Most of the examples in the pipeline aggregation docs use a small
"sales" test data set and I converted all of the examples that use
it to `// CONSOLE`. There are still a bunch of snippets in the pipeline
aggregation docs that aren't `// CONSOLE` so they aren't tested. Most
of them are "this is the most basic form of this aggregation" so they
are more immune to errors and bit rot then the examples that I converted.
I'd like to do something with them as well but I'm not sure what.
Also, the moving average docs and serial diff docs didn't get a lot of
love from this pass because they don't use the test data set or follow
the same general layout.
Relates to #18160
Adds a class that records changes made to RoutingAllocation, so that at the end of the allocation round other values can be more easily derived based on these changes. Most notably, it:
- replaces the explicit boolean flag that is passed around everywhere to denote changes to the routing table. The boolean flag is automatically updated now when changes actually occur, preventing issues where it got out of sync with actual changes to the routing table.
- records actual changes made to RoutingNodes so that primary term and in-sync allocation ids, which are part of index metadata, can be efficiently updated just by looking at the shards that were actually changed.
Currently both `PUT` and `POST` can be used to create indices. This commit
removes support for `POST index_name` so that we can use it to index documents
with auto-generated ids once types are removed.
Relates #15613
In addition to be an allocation decider, DiskThresholdDecider also
monitors the used disk in order to trigger a reroute when the thresholds
are crossed. This change splits out the settings for disk thresholds
into DiskThresholdSettings, and moves the monitoring to a new
DiskThresholdMonitor. DiskThresholdDecider is then in line with other
allocation deciders, needing only Settings and ClusterSettings for
construction, which will allow deguicing allocation deciders.
`LobObtainFailedException` should be reserved for on-disk locks that
Lucene attempts (like `write.lock`). This switches our in-memory
semaphore locks for shards to use a different exception. Additionally,
ShardLockObtainFailedException no longer subclasses IOException, since
no IO is being done is this case.
Resolves#19978
Currently plugins can not inspect or upgrade custom
meta data on startup. This commit allow plugins
to check and/or upgrade global custom meta data on startup.
Plugins can stop a node if any custom meta data is not supported.
This test was failing in the presence of transport clients. This turns
off transport clients while I fix the test so it doesn't fail for
everyone in the mean time.
The big change here is cleaning up the `TaskListResponse` so it doesn't
have a breaky `toString` implementation. That was causing the reindex
tests to break.
Also removed `NetworkModule#registerTaskStatus` which is part of the
Plugin API. Use `Plugin#getNamedWriteables` instead.
Primary shard allocation observes limits in forcing allocation
Previously, during primary shards allocation of shards
with prior allocation IDs, if all nodes returned a
NO decision for allocation (e.g. the settings blocked
allocation on that node), we would chose one of those
nodes and force the primary shard to be allocated to it.
However, this meant that primary shard allocation
would not adhere to the decision of the MaxRetryAllocationDecider,
which would lead to attempting to allocate a shard
which has failed N number of times already (presumably
due to some configuration issue).
This commit solves this issue by introducing the
notion of force allocating a primary shard to a node
and each decider implementation must implement whether
this is allowed or not. In the case of MaxRetryAllocationDecider,
it just forwards the request to canAllocate.
Closes#19446
In the example there was a alias removed and then a different alias created for the same index, but I think actually swapping a index by another one for the same alias would make more sense as an example here.
Parsing a search request is currently split up among a number of
classes, using multiple public static methods, which take multiple
regstries of elements that may appear in the search request like query
parsers and aggregations. This change begins consolidating all this code
by collapsing the registries normally used for parsing search requests
into a single SearchRequestParsers class. It is also made available to
plugin services to enable templating of search requests. Eventually all
of the actual parsing logic should move to the class, and the registries
should be hidden, but for now they are at least co-located to reduce the
number of objects that must be passed around.
Squashes all the subpackages of `org.elasticsearch.rest.action` down to
the following:
* `o.e.rest.action.admin` - Administrative actions
* `o.e.rest.action.cat` - Actions that make tables for `grep`ing
* `o.e.rest.action.document` - Actions that act on documents
* `o.e.rest.action.ingest` - Actions that act on ingest pipelines
* `o.e.rest.action.search` - Actions that search
I'm tempted to merge `search` into `document` but the `document`
package feels fairly complete as is and `Suggest` isn't actually always
about documents either....
