng shards such that
an index is guaranteed to be able to split once into twice as many shards.
The number of routing shards is scaled towards the default shard limit per index
such that indices with a smaller amount of shards can be split more often than
larger ones. For instance an index with 1 or 2 shards can be split 10x
(until it approaches 1024 shards) while an index created with 128 shards can only
be split 3x by a factor of 2. Please note this is just a default value and users
can still prepare their indices with `index.number_of_routing_shards` for custom
splitting.
NOTE: this change has an impact on the document distribution since we are changing
the hash space. Documents are still uniformly distributed across all shards but since
we are artificually changing the number of buckets in the consistent hashign space
document might be hashed into different shards compared to previous versions.
This is a 7.0 only change.
This change stops indexing the `_primary_term` field for nested documents
to allow fast retrieval of parent documents. Today we create a docvalues
field for children to ensure we have a dense datastructure on disk. Yet,
since we only use the primary term to tie-break on when we see the same
seqID on indexing having a dense datastructure is less important. We can
use this now to improve the nested docs performance and it's memory footprint.
Relates to #24362
Removing the unnecessary RankEvalTestHelper, making use of the common test infra
in ESTestCase, also hardening a few of the classes by making more fields final.
This change removes the module named aggs-composite and adds the `composite` aggs
as a core aggregation. This allows other plugins to use this new aggregation
and simplifies the integration in the HL rest client.
Today Cross Cluster Search requires at least one node in each remote cluster to be up once the cross cluster search is run. Otherwise the whole search request fails despite some of the data (either local and/or remote) is available. This happens when performing the _search/shards calls to find out which remote shards the query has to be executed on. This scenario is different from shard failures that may happen later on when the query is actually executed, in case e.g. remote shards are missing, which is not going to fail the whole request but rather yield partial results, and the _shards section in the response will indicate that.
This commit introduces a boolean setting per cluster called search.remote.$cluster_alias.skip_if_disconnected, set to false by default, which allows to skip certain clusters if they are down when trying to reach them through a cross cluster search requests. By default all clusters are mandatory.
Scroll requests support such setting too when they are first initiated (first search request with scroll parameter), but subsequent scroll rounds (_search/scroll endpoint) will fail if some of the remote clusters went down meanwhile.
The search API response contains now a new _clusters section, similar to the _shards section, that gets returned whenever one or more clusters were disconnected and got skipped:
"_clusters" : {
"total" : 3,
"successful" : 2,
"skipped" : 1
}
Such section won't be part of the response if no clusters have been skipped.
The per cluster skip_unavailable setting value has also been added to the output of the remote/info API.
This is related to #27422. Right now when we send a write to the netty
transport, we attach a listener to the future. When you submit a write
on the netty event loop and the event loop is shutdown, the onFailure
method is called. Unfortunately, netty then tries to notify the listener
which cannot be done without dispatching to the event loop. In this
case, the dispatch fails and netty logs and error and does not tell us.
This commit checks that netty is still not shutdown after sending a
message. If netty is shutdown, we complete the listener.
Currently we use ActionListener<TcpChannel> for connect, close, and send
message listeners in TcpTransport. However, all of the listeners have to
capture a reference to a channel in the case of the exception api being
called. This commit changes these listeners to be type <Void> as passing
the channel to onResponse is not necessary. Additionally, this change
makes it easier to integrate with low level transports (which use
different implementations of TcpChannel).
This commit is a follow up to the work completed in #27132. Essentially
it transitions two more methods (sendMessage and getLocalAddress) from
Transport to TcpChannel. With this change, there is no longer a need for
TcpTransport to be aware of the specific type of channel a transport
returns. So that class is no longer parameterized by channel type.
* This change adds a module called `aggs-composite` that defines a new aggregation named `composite`.
The `composite` aggregation is a multi-buckets aggregation that creates composite buckets made of multiple sources.
The sources for each bucket can be defined as:
* A `terms` source, values are extracted from a field or a script.
* A `date_histogram` source, values are extracted from a date field and rounded to the provided interval.
This aggregation can be used to retrieve all buckets of a deeply nested aggregation by flattening the nested aggregation in composite buckets.
A composite buckets is composed of one value per source and is built for each document as the combinations of values in the provided sources.
For instance the following aggregation:
````
"test_agg": {
"terms": {
"field": "field1"
},
"aggs": {
"nested_test_agg":
"terms": {
"field": "field2"
}
}
}
````
... which retrieves the top N terms for `field1` and for each top term in `field1` the top N terms for `field2`, can be replaced by a `composite` aggregation in order to retrieve **all** the combinations of `field1`, `field2` in the matching documents:
````
"composite_agg": {
"composite": {
"sources": [
{
"field1": {
"terms": {
"field": "field1"
}
}
},
{
"field2": {
"terms": {
"field": "field2"
}
}
},
}
}
````
The response of the aggregation looks like this:
````
"aggregations": {
"composite_agg": {
"buckets": [
{
"key": {
"field1": "alabama",
"field2": "almanach"
},
"doc_count": 100
},
{
"key": {
"field1": "alabama",
"field2": "calendar"
},
"doc_count": 1
},
{
"key": {
"field1": "arizona",
"field2": "calendar"
},
"doc_count": 1
}
]
}
}
````
By default this aggregation returns 10 buckets sorted in ascending order of the composite key.
Pagination can be achieved by providing `after` values, the values of the composite key to aggregate after.
For instance the following aggregation will aggregate all composite keys that sorts after `arizona, calendar`:
````
"composite_agg": {
"composite": {
"after": {"field1": "alabama", "field2": "calendar"},
"size": 100,
"sources": [
{
"field1": {
"terms": {
"field": "field1"
}
}
},
{
"field2": {
"terms": {
"field": "field2"
}
}
}
}
}
````
This aggregation is optimized for indices that set an index sorting that match the composite source definition.
For instance the aggregation above could run faster on indices that defines an index sorting like this:
````
"settings": {
"index.sort.field": ["field1", "field2"]
}
````
In this case the `composite` aggregation can early terminate on each segment.
This aggregation also accepts multi-valued field but disables early termination for these fields even if index sorting matches the sources definition.
This is mandatory because index sorting picks only one value per document to perform the sort.
Right now our different transport implementations must duplicate
functionality in order to stay compliant with the requirements of
TcpTransport. They must all implement common logic to open channels,
close channels, keep track of channels for eventual shutdown, etc.
Additionally, there is a weird and complicated relationship between
Transport and TransportService. We eventually want to start merging
some of the functionality between these classes.
This commit starts moving towards a world where TransportService retains
all the application logic and channel state. Transport implementations
in this world will only be tasked with returning a channel when one is
requested, calling transport service when a channel is accepted from
a server, and starting / stopping itself.
Specifically this commit changes how channels are opened and closed. All
Transport implementations now return a channel type that must comply with
the new TcpChannel interface. This interface has the methods necessary
for TcpTransport to completely manage the lifecycle of a channel. This
includes setting the channel up, waiting for connection, adding close
listeners, and eventually closing.
* REST: Rename ingest.processor.grok to ingest.processor_grok
* REST: Rename remote.info to cluster.remote_info
* REST: Fixed bad YAML comments
* REST: Force dummy scripts to be strings, not numbers
* REST: Fix bad YAML in search/110_field_collapsing.yml
* REST: Adjust percentile tests to work with Perl number handling
The Json Processor originally only supported parsing field values into Maps even
though the JSON spec specifies that strings, null-values, numbers, booleans, and arrays
are also valid JSON types. This commit enables parsing these values now.
response to #25972.
This is a followup to #26521. This commit expands the alias added for
the elasticsearch client codebase to all codebases. The original full
jar name property is left intact. This only adds an alias without the
version, which should help ease the pain in updating any versions (ES
itself or dependencies).
the query would be marked as verified candidate match. This is wrong as it can only marked as verified candidate match
on indices created on or after 6.1, due to the use of the CoveringQuery.
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
Sometimes systems like Beats would want to extract the date's timezone and/or locale
from a value in a field of the document. This PR adds support for mustache templating
to extract these values.
Closes#24024.
* Add limits for ngram and shingle settings (#27211)
Create index-level settings:
max_ngram_diff - maximum allowed difference between max_gram and min_gram in
NGramTokenFilter/NGramTokenizer. Default is 1.
max_shingle_diff - maximum allowed difference between max_shingle_size and
min_shingle_size in ShingleTokenFilter. Default is 3.
Throw an IllegalArgumentException when
trying to create NGramTokenFilter, NGramTokenizer, ShingleTokenFilter
where difference between max_size and min_size exceeds the settings value.
Closes#25887
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.
