* [DOCS] Rework conceptual info for ILM. (#52181)
* [DOCS] Rework conceptual info for ILM.
* Split the actions out of concepts.
* Added xpack role to actions.
Co-Authored-By: James Rodewig <james.rodewig@elastic.co>
* Apply suggestions from code review
* Edit actions for consistency and add action template. (#55632)
* Edit actions for consistency and add action template.
* Update docs/reference/ilm/actions/ilm-readonly.asciidoc
Co-Authored-By: James Rodewig <james.rodewig@elastic.co>
* Apply suggestions from code review
Currently the testTransientErrorsDuringRecoveryAreRetried validates that
the expected peer recovery starts only once. This check is coarse and is
executed on all nodes and indexes. This commit modifies this check to
only be performed on the expected index. Additionally this commit
removes the disruption behavior from the "blue" node where it is not
relevant. Finally, this commit improves the logging for this test.
BuildPlugin is a catch all for any elasticsearch common build
infrastructure. Unfortunately that makes reusing parts of it difficult.
This commit splits the parts specific to all java based projects out to
our own elasticsearch.java plugin.
This replaces a reference to the result of partially reducing
aggregations that async search keeps with a reference to the serialized
form of the result of the partial reduction which we need to keep
anyway.
When calling scripts in metric aggregation, the returned metric state is
passed along to the coordinating node to do the final reduce. However,
it is possible the object could contain nested state which is unknown to
StreamOutput/StreamInput. This would then result in the node crashing as
exceptions are not expected in the middle of serialization.
This commit adds a method to StreamOutput that can determine if an
object is writeable by the stream. It uses the same logic
writeGenericValue, special casing each of the supported collection types
to recursively determine if each contained value is itself writeable.
relates #54708
Currently cancelling the RetryableAction does not stop one last run from
being executed. This commit makes a best effort attempt to cancel a
scheduled retry and guards future executions from the action already
being completed.
Currently a failed peer recovery action will fail an recovery. This
includes when the recovery fails due to potentially short lived
transient issues such as rejected exceptions or circuit breaking
errors.
This commit adds the concept of a retryable action. A retryable action
will be retryed in face of certain errors. The action will be retried
after an exponentially increasing backoff period. After defined time,
the action will timeout.
This commit only implements retries for responses that indicate the
target node has NOT executed the action.
If we advance the global checkpoint during commit and sync that
checkpoint after commit, then the assertions in the test won't hold
because the deletion policy did not see the latest global checkpoint
but only the value before committing.
Closes#55680
The disk decider had special handling for the single data node case,
allowing any allocation (skipping watermark checks) for such clusters.
This special handling can now be avoided via a setting.
If a node client (or rather its underlying node) is closed then
any executions on it will just quietly fail as happens in #55660
via closing the nodes on the test thread and asynchronously using
a node client.
Closes#55660
For 7.x, we already implemented the `?prefer_v2_templates` flag and made V2 templates opt-in, so we
can relax the error when updating V1 templates to just a warning. This will still be a hard error
for 8.0+
Relates to #53101
Warn about potential performance impact when a large number of fields
is used with query string query and no default field.
Re-adds content from #35570.
That content was erroneously removed in #45296.
Co-authored-by: Peter Dyson <peter.dyson@geekpete.com>
This has no practical impact on users since frozen indices are the only
throttled indices today. However this has an impact on upcoming features
that would use search throttling.
Filtering out throttled indices made sense a couple years ago, but as
we're now improving support for slow requests with `_async_search` and
exploring ways to reduce storage costs, this feature has most likely
become a trap, that we'd like to not have with upcoming features that
would use search throttling.
Relates #54058
Today when prewarming a searchable snapshot we use the `SparseFileTracker` to
lock each (part of a) snapshotted blob, blocking any other readers from
accessing this data until the whole part is available.
This commit changes this strategy: instead we optimistically start to download
the blob without any locking, and then lock much smaller ranges after each
individual `read()` call. This may mean that some bytes are downloaded twice,
but reduces the time that other readers may need to wait before the data they
need is available.
As a best-effort optimisation we try to request the smallest possible single
range of missing bytes in the part by first checking how many of the initial
and terminal bytes of the part are already present in cache. In particular if
the part is already fully cached before prewarming then this check means we
skip the part entirely.
The Lucene `preserve_original` setting is currently not supported in the `edge_ngram`
token filter. This change adds it with a default value of `false`.
Closes#55767
Currently there is a clear mechanism to stub sending a request through
the transport. However, this is limited to testing exceptions on the
sender side. This commit reworks our transport related testing
infrastructure to allow stubbing request handling on the receiving side.
Fixes confusing error message when unknown value type is specified in a terms
aggregation. Adds support for parsing "numeric" and "number" value types.
Fixes#55727
* Simplify java home verification
At one time, all uses of java home were found through the getJavaHome
utility method on BuildPlugin. However, that was changed many
refactorings ago, but the complex support for registering a java home
version needed that fails at configuration time still exists. The only
remaining use of grabbing java home is within bwc tests, and must be at
runtime since that is when we have the checkout and know what version is
needed.
This commit consolidates the java home finding method into a utility
unassociated with BuildPlugin.
* fix checkstyle
* address feedback
Adding to #55659, we missed another way we could set the task to
failed due to task cancellation. CI revealed that we might also
get a `SearchPhaseExecutionException` whose cause is a
`TaskCancelledException`. That exception is not wrapped so
unwrapping it will not return the underlying `TaskCancelledException`.
Thus to be complete in catching this, we also need to check the
error's cause.
Closes#55068
Backport of #55797
This is a continuation from #55580.
Now that we're parsing phase progresses from the analytics process
we change `ProgressTracker` to allow for custom phases between
the `loading_data` and `writing_results` phases. Each `DataFrameAnalysis`
may declare its own phases.
This commit sets things in place for the analytics process to start
reporting different phases per analysis type. However, this is
still preserving existing behaviour as all analyses currently
declare a single `analyzing` phase.
Backport of #55763
This change adds validation when running the users tool so that
if Elasticsearch is expected to run in a JVM that is configured to
be in FIPS 140 mode and the password hashing algorithm is not
compliant, we would throw an error.
Users tool uses the configuration from the node and this validation
would also happen upon node startup but users might be added in the
file realm before the node is started and we would have the
opportunity to notify the user of this misconfiguration.
The changes in #55544 make this much less probable to happen in 8
since the default algorithm will be compliant but this change can
act as a fallback in anycase and makes for a better user experience.
Our handling for concurrent refresh of access tokens suffered from
a race condition where:
1. Thread A has just finished with updating the existing token
document, but hasn't stored the new tokens in a new document
yet
2. Thread B attempts to refresh the same token and since the
original token document is marked as refreshed, it decrypts and
gets the new access token and refresh token and returns that to
the caller of the API.
3. The caller attempts to use the newly refreshed access token
immediately and gets an authentication error since thread A still
hasn't finished writing the document.
This commit changes the behavior so that Thread B, would first try
to do a Get request for the token document where it expects that
the access token it decrypted is stored(with exponential backoff )
and will not respond until it can verify that it reads it in the
tokens index. That ensures that we only ever return tokens in a
response if they are already valid and can be used immediately
It also adjusts TokenAuthIntegTests
to test authenticating with the tokens each thread receives,
which would fail without the fix.
Resolves: #54289
We make sure to filter shard generations for indices that are missing
from the metadata when finalizing a partial snapshot (from concurrent index deletion)
but we failed to account for the case where we manually build a fake metadata instance
for snapshots without the global state.
Fixed this by handling missing indices by skipping, same way we do it for filtering the
shard generations.
Relates #50234