I'm also tempted to merge `ingest` into `admin.cluster` because the
latter contains the actions for dealing with stored scripts.
I've moved the `o.e.rest.action.support` into `o.e.rest.action`.
I've also added `package-info.java`s to all packges in `o.e.rest`. I
figure if the package is too small to deserve a `package-info.java` file
then it is too small to deserve to be a package....
Also fixes checkstyle in all moved classes.
* Enable BoostingQuery with FVH highlighter
* apply boost with negativeBoost
* flatten boosting query with its own boost and update boost query to a single layer
* Assign scroll keepAlive when deserializing
The scroll time value was never assign when deserializing from the transport layer, meaning that it would always be null when received from another node, although the originating search request might have it set to some value.
* add tests for SearchRequest serialization and fail fast with illegal arguments
To ease testing, also introduced equals, hashcode and toString methods in SearchRequest and Scroll.
The serialization test brought up a few wrong assumptions about non null instance members, for which some null checks were needed to avoid NPEs when serializing.
* make Scroll implement Writeable rather than Streamable
* [TEST] add serialization test for ShardSearchTransportRequest
This also covers ShardSearchLocalRequest implicitly as most of the serialization code is in it.
that have analyzer aliases in their analysis settings will still work, but
any attempts to create an alias for analyzers in newly created indices
will result in an IllegalArgumentException.
As a result, the setting `index.analysis.analyzer.{analyzerName}.alias` is
no longer supported.
Closes#18244
The term persisted task was used to indicate that a task should store its results upon its completion. We would like to use this term to indicate that a task can survive restart of nodes instead. This commit removes usages of the term "persist" when it means store results.
This commit fixes the number of max local storage nodes setting used in
the discovery disruption tests. In some cases (randomly but rarely), the
acked indexing test can run with five nodes instead of three, breaching
the max local storage nodes configuration.
As the most complicated `FetchSubPhase` highlighting gets its own package
(`o.e.seach.fetch.subphase.highlight`. No other `FetchSubPhase`s get their
own package. Instead they all reside together in `o.e.search.fetch.subphase`.
Add package descriptions to `o.e.search.fetch` and subpackages.
This commit adds a function to shard-level query result to determine whether
there are any hits that needs fetching. Currently, a shard-level query result
can have hits when there are search hits and/or completion suggestion hits.
The newly added function encapsulates the checks to determine if a shard-level
query result has any fetchable hits, which is used in optimizing for sorting
documents and releasing search request contexts.
We have 1074 snippets that look like they should be converted to
`// CONSOLE`. At least that is what `gradle docs:listConsoleCandidates`
says. This adds `// NOTCONSOLE` to explicitly mark snippets that
*shouldn't* be converted to `// CONSOLE`. After marking the blindingly
obvious ones this cuts the remaining snippet count to 1032.
Previously, we only caught subclasses of Exception, however, there are
some cases when Errors are thrown instead of Exceptions. These two cases
are `assert` and when a class cannot be found.
Without this change, the exception would bubble up to the
`uncaughtExceptionHandler`, which would in turn, exit the JVM
(related: #19923).
A note of difference between regular Java asserts and Groovy asserts,
from http://docs.groovy-lang.org/docs/latest/html/documentation/core-testing-guide.html
"Another important difference from Java is that in Groovy assertions are
enabled by default. It has been a language design decision to remove the
possibility to deactivate assertions."
In the event that a user uses an assert such as:
```groovy
def bar=false; assert bar, "message";
```
The GroovyScriptEngineService throws a NoClassDefFoundError being unable
to find the `java.lang.StringBuffer` class. It is *highly* recommended
that any Groovy scripting user switch to using regular exceptions rather
than unconfiguration Groovy assertions.
Resolves#19806
If a primary fails, an active replica is promoted to primary. Once we do the promotion, however, we are sure that the active replica is not relocating anymore. The reason is that when the primary fails, we first remove/cancel all initializing replicas (also if they are relocation targets). This is the only safe thing to do anyhow, because promoting relocating replica to primary would also mean that the replica recovery of the replica relocation target is suddenly promoted to primary relocation, which the recovery code treats in a different way.