The following is the current behaviour, tested now through a specific
test.
The low-level REST client doesn't add a leading wildcard when not
provided, unless a `pathPrefix` is configured in which case a trailing
slash will be automatically added when concatenating the prefix and the
provided uri.
Also when configuring a pathPrefix, if it doesn't start with a '/' it
will be modified by adding the missing leading '/'.
CRUD: Parsing changes for UpdateRequest (#29293)
Use `ObjectParser` to parse `UpdateRequest` so we reject unknown fields
and drop support for the `_fields` parameter because it was deprecated
in 5.x.
The default percentiles values and the default highlighter per- and
post-tags are currently publicly accessible and can be altered any time.
This change prevents this by restricting field access.
Today when reading an operation from the current generation fails
tragically we attempt to close the translog. However, by invoking close
before releasing the read lock we end up in self-deadlock because
closing tries to acquire the write lock and the read lock can not be
upgraded to a write lock. To avoid this, we move the close invocation
outside of the try-with-resources that acquired the read lock. As an
extra guard against this, we document the problem and add an assertion
that we are not trying to invoke close while holding the read lock.
This commit is a minor cleanup of a code block in NodeInfo.groovy. We
remove an unused variable, make the formatting of the code consistent,
and cast a property that is typed as an Object to a String to avoid an
annoying IDE warning.
Some build tasks require older JDKs. For example, the BWC build tasks
for older versions of Elasticsearch require older JDKs. It is onerous to
require these be configured when merely compiling Elasticsearch, the
requirement that they be strictly set to appropriate values should only
be enforced if these tasks are going to be executed. To address this, we
lazy configure these tasks.
Rather than checking a substring match, now that
VersionProperties#elasticsearch is a strongly-typed instance of Version,
we can use the Version#isSnapshot convenience method. This commit
switches the root build file to do this.
Today we have a nodeVersion property on the NodeInfo class that we use
to carry around information about a standalone node that we will start
during tests. This property is a String which we usually end up parsing
to a Version anyway to do various checks on it. This can end up
happening a lot during configuration so it would be more efficient and
safer to have this already be strongly-typed as a Version and parsed
from a String only once for each instance of NodeInfo. Therefore, this
commit makes NodeInfo#nodeVersion strongly-typed as a Version.
There are some scenarios where the license on a source file is one that
is compatible with our projects yet we do not want to add the license to
the list of approved license headers (to keep the number of files with
that compatible license contained). This commit adds the ability to
exclude a file from the license check.
Today we have JAVA_HOME for the compiler Java home and RUNTIME_JAVA_HOME
for the test Java home. However, when we compile BWC nodes and run them,
neither of these Java homes might be the version that was suitable for
that BWC node (e.g., 5.6 requires JDK 8 to compile and to run). This
commit adds support for the environment variables JAVA\d+_HOME and uses
the appropriate Java home based on the version of the node being
started. We even do this for reindex-from-old which requires JDK 7 for
these very old nodes. Note that these environment variables are not
required if not running BWC tests, and they are strictly required if
running BWC tests.
The BWC builds always fetch the latest from the elastic/elasticsearch
repository for the BWC branches. Yet, there are use-cases for using the
local checkout without fetching the latest. This commit enables these
use-cases by adding a tests.bwc.git.fetch.latest property to skip the
fetches.
This change adds a client that is connected to a remote cluster.
This allows plugins and internal structures to invoke actions on
remote clusters just like a if it's a local cluster. The remote
cluster must be configured via the cross cluster search infrastructure.
This adds 2 testcases that test if a shard goes idle
pending (uncommitted) segments are committed and unreferenced
files will be freed.
Relates to #29482
Control max size and count of warning headers
Add a static persistent cluster level setting
"http.max_warning_header_count" to control the maximum number of
warning headers in client HTTP responses.
Defaults to unbounded.
Add a static persistent cluster level setting
"http.max_warning_header_size" to control the maximum total size of
warning headers in client HTTP responses.
Defaults to unbounded.
With every warning header that exceeds these limits,
a message will be logged in the main ES log,
and any more warning headers for this response will be
ignored.
Unlike the `indices.create`, `indices.get_mapping` and `indices.put_mapping`
APIs, the index APIs do not need the `include_type_name` option, they can work
work with and without types withouth knowing whether types are being used.
Internally, `_doc` is used as a type if no type is provided, like for the
`indices.put_mapping` API.
Historically, the bootstrap checks used 2048 as the minimum limit for
the maximum number of threads. This limit was guided by the fact that
the number of processors was artificially capped at 32. This limit was
removed in 6.0.0 and the minimum limit was raised to 4096 to accommodate
this. However, the docs were not updated and this commit addresses that
miss.
