Some REST tests can rapid-fire script compilations that exceed the
default script compilations per minute. Rather than subjecting ourselves
to spurious failures because of the limit being too low, we opt for a
larger limit here.
This commit updates the docs for the config files to explain the new
mechanism for customizing the configuration directory via the
environment variable CONF_DIR.
Relates #25990
ToXContentToBytes is used as a base class that adds toString and buildAsBytes method implementation to classes that implement ToXContent. With the ongoing cleanups, this class is limited and doesn't add a lot of value, given that buildAsBytes can be replaced with XContentHelper.toXContent and toString can be replaced with Strings.toString(this).
The plan would be to remove ToXContentToBytes entirely, and AbstractQueryBuilder is the first place where we can remove its usage.
During peer recoveries, we need to copy over lucene files and replay the operations they miss from the source translog. Guaranteeing that translog files are not cleaned up has seen many iterations overtime. Back in the old 1.0 days, recoveries went through the Engine and actively prevented both translog cleaning and lucene commits. We then moved to a notion called Translog Views, which allowed the recovery code to "acquire" a view into the translog which is then guaranteed to be kept around until the view is closed. The Engine code was free to commit lucene and do what it ever it wanted without coordinating with recoveries. Translog file deletion logic was based on reference counting on the file level. Those counters were incremented when a view was acquired but also when the view was used to create a `Snapshot` that allowed you to read operations from the files. At some point we removed the file based counting complexity in favor of constructs on the Translog level that just keep track of "open" views and the minimum translog generation they refer to. To do so, Views had to be kept around until the last snapshot that was made from them was consumed. This was fine in recovery code but lead to [a subtle bug](https://github.com/elastic/elasticsearch/pull/25862) in the [Primary Replica Resyncer](https://github.com/elastic/elasticsearch/pull/25862).
Concurrently, we have developed the notion of a `TranslogDeletionPolicy` which is responsible for the liveness aspect of translog files. This class makes it very simple to take translog Snapshot into account for keep translog files around, allowing people that just need a snapshot to just take a snapshot and not worry about views and such. Recovery code which actually does need a view can now prevent trimming by acquiring a simple retention lock (a `Closable`). This removes the need for the notion of a View.
* Improves AbstractWireSerializingTestCase equals test
`AbstractWireSerializingTestCase.testEqualsAndHashcode()` now uses `EqualsHashcodeTestUtils` to perform the hashCode and equals checks. To support this `AbstractWireSerializingTestCase` has two new methods: `getCopyFunction()` and `getMutateFunction` which are used when calling `EqualsHashcodeTestUtils`
* Adds TODO
* Makes equivalent changes to AbstractStreamableTestCase
* corrects javadoc error
We publish javadocs to artifacts.elastic.co (and snapshots.elastic.co) for a while. This commit adds the link to them to the transport client, low level REST client, sniffer and high level REST client pages.
Closes#23761
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
This commit removes an outdated reference to http_address in the nodes
info docs. This information is available in the http object for each
node in the nodes info API response.
Relates #25980
We set some limits in the service file for Elasticsearch when installed
as a service on systemd-based systems. This commit adds a packaging test
that these limits are indeed set correctly.
Relates #25976
We have a bootstrap check for the maximum size of the virtual memory
address space for the Elasticsearch process. We can set this in the
service file for Elasticsearch when installed as a service on
systemd-based systems for a better user experience than them fumbling
through thinking they should set this via /etc/security/limits.d (as a
lot of pages on the Internet would tell them) not realizing that systemd
completely ignores these for services and then trying to figure out how
to add a unit file for the Elasticsearch service.
Relates #25975
The systemd service file that ships with Elasticsearch installs on
systemd-based systems contains a suggestion for setting LimitMEMLOCK if
the user wants to enable bootstrap.memory_lock. However, this setting
this in the installed service file goes against best practices for
working with systemd, and goes against our existing documentation for
how to set this. Therefore, we should not have this suggestion in the
service file otherwise users might be led to think they should edit it
there.
Relates #25979
On non-Windows platforms, we ignore the environment variable
JAVA_TOOL_OPTIONS (this is an environment variable that the JVM respects
by default for picking up extra JVM options). The primary reason that we
ignore this because of the Jayatana agent on Ubuntu; a secondary reason
is that it produces an annoying "Picked up JAVA_TOOL_OPTIONS: ..."
output message. When the elasticsearch-env batch script was introduced
for Windows, ignoring this environment variable was deliberately not
carried over as the primary reason does not apply on Windows. However,
after additional thinking, it seems that we should simply be consistent
to the extent possible here (and also avoid that annoying "Picked up
JAVA_TOOL_OPTIONS: ..." on Windows too). This commit causes the Windows
version of elasticsearch-env to also ignore JAVA_TOOL_OPTIONS.
Relates #25968
This commit removes some useless empty lines checks from the evil JNA
tests. These empty lines checks are useless because if the lines are
actually empty, the for loop will never be entered and we will hit the
fail condition at the bottom as intended anyway.
This commit adds a bootstrap check for the maximum file size, and
ensures the limit is set correctly when Elasticsearch is installed as a
service on systemd-based systems.
Relates #25974
When invoking the elasticsearch-env.bat batch script on Windows, if the
script exits due to an error (e.g., Java can not be found, or the wrong
version of Java is found), then the script exits. Sadly, on Windows,
this does not also terminate the caller, instead returning control. This
means we have to explicitly exit so that is what we do in this commit.