If creating the REST request throws an exception (for example, because
of invalid headers), we leak the request due to failure to release the
buffer (which would otherwise happen after replying on the
channel). This commit addresses this leak by handling the failure case.
Relates #27222
* Enhances exists queries to reduce need for `_field_names`
Before this change we wrote the name all the fields in a document to a `_field_names` field and then implemented exists queries as a term query on this field. The problem with this approach is that it bloats the index and also affects indexing performance.
This change adds a new method `existsQuery()` to `MappedFieldType` which is implemented by each sub-class. For most field types if doc values are available a `DocValuesFieldExistsQuery` is used, falling back to using `_field_names` if doc values are disabled. Note that only fields where no doc values are available are written to `_field_names`.
Closes#26770
* Addresses review comments
* Addresses more review comments
* implements existsQuery explicitly on every mapper
* Reinstates ability to perform term query on `_field_names`
* Added bwc depending on index created version
* Review Comments
* Skips tests that are not supported in 6.1.0
These values will need to be changed after backporting this PR to 6.x
When a search is executing locally over many shards, we can stack
overflow during query phase execution. This happens due to callbacks
that occur after a phase completes for a shard and we move to the same
phase on another shard. If all the shards for the query are local to the
local node then we will never go async and these callbacks will end up
as recursive calls. With sufficiently many shards, this will end up as a
stack overflow. This commit addresses this by truncating the stack by
forking to another thread on the executor for the phase.
Relates #27069
The headers passed to reindex were skipped except for the last one. This
commit fixes the copying of the headers, as well as adds a base test
case for rest client builders to access the headers within the built
rest client.
relates #22976
This commit removes the `ByteBufStreamInput` `readBytesReference` and
`readBytesRef` methods. These methods are zero-copy which means that
they retain a reference to the underlying netty buffer. The problem is
that our `TcpTransport` is not designed to handle zero-copy. The netty
implementation sets the read index past the current message once it has
been deserialized, handled, and mostly likely dispatched to another
thread. This means that netty is free to release this buffer. So it is
unsafe to retain a reference to it without calling `retain`. And we
cannot call `retain` because we are not currently designed to handle
reference counting past the transport level.
This should not currently impact us as we wrap the `ByteBufStreamInput`
in `NamedWriteableAwareStreamInput` in the `TcpTransport`. This stream
essentially delegates to the underling stream. However, in the case of
`readBytesReference` and `readBytesRef` it leaves thw implementations
to the standard `StreamInput` methods. These methods call the read byte
array method which delegates to `ByteBufStreamInput`. The read byte
array method on `ByteBufStreamInput` copies so it is safe. The only
impact of this commit should be removing methods that could be dangerous
if they were eventually called due to some refactoring.
Upgrade to Jackson 2.9.2 and also use a boolean `closed` flag to
indicate that a FastStringReader instance is closed, so that length
is still correctly reported after the reader is closed.
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.
Right now we are attempting to set SO_LINGER to 0 on server channels
when we are stopping the tcp transport. This is not a supported socket
option and throws an exception. This also prevents the channels from
being closed.
This commit 1. doesn't set SO_LINGER for server channges, 2. checks
that it is a supported option in nio, and 3. changes the log message
to warn for server channel close exceptions.
While opening a connection to a node, a channel can subsequently
close. If this happens, a future callback whose purpose is to close all
other channels and disconnect from the node will fire. However, this
future will not be ready to close all the channels because the
connection will not be exposed to the future callback yet. Since this
callback is run once, we will never try to disconnect from this node
again and we will be left with a closed channel. This commit adds a
check that all channels are open before exposing the channel and throws
a general connection exception. In this case, the usual connection retry
logic will take over.
Relates #26932
We had a TODO about adding tests around cached boxing. In #24077
I tracked down the uncached boxing tests and saw the TODO. Cached
boxing testing is a fairly small extension to that work.
With this commit we simplify our network layer by only allowing to define a
fixed receive predictor size instead of a minimum and maximum value. This also
means that the following (previously undocumented) settings are removed:
* http.netty.receive_predictor_min
* http.netty.receive_predictor_max
Using an adaptive sizing policy in the receive predictor is a very low-level
optimization. The implications on allocation behavior are extremely hard to grasp
(see our previous work in #23185) and adaptive sizing does not provide a lot of
benefits (see benchmarks in #26165 for more details).
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.
Right now if you run `gradle regen` on Windows you'll get `CRLF` line
endings on all the ANTLR generated files because we run
```
ant.fixcrlf(srcdir: outputPath) {
patternset(includes: 'Painless*.java')
}
```
The docs for fixcrlf say that the default line endings that it
corrects to is based on the OS:
https://ant.apache.org/manual/Tasks/fixcrlf.html
This change locks it to `LF`.
* Add additional low-level logging handler
We have the trace handler which is useful for recording sent messages
but there are times where it would be useful to have more low-level
logging about the events occurring on a channel. This commit adds a
logging handler that can be enabled by setting a certain log level
(org.elasticsearch.transport.netty4.ESLoggingHandler) to trace that
provides trace logging on low-level channel events and includes some
information about the request/response read/write events on the channel
as well.
* Remove imports
* License header
* Remove redundant
* Add test
* More assertions
We should unwrap the cause looking for any suppressed errors or root
causes that are errors when checking if we should maybe die. This commit
causes that to be the case.
Relates #26884
This commit changes the log level on a write and flush failure to warn
as this is not necessarily an Elasticsearch problem but more likely
indicative of an infrastructure problem.
Today we represent each value of a list setting with it's own dedicated key
that ends with the index of the value in the list. Aside of the obvious
weirdness this has several issues especially if lists are massive since it
causes massive runtime penalties when validating settings. Like a list of 100k
words will literally cause a create index call to timeout and in-turn massive
slowdown on all subsequent validations runs.
With this change we use a simple string list to represent the list. This change
also forbids to add a settings that ends with a .0 which was internally used to
detect a list setting. Once this has been rolled out for an entire major
version all the internal .0 handling can be removed since all settings will be
converted.
Relates to #26723
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
This commit fixes a #26855. Right now we set SO_LINGER to 0 if we are
stopping the transport. This can throw a ChannelClosedException if the
raw channel is already closed. We have a number of scenarios where it is
possible this could be called with a channel that is already closed.
This commit fixes the issue be checking that the channel is not closed
before attempting to set the socket option.
This commit reorders a maybe die check and a logging statement for the
following reasons:
- we should die as quickly as possible if the cause is fatal
- we do not want the JVM to be so broken that when we try to log
another exception is thrown (maybe another out of memory exception)
and then the maybe die is never invoked
- maybe die will log the cause anyway if the cause is fatal so we only
need to log if the cause is not fatal
Numeric fields no longer support the index_options parameter. This changes the parameter
to be rejected in numeric field types after it was deprecated in 6.0.
Closes#21475
We were accidentally defaulting it to the scroll size.
Untwists some of the tricks that we play with parsing
so that the size is no longer scrambled.
Closes#26761
This change adds a fromXContent method to Settings that allows to read
the xcontent that is produced by toXContent. It also replaces the entire settings
loader infrastructure and removes the structured map representation. Future PRs will
also tackle the `getAsMap` that exposes the internal represenation of settings for
better encapsulation.
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.
The `type` field has been deprecated in 5.0 and can be removed. It has been
replaced by using the MatchPhraseQueryBuilder or the
MatchPhrasePrefixQueryBuilder. The `slop` field has also been deprecated and can
be removed, the phrase and phrase prefix query builders still provide this
parameter.
Adds several small whitelist data structures and a new Whitelist class to separate the idea of loading a whitelist from the actual Painless Definition class. This is the first step of many in allowing users to define custom whitelists per context. Also supports the idea of loading multiple whitelists from different sources for a single context.
Today we can't validate the array length in `InputStreamStreamInput` since
we can't rely on `InputStream.available` yet in some situations we know
the size of the stream and can apply additional validation.
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.
* Fix percolator highlight sub fetch phase to not highlight query twice
The PercolatorHighlightSubFetchPhase does not override hitExecute and since it extends HighlightPhase the search hits
are highlighted twice (by the highlight phase and then by the percolator). This does not alter the results, the second highlighting
just overrides the first one but this slow down the request because it duplicates the work.
Today we have all non-plugin mappers in core. I'd like to start moving those
that neither map to json datatypes nor are very frequently used like `date` or
`ip` to a module.
This commit creates a new module called `mappers-extra` and moves the
`scaled_float` and `token_count` mappers to it. I'd like to eventually move
`range` fields there but it's more complicated due to their intimate
relationship with range queries.
