Prior to the change the watcher index listener didn't implement the
`postIndex(ShardId, Engine.Index, Engine.IndexResult)` method. This
caused document level exceptions like VersionConflictEngineException
to be ignored. This commit fixes this.
The watcher indexing listener did implement the `postIndex(ShardId, Engine.Index, Exception)`
method, but that only handles engine level exceptions.
This change also unmutes the SmokeTestWatcherTestSuiteIT#testMonitorClusterHealth test again.
Relates to #32299
Backport of #51526.
Previous the formatter was breaking simple if/else statements (i.e.
without braces) onto separate lines, which could be fragile because the
formatter cannot also introduce braces. Instead, keep such expressions
on the same line.
The timeout.tcp_read AD/LDAP realm setting, despite the low-level
allusion, controls the time interval the realms wait for a response for
a query (search or bind). If the connection to the server is synchronous
(un-pooled) the response timeout is analogous to the tcp read timeout.
But the tcp read timeout is irrelevant in the common case of a pooled
connection (when a Bind DN is specified).
The timeout.tcp_read qualifier is hereby deprecated in favor of
timeout.response.
In addition, the default value for both timeout.tcp_read and
timeout.response is that of timeout.ldap_search, instead of the 5s (but
the default for timeout.ldap_search is still 5s). The
timeout.ldap_search defines the server-controlled timeout of a search
request. There is no practical use case to have a smaller tcp_read
timeout compared to ldap_search (in this case the request would time-out
on the client but continue to be processed on the server). The proposed
change aims to simplify configuration so that the more common
configuration change, adjusting timeout.ldap_search up, has the expected
result (no timeout during searches) without any additional
modifications.
Closes#46028
In the SQL with SSL tests, we need to find the interfaces that are up,
are loopback devices, or have a loopback address. If we check if the
device is up first, we can run into situations where the device is a
virtual ethernet device that might have disappeared between us seeing
the device, and checking if it is up. By first checking if the device is
a loopback device or it has a loopback address, then we can avoid
checking if the device is up except for loopback devices and therefore
we can avoid the disappearing virtual ethernet device problem.
* Allow Repository Plugins to Filter Metadata on Create
Add a hook that allows repository plugins to filter the repository metadata
before it gets written to the cluster state.
This commit deprecates the creation of dot-prefixed index names (e.g.
.watches) unless they are either 1) a hidden index, or 2) registered by
a plugin that extends SystemIndexPlugin. This is the first step
towards more thorough protections for system indices.
This commit also modifies several plugins which use dot-prefixed indices
to register indices they own as system indices, and adds a plugin to
register .tasks as a system index.
The docs tests have recently been running much slower than before (see #49753).
The gist here is that with ILM/SLM we do a lot of unnecessary setup / teardown work on each
test. Compounded with the slightly slower cluster state storage mechanism, this causes the
tests to run much slower.
In particular, on RAMDisk, docs:check is taking
ES 7.4: 6:55 minutes
ES master: 16:09 minutes
ES with this commit: 6:52 minutes
on SSD, docs:check is taking
ES 7.4: ??? minutes
ES master: 32:20 minutes
ES with this commit: 11:21 minutes
Changes the find_file_structure response to include a CSV
ingest processor in the ingest pipeline it suggests.
Previously the Kibana file upload functionality parsed CSV
in the browser, but by parsing CSV in the ingest pipeline
it makes the Kibana file upload functionality more easily
interchangable with Filebeat such that the configurations
it creates can more easily be used to import data with the
same structure repeatedly in production.
* Reload secure settings with password (#43197)
If a password is not set, we assume an empty string to be
compatible with previous behavior.
Only allow the reload to be broadcast to other nodes if TLS is
enabled for the transport layer.
* Add passphrase support to elasticsearch-keystore (#38498)
This change adds support for keystore passphrases to all subcommands
of the elasticsearch-keystore cli tool and adds a subcommand for
changing the passphrase of an existing keystore.
The work to read the passphrase in Elasticsearch when
loading, which will be addressed in a different PR.
