This is related to elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch#1217. This PR removes the default password of
"changeme" from the reserved users.
This PR adds special behavior for authenticating the reserved users. No
ReservedRealm user can be authenticated until its password is set. The
one exception to this is the elastic user. The elastic user can be
authenticated with an empty password if the action is a rest request
originating from localhost. In this scenario where an elastic user is
authenticated with a default password, it will have metadata indicating
that it is in setup mode. An elastic user in setup mode is only
authorized to execute a change password request.
Original commit: elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch@e1e101a237
The distribution of watches now happens on the node which holds the
watches index, instead of on the master node. This requires several
changes to the current implementation.
1. Running on shards and replicas
In order to run watches on the nodes with the watches index on its
primaries and replicas. To ensure that watches do not run twice, there is
a logic which checks the local shards, runs a murmurhash on the id and
runs modulo against the number of shards and replicas, this is the way to
find out, if a watch should run local. Reloading happens
2. Several master node actions moved to a HandledTransportAction, as they
are basically just aliases for indexing actions, among them the
put/delete/get watch actions, the acknowledgement action, the de/activate
actions
3. Stats action moved to a broadcast node action, because we potentially
have to query every node to get watcher statistics
4. Starting/Stopping watcher now is a master node action, which updates
the cluster state and then listeners acts on those. Because of this watches
can be running on two systems, if you those have different cluster state
versions, until the new watcher state is propagated
5. Watcher is started on all nodes now. With the exception of the ticker
schedule engine most classes do not need a lot of resources while running.
However they have to run, because of the execute watch API, which can hit
any node - it does not make sense to find the right shard for this watch
and only then execute (as this also has to work with a watch, that has not
been stored before)
6. By using a indexing operation listener, each storing of a watch now
parses the watch first and only stores on successful parsing
7. Execute watch API now uses the watcher threadpool for execution
8. Getting the number of watches for the stats now simply queries the
different execution engines, how many watches are scheduled, so this is
not doing a search anymore
There will be follow up commits on this one, mainly to ensure BWC compatibility.
Original commit: elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch@0adb46e658
Adds a gradle build for documentation testing, partially stolen from the xpack meta repo. Updated to make work with the current setup
index.asciidoc was updated/enabled as a test, and various pre-existing tests appear to be working. There are a large number of tests still ignored due to missing proper // CONSOLE tags
Original commit: elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch@1d596f0be3