Relates #10368
RangeQueryBuilder needs to perform too many `instanceof` checks in order to
check for `date` or `range` fields in order to know what it should do with the
shape relation, time zone and date format.
This commit adds those 3 parameters to the `rangeQuery` factory method so that
those instanceof checks are not necessary anymore.
The percolator will add a `_percolator_document_slot` field to all percolator
hits to indicate with what document it has matched. This number matches with
the order in which the documents have been specified in the percolate query.
Also improved the support for multiple percolate queries in a search request.
Security manager policy files contains grants for specific codebases,
where a codebase is a jar file. We use a system property containing the
name of the jar file to resolve the jar file location when parsing the
policy file. However, this means the version of the jars must be
modified when versions of dependencies change. This is particularly
messy for elasticsearch, where we now have a dependency on the rest
client, and need to support both a snapshot version for testing and non
snapshot for release.
This commit adds an alias for the elasticsearch rest client without a
version to be used in policy files. That allows the policy files to not care whether
the rest client is a snapshot or release.
* If in a range query upper is smaller than lower then ignore the range query
* If two empty range extractions are compared don't fail with NoSuchElementException
The `index.percolator.map_unmapped_fields_as_text` is a more better name, because unmapped fields are mapped to a text field with default settings
and string is no longer a field type (it is either keyword or text).
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.
* Moves deferring code into its own subclass
This change moves the code that deals with deferring collection to a subclass of BucketAggregator called DeferringBucketAggregator. This means that the code in AggregatorBase is simplified and also means that the code for deferring colleciton is in one place and easier to maintain.
* Makes SIngleBucketAggregator an interface
This is so aggregators that extend BucketsAggregator directly and those that extend DeferringBucketAggregator can be a single bucket aggregator
* review comments
* More review comments
* Remove the _all metadata field
This change removes the `_all` metadata field. This field is deprecated in 6
and cannot be activated for indices created in 6 so it can be safely removed in
the next major version (e.g. 7).
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.
There is a group of five settings relating to raw tcp configurations
(no_delay, buffer sizes, etc) that we have for the http transport. These
currently live in the netty module. As they are unrelated to netty
specifically, this commit moves these settings to the
`HttpTransportSettings` class in core.
When slices is set as auto, there's an additional network call
needed for the reindex tasks to know how to rethrottle. Sometimes
the rethrottle action happens before the reindex task is fully
initialized, so in the test we wait for the task to be ready.
This commit also adds some safeguards to ensure that
cancel and rethrottle operations are handled correctly
Closes#26192
Links to inner classes were using `$` in urls instead of `.`, causing
them to 404.
Also fixes the doc generation code to generate docs into the correct
directory. We moved the docs but never updated the generation code.
Right now it is possible for the `HttpPipeliningHandler` to queue
pipelined responses. On channel close, we do not clear and release these
responses. This commit releases the responses and completes the promise.
Due to the weird way of structuring the serialization code in AcknowledgedRequest, many request types forgot to properly serialize the request timeout, for example "index deletion", "index rollover", "index shrink", "putting pipeline", and other requests. This means that if those requests were not directly sent to the master node, the acknowledgement timeout information would be lost (and the default used instead).
Some requests also don't properly expose the timeout mechanism in the REST layer, such as put / delete stored script. This commit fixes all that.
This test was too lenient with its randomization of targetFieldName and
resulting in a conflict with the original existing fields. This commit
fixes that.
Closes#26177.
The following token filters were moved: arabic_stem, brazilian_stem, czech_stem, dutch_stem, french_stem, german_stem and russian_stem.
Relates to #23658
In reindex APIs, when using the `slices` parameter to choose the number of slices, adds the option to specify `slices` as "auto" which will choose a reasonable number of slices. It uses the number of shards in the source index, up to a ceiling. If there is more than one source index, it uses the smallest number of shards among them.
This gives users an easy way to use slicing in these APIs without having to make decisions about how to configure it, as it provides a good-enough configuration for them out of the box. This may become the default behavior for these APIs in the future.
The percolator field mapper doesn't need to extract all terms and ranges from a bool query with must or filter clauses.
In order to help to default extraction behavior, boost fields can be configured, so that fields that are known for not being
selective enough can be ignored in favor for other fields or clauses with specific fields can forcefully take precedence over other clauses.
This can help selecting clauses for fields that don't match with a lot of percolator queries over other clauses and thus improving performance of the percolate query.
For example a status like field is something that should configured as an ignore field.
Queries on this field tend to match with more documents and so if clauses for this fields
get selected as best clause then that isn't very helpful for the candidate query that the
percolate query generates to filter out percolator queries that are likely not going to match.
With this commit we remove the following three previously unused
(and undocumented) Netty 4 related settings:
* transport.netty.max_cumulation_buffer_capacity,
* transport.netty.max_composite_buffer_components and
* http.netty.max_cumulation_buffer_capacity
from Elasticsearch.
We introduced a hack in #25885 to respect the cluster alias if available on the `_index` field. This is important if aggregations or other field data related operations are executed. Yet, we added a small hack that duplicated an implementation detail from the `_index` field data builder to make this work. This change adds a necessary but simple API change that allows us to remove the hack and only have a single implementation.
The goal of this similarity is to help users who would like to keep the
functionality of the `tf-idf` similarity that we want to remove, or to allow
for specific usec-cases (disabling idf, disabling tf, disabling length norm,
etc.) to not have to build a custom plugin and familiarize with the low-level
Lucene API.
Raw requests are supported only by the java yaml test runner and were introduced to test docs snippets. Some yaml tests ended up using them (see #23497) which causes failures for other language clients. This commit migrates those yaml tests to Java tests that send requests through the Java low-level REST client, and also moves the ability to send raw requests to a special client that's only available when testing docs snippets.
Closes#25694
* Adds mutate function to various tests
Relates to #25929
* fix test
* implements mutate function for all single bucket aggs
* review comments
* convert getMutateFunction to mutateIInstance
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
This commit fixes an issue with the Netty 4 multi-port test that a
transport client can connect. The problem here is that in case the
bottom of the random port range was already bound to (for example, by
another JVM) then then transport client could not connect to the data
node. This is because the transport client was in fact using the bottom
of the port range only. Instead, we simply try all the ports that the
data node might be bound to.
Closes#24441
The following token filters were moved: delimited_payload_filter, keep, keep_types, classic, apostrophe, decimal_digit, fingerprint, min_hash and scandinavian_folding.
Relates to #23658
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 change merges the functionality of the FiltersFunctionScoreQuery in the FunctionScoreQuery.
It also ensures that an exception is thrown when the computed score is equals to Float.NaN or Float.NEGATIVE_INFINITY.
These scores are invalid for TopDocsCollectors that relies on score comparison.
Fixes#15709Fixes#23628
Extracts ranges from range queries on byte, short, integer, long, half_float, scaled_float, float, double, date and ip fields.
byte, short, integer and date ranges are normalized to Lucene's LongRange.
half_float and float are normalized to Lucene's DoubleRange.
When extracting range queries, the QueryAnalyzer computes the width of the range. This width is used to determine
what range should be preferred in a conjunction query. The QueryAnalyzer prefers the smaller ranges, because these
ranges tend to match with less documents.
Closes#21040
Today we expose `IndexFieldDataService` outside of IndexService to do maintenance
or lookup field data in different ways. Yet, we have a streamlined way to access IndexFieldData
via `QueryShardContext` that should encapsulate all access to it. This also ensures that we control all other functionality like cache clearing etc.
This change also removes the `recycler` option from `ClearIndicesCacheRequest` this option is a no-op and should have been removed long ago.
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 change disables the graph analysis on default `shingle` filter.
The pre-configured shingle filter produces shingles of different size.
Graph analysis on such token stream is useless and dangerous as it may create too many paths.
Fixes#25555
This change rewrites search requests on the coordinating node before
we send requests to the individual shards. This will reduce the rewrite load
and object creation for each rewrite on the executing nodes and will fetch
resources only once instead of N times once per shard for queries like `terms`
query with index lookups. (among percolator and geo-shape)
Relates to #25791
Also has updates to ScriptMetaData for allowing the old namespace format to be loaded all the way back through 5.0; however, it will throw an exception if two scripts share the same id but different languages.
The `QueryRewriteContext` used to provide a client object that can
be used to fetch geo-shapes, terms or documents for percolation. Unfortunately
all client calls used to be blocking calls which can have significant impact on the
rewrite phase since it occupies an entire search thread until the resource is
received. In the case that the index the resource is fetched from isn't on the local
node this can have significant impact on query throughput.
