We will keep this abstractions as it's convenient, otherwise IngestDocument would depend on ScriptService directly, and would explicitly rely on mustache which is not even part of core. better to have the interface in core, and the impl as part of the ingest plugin, which relies on mustache, shipped with core by default.
* Added percolator field mapper that extracts the query terms and indexes these terms with the percolator query.
* At percolate time these extracted terms are used to query percolator queries that are like to be evaluated. This can significantly cut down the time it takes to percolate. Whereas before all percolator queries were evaluated if they matches with the document being percolated.
* Changes made to percolator queries are no longer immediately visible, a refresh needs to happen before the changes are visible.
* By default the percolate api only returns upto 10 matches instead of returning all matching percolator queries.
* Made percolate more modular, so that it is easier to add unit tests.
* Added unit tests for the percolator.
Closes#12664Closes#13646
Adds task manager class and enables all activities to register with the task manager. Currently, the immutable Transport*Activity class represents activity itself shared across all requests. This PR adds and an additional structure Task that keeps track of currently running requests and can be used to communicate with these requests using TransportTaskAction.
Related to #15117
By default, azure does not timeout. This commit adds support for a timeout settings which defaults to 5 minutes.
It's a timeout **per request** not a global timeout for a snapshot request.
It can be defined globally, per account or both. Defaults to `5m`.
```yml
cloud:
azure:
storage:
timeout: 10s
my_account1:
account: your_azure_storage_account1
key: your_azure_storage_key1
default: true
my_account2:
account: your_azure_storage_account2
key: your_azure_storage_key2
timeout: 30s
```
In this example, timeout will be 10s for `my_account1` and 30s for `my_account2`.
Closes#14277.
All those repository settings can also be defined globally in `elasticsearch.yml` file using prefix `repositories.azure.`. For example:
```yml
repositories.azure:
container: backup-container
base_path: backups
chunk_size: 32m
compress": true
```
Closes#13776.
An index template for the '.ingest' index is required because:
* We don't want arbitrary fields in pipeline documents, because that can turn into upgrade problems if we add more properties to the pipeline dsl.
* We know what are the usages are of the '.ingest' index, so we can optimize for that and prevent that this index is used for different purposes.
Closes#15001
This removes the backward compatibility layer with pre-2.0 indices, notably
the extraction of _id, _routing or _timestamp from the source document when a
path is defined.
This changes a couple of things:
Mappings are truly immutable. Before, each field mapper stored a
MappedFieldTypeReference that was shared across fields that have the same name
across types. This means that a mapping update could have the side-effect of
changing the field type in other types when updateAllTypes is true. This works
differently now: after a mapping update, a new copy of the mappings is created
in such a way that fields across different types have the same MappedFieldType.
See the new Mapper.updateFieldType API which replaces MappedFieldTypeReference.
DocumentMapper is now immutable and MapperService.merge has been refactored in
such a way that if an exception is thrown while eg. lookup structures are being
updated, then the whole mapping update will be aborted. As a consequence,
FieldTypeLookup's checkCompatibility has been folded into copyAndAddAll.
Synchronization was simplified: given that mappings are truly immutable, we
don't need the read/write lock so that no documents can be parsed while a
mapping update is being processed. Document parsing is not performed under a
lock anymore, and mapping merging uses a simple synchronized block.
This adds the required changes/checks so that the build can run on
FreeBSD.
There are a few things that differ between FreeBSD and Linux:
- CPU probes return -1 for CPU usage
- `hot_threads` cannot be supported on FreeBSD
From OpenJDK's `os_bsd.cpp`:
```c++
bool os::is_thread_cpu_time_supported() {
#ifdef __APPLE__
return true;
#else
return false;
#endif
}
```
So this API now returns (for each FreeBSD node):
```
curl -s localhost:9200/_nodes/hot_threads
::: {Devil Hunter Gabriel}{q8OJnKCcQS6EB9fygU4R4g}{127.0.0.1}{127.0.0.1:9300}
hot_threads is not supported on FreeBSD
```
- multicast fails in native `join` method - known bug:
https://bugs.freebsd.org/bugzilla/show_bug.cgi?id=193246
Which causes:
```
1> Caused by: java.net.SocketException: Invalid argument
1> at java.net.PlainDatagramSocketImpl.join(Native Method)
1> at java.net.AbstractPlainDatagramSocketImpl.join(AbstractPlainDatagramSocketImpl.java:179)
1> at java.net.MulticastSocket.joinGroup(MulticastSocket.java:323)
1> at org.elasticsearch.plugin.discovery.multicast.MulticastChannel$Plain.buildMulticastSocket(MulticastChannel.java:309)
```
So these tests are skipped on FreeBSD.
