The failed_category_count statistic records the number of times
categorization wanted to create a new category but couldn't
because the job had reached its model_memory_limit.
Backport of #55716
Makes the following changes to the `stemmer` token filter docs:
* Adds detailed analyze example
* Rewrites parameter definitions
* Adds custom analyzer example
* Adds a `language` value for the `estonian` stemmer
* Reorders the `language` values to show recommended algorithms first,
followed by other values alphabetically
Adds conceptual documentation for stemming, including:
* An overview of why stemming is helpful in search
* Algorithmic vs. dictionary stemming
* Token filters used to control stemming, such as `stemmer_override`, `keyword_marker`, and `conditional`
The example looks the same as in the previous section although it should use the
"fuzziness" parameter. This seems to be okay on 6.8 and master and was probably
only forgotten to port to 7.x branches.
This adds a validation to VSParserHelper to ensure that a field or
script or both are specified by the user. This is technically
required today already, but throws an exception much deeper
in the agg framework and has a very unintuitive error for the user
(as well as eating more resources instead of failing early)
Adds a important admonition to the EQL syntax page noting that
the equal (`==`) operator should not be used to match `text` field
values.
Relates to #52709 and #53020
Documents several parameters missing from the bulk API's response body
docs. Also moves several response-related chunks of text to the response
body section.
Relates to #55237
The ML info endpoint returns the max_model_memory_limit setting
if one is configured. However, it is still possible to create
a job that cannot run anywhere in the current cluster because
no node in the cluster has enough memory to accommodate it.
This change adds an extra piece of information,
limits.effective_max_model_memory_limit, to the ML info
response that returns the biggest model memory limit that could
be run in the current cluster assuming no other jobs were
running.
The idea is that the ML UI will be able to warn users who try to
create jobs with higher model memory limits that their jobs will
not be able to start unless they add a bigger ML node to their
cluster.
Backport of #55529
Adds a "node" field to the response from the following endpoints:
1. Open anomaly detection job
2. Start datafeed
3. Start data frame analytics job
If the job or datafeed is assigned to a node immediately then
this field will return the ID of that node.
In the case where a job or datafeed is opened or started lazily
the node field will contain an empty string. Clients that want
to test whether a job or datafeed was opened or started lazily
can therefore check for this.
Backport of #55473
Adds an example for bulk API requests that include failures.
Also documents guidance on use the `filter_path` parameter
to narrow the bulk API response for errors.
Closes#55237
Removes the 'Testing' chapter from the Elasticsearch Reference guide.
This chapter was originally written for so that users using the Java HLRC client could
use the same test classes when testing Elasticsearch in their own applications.
However, this is no longer the case or recommended.
Closes#55257.
This paves the data layer way so that exceptionally large models are partitioned across multiple documents.
This change means that nodes before 7.8.0 will not be able to use trained inference models created on nodes on or after 7.8.0.
I chose the definition document limit to be 100. This *SHOULD* be plenty for any large model. One of the largest models that I have created so far had the following stats:
~314MB of inflated JSON, ~66MB when compressed, ~177MB of heap.
With the chunking sizes of `16 * 1024 * 1024` its compressed string could be partitioned to 5 documents.
Supporting models 20 times this size (compressed) seems adequate for now.
This commit adds a new querystring parameter on the following APIs:
- Index
- Update
- Bulk
- Create Index
- Rollover
These APIs now support a `?prefer_v2_templates=true|false` flag. This flag changes the preference
creation to use either V2 index templates or V1 templates. This flag defaults to `false` and will be
changed to `true` for 8.0+ in subsequent work.
Additionally, setting this flag internally sets the `index.prefer_v2_templates` index-level setting.
This setting is used so that actions that automatically create a new index (things like rollover
initiated by ILM) will inherit the preference from the original index. This setting is dynamic so
that a transition from v1 to v2 templates can occur for long-running indices grouped by an alias
performing periodic rollover.
This also adds support for sending this parameter to the High Level Rest Client.
Relates to #53101
We believe there's no longer a need to be able to disable basic-license
features completely using the "xpack.*.enabled" settings. If users don't
want to use those features, they simply don't need to use them. Having
such features always available lets us build more complex features that
assume basic-license features are present.
This commit deprecates settings of the form "xpack.*.enabled" for
basic-license features, excluding "security", which is a special case.
It also removes deprecated settings from integration tests and unit
tests where they're not directly relevant; e.g. monitoring and ILM are
no longer disabled in many integration tests.
PR #51260 moved usage counts about mapping field types and analysis to
the `_cluster/stats` API.
This documents those stats in the response section of the cluster stats
API docs.
Implement the use of scalar functions inside aggregate functions.
This allows for complex expressions inside aggregations, with or without
GROUBY as well as with or without a HAVING clause. e.g.:
```
SELECT MAX(CASE WHEN a IS NULL then -1 ELSE abs(a * 10) + 1 END) AS max, b
FROM test
GROUP BY b
HAVING MAX(CASE WHEN a IS NULL then -1 ELSE abs(a * 10) + 1 END) > 5
```
Scalar functions are still not allowed for `KURTOSIS` and `SKEWNESS` as
this is currently not implemented on the ElasticSearch side.
Fixes: #29980Fixes: #36865Fixes: #37271
(cherry picked from commit 506d1beea7abb2b45de793bba2e349090a78f2f9)
The main changes are:
1. Throw an error when updating `include_in_parent` or `include_in_root` attribute of nested field dynamically by the PUT mapping API.
2. Add a test for the change.
Closes#53792
Co-authored-by: bellengao <gbl_long@163.com>
* [DOCS] Reformat `flatten_graph` token filter
Makes the following changes to the `flatten_graph` token filter docs:
* Rewrites description and adds Lucene link
* Adds detailed analyze example
* Adds analyzer example
* Add the change log for 7.7
Add the change log for 7.7
* Update rel. notes to latest state (BC5)
Update the release notes to current state (i.e. BC5).
* Update docs/reference/release-notes/7.7.asciidoc
Co-Authored-By: James Rodewig <james.rodewig@elastic.co>
Upgrade to lucene 8.5.1 release that contains a bug fix for a bug that might introduce index corruption when deleting data from an index that was previously shrunk.
* [ML] adding prediction_field_type to inference config (#55128)
Data frame analytics dynamically determines the classification field type. This field type then dictates the encoded JSON that is written to Elasticsearch.
Inference needs to know about this field type so that it may provide the EXACT SAME predicted values as analytics.
Here is added a new field `prediction_field_type` which indicates the desired type. Options are: `string` (DEFAULT), `number`, `boolean` (where close_to(1.0) == true, false otherwise).
Analytics provides the default `prediction_field_type` when the model is created from the process.
Updates the supported upgrade path table in [Upgrade Elasticsearch][0]
to include a new row for maintenance releases. For example, this row
covers upgrading from 7.6.0 to 7.6.2.
The new table row only displays for releases greater than n.x.0. For
example, the new row will display for the 7.7.1 release but not the
7.7.0 release.
[0]: https://www.elastic.co/guide/en/elasticsearch/reference/master/setup-upgrade.html
Provides basic repository-level stats that will allow us to get some insight into how many
requests are actually being made by the underlying SDK. Currently only tracks GET and LIST
calls for S3 repositories. Most of the code is unfortunately boiler plate to add a new endpoint
that will help us better understand some of the low-level dynamics of searchable snapshots.