Note: this doesn't fix MLT since it fetches stuff in doQuery which is a different beast. Yet, it is a huge step in the right direction
This commit calls the `useSystemProperties` method on the HttpAsyncClientBuilder so that the jvm
system properties are used. The primary reason for doing this is to ensure the builder uses the
system default SSLContext rather than the default instance created by the http client library.
Closes#23231
Today we have duplicated code that is quite complicated to iterate
over rewriteable (`QueryBuilders` mainly) This change introduces a
`Rewriteable` interface that allow to share code to do the rewriting as
well as encapsulation and composition of queries.
We currently use fielddata on the `_id` field which is trappy, especially as we
do it implicitly. This changes the `random_score` function to use doc ids when
no seed is provided and to suggest a field when a seed is provided.
For now the change only emits a deprecation warning when no field is supplied
but this should be replaced by a strict check on 7.0.
Closes#25240
The following token filters were moved: arabic_normalization, german_normalization, hindi_normalization, indic_normalization, persian_normalization, scandinavian_normalization, serbian_normalization, sorani_normalization, cjk_width and cjk_width
Relates to #23658
This change refactors the query_string query to analyze the query text around logical operators of the query string the same way than a match_query/multi_match_query.
It also adds a type parameter that can be used to change the way multi fields query are built the same way than a multi_match query does.
Now that these queries share the same behavior regarding text analysis, some parameters are obsolete and have been deprecated:
split_on_whitespace: This setting is now ignored with a deprecation notice
if it is used explicitely. With this PR The query_string always splits on logical operator.
It simplifies the understanding of the other parameters that can have different meanings
depending on the value of split_on_whitespace.
auto_generate_phrase_queries: This setting is now ignored with a deprecation notice
if it is used explicitely. This setting only makes sense when the parser splits on whitespace.
use_dismax: This setting is now ignored with a deprecation notice
if it is used explicitely. The tie_breaker parameter is sufficient to handle best_fields/most_fields.
Fixes#25574
It was brought up that our current client artifacts have generic names like 'rest' that may cause conflicts with other artifacts.
This commit renames:
- rest -> elasticsearch-rest-client
- sniffer -> elasticsearch-rest-client-sniffer
- rest-high-level -> elasticsearch-rest-high-level-client
A couple of small changes are also preparing the high level client for its first release.
Closes#20248
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.
Requests that execute a stored script will no longer be allowed to specify the lang of the script. This information is stored in the cluster state making only an id necessary to execute against. Putting a stored script will still require a lang.
There is a bug when a call to `BytesReferenceStreamInput` skip is made
on a `BytesReference` that has an initial offset. The offset for the
current slice is added to the current index and then subtracted from the
length. This introduces the possibility of a negative number of bytes to
skip. This happens inside a loop, which leads to an infinte loop.
This commit correctly subtracts the current slice index from the
slice.length. Additionally, the `BytesArrayTests` are modified to test
instances that include an offset.
Currently when we close a channel in Netty4Utils.closeChannels we
block until the closing is complete. This introduces the possibility
that a network selector thread will block while waiting until a
separate network selector thread closes a channel.
For instance: T1 closes channel 1 (which is assigned to a T1 selector).
Channel 1's close listener executes the closing of the node. That
means that T1 now tries to close channel 2. However, channel 2 is
assigned to a selector that is running on T2. T1 now must wait until T2
closes that channel at some point in the future.
This commit addresses this by adding a boolean to closeChannels
indicating if we should block on close. We only set this boolean to true
if we are closing down the server channels at shutdown. This call is
never made from a network thread. When we call the closeChannels method
with that boolean set to false, we do not block on close.
This commit does two things:
- bumps the version from 6.0.0-alpha3 to 6.0.0-beta1
- renames the 6.0.0-alpha3 version constant to 6.0.0-beta1
Relates #25621
Indexing ids in binary form should help with indexing speed since we would
have to compare fewer bytes upon sorting, should help with memory usage of
the live version map since keys will be shorter, and might help with disk
usage depending on how efficient the terms dictionary is at compressing
terms.
Since we can only expect base64 ids in the auto-generated case, this PR tries
to use an encoding that makes the binary id equal to the base64-decoded id in
the majority of cases (253 out of 256). It also specializes numeric ids, since
this seems to be common when content that is stored in Elasticsearch comes
from another database that uses eg. auto-increment ids.
Another option could be to require base64 ids all the time. It would make things
simpler but I'm not sure users would welcome this requirement.
This PR should bring some benefits, but I expect it to be mostly useful when
coupled with something like #24615.
Closes#18154
Transport profiles unfortunately have never been validated. Yet, it's very
easy to make a mistake when configuring profiles which will most likely stay
undetected since we don't validate the settings but allow almost everything
based on the wildcard in `transport.profiles.*`. This change removes the
settings subset based parsing of profiles but rather uses concrete affix settings
for the profiles which makes it easier to fall back to higher level settings since
the fallback settings are present when the profile setting is parsed. Previously, it was
unclear in the code which setting is used ie. if the profiles settings (with removed
prefixes) or the global node setting. There is no distinction anymore since we don't pull
prefix based settings.
* Adds check for negative search request size
This change adds a check to `SearchSourceBuilder` to throw and exception if the size set on it is set to a negative value.
Closes#22530
* fix error in reindex
* update re-index tests
* Addresses review comment
* Fixed tests
* Added random negative size test
* Fixes test
QueryParseContext is currently only used as a wrapper for an XContentParser, so
this change removes it entirely and changes the appropriate APIs that use it so
far to only accept a parser instead.
This commit makes the use of the global network settings explicit instead
of implicit within NetworkService. It cleans up several places where we fall
back to the global settings while we should have used tcp or http ones.
In addition this change also removes unnecessary settings classes
These settings have not be working for a full major version since they
are not registered. Given that they are simply duplicates we can just remove
them.
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.
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
The following token filters were moved: stemmer, stemmer_override, kstem, dictionary_decompounder, hyphenation_decompounder, reverse, elision and truncate.
Relates to #23658
* 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
This change cleans up remaining tests to not use index.mapping.single_type=false
but instead where applicable use a single type or markt the index as created
with a pre 6.x version.
Yet, there is still on leftover in the client tests that needs special attention.
See `org.elasticsearch.client.SearchIT`
Relates to #24961
Tests were randomly assigning `targetField` to an existing field that was an array,
causing path resolution issues. This PR fixes those tests
Closes#25346 & #25348
Custom whitelists in Painless will need to allow classes to be augmented beyond the currently hard-coded Augmentation class tied to Painless directly. This change allows any class to specify an augmentation on a Painless struct using an appropriate static method. Changes to loading the whitelist have also been created to allow for this specification of a different class for augmentation.
Most notable changes:
- better update concurrency: LUCENE-7868
- TopDocs.totalHits is now a long: LUCENE-7872
- QueryBuilder does not remove the boolean query around multi-term synonyms:
LUCENE-7878
- removal of Fields: LUCENE-7500
For the `TopDocs.totalHits` change, this PR relies on the fact that the encoding
of vInts and vLongs are compatible: you can write and read with any of them as
long as the value can be represented by a positive int.
The `document_type` parameter is no longer required to be specified,
because by default from 6.0 only a single type is allowed. (`index.mapping.single_type` defaults to `true`)
* [Analysis] Parse synonyms with the same analysis chain
Synonym Token Filter / Synonym Graph Filter tokenize synonyms with whatever tokenizer and token filters appear before it in the chain.
Close#7199
I'm still trying to hunt down rare failures in the cancelation tests
for reindex and friends. Here is the latest:
https://elasticsearch-ci.elastic.co/job/elastic+elasticsearch+5.x+multijob-unix-compatibility/os=ubuntu/876/console
It doesn't show much, other than that one of the tasks didn't kill
itself when asked to cancel.
So I'm going a bit crazy with debug logging so that the next time this
comes up I can trace exactly what happened.
Additionally, this tweaks the logic around how rethrottles were
performed around cancel. Previously we set the `requestsPerSecond`
to `0` when we cancelled the task. That was the "old way" to set them
to inifity which was the intent. This switches that from `0` to
`Float.MAX_VALUE` which is the "new way" to set the `requestsPerSecond`
to infinity. I don't know that this is much better, but it feels better.
This change adds tests for the aggregation parsing that try to simulate that we
can parse existing aggregations in a forward compatible way in the future,
ignoring potential newly added fields or substructures to the xContent response.
Today TcpTransport is the de-facto base-class for transport implementations.
The need for all the callbacks we have in TransportServiceAdaptor are not necessary
anymore since we can simply have the logic inside the base class itself. This change
moves the stats metrics directly into TcpTransport removing the need for low level
bytes send / received callbacks.