This change adds the current primary term to the header of the current
translog file. Having a term in a translog header is a prerequisite step
that allows us to trim translog operations given the max valid seq# for
that term.
This commit also updates tests to conform the primary term invariant
which guarantees that all translog operations in a translog file have
its terms at most the term stored in the translog header.
* Add a helper method to get a random java.util.TimeZone
This adds a helper method to ESTestCase that returns a randomized
`java.util.TimeZone`. This can be used when transitioning code from Joda to the
JDK's time classes.
This commit moves the `TimeValue` class into the elasticsearch-core project.
This allows us to use this class in many of our other projects without relying
on the entire `server` jar.
Relates to #28504
This commit introduces built in support for adding files to the
keystore when configuring the integration test cluster for a project.
In order to use this support, simply add `keystoreFile` followed by the
secure setting name and the path to the source file inside the
integTestCluster closure for a project. The built in support will
handle the creation of the keystore and the addition of the file to the
keystore.
* Decouple TimeValue from Elasticsearch server classes
This commit decouples the `TimeValue` class from the other server classes. This
is in preperation to move `TimeValue` into the `elasticsearch-core` jar,
allowing us to use it from projects that cannot depend on the elasticsearch-core
library.
Relates to #28504
This change removes the check for extra tokens when parsing a source generated by a templated
_msearch request. This was added unintentionally in #29428 but the intent of this modification was to validate
simple _search request only.
The skeleton of ElasticsearchMergePolicy is quite similar to
MergePolicyWrapper. This commit therefore makes ElasticsearchMergePolicy
inherited from MergePolicyWrapper instead of MergePolicy.
Currently, a flush stats contains only the total flush which is the sum
of manual flush (via API) and periodic flush (async triggered when the
uncommitted translog size is exceeded the flush threshold). Sometimes,
it's useful to know these two numbers independently. This commit tracks
and returns a periodic flush count in a flush stats.
This adds an `include_type_name` option to the `indices.create`,
`indices.get_mapping` and `indices.put_mapping` APIs, which defaults to `true`.
When set to `false`, then mappings will be returned directly in the body of
the `indices.get_mapping` API, without keying them by the type name, the
`indices.create` will expect mappings directly under the `mappings` key, and
the `indices.put_mapping` will use `_doc` as a type name and fail if a `type`
is provided explicitly.
Relates #15613
Today we expose a mutable list of documents in ParseContext via
ParseContext#docs(). This, on the one hand places knowledge how
to access nested documnts in multiple places and on the other
allows for potential illegal access to nested only docs after
the docs are reversed. This change restricts the access and
streamlines nested / non-root doc access.
This change validates that the `_search` request does not have trailing
tokens after the main object and fails the request with a parsing exception otherwise.
Closes#28995
Some features have been deprecated since `6.0` like the `_parent` field or the
ability to have multiple types per index. This allows to remove quite some
code, which in-turn will hopefully make it easier to proceed with the removal
of types.
Today when a user runs a CLI tool with standard input closed and no tty
attached, the result from reading is null and this usually leads to a
null pointer exception when we try to parse this input. This arises for
example when the user runs the plugin installer through a Docker
container without leaving standard input open and attaching a tty
(docker exec <container ID> bin/elasticsearch-plugin install). When we
try to read that the user accepts the plugin requiring additional
security permissions we will get back null. This commit addresses this
for all cases by throwing an illegal state exception. The solution for
the user is leave standard input open and attach a tty (or, for some
tools, use batch mode).
#29409 removed the nearlyEquals() double comparison snippet, which
makes these tests very flaky because they can generate very large or
very small doubles which don't work well with absolute error comparison.
We need to either refactor these tests to guarantee they stay in a small
range (which could be difficult due to holt/holt-winters) or re-implement
the more robust double comparison.
Tracking issue: #29456
This commit simplifies the exception handling in
TranslogWriter#closeWithTragicEvent. When invoking this method, the
inner close method could throw an exception which we always catch and
suppress into the exception that led us to tragically close. This commit
moves that repeated logic into closeWithTragicException and now callers
simply need to catch, invoke closeWithTragicException, and rethrow.
Currently rest-based tests do not work from the IDE, as the security
manager is configured to permit certain network operations when
using the snapshot jars compiled by gradle. We have an existing
workaround that explicitly associates a codebase with the path
from which the classes are loaded (in this case, the IDE build
directory). This PR adds the rest client to this workaround list.
In the case that a document with a percolator field is matched when using the `percolate` query then
the fetch phase can fail due to the fact that the percolator can't resolve any query from that document.
Closes#29429