Today we have a push model for registering basically anything. All our extension points
are defined on modules which we pass in to plugins. This is harder to maintain and adds
unnecessary dependencies on the modules itself. This change moves towards a pull model
where the plugin offers a getter kind of method to get the extensions. This will also
help in the future if we need to pass dependencies to the extension points which can
easily be defined on the method as arguments if a pull model is used.
In 2.0 we added plugin descriptors which require defining a name and
description for the plugin. However, we still have name() and
description() which must be overriden from the Plugin class. This still
exists for classpath plugins. But classpath plugins are mainly for
tests, and even then, referring to classpath plugins with their class is
a better idea. This change removes name() and description(), replacing
the name for classpath plugins with the full class name.
Failing the build on deprecation warnings was removed in
19b3ec88af. This commit removes the
suppressed deprecation warnings so that their use is surfaced in the
build now.
Relates #18582
This change makes ES compile with java9 again, build 118.
* There are a handful of changes due to failure to determine types during compile.
* The attachment plugins which use tika needed to have tika upgraded in order to pickup fixes there for java 9.
* azure discovery and s3 repository indirectly depend on jaxb, which is no longer in the default modules. They now add a jaxb dependency externally, and make JarHell allow for this package.
This change does the following:
- Queries that are currently unsupported such as prefix queries on numeric
fields or term queries on geo fields now throw an error rather than returning
a query that does not match anything.
- Fuzzy queries on numeric, date and ip fields are now unsupported: they used
to create range queries, we now expect users to use range queries directly.
Fuzzy, regexp and prefix queries are now only supported on text/keyword
fields (including `_all`).
- The `_uid` and `_id` fields do not support prefix or range queries anymore as
it would prevent us to store them more efficiently in the future, eg. by
using a binary encoding.
Note that it is still possible to ignore these errors by using the `lenient`
option of the `match` or `query_string` queries.
This makes all numeric fields including `date`, `ip` and `token_count` use
points instead of the inverted index as a lookup structure. This is expected
to perform worse for exact queries, but faster for range queries. It also
requires less storage.
Notes about how the change works:
- Numeric mappers have been split into a legacy version that is essentially
the current mapper, and a new version that uses points, eg.
LegacyDateFieldMapper and DateFieldMapper.
- Since new and old fields have the same names, the decision about which one
to use is made based on the index creation version.
- If you try to force using a legacy field on a new index or a field that uses
points on an old index, you will get an exception.
- IP addresses now support IPv6 via Lucene's InetAddressPoint and store them
in SORTED_SET doc values using the same encoding (fixed length of 16 bytes
and sortable).
- The internal MappedFieldType that is stored by the new mappers does not have
any of the points-related properties set. Instead, it keeps setting the index
options when parsing the `index` property of mappings and does
`if (fieldType.indexOptions() != IndexOptions.NONE) { // add point field }`
when parsing documents.
Known issues that won't fix:
- You can't use numeric fields in significant terms aggregations anymore since
this requires document frequencies, which points do not record.
- Term queries on numeric fields will now return constant scores instead of
giving better scores to the rare values.
Known issues that we could work around (in follow-up PRs, this one is too large
already):
- Range queries on `ip` addresses only work if both the lower and upper bounds
are inclusive (exclusive bounds are not exposed in Lucene). We could either
decide to implement it, or drop range support entirely and tell users to
query subnets using the CIDR notation instead.
- Since IP addresses now use a different representation for doc values,
aggregations will fail when running a terms aggregation on an ip field on a
list of indices that contains both pre-5.0 and 5.0 indices.
- The ip range aggregation does not work on the new ip field. We need to either
implement range aggs for SORTED_SET doc values or drop support for ip ranges
and tell users to use filters instead. #17700Closes#16751Closes#17007Closes#11513
This commit removes `MappedFieldType.value` and simplifies
`MappedFieldType.valueforSearch`. `valueforSearch` was used to post-process
values that come for stored fields (eg. to convert a long back to a string
representation of a date in the case of a date field) and also values that
are extracted from the source but only in the case of GET calls: it would
not be called when performing source filtering on search requests.