Moves the keyword tokenizer to the analysis-common module. The keyword tokenizer is special because it is used by CustomNormalizerProvider so I pulled it out into its own PR. To get the move to work I've reworked the lookup from static to one using the AnalysisRegistry. This seems safe enough.
Part of #23658.
* Add a section named "relation" in the ParentJoinFieldMapper
This commit puts the parent/child definition in an inner section named "relation".
Mapping for the parent-join will look like this:
```
"join_field": {
"type": "join"
"relations":
"parent": "child"
}
}
```
to specify a `targetField`. This results in some interesting behavior that was missed in the review.
This processor sorts in-place, so there is a side-effect in both the original field and the target field.
Another bug was that the targetField was not being set if the list being sorted was fewer than two elements.
The new behavior works like this: If targetField and fieldName are not the same, we copy the list.
We use assertBusy in many places where the underlying code throw exceptions. Currently we need to wrap those exceptions in a RuntimeException which is ugly.
This commit adds a NamedXContentProvider interface that can
be implemented by plugins or modules using Java's SPI feature
in order to provide additional NamedXContent parsers to external
applications like the Java High Level Rest Client.
This snapshot has faster range queries on range fields (LUCENE-7828), more
accurate norms (LUCENE-7730) and the ability to use fake term frequencies
(LUCENE-7854).
This commit renames the needsScores method so as to make it
automatically generatable, based on the name of the `_score` variable
which is available in search scripts. It also adds documentation to
ScriptContext to explain the naming and signature of such methods.
Expose the experimental simplepattern and
simplepatternsplit tokenizers in the common
analysis plugin. They provide tokenization based
on regular expressions, using Lucene's
deterministic regex implementation that is usually
faster than Java's and has protections against
creating too-deep stacks during matching.
Both have a not-very-useful default pattern of the
empty string because all tokenizer factories must
be able to be instantiated at index creation time.
They should always be configured by the user
in practice.
Today if a channel gets closed due to a disconnect we notify the response
handler that the connection is closed and the node is disconnected. Unfortunately
this is not a complete solution since it only works for published connections.
Connections that are unpublished ie. for discovery can indefinitely hang since we
never invoke their handers when we get a failure while a user is waiting for
the response. This change adds connection tracking to TcpTransport that ensures
we are notifying the corresponding connection if there is a failure on a channel.
Get mappings HEAD requests incorrectly return a content-length header of
0. This commit addresses this by removing the special handling for get
mappings HEAD requests, and just relying on the general mechanism that
exists for handling HEAD requests in the REST layer.
Relates #23192
Today when an exception is thrown handling a HEAD request, the body is
swallowed before the channel has a chance to see it. Yet, the channel is
where we compute the content length that would be returned as a header
in the response. This is a violation of the HTTP specification. This
commit addresses the issue. To address this issue, we remove the special
handling in bytes rest response for HEAD requests when an exception is
thrown. Instead, we let the upstream channel handle the special case, as
we already do today for the non-exceptional case.
Relates #25172
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 change removes the `postings` highlighter. This highlighter has been removed from Lucene master (7.x) because it behaves
exactly like the `unified` highlighter when index_options is set to `offsets`:
https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/LUCENE-7815
It also makes the `unified` highlighter the default choice for highlighting a field (if `type` is not provided).
The strategy used internally by this highlighter remain the same as before, it checks `term_vectors` first, then `postings` and ultimately it re-analyzes the text.
Ultimately it rewrites the docs so that the options that the `unified` highlighter cannot handle are clearly marked as such.
There are few features that the `unified` highlighter is not able to handle which is why the other highlighters (`plain` and `fvh`) are still available.
I'll open separate issues for these features and we'll deprecate the `fvh` and `plain` highlighters when full support for these features have been added to the `unified`.
This PR enables Ingest plugins to leverage processor-scoped REST
endpoints. First of which being the Grok endpoint that retrieves
Grok Patterns for users to retrieve all the built-in patterns.
Example usage: Kibana Grok Autocomplete!
This commit modifies query_string, simple_query_string and multi_match queries to always use a DisjunctionMaxQuery when a disjunction over multiple fields is built. The tiebreaker is set to 1 in order to behave like the boolean query in terms of scoring.
The removal of the coord factor in Lucene 7 made this change mandatory to correctly handle minimum_should_match.
Closes#23966
The `scorerSupplier` API allows to give a hint to queries in order to let them
know that they will be consumed in a random-access fashion. We should use this
for aggregations, function_score and matched queries.
Previously the HEAD and GET aliases endpoints were misaigned in
behavior. The HEAD verb would 404 if any aliases are missing while the
GET verb would not if any aliases existed. When HEAD was aligned with
GET, this broke the previous usage of HEAD to serve as an existence
check for aliases. It is the behavior of GET that is problematic here
though, if any alias is missing the request should 404. This commit
addresses this by modifying the behavior of GET to behave in this
way. This fixes the behavior for HEAD to also 404 when aliases are
missing.
Relates #25043
This change moves the parent_id query to the parent-join module and handles the case when only the parent-join field can be declared on an index (index with single type on).
If single type is off it uses the legacy parent join field mapper and switch to the new one otherwise (default in 6).
Relates #20257
Unknown patterns used to silently be ignored. This was a problem because users did not know they were providing an invalid pattern name, and maybe thought the rest of their regexes were invalid.
Fixes#22831.
REST handlers that require a body will throw an an ElasticsearchParseException "request body required".
REST handlers that require a body OR source param will throw an ElasticsearchParseException "request body or source param required".
Replaced asserts in BulkRequest parsing code with a more descriptive IllegalArgumentException if the line contains an empty object.
Updated bulk REST test to verify an empty action line is rejected properly.
Updated BulkRequestTests with randomized testing for an empty action line.
Used try-with-resouces for XContentParser in AbstractBulkByQueryRestHandler.
This commit creates TemplateScript and associated classes so that
templates no longer need a special ScriptService.compileTemplate method.
The execute() method is equivalent to the old run() method.
relates #20426
* All public methods starting with get will be added as local variables
to the execute method.
* The execute method on a ScriptContext must be both public and
abstract. This method will be implemented by the Painless compiler.
* A static list of parameter names for the execute method must be
provided since the names will be eliminated at runtime.
* The uses$ methods will still be implemented as before.
* A single constructor may be provided by the ScriptContext. This
constructor will be overridden by the Painless compiler to include the
exact same arguments. This allows instances of a Painless script to
potentially contain state. If a constructor is not provided it is
assumed the default constructor with no arguments will be used.
This removes the `accumulateExceptions()` method (and its usage) from `TransportNodesAction` and `TransportTasksAction`, forcing both transport actions to always accumulate exceptions.
Without this change, some transport actions, like `TransportNodesStatsAction` would respond in very unexpected ways by returning no response due to some failure, but instead of returning an
error the response would simply be empty: no response and no error.
This results in a very trappy response structure where users can check for an error, then attempt to blindly use the response when no error is returned.
* 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
This change ensures that there is a single parent-join field defined per mapping.
The verification is done through the addition of a special field mapper (MetaJoinFieldMapper) with a unique name (_parent_join) that is registered to the mapping service
when the first parent-join field is defined. If a new parent-join is added, this field mapper will clash with the new one and the update will fail.
This change also simplifies the parent join fetch sub phase by retrieving the parent-join field without iterating on all fields in the mapping.
This commit adds an optional `context` url parameter to the put stored
script request. When a context is specified, the script is compiled
against that context before storing, as a validation the script will
work when used in that context.
* Introduce ParentJoinFieldMapper, a field mapper that creates parent/child relation within documents of the same index
This change adds a new field mapper named ParentJoinFieldMapper. This mapper is a replacement for the ParentFieldMapper but instead of using the types in the mapping
it uses an internal field to materialize parent/child relation within a single index.
This change also adds a fetch sub phase that automatically retrieves the join name (parent or child name) and the parent id for child documents in the response hit fields.
The compatibility with `has_parent`, `has_child` queries and `children` agg will be added in a follow up.
Relates #20257
ScriptContexts currently understand a FactoryType that can produce
instances of the script InstanceType. However, for search scripts, this
does not work as we have the concept of LeafSearchScript that is created
per lucene segment. This commit effectively renames the existing
SearchScript class into SearchScript.LeafFactory, which is a new,
optional, class that can be defined within a ScriptContext.
LeafSearchScript is effectively renamed back into SearchScript. This
change allows the model of stateless factory -> stateful factory ->
script instance to continue, but in a generic way that any script
context may take advantage of.
relates #20426
DateProcessor's DateFormat UNIX format parser resulted in
a floating point rounding error when parsing certain stringed
epoch times. Now Double.parseDouble is used, preserving the
intented input.
