This commit does a few things
- moves ILM-specifc rest yaml tests into plugin/ilm/qa, and creates special
:plugin:ilm:qa:rest module to test them
- removes the with-security tests of the yaml tests since they are covered in
the rest tests now
- moves ChangePolicyforIndexIT into the qa/multi-node project since that test is
not currently running in main ilm since integTest is disabled
This PR renames the CRUD APIS for ILM
GET _ilm/<policy>, _ilm -> _ilm/policy/<policy>, _ilm/policy
PUT _ilm/<policy> -> _ilm/policy/<policy>
DELETE _ilm/<policy> -> _ilm/policy/<policy>
closes#34929.
Previously, if ClusterStateActionSteps or ClusterStateWaitSteps threw an
exception executing, the exception would only be caught and logged by
the generic ClusterStateUpdateTask machinery and the index would become
stuck on that step.
Now, exceptions thrown in these steps will be caught and the index will
be moved to the Error step.
The Move To Step API now checks to see if the target step is an
AsyncActionStep, and if so, runs it.
Previously, AsyncActionSteps would only be run when they are entered by
executing the previous step, so if an AsyncActionStep was entered via
the Move To Step API, ILM would never touch that index again.
ILM would return a resource-not-found exception when requesting policies
while the IndexLifecycleMetaData is not initialized. The behavior here
should not be as extreme since it is not the user's fault.
This commit changes the behavior so that it succeeds and returns no policies
when no policy names are explicitely specified, otherwise keep the same behavior
of throwing an exception
With the introduction of _ilm/stop and _ilm/start APIs, the
use cases where one would only target a select group
of indices to start/stop has been reduced. Since there is no
strong use-case for skipping specific indices, it is best to
remove this functionality and only adding if later desired, with the
hopes of keeping things more simple.
through randomization, there is a chance that the mutateInstance
for PolicyStatsTests does not actually mutate the original object.
This PR aims to fix this
* Adds usage data for ILM
* Adds tests for IndexLifecycleFeatureSetUsage and friends
* Adds tests for IndexLifecycleFeatureSet
* Fixes merge errors
* Add number of indices managed to usage stats
Also adds more tests
* Addresses Review comments
* Removes Set Policy API in favour of setting index.lifecycle.name
directly
* Reinstates matcher that will still be used
* Cleans up code after rebase
* Adds test to check changing policy with ndex settings works
* Fixes TimeseriesLifecycleActionsIT after API removal
* Fixes docs tests
* Fixes case on close where lifecycle service was never created
Since there's no transition into the "new" phase it wasn't set until the "hot"
phase, so now we initialize it when initializing the policy context.
Resolves#34277
Having integration tests separated from the unit tests in the qa
directory works much more smoothly with our testing infrastructure,
matches what other plugins do, and tests in a more "real" deployment
scenario by having all plugins installed.
This change adds the command RemoveIndexLifecyclePolicy to the HLRC. This uses the
new TimeRequest as a base class for RemoveIndexLifecyclePolicyRequest on the client side.
This fixes an issue where an incorrect expected next step is used when checking
to execute `AsyncActionStep`s after a cluster state step.
It fixes this scenario:
- `ExecuteStepsUpdateTask` executes a `ClusterStateWaitStep` or
`ClusterStateActionStep` successfully
- The next step is also a `ClusterStateWaitStep`, so it loops
- The `ClusterStateWaitStep` has a next stepkey (which gets set to the
`nextStepKey` in the code)
- The `ClusterStateWaitStep` fails the condition, meaning that it will have to
wait longer
- The `nextStepKey` is now incorrect though, because we did not advance the
index's step, and it's not `null` (which is another safe value if there is no
step after the `ClusterStateWaitStep`)
This fixes the problem by resetting the nextStepKey to null if the condition is
not met, since we are not going to advance the step metadata in this
case (thereby skipping the `maybeRunAsyncAction` invocation).
This commit also tightens up and enhances much of the ILM logging. A lot of
logging was missing the index name (making it hard to debug in the presence of
multiple indices) and a lot was using the wrong logging level (DEBUG is now
actually readable without being a wall of text).
Resolves#34297
- this adds an integration test that runs through a policy
with all the actions defined.
- adds a test specific to a policy having just a rollover action
- bumps the node count to 4
This commit changes the way that step execution flows. Rather than have any step
run when the cluster state changes or the periodic scheduler fires, this now
runs the different types of steps at different times.
`AsyncWaitStep` is run at a periodic manner, ie, every 10 minutes by default
`ClusterStateActionStep` and `ClusterStateWaitStep` are run every time the
cluster state changes.