`valueforSearch` is now only called for stored fields, since values that are
extracted from the source should already be formatted as expected.
We have both `Settings.settingsBuilder` and `Settings.builder` that do exactly
the same thing, so we should keep only one. I kept `Settings.builder` since it
has my preference but also it is the one that we use in examples of the Java API.
This PR just adds a new test where we check that we forcing a value in the JSON document actually works as expected:
```json
{
"file": {
"_content": "BASE64"
"_name": "12-240.pdf",
"_language": "en",
"_content_type": "pdf"
}
}
```
Note that we don't support forcing all values. So sending:
```json
{
"file": {
"_content": "BASE64"
"_name": "12-240.pdf",
"_title": "12-240.pdf",
"_keywords": "Div42 Src580 LGE Mechtech",
"_language": "en",
"_content_type": "pdf"
}
}
```
Will have absolutely no effect on fields `title` and `keywords`.
Note that when `_language` is set, it only works if `index.mapping.attachment.detect_language` is set to `true`.
Related to https://discuss.elastic.co/t/mapper-attachments/46615/4
This commit removes the ability to use string fields on indices created on or
after 5.0. Dynamic mappings now generate text fields by default for strings
but there are plans to also add a sub keyword field (in a future PR).
Most of the changes in this commit are just about replacing string with
keyword or text. Some tests have been removed because they existed because of
corner cases of string mappings like setting ignore-above on a text field or
enabling term vectors on a keyword field which are now impossible.
The plan is to remove strings entirely in 6.0.
The big win here is catching tests that are incorrectly named and will
be skipped by gradle, providing a false sense of security.
The whole thing takes about 10 seconds on my Macbook Air, not counting
compiling the test classes, which seems worth it. Because this runs as
a gradle task with propery UP-TO-DATE handling it can be skipped if the
tests haven't been changed which should save some time.
I chose to keep this in test:framework rather than a new subproject of
buildSrc because ESIntegTestCase and doesn't inroduce any additional
dependencies.
Instead of modifying methods each time we need to add a new behavior for settings, we can simply pass `SettingsProperty... properties` instead.
`SettingsProperty` could be defined then:
```
public enum SettingsProperty {
Filtered,
Dynamic,
ClusterScope,
NodeScope,
IndexScope
// HereGoesYours;
}
```
Then in setting code, it become much more flexible.
TODO: Note that we need to validate SettingsProperty which are added to a Setting as some of them might be mutually exclusive.
Cli tools currently catch all exceptions, and only print the exception
message, except when a special system property is set. Even with this
flag set, certain exceptions, like IOException, are captured and their
stack trace is always lost.
This change adds a UserError class, which can be used a cli tools to
specify a message to the user, as well as an exit status. All other
exceptions are propagated out of main, so java will exit with non-zero
and print the stack trace.
Parsing is currently very lenient, which has the bad side-effect that if you
have a typo and pass eg. `store: fasle` this will actually be interpreted as
`store: true`. Since mappings can't be changed after the fact, it is quite bad
if it happens on an index that already contains data.
Note that this does not cover all settings that accept a boolean, but since the
PR was quite hard to build and already covers some main settirgs like `store`
or `doc_values` this would already be a good incremental improvement.
The rest test framework, because it used to be tightly integrated with
ESIntegTestCase, currently expects the addresses for the test cluster to
be passed using the transport protocol port. However, it only uses this
to then find the http address.
This change makes ESRestTestCase extend from ESTestCase instead of
ESIntegTestCase, and changes the sysprop used to tests.rest.cluster,
which now takes the http address.
closes#15459
Site plugins used to be used for things like kibana and marvel, but
there is no longer a need since kibana (and marvel as a kibana plugin)
uses node.js. This change removes site plugins, as well as the flag for
jvm plugins. Now all plugins are jvm plugins.
DocumentMapperParser has both parse and parseCompressed methods. Except that the
parse methods are ONLY used from the unit tests. This commit removes the parse
method and moves all tests to parseCompressed so that they test more
realistically how mappings are managed.
Then I renamed parseCompressed to parse given that this is the only alternative
anyway.