CCR shard follow task can hit CircuitBreakingException on the leader
cluster (read changes requests) or the follower cluster (bulk requests).
CCR should retry on CircuitBreakingException as it's a transient error.
This commit removes `integTest` task from all es-plugins.
Most relevant projects have been converted to use yamlRestTest, javaRestTest,
or internalClusterTest in prior PRs.
A few projects needed to be adjusted to allow complete removal of this task
* x-pack/plugin - converted to use yamlRestTest and javaRestTest
* plugins/repository-hdfs - kept the integTest task, but use `rest-test` plugin to define the task
* qa/die-with-dignity - convert to javaRestTest
* x-pack/qa/security-example-spi-extension - convert to javaRestTest
* multiple projects - remove the integTest.enabled = false (yay!)
related: #61802
related: #60630
related: #59444
related: #59089
related: #56841
related: #59939
related: #55896
For 1/2 the plugins in x-pack, the integTest
task is now a no-op and all of the tests are now executed via a test,
yamlRestTest, javaRestTest, or internalClusterTest.
This includes the following projects:
async-search, autoscaling, ccr, enrich, eql, frozen-indicies,
data-streams, graph, ilm, mapper-constant-keyword, mapper-flattened, ml
A few of the more specialized qa projects within these plugins
have not been changed with this PR due to additional complexity which should
be addressed separately.
A follow up PR will address the remaining x-pack plugins (this PR is big enough as-is).
related: #61802
related: #56841
related: #59939
related: #55896
If the master node of the follower cluster is busy, then the
auto-follower will fail to initialize the following process. This also
occurs when an auto-follow pattern matches multiple indices. We should
set the timeout of put-follow requests issued by the auto-follower to
unbounded to avoid this problem.
Closes#56891
This commit adds the functionality to allocate newly created indices on nodes in the "hot" tier by
default when they are created.
This does not break existing behavior, as nodes with the `data` role are considered to be part of
the hot tier. Users that separate their deployments by using the `data_hot` (and `data_warm`,
`data_cold`, `data_frozen`) roles will have their data allocated on the hot tier nodes now by
default.
This change is a little more complicated than changing the default value for
`index.routing.allocation.include._tier` from null to "data_hot". Instead, this adds the ability to
have a plugin inject a setting into the builder for a newly created index. This has the benefit of
allowing this setting to be visible as part of the settings when retrieving the index, for example:
```
// Create an index
PUT /eggplant
// Get an index
GET /eggplant?flat_settings
```
Returns the default settings now of:
```json
{
"eggplant" : {
"aliases" : { },
"mappings" : { },
"settings" : {
"index.creation_date" : "1597855465598",
"index.number_of_replicas" : "1",
"index.number_of_shards" : "1",
"index.provided_name" : "eggplant",
"index.routing.allocation.include._tier" : "data_hot",
"index.uuid" : "6ySG78s9RWGystRipoBFCA",
"index.version.created" : "8000099"
}
}
}
```
After the initial setting of this setting, it can be treated like any other index level setting.
This new setting is *not* set on a new index if any of the following is true:
- The index is created with an `index.routing.allocation.include.<anything>` setting
- The index is created with an `index.routing.allocation.exclude.<anything>` setting
- The index is created with an `index.routing.allocation.require.<anything>` setting
- The index is created with a null `index.routing.allocation.include._tier` value
- The index was created from an existing source metadata (shrink, clone, split, etc)
Relates to #60848
* Faster `equals` for `BytesArray` which is nice since with this change we use it for the search cache
* Lighter `StreamInput` for `BytesArray` that should save memory and some indirection relative to the one on the abstract bytes reference
* Lighter `writeTo` implementation
* Build a `BytesArray` instead of a PagedBytesReference whenever possible to save indirection and memory
The test failed because the leader was taking a lot of CPUs to process
many mapping updates. This commit reduces the mapping updates, increases
timeout, and adds more debug info.
Closes#59832
* Merge test runner task into RestIntegTest (#60261)
* Merge test runner task into RestIntegTest
* Reorganizing Standalone runner and RestIntegTest task
* Rework general test task configuration and extension
* Fix merge issues
* use former 7.x common test configuration
This commit does three things:
* Removes all Copyright/license headers for the build.gradle files under x-pack. (implicit Apache license)
* Removes evaluationDependsOn(xpackModule('core')) from build.gradle files under x-pack
* Removes a place holder test in favor of disabling the test task (in the async plugin)
- Replace immediate task creations by using task avoidance api
- One step closer to #56610
- Still many tasks are created during configuration phase. Tackled in separate steps
CCR will stop functioning if the master node is on 7.8, but data nodes
are before that version because the master node considers that all data
nodes do not have the remote cluster client role. This commit allows CCR
work on data nodes with legacy roles only.