This commit adds a `doc_count` field to the response body of Matrix
Stats aggregation. It exposes the number of documents involved in
the computation of statistics, a value that can already be retrieved using
the method MatrixStats.getDocCount() in the Java API.
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.
This commit renames the concept of the "compiled type" to a "factory
type", along with all implementations of this class to be named Factory.
This brings it inline with the classes purpose.
This commit adds collection of all contexts to the parameters of
getScriptEngine. This will allow script engines like painless to
precache extra information about the contexts.
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.
This commit changes the compile method of ScriptEngine to be generic in
the same way it is on ScriptService. This moves the shim of handling the
two existing context classes into each script engine, so that each
engine can be worked on independently to convert to real handling of
contexts.
This commit modifies the compile method of ScriptService to be context
aware. The ScriptContext is now a generic class which contains both the
instance type and compiled type for a script. Instance type may be
stateful (for example, pre loading field information for the index a
script will execute on, like in expressions), while the compiled type is
stateless and used to construct instance type instances. This change is
only a first step to cutover ScriptService to the new paradigm. It only
converts callers to the script service, and has a small shim to wrap
compilation from the script engines to support the current two fixed
instance types, SearchScript and ExecutableScript.
Since groovy was removed, we no longer have any ScriptEngines with
resources to release. We may want to keep the option open for a script
engine to close resources, but this would not be common. This commit
adds a default implementation to ScriptEngine for `close()` to reduce
the boiler plate that must be added for a ScriptEngine implementation.
This will be useful for the high level client to add support for the matrix stats aggregation, as we will ship with this jar by default like we do for parent-join-client which is aligned with distributing core with the modules already included.
Relates to #24796
This commit moves the handling of nested and parent/child inner hits to specialized classes that can be defined outside of ES core.
InnerHitBuilderContext is now used by the parent query (nested or hasChild, ...) to build the sub context from the InnerHitBuilder definition.
BWC is also ensured so that nodes in previous versions can still send/receive inner hits to/from this version.
Relates #20257
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.
Allows plugins to register pre-configured tokenizers. Much
of the decisions are the same as those in #24223, #24572,
and #24223. This only migrates the lowercase tokenizer but
I figure that is a good start because it proves out the features.
This change removes the field data specialization needed for the parent field and replaces it with
a simple DocValuesIndexFieldData. The underlying global ordinals are retrieved via a new function called
IndexOrdinalsFieldData#getOrdinalMap.
The children aggregation is also modified to use a simple WithOrdinals value source rather than the deleted WithOrdinals.Parent.
Relates #20257
Shared settings were added intially to allow the few common settings
names across aws plugins. However, in 6.0 these settings have been
removed. The last use was in netty, but since 6.0 also has the netty 3
modules removed, there is no longer a need for the shared property. This
commit removes the shared setting property.
Approaching the release of 6.0 we need to sort out the usage of
`Version#minimumCompatibilityVersion` which was still set to 5.0.0.
Now this change moves it to the latest released version of 5.x (5.4 at this point)
to ensure we are compatible with the latest minor of the previous major. This change
also removes all the `_UNRELEASED` from the versions that where released and drops versions
that were never released and are not expected to be released (bugfixes in minors that are not
the latest in the previous major).
We've switched to supporting only `yml` files but anyone who didn't
notice will commit a `yaml` file which won't be executed
which is bad because it is easy not to notice. The test to catch this is
simple enough that I think it is worth adding just to warn folks about
their mistake.
These tests are broken because I added them with the `yml` extension
and didn't realize that we weren't running tests with that extension
until we merged #24659. I used that extension in anticipation of #24659
but didn't verify that the tests were actually running. Ooops!
Closes#24734
This commit renames all rest test files to use the .yml extension
instead of .yaml. This way the extension used within all of
elasticsearch for yaml is consistent.
Moves the remaining preconfigured token figured into the analysis-common module. There were a couple of tests in core that depended on the pre-configured token filters so I had to touch them:
* `GetTermVectorsCheckDocFreqIT` depended on `type_as_payload` but didn't do anything important with it. I dropped the dependency. Then I moved the test to a single node test case because we're trying to cut down on the number of `ESIntegTestCase` subclasses.
* `AbstractTermVectorsTestCase` and its subclasses depended on `type_as_payload`. I dropped their usage of the token filter and added an integration test for the termvectors API that uses `type_as_payload` to the `analysis-common` module.
* `AnalysisModuleTests` expected a few pre-configured token filtes be registered by default. They aren't any more so I dropped this assertion. We assert that the `CommonAnalysisPlugin` registers these pre-built token filters in `CommonAnalysisFactoryTests`
* `SearchQueryIT` and `SuggestSearchIT` had tests that depended on the specific behavior of the token filters so I moved the tests to integration tests in `analysis-common`.
Today when an index is `read-only` the index is also blocked from
being deleted which sometimes is undesired since in-order to make
changes to a cluster indices must be deleted to free up space. This is
a likely scenario in a hosted environment when disk-space is limited to switch
indices read-only but allow deletions to free up space.
Range queries with now based date ranges were previously not allowed,
but since #23921 these queries were allowed. This change should really
fix range queries with now based date ranges.
Template script engines (mustache, the only one) currently return a
BytesReference that users must know is utf8 encoded. This commit
modifies all callers and mustache to have the template engine return
String. This is much simpler, and does not require decoding in order to
use (for example, in ingest).
Netty removed a logging guarded we added to prevent a scary logging
message. We added a hack to work around this. They've added the guard
back, so we can remove the hack now.
When constructing an array list, if we know the size of the list in
advance (because we are adding objects to it derived from another list),
we should size the array list to the appropriate capacity in advance (to
avoid resizing allocations). This commit does this in various places.
Relates #24439
* Add parent-join module
This change adds a new module named `parent-join`.
The goal of this module is to provide a replacement for the `_parent` field but as a first step this change only moves the `has_child`, `has_parent` queries and the `children` aggregation to this module.
These queries and aggregations are no longer in core but they are deployed by default as a module.
Relates #20257
Today we prune transport handlers in TransportService when a node is disconnected.
This can cause connections to starve in the TransportService if the connection is
opened as a short living connection ie. without sharing the connection to a node
via registering in the transport itself. This change now moves to pruning based
on the connections cache key to ensure we notify handlers as soon as the connection
is closed for all connections not just for registered connections.
Relates to #24632
Relates to #24575
Relates to #24557
If the request asks for the `_source` stored field then don't
duplicate it when forcing the `_source` parameter to onto the
request for reindex-from-remote from versions before 1.0.
Closes#24628
This allows other plugins to use a client to call the functionality
that is in the core modules without duplicating the logic.
Plugins can now safely send the request and response classes via the
client even if the requests are executed locally. All relevant classes
are loaded by the core classloader such that plugins can share them.
This is re-adds this commit that was revered in 952feb58e4
This allows other plugins to use a client to call the functionality
that is in the core modules without duplicating the logic.
Plugins can now safely send the request and response classes via the
client even if the requests are executed locally. All relevant classes
are loaded by the core classloader such that plugins can share them.
Adds tests for reindex-from-remote for the latest 2.4, 1.7, and
0.90 releases. 2.4 and 1.7 are fairly popular versions but 0.90
is a point of pride.
This fixes any issues those tests revealed.
Closes#23828Closes#24520
There are now three public static method to build instances of
PreConfiguredTokenFilter and the ctor is private. I chose static
methods instead of constructors because those allow us to change
out the implementation returned if we so desire.
Relates to #23658
The max concurrent searches logic is complex and we shouldn't duplicate that in multi search template api,
so we should template each individual template search request and then delegate to multi search api.
The max concurrent searches logic is complex and we shouldn't duplicate that in multi search template api,
so we should template each individual template search request and then delegate to multi search api.
This commit renames ScriptEngineService to ScriptEngine. It is often
confusing because we have the ScriptService, and then
ScriptEngineService implementations, but the latter are not services as
we see in other places in elasticsearch.
This changes the way we register pre-configured token filters so that
plugins can declare them and starts to move all of the pre-configured
token filters out of core. It doesn't finish the job because doing
so would make the change unreviewably large. So this PR includes
a shim that keeps the "old" way of registering pre-configured token
filters around.
The Lowercase token filter is special because there is a "special"
interaction between it and the lowercase tokenizer. I'm not sure
exactly what to do about it so for now I'm leaving it alone with
the intent of figuring out what to do with it in a followup.
This also renames these pre-configured token filters from
"pre-built" to "pre-configured" because that seemed like a more
descriptive name.
