If the translog on a replica is corrupt, we should not perform an
operation-based recovery or utilize sync_id as we won't be able to open
an engine in the next step. This change adds an extra validation that
ensures translog is okay when preparing a peer recovery request.
This upgrades Painless to use the latest ASM libraries providing support up
to Java 14. Note the library is not published with the latest versions in an
"all" package, so we pick up each lib independently that's required. There
were some changes to the getType method that require descriptors to be
used in place of internal class names.
This change disables the query and request cache when
profile is set to true in the request. This means that profiled queries
will not check caches to execute the query and the result will never be
added in the cache either.
Closes#33298
If a datafeed is stopped normally and force stopped at the same
time then it is possible that the force stop removes the
persistent task while the normal stop is performing actions.
Currently this causes the normal stop to error, but since
stopping a stopped datafeed is not an error this doesn't make
sense. Instead the force stop should just take precedence.
This is a followup to #49191 and should really have been
included in the changes in that PR.
Currently the `token_chars` setting in both `edgeNGram` and `ngram` tokenizers
only allows for a list of predefined character classes, which might not fit
every use case. For example, including underscore "_" in a token would currently
require the `punctuation` class which comes with a lot of other characters.
This change adds an additional "custom" option to the `token_chars` setting,
which requires an additional `custom_token_chars` setting to be present and
which will be interpreted as a set of characters to inlcude into a token.
Closes#25894
Lucene now allows us to explore the structure of a query using QueryVisitors,
delegating the knowledge of how to recurse through and collect terms to the
query implementations themselves. The percolator currently has a home-grown
external version of this API to construct sets of matching terms that must be
present in a document in order for it to possibly match the query.
This commit removes the home-grown implementation in favour of one using
QueryVisitor. This has the added benefit of making interval queries available
for percolator pre-filtering. Due to a bug in multi-term intervals (LUCENE-9050)
it also includes a clone of some of the lucene intervals logic, that can be removed
once upstream has been fixed.
Closes#45639
This commit fixes the server side logic of "List Objects" operations
of Azure and S3 fixtures. Until today, the fixtures were returning a "
flat" view of stored objects and were not correctly handling the
delimiter parameter. This causes some objects listing to be wrongly
interpreted by the snapshot deletion logic in Elasticsearch which
relies on the ability to list child containers of BlobContainer (#42653)
to correctly delete stale indices.
As a consequence, the blobs were not correctly deleted from the
emulated storage service and stayed in heap until they got garbage
collected, causing CI failures like #48978.
This commit fixes the server side logic of Azure and S3 fixture when
listing objects so that it now return correct common blob prefixes as
expected by the snapshot deletion process. It also adds an after-test
check to ensure that tests leave the repository empty (besides the
root index files).
Closes#48978
This commit moves the async calls required to retrieve the components
that make up `ExtractedFieldsExtractor` out of `DataFrameDataExtractorFactory`
and into a dedicated `ExtractorFieldsExtractorFactory` class.
A few more refactorings are performed:
- The detector no longer needs the results field. Instead, it knows
whether to use it or not based on whether the task is restarting.
- We pass more accurately whether the task is restarting or not.
- The validation of whether fields that have a cardinality limit
are valid is now performed in the detector after retrieving the
respective cardinalities.
Backport of #49315
This is a pure code rearrangement refactor. Logic for what specific ValuesSource instance to use for a given type (e.g. script or field) moved out of ValuesSourceConfig and into CoreValuesSourceType (previously just ValueSourceType; we extract an interface for future extensibility). ValueSourceConfig still selects which case to use, and then the ValuesSourceType instance knows how to construct the ValuesSource for that case.
This commit changes the ThreadContext to just use a regular ThreadLocal
over the lucene CloseableThreadLocal. The CloseableThreadLocal solves
issues with ThreadLocals that are no longer needed during runtime but
in the case of the ThreadContext, we need it for the runtime of the
node and it is typically not closed until the node closes, so we miss
out on the benefits that this class provides.
Additionally by removing the close logic, we simplify code in other
places that deal with exceptions and tracking to see if it happens when
the node is closing.
Closes#42577
Tasks intending to use a particular java home provided by JAVA<N>_HOME
use the getJavaHome method, which verifies the given java home is
available, or will be if the task will run. However, the verification
logic was broken, in addition to unnecessarily delaying retrieving the
java home until runtime. This commit fixes the verification logic to run
at either config time, delaying verification, or at runtime which
immediately checks if java home is available.
closes#49153
This commit wraps the calls to retrieve the current step in a try/catch
so that the exception does not bubble up. Instead, step info is added
containing the exception to the existing step.
Semi-related to #49128
(cherry picked from commit 72530f8a7f40ae1fca3704effb38cf92daf29057)
Signed-off-by: Andrei Dan <andrei.dan@elastic.co>
This API call in most implementations is fairly IO heavy and slow
so it is more natural to be async in the first place.
Concretely though, this change is a prerequisite of #49060 since
determining the repository generation from the cluster state
introduces situations where this call would have to wait for other
operations to finish. Doing so in a blocking manner would break
`SnapshotResiliencyTests` and waste a thread.
Also, this sets up the possibility to in the future make use of async IO
where provided by the underlying Repository implementation.
In a follow-up `SnapshotsService#getRepositoryData` will be made async
as well (did not do it here, since it's another huge change to do so).
Note: This change for now does not alter the threading behaviour in any way (since `Repository#getRepositoryData` isn't forking) and is purely mechanical.
Previously, DATEDIFF for minutes and hours was doing a
rounding calculation using all the time fields (secs, msecs/micros/nanos).
Instead it should first truncate the 2 dates to the respective field (mins or hours)
zeroing out all the more detailed time fields and then make the subtraction.
(cherry picked from commit 124cd18e20429e19d52fd8dc383827ea5132d428)
The following edge cases were fixed:
1. A request to force-stop a stopping datafeed is no longer
ignored. Force-stop is an important recovery mechanism
if normal stop doesn't work for some reason, and needs
to operate on a datafeed in any state other than stopped.
2. If the node that a datafeed is running on is removed from
the cluster during a normal stop then the stop request is
retried (and will likely succeed on this retry by simply
cancelling the persistent task for the affected datafeed).
3. If there are multiple simultaneous force-stop requests for
the same datafeed we no longer fail the one that is
processed second. The previous behaviour was wrong as
stopping a stopped datafeed is not an error, so stopping
a datafeed twice simultaneously should not be either.
Backport of #49191
We shouldn't be throwing `RepositoryException` when the repository
wasn't concurrently modified in an unexpected fashion (i.e. on the blob/file level).
When we know that the known repo gen moved higher in terms of the generation
tracked in master memory we should throw the concurrent snapshot exception.
This change makes concurrent snapshot create and delete always throw the same exception,
prevents unnecessary listings when the generation is known to be off and prevents
future test failures in SLM tests that assume the concurrent snapshot exception
is always thrown here.
Without this change, the newly added test randomly fails the `instanceOf` assertion
by running into a `RepositoryException`.