Subcommands of elasticsearch-keystore can handle (open and create)
passphrase protected keystores
When reading a keystore, a user is only prompted for a passphrase
only if the keystore is passphrase protected.
When creating a keystore, a user is allowed (default behavior) to create one with an
empty passphrase
Passphrase can be set to be empty when changing/setting it for an
existing keystore
Relates to: #32691
Supersedes: #37472
* Restore behavior for force parameter (#44847)
Turns out that the behavior of `-f` for the add and add-file sub
commands where it would also forcibly create the keystore if it
didn't exist, was by design - although undocumented.
This change restores that behavior auto-creating a keystore that
is not password protected if the force flag is used. The force
OptionSpec is moved to the BaseKeyStoreCommand as we will presumably
want to maintain the same behavior in any other command that takes
a force option.
* Handle pwd protected keystores in all CLI tools (#45289)
This change ensures that `elasticsearch-setup-passwords` and
`elasticsearch-saml-metadata` can handle a password protected
elasticsearch.keystore.
For setup passwords the user would be prompted to add the
elasticsearch keystore password upon running the tool. There is no
option to pass the password as a parameter as we assume the user is
present in order to enter the desired passwords for the built-in
users.
For saml-metadata, we prompt for the keystore password at all times
even though we'd only need to read something from the keystore when
there is a signing or encryption configuration.
* Modify docs for setup passwords and saml metadata cli (#45797)
Adds a sentence in the documentation of `elasticsearch-setup-passwords`
and `elasticsearch-saml-metadata` to describe that users would be
prompted for the keystore's password when running these CLI tools,
when the keystore is password protected.
Co-Authored-By: Lisa Cawley <lcawley@elastic.co>
* Elasticsearch keystore passphrase for startup scripts (#44775)
This commit allows a user to provide a keystore password on Elasticsearch
startup, but only prompts when the keystore exists and is encrypted.
The entrypoint in Java code is standard input. When the Bootstrap class is
checking for secure keystore settings, it checks whether or not the keystore
is encrypted. If so, we read one line from standard input and use this as the
password. For simplicity's sake, we allow a maximum passphrase length of 128
characters. (This is an arbitrary limit and could be increased or eliminated.
It is also enforced in the keystore tools, so that a user can't create a
password that's too long to enter at startup.)
In order to provide a password on standard input, we have to account for four
different ways of starting Elasticsearch: the bash startup script, the Windows
batch startup script, systemd startup, and docker startup. We use wrapper
scripts to reduce systemd and docker to the bash case: in both cases, a
wrapper script can read a passphrase from the filesystem and pass it to the
bash script.
In order to simplify testing the need for a passphrase, I have added a
has-passwd command to the keystore tool. This command can run silently, and
exit with status 0 when the keystore has a password. It exits with status 1 if
the keystore doesn't exist or exists and is unencrypted.
A good deal of the code-change in this commit has to do with refactoring
packaging tests to cleanly use the same tests for both the "archive" and the
"package" cases. This required not only moving tests around, but also adding
some convenience methods for an abstraction layer over distribution-specific
commands.
* Adjust docs for password protected keystore (#45054)
This commit adds relevant parts in the elasticsearch-keystore
sub-commands reference docs and in the reload secure settings API
doc.
* Fix failing Keystore Passphrase test for feature branch (#50154)
One problem with the passphrase-from-file tests, as written, is that
they would leave a SystemD environment variable set when they failed,
and this setting would cause elasticsearch startup to fail for other
tests as well. By using a try-finally, I hope that these tests will fail
more gracefully.
It appears that our Fedora and Ubuntu environments may be configured to
store journald information under /var rather than under /run, so that it
will persist between boots. Our destructive tests that read from the
journal need to account for this in order to avoid trying to limit the
output we check in tests.
* Run keystore management tests on docker distros (#50610)
* Add Docker handling to PackagingTestCase
Keystore tests need to be able to run in the Docker case. We can do this
by using a DockerShell instead of a plain Shell when Docker is running.