Relates #25959
We have a command-line flag -V or --version that can be used to display
the version of Elasticsearch. However, the version that we display does
not contain whether or not the version is a snapshot build. This commit
changes the behavior here so that if the build is a snapshot, that is
included in the version string.
Relates #25970
Today we strip some ignored JVM options before starting the main Java
process (e.g., we unset JAVA_TOOL_OPTIONS, and we ignore
JAVA_OPTS). However, there is another Java process that we start before
starting the main process: the Java version checker. We are currently
starting this before ignoring the undesired JVM options so the Java
version checker will pick up JAVA_TOOL_OPTIONS and it will silently
ignore JAVA_OPTS. Instead, we should ignore JAVA_TOOL_OPTIONS here too,
and not silently ignore JAVA_OPTS but instead warn before doing so (as
we already do for the main Java process). This commit rearranges the
execution of these steps so that we do the right thing here.
Relates #25969
Previously we manually checked if mutually exclusive options are passed
on the command line. Yet, after an upgrade to our option parser
dependency, we were able to use built-in functionality to establish
these mutually exclusive options and the parser would take care of
checking if such options are passed on the command line. However, the
previous manually checking code is now dead and was left behind. This
commit removes that dead code.
Relates #19278
This commit removes a legacy check against running bin/elasticsearch
that is not produced from a distribution. This check exists for legacy
reasons, namely when bin/elasticsearch previously sat in the root of the
Elasticsearch repository. In this old scenario, someone might clone the
repository, see the bin folder and try to run bin/elasticsearch without
first production a distribution. Today, this is unlikely since
bin/elasticsearch now sits in
distribution/src/main/resources/bin/elasticsearch so first, bin is no
longer in the root of the repository, and second, the src indicates this
is source and not already for production. Moreover, our README in the
root of the repository provides clear instructions for getting started:
either download a distribution or build one from source. In the name of
simplicity, we therefore remove this legacy check.
Relates #25960
This commit removes a rolling upgrade test for scripting that is totally
busted yet is preventing builds from succeeding. We elect to remove this
test as opposed to skipping the test as:
- it has beeen being skipped for months with no apparent loss
- it appears to need significant work to get to an unbusted state
This commit cleans up a few items with the script packaging:
- remove the now dead elasticsearch.in.sh script
- add assertions for the existence elasticsearch-env and
elasticsearch-keystore
The failure reason for snapshot shard failures might not be propagated properly if the master node changes after the errors were reported by other data nodes. This commits ensures that the snapshot shard failure reason is preserved properly and adds workaround for reading old snapshot files where this information might not have been preserved.
Closes#25878
This commit addresses a change in core Elasticsearch where the
command-line flag --path.conf is no longer respected. Instead, the
configuration path must be passed through the system property
es.path.conf. We adapt the Windows batch file and the service for this
change.
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.
The example output for node info and cluster stats was outdated w.r.t.
to the information that is shown for plugins. With this commit we
updated the example output and update the explanation of the respective
fields.
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
This commit fixes tests for environment-aware commands. A previous
change added a check that es.path.conf is not null. The problem is that
this system property is not being set in tests so this check trips every
single time. To fix this, we move the check into a method that can be
overridden, and then override this method in relevant places in tests to
avoid having to set the property in tests. We also add a test that this
check works as expected.
This is related to #25931. In CloudBlobContainer#exists it is possible
that a socket connection will be opened. This commit ensures that those
calls have the proper socket privileges.
This is related to #25932. Currently when we create the
`GoogleCloudStorageService` client we do not wrap that call in a
doPrivileged block. The call might open a connection. This commit
ensures that the creation is wrapped in a doPrivileged block.
A previous change enabled it so that users could configure the
configuration path via a command-line option --path.conf. However, a
subsequent change has made it so that we expect users to set the
configuration path via the environment variable CONF_DIR. To enable
this, we now pass the value of CONF_DIR as the value for the
command-line option --path.conf. This has two problems:
- the presence of --path.conf always being on the command line breaks
other flags like --help for multi-commands
- the scripts for which --help is not broken say that you can pass
--path.conf but this is a lie since passing it will make it appear
twice in the command-line arguments breaking the script
Since --path.conf is no longer the way that we want users to set the
configuration path, we should remove the --path.conf option. However, we
still need a way to get the configuration path from the scripts to the
running Java process. To do this, we now pass the configuration path as
a system property. This keeps it off the script command line fixing the
above problems.
The only remaining question (that I can see) is whether or not to
respect -Des.path.conf=<some path> if the user sets this in their
jvm.options or via ES_JAVA_OPTS. I think that we should not do this (as
has been our tradition), es.path.home and es.path.conf are special,
should be set by our scripts only so users should not be setting them at
all so we should not take any effort to respect these flags if the user
tries to otherwise use them.
Relates #25943
When running a script that depends on elasticsearch-env, the
elasticsearch-env script seeks backwards from the directory containing
the script to find Elasticsearch home. This is done by seeking backwards
in the path to find bin, and then going one directory above
that. Unfortunately, if the script is started relatively from the bin
directory, then bin will appear in the path since it is a relative
path. This commit fixes this by making the starting path absolute before
attempting to seek backwards.
* A cycle was detected in eclipse, and was fixed in the same fashion as
core and core-tests.
* The rest client deps jar was not properly exported in the generated
eclipse classpath file for rest client.
Relates #25208