Resolves#15562
both processors and pipelines now have the ability to define
a separate list of processors to be executed if the original line
of execution throws an Exception.
processors without an on_failure parameter defined will throw an
exception and exit the pipeline immediately. processors with on_failure
defined will catch the exception and allow for further processors to
run. Exceptions within the on_failure block will be treated the same as
the top-level.
The append processor allows to append one or more values to an existing list; add a new list with the provided values if the field doesn't exist yet, or convert an existing scalar into a list and add the provided values to the newly created list.
This required adapting of IngestDocument#appendFieldValue behaviour, also added support for templating to it.
Closes#14324
DocumentMapperParser has both parse and parseCompressed methods. Except that the
parse methods are ONLY used from the unit tests. This commit removes the parse
method and moves all tests to parseCompressed so that they test more
realistically how mappings are managed.
Then I renamed parseCompressed to parse given that this is the only alternative
anyway.
This change adds a Fixture class for use by gradle. A Fixture is an
external process that integration tests will use. It can be added as a
dependsOn for integTest, and will automatically be shutdown upon success
or failure, as well as relevant information dumped on failure. There is
also an example fixture in this change.
* Pipeline store can now only start when there is no .ingest index or all primary shards of .ingest have been started
* IngestPlugin adds`node.ingest` setting to `true`. This is used to figure out to what nodes to send the refresh request too. This setting isn't yet configurable. This will be done in a follow up issue.
* Removed the background pipeline updater and added added logic to deal with specific scenarious to reload all pipelines.
* Ingest services are no longer be managed by Guice. Only the bootstrapper gets managed by guice and that contructs
all the services/components ingest will need.
Added ingest wide template infrastructure to IngestDocument
Added a TemplateService interface that the ingest framework uses
Added a TemplateService implementation that the ingest plugin provides that delegates to the ES' script service
Cut SetProcessor over to use the template infrastructure for the `field` and `value` settings.
Removed the MetaDataProcessor
Removed dependency on mustache library
Added qa ingest mustache rest test so that the ingest and mustache integration can be tested.
We have the Text API, which is essentially a wrapper around a String and a
BytesReference and then we have 3 implementations depending on whether the
String view should be cached, the BytesReference view should be cached, or both
should be cached.
This commit merges everything into a single Text that is essentially the old
StringAndBytesText impl.
Long term we should look into whether this API has any performance benefit or
if we could just use plain strings. This would greatly simplify all our other
APIs that currently use Text.
This fixes the `lenient` parameter to be `missingClasses`. I will remove this boolean and we can handle them via the normal whitelist.
It also adds a check for sheisty classes (jar hell with the jdk).
This is inspired by the lucene "sheisty" classes check, but it has false positives. This check is more evil, it validates every class file against the extension classloader as a resource, to see if it exists there. If so: jar hell.
This jar hell is a problem for several reasons:
1. causes insanely-hard-to-debug problems (like bugs in forbidden-apis)
2. hides problems (like internal api access)
3. the code you think is executing, is not really executing
4. security permissions are not what you think they are
5. brings in unnecessary dependencies
6. its jar hell
The more difficult problems are stuff like jython, where these classes are simply 'uberjared' directly in, so you cant just fix them by removing a bogus dependency. And there is a legit reason for them to do that, they want to support java 1.4.
When creating a metadata mapper for a new type, we reuse an existing
configuration from an existing type (if any) in order to avoid introducing
conflicts. However this field type that is provided is considered as both an
initial configuration and the default configuration. So at serialization time,
we might only serialize the difference between the current configuration and
this default configuration, which might be different to what is actually
considered the default configuration.