* Improve ES startup check for docker
Previously we were checking truncated output for the packaged JDK as
an indication that Elasticsearch had started. With new preliminary
password checks, we might get a false positive from ES keystore
commands, so we have to check specifically that the Elasticsearch
class from the Bootstrap package is what's running.
* Test password-protected keystore with Docker (#50803)
This commit adds two tests for the case where we mount a
password-protected keystore into a Docker container and provide a
password via a Docker environment variable.
We also fix a logging bug where we were logging the identifier for an
array of strings rather than the contents of that array.
* Add documentation for keystore startup prompting (#50821)
When a keystore is password-protected, Elasticsearch will prompt at
startup. This commit adds documentation for this prompt for the archive,
systemd, and Docker cases.
Co-authored-by: Lisa Cawley <lcawley@elastic.co>
* Warn when unable to upgrade keystore on debian (#51011)
For Red Hat RPM upgrades, we warn if we can't upgrade the keystore. This
commit brings the same logic to the code for Debian packages. See the
posttrans file for gets executed for RPMs.
* Restore handling of string input
Adds tests that were mistakenly removed. One of these tests proved
we were not handling the the stdin (-x) option correctly when no
input was added. This commit restores the original approach of
reading stdin one char at a time until there is no more (-1, \r, \n)
instead of using readline() that might return null
* Apply spotless reformatting
* Use '--since' flag to get recent journal messages
When we get Elasticsearch logs from journald, we want to fetch only log
messages from the last run. There are two reasons for this. First, if
there are many logs, we might get a string that's too large for our
utility methods. Second, when we're looking for a specific message or
error, we almost certainly want to look only at messages from the last
execution.
Previously, we've been trying to do this by clearing out the physical
files under the journald process. But there seems to be some contention
over these directories: if journald writes a log file in between when
our deletion command deletes the file and when it deletes the log
directory, the deletion will fail.
It seems to me that we might be able to use journald's "--since" flag to
retrieve only log messages from the last run, and that this might be
less likely to fail due to race conditions in file deletion.
Unfortunately, it looks as if the "--since" flag has a granularity of
one-second. I've added a two-second sleep to make sure that there's a
sufficient gap between the test that will read from journald and the
test before it.
* Use new journald wrapper pattern
* Update version added in secure settings request
Co-authored-by: Lisa Cawley <lcawley@elastic.co>
Co-authored-by: Ioannis Kakavas <ikakavas@protonmail.com>
moves audit message for index creation after the index has been successfully created. This has
been confusing for a user where index creation failed but audit reported index creation.
This commit sets `xpack.security.ssl.diagnose.trust` to false in all
of our tests when running in FIPS 140 mode and when settings objects
are used to create an instance of the SSLService. This is needed
in 7.x because setting xpack.security.ssl.diagnose.trust to true
wraps SunJSSE TrustManager with our own DiagnosticTrustManager and
this is not allowed when SunJSSE is in FIPS mode.
An alternative would be to set xpack.security.fips.enabled to
true which would also implicitly disable
xpack.security.ssl.diagnose.trust but would have additional effects
(would require that we set PBKDF2 for password hashing algorithm in
all test clusters, would prohibit using JKS keystores in nodes even
if relevant tests have been muted in FIPS mode etc.)
Relates: #49900Resolves: #51268
* Don't overwrite target field with SetSecurityUserProcessor
This change fix problem with `SetSecurityUserProcessor` which was overwriting
whole target field and not only fields really filled by the processor.
Closes#51428
* Unused imports removed
Today we are repeatedly checking if the current build is a snapshot
build or not by reading the system property build.snapshot. This commit
formalizes this by adding a build parameter to indicate whether or not
the current build is a snapshot build.
* Introduce reusable QL plugin for SQL and EQL (#50815)
Extract reusable functionality from SQL into its own dedicated project QL.
Implemented as a plugin, it provides common components across SQL and the upcoming EQL.
While this commit is fairly large, for the most part it's just a big file move from sql package to the newly introduced ql.