Relates #54146
Relates #59375
If a primary shard of a follower index is being relocated, then we
will fail to create a follow-task. This validation is too restricted.
We should ensure that all primaries of the follower index are active
instead.
Closes#59625
Today, a follow task will fail if the master node of the follower
cluster is temporarily overloaded and unable to process master node
requests (such as update mapping, setting, or alias) from a follow-task
within the default timeout. This error is transient, and follow-tasks
should not abort. We can avoid this problem by setting the timeout of
master node requests on the follower cluster to unbounded.
Closes#56891
It can take more than 10 seconds to auto-follow and create a follow-task
on a slow CI. This commit increases timeout in AutoFollowIT by replacing
assertBusy with assertLongBusy.
Closes#59952
Enables fully concurrent snapshot operations:
* Snapshot create- and delete operations can be started in any order
* Delete operations wait for snapshot finalization to finish, are batched as much as possible to improve efficiency and once enqueued in the cluster state prevent new snapshots from starting on data nodes until executed
* We could be even more concurrent here in a follow-up by interleaving deletes and snapshots on a per-shard level. I decided not to do this for now since it seemed not worth the added complexity yet. Due to batching+deduplicating of deletes the pain of having a delete stuck behind a long -running snapshot seemed manageable (dropped client connections + resulting retries don't cause issues due to deduplication of delete jobs, batching of deletes allows enqueuing more and more deletes even if a snapshot blocks for a long time that will all be executed in essentially constant time (due to bulk snapshot deletion, deleting multiple snapshots is mostly about as fast as deleting a single one))
* Snapshot creation is completely concurrent across shards, but per shard snapshots are linearized for each repository as are snapshot finalizations
See updated JavaDoc and added test cases for more details and illustration on the functionality.
Some notes:
The queuing of snapshot finalizations and deletes and the related locking/synchronization is a little awkward in this version but can be much simplified with some refactoring. The problem is that snapshot finalizations resolve their listeners on the `SNAPSHOT` pool while deletes resolve the listener on the master update thread. With some refactoring both of these could be moved to the master update thread, effectively removing the need for any synchronization around the `SnapshotService` state. I didn't do this refactoring here because it's a fairly large change and not necessary for the functionality but plan to do so in a follow-up.
This change allows for completely removing any trickery around synchronizing deletes and snapshots from SLM and 100% does away with SLM errors from collisions between deletes and snapshots.
Snapshotting a single index in parallel to a long running full backup will execute without having to wait for the long running backup as required by the ILM/SLM use case of moving indices to "snapshot tier". Finalizations are linearized but ordered according to which snapshot saw all of its shards complete first
Many of the parameters we pass into this method were only used to
build the `SnapshotInfo` instance to write.
This change simplifies the signature. Also, it seems less error prone to build
`SnapshotInfo` in `SnapshotsService` isntead of relying on the fact that each repository
implementation will build the correct `SnapshotInfo`.
This PR introduces two new fields in to `RepositoryData` (index-N) to track the blob name of `IndexMetaData` blobs and their content via setting generations and uuids. This is used to deduplicate the `IndexMetaData` blobs (`meta-{uuid}.dat` in the indices folders under `/indices` so that new metadata for an index is only written to the repository during a snapshot if that same metadata can't be found in another snapshot.
This saves one write per index in the common case of unchanged metadata thus saving cost and making snapshot finalization drastically faster if many indices are being snapshotted at the same time.
The implementation is mostly analogous to that for shard generations in #46250 and piggy backs on the BwC mechanism introduced in that PR (which means this PR needs adjustments if it doesn't go into `7.6`).
Relates to #45736 as it improves the efficiency of snapshotting unchanged indices
Relates to #49800 as it has the potential of loading the index metadata for multiple snapshots of the same index concurrently much more efficient speeding up future concurrent snapshot delete
Currently we combine coordinating and primary bytes into a single bucket
for indexing pressure stats. This makes sense for rejection logic.
However, for metrics it would be useful to separate them.