This is a part of #23658
In pre-release versions of Elasticsearch 5.0.0, users were subject to
log messages of the form "your platform does not.*reliably.*potential
system instability". This is because we disable Netty from being unsafe,
and Netty throws up this scary info-level message when unsafe is
unavailable, even if it was unavailable because the user requested that
it be unavailabe. Users were rightly confused, and concerned. So, we
contributed a guard to Netty to prevent this log message from showing up
when unsafe was explicitly disabled. This guard shipped with all
versions of Netty that shipped starting with Elasticsearch
5.0.0. Unfortunately, this guard was lost in an unrelated refactoring
and now with the 4.1.10.Final upgrade, users will again see this
message. This commit is a hack around this until we can get a fix
upstream again.
Relates #24469
This change makes the request builder code-path same as `Client#execute`. The request builder used to return a `ListenableActionFuture` when calling execute, which allows to associate listeners with the returned future. For async execution though it is recommended to use the `execute` method that accepts an `ActionListener`, like users would do when using `Client#execute`.
Relates to #24412
Relates to #9201
This adds `-XX:-OmitStackTraceInFastThrow` to the JVM arguments
which *should* prevent the JVM from omitting stack traces on
common exception sites. Even though these sites are common, we'd
still like the exceptions to debug them.
This also adds the flag when running tests and adapts some tests
that had workarounds for the absense of the flag.
Closes#24376
Netty uses the number of processors for sizing various resources (e.g.,
thread pools, buffer pools, etc.). However, it uses the runtime number
of available processors which might not match the configured number of
processors as set in Elasticsearch to limit the number of threads (for
example, in Docker containers). A new feature was added to Netty that
enables configuring the number of processors Netty should see for sizing
this various resources. This commit takes advantage of this feature to
set this number of available processors to be equal to the configured
number of processors set in Elasticsearch.
Relates #24420
* Fix wrong delegation to constructors when compiling lambdas with method references to ctors. Also remove the get$lambda factory.
* Cleanup code and remove unneeded transformations between binary and internal class names (uses ASM Type class instead)
* Cleanup Exception handling
* Simplification by moving the type adaption to the outside
* Remove STATIC access flag from our Lambda class (not required and also officially not allowed)
* Move the lambda counter to the classloader, so we have a per-script lambda ID
* Change Codesource of generated lambdas to be consistent
This adds the `index.mapping.single_type` setting, which enforces that indices
have at most one type when it is true. The default value is true for 6.0+ indices
and false for old indices.
Relates #15613
The one argument ctor for `Script` creates a script with the
default language but most usages of are for testing and either
don't care about the language or are for use with
`MockScriptEngine`. This replaces most usages of the one argument
ctor on `Script` with calls to `ESTestCase#mockScript` to make
it clear that the tests don't need the default scripting language.
I've also factored out some copy and pasted script generation
code into a single place. I would have had to change that code
to use `mockScript` anyway, so it was easier to perform the
refactor.
Relates to #16314
Another step down the road to dropping the
lucene-analyzers-common dependency from core.
Note that this removes some tests that no longer compile from
core. I played around with adding them to the analysis-common
module where they would compile but we already test these in
the tests generated from the example usage in the documentation.
I'm not super happy with the way that `requriesAnalysisSettings`
works with regards to plugins. I think it'd be fairly bug-prone
for plugin authors to use. But I'm making it visible as is for
now and I'll rethink later.
A part of #23658
The percolator doesn't close the IndexReader of the memory index any more.
Prior to 2.x the percolator had its own SearchContext (PercolatorContext) that did this,
but that was removed when the percolator was refactored as part of the 5.0 release.
I think an alternative way to fix this is to let percolator not use the bitset and fielddata caches,
that way we prevent the memory leak.
Closes#24108
It looks like auto-complete gave us a nasty surprise here with
Logger#equals being invoked instead of Logger#error swallowing the
absolute worst-possible level of a log message. This commit fixes the
invocation.
This commit adds a compileTemplate method to the ScriptService.
Eventually this will be used to easily cutover all consumers to a new
TemplateService.
relates #16314
Replaces LambdaMetaFactory with LambdaBootstrap, a custom solution for lambdas in Painless using a design similar to LambdaMetaFactory, but allows for custom adaptation of types which recent changes to LambdaMetaFactory no longer allowed.
ScriptService has two executable methods, one which takes a
CompiledScript, which is similar to search, and one that takes a raw
Script and both compiles and returns an ExecutableScript for it. The
latter is not needed, and the call sites which used one or the other
were mixed. This commit removes the extra executable method in favor of
callers first calling compile, then executable.
The unwrap method was leftover from support javascript and python. Since
those languages are removed in 6.0, this commit removes the unwrap
feature from scripts.
Start moving built in analysis components into the new analysis-common
module. The goal of this project is:
1. Remove core's dependency on lucene-analyzers-common.jar which should
shrink the dependencies for transport client and high level rest client.
2. Prove that analysis plugins can do all the "built in" things by moving all
"built in" behavior to a plugin.
3. Force tests not to depend on any oddball analyzer behavior. If tests
need anything more than the standard analyzer they can use the mock
analyzer provided by Lucene's test infrastructure.
`script_stack` is super useful when debugging Painless scripts
because it skips all the "weird" stuff involved that obfuscates
where the actual error is. It skips Painless's internals and
call site bootstrapping.
It works fine, but it didn't have many tests. This converts a
test that we had for line numbers into a test for the
`script_stack`. The line numbers test was an indirect test
for `script_stack`.
This change simplifies how the rest test runner finds test files and
removes all leniency. Previously multiple prefixes and suffixes would
be tried, and tests could exist inside or outside of the classpath,
although outside of the classpath never quite worked. Now only classpath
tests are supported, and only one resource prefix is supported,
`/rest-api-spec/tests`.
closes#20240
We'd like to be able to support context-sensitive whitelists in
Painless but we can't now because the whitelist is a static thing.
This begins to de-static the whitelist, in particular removing
the static keyword from most of the methods on `Definition` and
plumbing the static instance into the appropriate spots as though
it weren't static. Once we de-static all the methods we should be
able to fairly simply build context-sensitive whitelists.
The only "fun" bit of this is that I added another layer in the
chain of methods that bootstraps `def` calls. Instead of running
`invokedynamic` directly on `DefBootstrap` we now `invokedynamic`
`$bootstrapDef` on the script itself loads the `Definition` that
the script was compiled against and then calls `DefBootstrap`.
I chose to put `Definition` into `Locals` so I didn't have to
change the signature of all the `analyze` methods. I could have
do it another way, but that seems ok for now.
We want to upgrade to Lucene 7 ahead of time in order to be able to check whether it causes any trouble to Elasticsearch before Lucene 7.0 gets released. From a user perspective, the main benefit of this upgrade is the enhanced support for sparse fields, whose resource consumption is now function of the number of docs that have a value rather than the total number of docs in the index.
Some notes about the change:
- it includes the deprecation of the `disable_coord` parameter of the `bool` and `common_terms` queries: Lucene has removed support for coord factors
- it includes the deprecation of the `index.similarity.base` expert setting, since it was only useful to configure coords and query norms, which have both been removed
- two tests have been marked with `@AwaitsFix` because of #23966, which we intend to address after the merge
The JVM caches `Integer` objects. This is known. A test in Painless
was relying on the JVM not caching the particular integer `1000`.
It turns out that when you provide `-XX:+AggressiveOpts` the JVM
*does* cache `1000`, causing the test to fail when that is
specified.
This replaces `1000` with a randomly selected integer that we test
to make sure *isn't* cached by the JVM. *Hopefully* this test is
good enough. It relies on the caching not changing in between when
we check that the value isn't cached and when we run the painless
code. The cache now is a simple array but there is nothing
preventing it from changing. If it does change in a way that thwarts
this test then the test fail fail again. At least when that happens
the next person can see the comment about how it is important
that the integer isn't cached and can follow that line of inquiry.
Closes#24041
When indexing a document via the bulk API where IDs can be explicitly
specified, we currently accept an empty ID. This is problematic because
such a document can not be obtained via the get API. Instead, we should
rejected these requets as accepting them could be a dangerous form of
leniency. Additionally, we already have a way of specifying
auto-generated IDs and that is to not explicitly specify an ID so we do
not need a second way. This commit rejects the individual requests where
ID is specified but empty.
Relates #24118
This commit makes closing a ReleasableBytesStreamOutput release the underlying BigArray so
that we can use try-with-resources with these streams and avoid leaking memory by not returning
the BigArray. As part of this change, the ReleasableBytesStreamOutput adds protection to only
release the BigArray once.