(cherry picked from commit ec1ac0d463bfa12a02c8174afbcdd6984345e8b4)
* SQL: Fix incomplete registration of geo NamedWritables
(cherry picked from commit e295763686f9592976e551e504fdad1d2a3a566d)
* QL: Extend NodeSubclass to read classes from jars (#50866)
As the test classes are spread across more than one project, the Gradle
classpath contains not just folders but also jars.
This commit allows the test class to explore the archive content and
load matching classes from said source.
(cherry picked from commit 25ad74928afcbf286dc58f7d430491b0af662f04)
* QL: Remove implicit conversion inside Literal (#50962)
Literal constructor makes an implicit conversion for each value given
which turns out has some subtle side-effects.
Improve MathProcessors to preserve numeric type where possible
Fix bug on issue compatibility between date and intervals
Preserve the source when folding inside the Optimizer
(cherry picked from commit 9b73e225b0aa07a23859550fb117bae571a2b672)
* QL: Refactor DataType for pluggability (#51328)
Change DataType from enum to class
Break DataType enums into QL (default) and SQL types
Make data type conversion pluggable so that new types can be introduced
As part of the process:
- static type conversion in QL package (such as Literal) has been
removed
- several utility classes have been broken into base (QL) and extended
(SQL) parts based on type awareness
- operators (+,-,/,*) are
- due to extensibility, serialization of arithmetic operation has been
slightly changed and pushed down to the operator executor itself
(cherry picked from commit aebda81b30e1563b877a8896309fd50633e0b663)
* Compilation fixes for 7.x
We added a new rounding in #50609 that handles offsets to the start and
end of the rounding so that we could support `offset` in the `composite`
aggregation. This starts moving `date_histogram` to that new offset.
This is a redo of #50873 with more integration tests.
This reverts commit d114c9db3e1d1a766f9f48f846eed0466125ce83.
The DATE and DATESTAMP Grok patterns match 2 digit years
as well as 4 digit years. The pattern determination in
find_file_structure worked correctly in this case, but
the regex used to create a multi-line start pattern was
assuming a 4 digit year. Also, the quick rule-out
patterns did not always correctly consider 2 digit years,
meaning that detection was inconsistent.
This change fixes both problems, and also extends the
tests for DATE and DATESTAMP to check both 2 and 4 digit
years.
* Fix TimeSeriesLifecycleActionsIT.testShrinkAction
Shrinking a 6 shard index to 3 shards can be quite time consuming and
assertBusy probes the conditions at exponentially growing intervals.
This separates the one assertion that was used for all the conditions
into multiple assertBusy statements and increases the timeout for waiting
for the shrink to complete.
* Allow more time for shrink to complete
This commit allows more time for the shrink operation to complete in
testRetryFailedShrinkAction (separating the assertBusy calls too) and
testMoveToRolloverStep.
* Shrink to no more than 2 shards in tests
(cherry picked from commit 5fe780148fa3536915d61475b087896a5b9ace82)
Signed-off-by: Andrei Dan <andrei.dan@elastic.co>
This change changes the way to run our test suites in
JVMs configured in FIPS 140 approved mode. It does so by:
- Configuring any given runtime Java in FIPS mode with the bundled
policy and security properties files, setting the system
properties java.security.properties and java.security.policy
with the == operator that overrides the default JVM properties
and policy.
- When runtime java is 11 and higher, using BouncyCastle FIPS
Cryptographic provider and BCJSSE in FIPS mode. These are
used as testRuntime dependencies for unit
tests and internal clusters, and copied (relevant jars)
explicitly to the lib directory for testclusters used in REST tests
- When runtime java is 8, using BouncyCastle FIPS
Cryptographic provider and SunJSSE in FIPS mode.
Running the tests in FIPS 140 approved mode doesn't require an
additional configuration either in CI workers or locally and is
controlled by specifying -Dtests.fips.enabled=true
* Centralize mocks initialization in ILM steps tests
This change centralizes initialization of `Client`, `AdminClient`
and `IndicesAdminClient` for all classes extending `AbstractStepTestCase`.