The primary shards of follower indices during the bootstrap need to be
on nodes with the remote cluster client role as those nodes reach out to
the corresponding leader shards on the remote cluster to copy Lucene
segment files and renew the retention leases. This commit introduces a
new allocation decider that ensures bootstrapping follower primaries are
allocated to nodes with the remote cluster client role.
Co-authored-by: Jason Tedor <jason@tedor.me>
We have recently added internal metrics to monitor the amount of
indexing occurring on a node. These metrics introduce back pressure to
indexing when memory utilization is too high. This commit exposes these
stats through the node stats API.
Today, we send operations in phase2 of peer recoveries batch by batch
sequentially. Normally that's okay as we should have a fairly small of
operations in phase 2 due to the file-based threshold. However, if
phase1 takes a lot of time and we are actively indexing, then phase2 can
have a lot of operations to replay.
With this change, we will send multiple batches concurrently (defaults
to 1) to reduce the recovery time.
Backport of #58018
This commit creates a new Gradle plugin to provide a separate task name
and source set for running YAML based REST tests. The only project
converted to use the new plugin in this PR is distribution/archives/integ-test-zip.
For which the testing has been moved to :rest-api-spec since it makes the most
sense and it avoids a small but awkward change to the distribution plugin.
The remaining cases in modules, plugins, and x-pack will be handled in followups.
This plugin is distinctly different from the plugin introduced in #55896 since
the YAML REST tests are intended to be black box tests over HTTP. As such they
should not (by default) have access to the classpath for that which they are testing.
The YAML based REST tests will be moved to separate source sets (yamlRestTest).
The which source is the target for the test resources is dependent on if this
new plugin is applied. If it is not applied, it will default to the test source
set.
Further, this introduces a breaking change for plugin developers that
use the YAML testing framework. They will now need to either use the new source set
and matching task, or configure the rest resources to use the old "test" source set that
matches the old integTest task. (The former should be preferred).
As part of this change (which is also breaking for plugin developers) the
rest resources plugin has been removed from the build plugin and now requires
either explicit application or application via the new YAML REST test plugin.
Plugin developers should be able to fix the breaking changes to the YAML tests
by adding apply plugin: 'elasticsearch.yaml-rest-test' and moving the YAML tests
under a yamlRestTest folder (instead of test)
This is a follow-up to #57573. This commit combines coordinating and
primary bytes under the same "write" bucket. Double accounting is
prevented by only accounting the bytes at either the reroute phase or
the primary phase. TransportBulkAction calls execute directly, so the
operations handler is skipped and the bytes are not double accounted.
When the documents are large, a follower can receive a partial response
because the requesting range of operations is capped by
max_read_request_size instead of max_read_request_operation_count. In
this case, the follower will continue reading the subsequent ranges
without checking the remaining size of the buffer. The buffer then can
use more memory than max_write_buffer_size and even causes OOM.
Backport of #58620
The checks on the license state have a singular method, isAllowed, that
returns whether the given feature is allowed by the current license.
However, there are two classes of usages, one which intends to actually
use a feature, and another that intends to return in telemetry whether
the feature is allowed. When feature usage tracking is added, the latter
case should not count as a "usage", so this commit reworks the calls to
isAllowed into 2 methods, checkFeature, which will (eventually) both
check whether a feature is allowed, and keep track of the last usage
time, and isAllowed, which simply determines whether the feature is
allowed.
Note that I considered having a boolean flag on the current method, but
wanted the additional clarity that a different method name provides,
versus a boolean flag which is more easily copied without realizing what
the flag means since it is nameless in call sites.
Restoring from a snapshot (which is a particular form of recovery) does not currently take recovery throttling into account
(i.e. the `indices.recovery.max_bytes_per_sec` setting). While restores are subject to their own throttling (repository
setting `max_restore_bytes_per_sec`), this repository setting does not allow for values to be configured differently on a
per-node basis. As restores are very similar in nature to peer recoveries (streaming bytes to the node), it makes sense to
configure throttling in a single place.
The `max_restore_bytes_per_sec` setting is also changed to default to unlimited now, whereas previously it was set to
`40mb`, which is the current default of `indices.recovery.max_bytes_per_sec`). This means that no behavioral change
will be observed by clusters where the recovery and restore settings were not adapted.
Relates https://github.com/elastic/elasticsearch/issues/57023
Co-authored-by: James Rodewig <james.rodewig@elastic.co>
Today the disk-based shard allocator accounts for incoming shards by
subtracting the estimated size of the incoming shard from the free space on the
node. This is an overly conservative estimate if the incoming shard has almost
finished its recovery since in that case it is already consuming most of the
disk space it needs.