In order to make some of the changes cleaner, the ReleasableBytesStream interface has been
removed. The BytesStream interface is changed to a abstract class so that we can use it as a
useable return type for a new method, Streams#flushOnCloseStream. This new method wraps a
given stream and overrides the close method so that the stream is simply flushed and not closed.
This behavior is used in the TcpTransport when compression is used with a
ReleasableBytesStreamOutput as we need to close the compressed stream to ensure all of the data
is written from this stream. Closing the compressed stream will try to close the underlying stream
but we only want to flush so that all of the written bytes are available.
Additionally, an error message method added in the BytesRestResponse did not use a builder
provided by the channel and instead created its own JSON builder. This changes that method to use
the channel builder and in turn the bytes stream output that is managed by the channel.
Note, this commit differs from 6bfecdf921 in that it updates
ReleasableBytesStreamOutput to handle the case of the BigArray decreasing in size, which changes
the reference to the BigArray. When the reference is changed, the releasable needs to be updated
otherwise there could be a leak of bytes and corruption of data in unrelated streams.
This reverts commit afd45c1432, which reverted #23572.
This commit collapses the SyncBulkRequestHandler and
AsyncBulkRequestHandler into a single BulkRequestHandler. The new
handler executes a bulk request and awaits for the completion if the
BulkProcessor was configured with a concurrentRequests setting of 0.
Otherwise the execution happens asynchronously.
As part of this change the Retry class has been refactored.
withSyncBackoff and withAsyncBackoff have been replaced with two
versions of withBackoff. One method takes a listener that will be
called on completion. The other method returns a future that will been
complete on request completion.
This commit skips the two Painless tests
EqualsTests#testBranchEqualsDefAndPrimitive and
EqualsTests#testBranchNotEqualsDefAndPrimitive on Windows as the tests
are repeatedly failing there.
The getProperty method is an internal method needed to run pipeline aggregations and retrieve info by path from the aggs tree. It is not needed in the MultiBucketsAggregation.Bucket interface, which is returned to users running aggregations from the transport client. The method is moved to the InternalMultiBucketAggregation class as that's where it belongs.
reindex_from_remote was using `TimeValue#toString` to generate the
scroll timeout which is bad because that generates fractional
time values that are useful for people but bad for Elasticsearch
which doesn't like to parse them. This switches it to using
`TimeValue#getStringRep` which spits out whole time values.
Closes to #23945
Makes #23828 even more desirable
Before now ranges where forbidden, because the percolator query itself could get cached and then the percolator queries with now ranges that should no longer match, incorrectly will continue to match.
By disabling caching when the `percolator` is being used, the percolator can now correctly support range queries with now based ranges.
I think this is the right tradeoff. The percolator query is likely to not be the same between search requests and disabling range queries with now ranges really disabled people using the percolator for their use cases.
Also fixed an issue that existed in the percolator fieldmapper, it was unable to find forbidden queries inside `dismax` queries.
Closes#23859
This commit modifies the BulkProcessor to be decoupled from the
client implementation. Instead it just takes a
BiConsumer<BulkRequest, ActionListener<BulkResponse>> that executes
the BulkRequest.
This commit makes closing a ReleasableBytesStreamOutput release the underlying BigArray so
that we can use try-with-resources with these streams and avoid leaking memory by not returning
the BigArray. As part of this change, the ReleasableBytesStreamOutput adds protection to only release the BigArray once.
In order to make some of the changes cleaner, the ReleasableBytesStream interface has been
removed. The BytesStream interface is changed to a abstract class so that we can use it as a
useable return type for a new method, Streams#flushOnCloseStream. This new method wraps a
given stream and overrides the close method so that the stream is simply flushed and not closed.
This behavior is used in the TcpTransport when compression is used with a
ReleasableBytesStreamOutput as we need to close the compressed stream to ensure all of the data
is written from this stream. Closing the compressed stream will try to close the underlying stream
but we only want to flush so that all of the written bytes are available.
Additionally, an error message method added in the BytesRestResponse did not use a builder
provided by the channel and instead created its own JSON builder. This changes that method to use the channel builder and in turn the bytes stream output that is managed by the channel.
This commit renames the random ASCII helper methods in ESTestCase. This
is because this method ultimately uses the random ASCII methods from
randomized runner, but these methods actually only produce random
strings generated from [a-zA-Z].
Relates #23886
This commit changes the listener passed to sendMessage from a Runnable
to a ActionListener.
This change also removes IOException from the sendMessage signature.
That signature is misleading as it allows implementers to assume an
exception will be thrown in case of failure. That does not happen due
to Netty's async nature.
As the query of a search request defaults to match_all,
calling _delete_by_query without an explicit query may
result in deleting all data.
In order to protect users against falling into that
pitfall, this commit adds a check to require the explicit
setting of a query.
Closes#23629
The current rest backcompat tests, which run against a mixed cluster of
5.x and 6.0 nodes, depend on snapshot builds of 5.x. However, this has
the potential for inconsistency that results in CI failures, and happens
quite often, whenever some backcompat logic is added to 5.x, but the bwc
test on master fails because the 5.x code has not yet been published as
a snapshot.
This change creates a git clone of the 5.x branch,
builds the zip distribution, and ties that into gradle substitutions for
the 5.x version.
Removed `parse(String index, String type, String id, BytesReference source)` in DocumentMapper.java and replaced all of its use in Test files with `parse(SourceToParse source)`.
`parse(String index, String type, String id, BytesReference source)` was only used in test files and never in the main code so it was removed. All of the test files that used it was then modified to use `parse(SourceToParse source)` method that existing in DocumentMapper.java
Without this change, if write a script with multiple regexes
*sometimes* the lexer will decide to look at them like one
big regex and then some trailing garbage. Like this discuss post:
https://discuss.elastic.co/t/error-with-the-split-function-in-painless-script/79021
```
def val = /\\\\/.split(ctx._source.event_data.param17);
if (val[2] =~ /\\./) {
def val2 = /\\./.split(val[2]);
ctx._source['user_crash'] = val2[0]
} else {
ctx._source['user_crash'] = val[2]
}
```
The error message you get from the lexer is `lexer_no_viable_alt_exception`
right after the *second* regex.
With this change each regex is just a single regex like it ought to be.
As a bonus, while looking into this issue I found that the error
reporting for regexes wasn't very nice. If you specify an invalid
pattern then you get an error marker on the start of the pattern
with the JVM's regex error message which attempts to point you to the
location in the regex but is totally unreadable in the JSON response.
This change fixes the location to point to the appropriate spot
inside the pattern and removes the portion of the JVM's error message
that doesn't render well. It is no longer needed now that we point
users to the appropriate spot in the pattern.
Changes reindex and friends to wait until the entire request has
been "cleaned up" before responding. "Clean up" in this context
is clearing the scroll and (for reindex-from-remote) shutting
down the client. Failures to clean up are still only logged, not
returned to the user.
Closes#23653
This commit upgrades the Netty dependencies from version 4.1.8 to
version 4.1.9. This commit picks up a few bug fixes that impacted us:
- Netty was incorrectly ignoring interfaces with self-assigned MAC
addresses (e.g., instances running in Docker containers or on EC2)
- incorrect handling of the Expect: 100-continue header
Relates #23540
With this commit we change the default receive predictor size for Netty
from 32kB to 64kB as our testing has shown that this leads to less
allocations on smaller heaps like the default out of the box
configuration and this value also works reasonably well for larger
heaps.
Closes#23185
This commit mutes a ton of Painless lambda tests on JDK 9. This commit
did not attempt to discover exactly which tests are failing, but instead
just blanket muted all tests in LambdaTests, FunctionRefTests, and
AugmentationTests.
Relates #23473
Previously, the RestController would stash the context prior to copying headers. However, there could be deprecation
log messages logged and in turn warning headers being added to the context prior to the stashing of the context. These
headers in the context would then be removed from the request and also leaked back into the calling thread's context.
This change moves the stashing of the context to the HttpTransport so that the network threads' context isn't
accidentally populated with warning headers and to ensure the headers added early on in the RestController are not
excluded from the response.
Throw error when skip or do sections are malformed, such as they don't start with the proper token (START_OBJECT). That signals bad indentation, which would be ignored otherwise. Thanks (or due to) our pull parsing code, we were still able to properly parse the sections, yet other runners weren't able to.
Closes#21980
* [TEST] fix indentation in matrix_stats yaml tests
* [TEST] fix indentation in painless yaml test
* [TEST] fix indentation in analysis yaml tests
* [TEST] fix indentation in generated docs yaml tests
* [TEST] fix indentation in multi_cluster_search yaml tests