This removes a lot of code duplication and make it easier to write tests.
This also removes need for `AsyncActionStep#setClient`
* Unused imports removed
* Added missed tests
* Fix OpenFollowerIndexStepTests
* Check all snapshots in SnapshotLifecycleRestIT.testFullPolicy
Rather than check the first returned snapshot for a snapshot starting with `snap-` in
SnapshotLifecycleRestIT.testFullPolicy, this commit changes the test to find any snapshots starting
with `snap-`.
In the event that there are no snapshots (the failure case), this also exposes the full results map
so we can diagnose why a failure occurred.
Relates to #50358
* Use a more imperative style for checking
* Separate aliases used for tests in TimeSeriesLifecycleActionsIT
This is related to #51375 and hopes to help illuminate why some of those tests are failing. This
commit switches the aliases used in the test to use a random alias name every time (since there were
some complaints in the tests about aliases having more than one write index). With this we hope to
determine the actual cause of the failure in the test.
This also adds additional information to the exception returned when calling move-to-step with the
incorrect current step.
* Fix rest test
* [ML][Inference] add tags url param to GET (#51330)
Adds a new URL parameter, `tags` to the GET _ml/inference/<model_id> endpoint.
This parameter allows the list of models to be further reduced to those who contain all the provided tags.
Previously this test failed waiting for yellow:
https://gradle-enterprise.elastic.co/s/fv55holsa36tg/console-log#L2676
Oddly cluster health returned red status, but there were no unassigned, relocating or initializing shards.
Placed the waiting for green in a try-catch block, so that when this fails again then cluster state gets printed.
Relates to #48381
* Use ESSingleNodeTestCase instead of ESIntegTestCase (#51345)
(cherry picked from commit abcf1c41faf05a0b0196fb06e57c3de8c3d67688)
Signed-off-by: Andrei Dan <andrei.dan@elastic.co>
The ApiKeyService would aggressively "close" ApiKeyCredentials objects
during processing. However, under rare circumstances, the verfication
of the secret key would be performed asychronously and may need access
to the SecureString after it had been closed by the caller.
The trigger for this would be if the cache already held a Future for
that ApiKey, but the future was not yet complete. In this case the
verification of the secret key would take place asynchronously on the
generic thread pool.
This commit moves the "close" of the credentials to the body of the
listener so that it only occurs after key verification is complete.
Backport of: #51244
As we prepare to introduce a new index for storing additional
information about data frame analytics jobs (e.g. intrumentation),
renaming this class to `DestinationIndex` better captures what it does
and leaves its prior name available for a more suitable use.
Backport of #51353
Co-authored-by: Elastic Machine <elasticmachine@users.noreply.github.com>
API Key expiration value has millisecond precision as we use
{@link Instant#toEpoqueMilli()} when creating the API key
document.
It could often happen that `Instant.now()` Instant in the testCreateApiKey
was close enough to the ApiKeyService's `clock.instant()` Instant,
when the nanos were removed from the latter ( due to the call
to `toEpoqueMilli()` ) the result of comparing these two Instants
was a few nanos short of a 7 days.
Resolves: #47958
check bulk indexing error for permanent problems and ensure the state goes into failed instead of
retry. Corrects the stats API to show the real error and avoids excessive audit logging.
fixes#50122
This change exposes master timeout to ILM steps through global dynamic setting.
All currently implemented steps make use of this setting as well.
Closes#44136
IndexWriter might not filter out fully deleted segments if retention
leases exist or the number of the retaining operations is non-zero.
SoftDeletesDirectoryReaderWrapper, however, always filters out fully
deleted segments.
This change uses the original directory reader when calculating segment
stats instead.
Relates #51192Closes#51303
Data frame analytics classification currently only supports 2 classes for the
dependent variable. We were checking that the field's cardinality is not higher
than 2 but we should also check it is not less than that as otherwise the process
fails.