`AsyncActionStep` is now run only after the cluster state has been transitioned
into a new step. This prevents these non-idempotent steps from running at the
same time. It addition to being run when transitioned into, this is also run
when a node is newly elected master (only if set as the current step) so that
master failover does not fail to run the step.
This also changes the `RolloverStep` from an `AsyncActionStep` to an
`AsyncWaitStep` so that it can run periodically.
Relates to #29823
ILM now only forces indices to become read only in the case of Shrink
and Force Merge actions, as these are most useful in cases where the
index is no longer being written to.
Using index settings for ILM state is fragile and exposes too much
information that doesn't need to be exposed. Using custom index metadata
is more resilient and allows more controlled access to internal
information.
As part of these changes, moves away from using defaults for ILM-related
values, in favor of using null values to clearly indicate that the value is not
present.
This moves away from caching a list of steps for a current phase, instead
rebuilding the necessary step from the phase JSON stored in the index's
metadata.
Relates to #29823
There was a listener that re-runs the policy with the new state when the cluster
state is processed by the `MoveToNextStepUpdateTask`. This removes this listener
as we will execute the policy through the `IndexLifecyleService` cluster state
listener.
It is useful to keep track of which version of a policy is currently
being executed by a specific index. For management purposes, it would
also be useful to know at which time the latest version was inserted
so that an audit trail is left for reconciling changes happening in ILM.
This removes `PhaseAfterStep` in favor of a new `PhaseCompleteStep`. This step
in only a marker that the `LifecyclePolicyRunner` needs to halt until the time
indicated for entering the next phase.
This also fixes a bug where phase times were encapsulated into the policy
instead of dynamically adjusting to policy changes.
Supersedes #33140, which it replaces
Relates to #29823
Since policies can be updated independent of execution plans for the current
phase being executed, it would be nice to know what the phase that is executing
looks like in JSON. This PR does just that, while also using that index setting
to recontruct the phase steps to execute (for consistency)
This brings the name in line with everywhere else and means that name
seen on the feature usage and `GET _xpack` APIs will match the plugin
name.
This change also removes `IndexLifcycle.NAME` since this was only used
to name the scheduler job and that can be done using
`XPackField.INDEX_LIFECYCLE` instead
Changes to the IndexLifecycleService were necessary since relying on
ClusterChangedEvents for a full picture of the cluster state's settings was
a mistake. It is not necessary that these events hold all settings, especially ones
that are set at node start-up.
Changes to main include:
- move poll interval updates to a SettingsUpdateConsumer
- move scheduler start/stop to a localMasterNodeListener
- keep triggerPolicies in clusterChanged
Changes to tests include:
- removal of some low-level state transition checks in the Service that no longer make sense
since the changes are unconditionally specified in the appropriate listeners
- add integration tests for poll-interval updates
- add integration test assertions for verifying scheduler is started up correctly
* Remove canSetPolicy, canUpdatePolicy and canRemovePolicy
Since we now store a pre-compiled list of steps for an index's phase in the
`PolicyStepsRegistry`, we no longer need to worry about updating policies as any
updates won't affect the current phase, and will only be picked up on phase
transitions.
This also removes the tests that test these methods
Relates to #29823
This is needed as with recent changes to master (see #32952), protocol
is no longer accessible from core, so these classes need to be
duplicated in both places.
This change fixes the shrink action so when the shrink is performed we
remove the single node allocation fromt eh shard allocation filtering
settings. Without this fix replicas cannot be allocated after we have
performed the shrink and we cannot make progress with the rest of the
shink aciton.
This change also fixes a bug in the explain API where the maste node
timeout was being set to null if it wasn't provided instead of using
its default value causing a NPE
If we are waiting on a condition to be met, and the reason
it is not completed is unchanged, we find ourselves updating
cluster state over and over again and kicking of the ILM listeners
to re-check. This is overkill and can generate way too many
cluster state updates
This is the final PR for copying over the necessary components for
clients to parse/render LifecyclePolicy. Changes include:
- move of named-x-content server objects away from client
- move validation into the client copy of LifecyclePolicy
- move LifecycleAction into an interface with `getName`
* Store phase steps for index in PolicyStepsRegistry
This changes the way that steps are retrieved from `PolicyStepsRegistry` to
store the steps on a per-index basis (in memory for now, though that will change
in subsequent PRs). These steps are rebuilt as the index changes phases.
This also fixes a bug where an action with the same phase and name was not being
considered changed (and thus updated) in the compiled steps list. These are now
correctly considered as "upsert" diffs.
Relates to #29823
As we migrate to a per-phase execution model, we need to prepare our cluster-state-step execution model to be aligned. It is the case that the final iteration into the next "currentStep" from the next phase would not be available in the registry yet. This change exits the execution loop early as to not jump into executing the next phase's steps before the registry is properly updated