This does not cause bugs today because metadata mappers usually override the
toXContent method and compare the current field type with Defaults.FIELD_TYPE
instead of defaultFieldType() but I would still like to do this change to
avoid future bugs.
The `path` option allowed to index/store a field `a.b.c` under just `c` when
set to `just_name`. This "feature" has been removed in 2.0 in favor of `copy_to`
so we can remove the back compat in 3.x.
Today mappings are mutable because of two APIs:
- Mapper.merge, which expects changes to be performed in-place
- IncludeInAll, which allows to change whether values should be put in the
`_all` field in place.
This commit changes both APIs to return a modified copy instead of modifying in
place so that mappings can be immutable. For now, only the type-level object is
immutable, but in the future we can imagine making them immutable at the
index-level so that mapping updates could be completely atomic at the index
level.
Close#9365
This change adds back the http.type setting. It also cleans up all the
transport related guice code to be consolidated within the
NetworkModule (as transport and http related stuff is what and how ES
exposes over the network). The setter methods previously used by some
plugins to override eg the TransportService or HttpServerTransport are
removed, and those plugins should now register a custom implementation
of the class with a name and set that using the appropriate config
setting. Note that I think ActionModule should also be moved into here,
to sit along side the rest actions, but I left that for a followup.
closes#14148
Migrated from ES-Hadoop. Contains several improvements regarding:
* Security
Takes advantage of the pluggable security in ES 2.2 and uses that in order
to grant the necessary permissions to the Hadoop libs. It relies on a
dedicated DomainCombiner to grant permissions only when needed only to the
libraries installed in the plugin folder
Add security checks for SpecialPermission/scripting and provides out of
the box permissions for the latest Hadoop 1.x (1.2.1) and 2.x (2.7.1)
* Testing
Uses a customized Local FS to perform actual integration testing of the
Hadoop stack (and thus to make sure the proper permissions and ACC blocks
are in place) however without requiring extra permissions for testing.
If needed, a MiniDFS cluster is provided (though it requires extra
permissions to bind ports)
Provides a RestIT test
* Build system
Picks the build system used in ES (still Gradle)
This commit removes and now forbids all uses of
Collections#shuffle(List) and Random#<init>() across the codebase. The
rationale for removing and forbidding these methods is to increase test
reproducibility. As these methods use non-reproducible seeds, production
code and tests that rely on these methods contribute to
non-reproducbility of tests.
Instead of Collections#shuffle(List) the method
Collections#shuffle(List, Random) can be used. All that is required then
is a reproducible source of randomness. Consequently, the utility class
Randomness has been added to assist in creating reproducible sources of
randomness.
Instead of Random#<init>(), Random#<init>(long) with a reproducible seed
or the aforementioned Randomess class can be used.
Closes#15287
IndexResponse, DeleteResponse and UpdateResponse share some logic. This can be unified to a single DocWriteResponse base class. On top, some replication actions are now not about write operations anymore. This commit renames ActionWriteResponse to ReplicationResponse
Last some toXContent is moved from the Rest layer to the actual response classes, for more code re-sharing.
Closes#15334
Unify metadata map and source, add also support for _ingest prefix. Depending on the prefix, either _source, nothing or _ingest, we will figure out which map to use for values retrieval, but also modifications.
If one is using the ingest plugin and providing a pipeline id with the request, the chance that the source is going to be modified is 99%. We shouldn't worry about keeping track of whether something changed. That seemed useful at first so we can save the resources for setting back the source (map to bytes) when not needed. Also, we are trying to unify metadata fields and source in the same map and that is going to complicate how we keep track of changes that happen in the source only. Best solution is to remove the flag.
IngestDocument now holds an additional map of transient metadata. The only field that gets added automatically is `timestamp`, which contains the timestamp of ingestion in ISO8601 format. In the future it will be possible to eventually add or modify these fields, which will not get indexed, but they will be available via templates to all of the processors.
Transient metadata will be visualized by the simulate api, although they will never get indexed. Moved WriteableIngestDocument to the simulate package as it's only used by simulate and it's now modelled for that specific usecase.
Also taken the chance to remove one IngestDocument constructor used only for testing (accepting only a subset of es metadata fields). While doing that introduced some more randomizations to some existing processor tests.
Closes#15036