Backport of #51232
The ID of the datafeed's associated job was being obtained
frequently by looking up the datafeed task in a map that
was being modified in other threads. This could lead to
NPEs if the datafeed stopped running at an unexpected time.
This change reduces the number of places where a datafeed's
associated job ID is looked up to avoid the possibility of
failures when the datafeed's task is removed from the map
of running tasks during multi-step operations in other
threads.
Fixes#51285
This makes the UpdateSettingsStep retryable. This step updates settings needed
during the execution of ILM actions (mark indexes as read-only, change
allocation configurations, mark indexing complete, etc)
As the index updates are idempotent in nature (PUT requests and are applied only
if the values have changed) and the settings values are seldom user-configurable
(aside from the allocate action) the testing for this change goes along the
lines of artificially simulating a setting update failure on a particular value
update, which is followed by a successful step execution (a retry) in an
environment outside of ILM (the step executions are triggered manually).
(cherry picked from commit 8391b0aba469f39532bfc2796b76148167dc0289)
Signed-off-by: Andrei Dan <andrei.dan@elastic.co>
After we rollover the index we wait for the configured number of shards for the
rolled index to become active (based on the index.write.wait_for_active_shards
setting which might be present in a template, or otherwise in the default case,
for the primaries to become active).
This wait might be long due to disk watermarks being tripped, replicas not
being able to spring to life due to cluster nodes reconfiguration and others
and, the RolloverStep might not complete successfully due to this inherent
transient situation, albeit the rolled index having been created.
(cherry picked from commit 457a92fb4c68c55976cc3c3e2f00a053dd2eac70)
Signed-off-by: Andrei Dan <andrei.dan@elastic.co>
When not truncated, a long SAML response XML document can fill max
line length and mask the actual exception message that the trace
statement is meant to inform about.
The same XML Document is also printed in full on trace level in
SamlRequestHandler#parseSamlMessage() so there is no loss of
information
This replaces the message we return for unknown queries with the standard
one that we use for unknown fields from `ObjectParser`. This is nice
because it includes "did you mean". One day we might convert parsing
queries to using object parser, but that looks complex. This change is
much smaller and seems useful.
There are two edge cases that can be ran into when example input is matched in a weird way.
1. Recursion depth could continue many many times, resulting in a HUGE runtime cost. I put a limit of 10 recursions (could be adjusted I suppose).
2. If there are no "fixed regex bits", exploring the grok space would result in a fence-post error during runtime (with assertions turned off)
2> REPRODUCE WITH: ./gradlew ':x-pack:plugin:watcher:test' --tests "org.elasticsearch.xpack.watcher.history.HistoryTemplateTransformMappingsTests.testTransformFields" -Dtests.seed=26754396AB9C1A30 -Dtests.security.manager=true -Dtests.locale=lv-LV -Dtests.timezone=America/Dominica -Dcompiler.java=13 -Druntime.java=8
2> java.lang.NullPointerException
at __randomizedtesting.SeedInfo.seed([26754396AB9C1A30:B2A3CA27E260803B]:0)
at org.elasticsearch.xpack.watcher.history.HistoryTemplateTransformMappingsTests.lambda$testTransformFields$1(HistoryTemplateTransformMappingsTests.java:85)
at java.util.stream.ReferencePipeline$3$1.accept(ReferencePipeline.java:193)
at java.util.stream.ReferencePipeline$3$1.accept(ReferencePipeline.java:193)
at java.util.HashMap$ValueSpliterator.forEachRemaining(HashMap.java:1628)
at java.util.stream.AbstractPipeline.copyInto(AbstractPipeline.java:482)
at java.util.stream.AbstractPipeline.wrapAndCopyInto(AbstractPipeline.java:472)
at java.util.stream.ReduceOps$ReduceOp.evaluateSequential(ReduceOps.java:708)
at java.util.stream.AbstractPipeline.evaluate(AbstractPipeline.java:234)
at java.util.stream.ReferencePipeline.collect(ReferencePipeline.java:499)
at org.elasticsearch.xpack.watcher.history.HistoryTemplateTransformMappingsTests.lambda$testTransformFields$2(HistoryTemplateTransformMappingsTests.java:88)
at org.elasticsearch.test.ESTestCase.assertBusy(ESTestCase.java:892)
at org.elasticsearch.test.ESTestCase.assertBusy(ESTestCase.java:877)
at org.elasticsearch.xpack.watcher.history.HistoryTemplateTransformMappingsTests.testTransformFields(HistoryTemplateTransformMappingsTests.java:74)
Allows ML datafeeds to work with time fields that have
the "date_nanos" type _and make use of the extra precision_.