This change adds to the shard stats a measure of how much larger each store is
expected to grow, computed from the ongoing recovery, and uses this to account
for the disk usage of incoming shards more accurately.
Backport of #58029 to 7.x
* Picky picky
* Missing type
* Replace compile configuration usage with api (#58451)
- Use java-library instead of plugin to allow api configuration usage
- Remove explicit references to runtime configurations in dependency declarations
- Make test runtime classpath input for testing convention
- required as java library will by default not have build jar file
- jar file is now explicit input of the task and gradle will ensure its properly build
* Fix compile usages in 7.x branch
Today we have individual settings for configuring node roles such as
node.data and node.master. Additionally, roles are pluggable and we have
used this to introduce roles such as node.ml and node.voting_only. As
the number of roles is growing, managing these becomes harder for the
user. For example, to create a master-only node, today a user has to
configure:
- node.data: false
- node.ingest: false
- node.remote_cluster_client: false
- node.ml: false
at a minimum if they are relying on defaults, but also add:
- node.master: true
- node.transform: false
- node.voting_only: false
If they want to be explicit. This is also challenging in cases where a
user wants to have configure a coordinating-only node which requires
disabling all roles, a list which we are adding to, requiring the user
to keep checking whether a node has acquired any of these roles.
This commit addresses this by adding a list setting node.roles for which
a user has explicit control over the list of roles that a node has. If
the setting is configured, the node has exactly the roles in the list,
and not any additional roles. This means to configure a master-only
node, the setting is merely 'node.roles: [master]', and to configure a
coordinating-only node, the setting is merely: 'node.roles: []'.
With this change we deprecate the existing 'node.*' settings such as
'node.data'.
* Add support for snapshot and restore to data streams (#57675)
This change adds support for including data streams in snapshots.
Names are provided in indices field (the same way as in other APIs), wildcards are supported.
If rename pattern is specified it renames both data streams and backing indices.
It also adds test to make sure SLM works correctly.
Closes#57127
Relates to #53100
* version fix
* compilation fix
* compilation fix
* remove unused changes
* compilation fix
* test fix
Today when creating a follower index via the put follow API, or via an
auto-follow pattern, it is not possible to specify settings overrides
for the follower index. Instead, we copy all of the leader index
settings to the follower. Yet, there are cases where a user would want
some different settings on the follower index such as the number of
replicas, or allocation settings. This commit addresses this by allowing
the user to specify settings overrides when creating follower index via
manual put follower calls, or via auto-follow patterns. Note that not
all settings can be overrode (e.g., index.number_of_shards) so we also
have detection that prevents attempting to override settings that must
be equal between the leader and follow index. Note that we do not even
allow specifying such settings in the overrides, even if they are
specified to be equal between the leader and the follower
index. Instead, the must be implicitly copied from the leader index, not
explicitly set by the user.
The leases issued by CCR keep one extra operation around on the leader shards. This is not
harmful to the leader cluster, but means that there's potentially one delete that can't be
cleaned up.
* Remove usage of deprecated testCompile configuration
* Replace testCompile usage by testImplementation
* Make testImplementation non transitive by default (as we did for testCompile)
* Update CONTRIBUTING about using testImplementation for test dependencies
* Fail on testCompile configuration usage
Our FIPS 140 testing depends on setting the appropriate java policy
in order to configure the JVM in FIPS mode. Some tests (
discovery-ec2 and ccr qa ) also needed to set a custom policy file
to grant a specific permission, which overwrote the FIPS related
policy and tests would fail. This change ensures that when a
custom policy needs to be set in these tests, the permissions that
are necessary for FIPS are also set.
Resolves: #51685, #52034
Merging logic is currently split between FieldMapper, with its merge() method, and
MappedFieldType, which checks for merging compatibility. The compatibility checks
are called from a third class, MappingMergeValidator. This makes it difficult to reason
about what is or is not compatible in updates, and even what is in fact updateable - we
have a number of tests that check compatibility on changes in mapping configuration
that are not in fact possible.
This commit refactors the compatibility logic so that it all sits on FieldMapper, and
makes it called at merge time. It adds a new FieldMapperTestCase base class that
FieldMapper tests can extend, and moves the compatibility testing machinery from
FieldTypeTestCase to here.
Relates to #56814