(Previously datafeeds only worked with time fields that were
exact multiples of milliseconds. So datafeeds would work
with "date_nanos" only if the extra precision over "date" was
not used.)
Relates #49889
* REST PreparedStatement-like query parameters are now supported in the form of an array of non-object, non-array values where ES SQL parser will try to infer the data type of the value being passed as parameter.
(cherry picked from commit 45b8bf619aecb1c03d7bc0cf06928dcc36005a66)
The hierarchy of fields/sub-fields under a field that is of an
unsupported data type will be marked as unsupported as well. Until this
change, the behavior was to set the unsupported data type field's
hierarchy as empty.
Example, considering the following hierarchy of fields/sub-fields
a -> b -> c -> d, if b would be of type "foo", then b, c and d will
be marked as unsupported.
(cherry picked from commit 7adb286c4c485b9e781f88b0a2f98cab9ec5b7e2)
This commit merely adds the skeleton for the autoscaling project, adding
the basics to include the autoscaling module in the default
distribution, opt-in to code formatting, and a placeholder for the docs.
These policies store statistics, but since stats updating is asynchronous, it's
possible for the update from one test to bleed into a separate one. This change
switches the tests to use separate policy ids so that their stats are tracked
independently. It also relaxes the checking constraint in one of the tests.
Hopefully this:
Resolves#48531Resolves#48017
This change introduces a new feature for indices so that they can be
hidden from wildcard expansion. The feature is referred to as hidden
indices. An index can be marked hidden through the use of an index
setting, `index.hidden`, at creation time. One primary use case for
this feature is to have a construct that fits indices that are created
by the stack that contain data used for display to the user and/or
intended for querying by the user. The desire to keep them hidden is
to avoid confusing users when searching all of the data they have
indexed and getting results returned from indices created by the
system.
Hidden indices have the following properties:
* API calls for all indices (empty indices array, _all, or *) will not
return hidden indices by default.
* Wildcard expansion will not return hidden indices by default unless
the wildcard pattern begins with a `.`. This behavior is similar to
shell expansion of wildcards.
* REST API calls can enable the expansion of wildcards to hidden
indices with the `expand_wildcards` parameter. To expand wildcards
to hidden indices, use the value `hidden` in conjunction with `open`
and/or `closed`.
* Creation of a hidden index will ignore global index templates. A
global index template is one with a match-all pattern.
* Index templates can make an index hidden, with the exception of a
global index template.
* Accessing a hidden index directly requires no additional parameters.
Backport of #50452
This commit upgrades the OWASP HTML sanitizer used by watcher to the
latest version and also upgrades guava, which it depends on. The guava
upgrade also requires the addition of a new dependency that guava
itself requires as of version 27.0. The sanitizer's behavior has changed to
re-write these templated values with a comment that results in this output
`{<!-- -->{ctx.metadata.name}}`. This would be an issue if we attempted to
sanitize the template, but the code that uses the sanitizer runs the rendered
string through the sanitizer, which means that the templated values have
been replaced already.
Relates #50395
This commit changes our behavior so that when we receive a
request with an invalid/expired/wrong access token or API Key
we do not fallback to authenticating as the anonymous user even if
anonymous access is enabled for Elasticsearch.
If 1000 different category definitions are created for a job in
the first 100 buckets it processes then an audit warning will now
be created. (This will cause a yellow warning triangle in the
ML UI's jobs list.)
Such a large number of categories suggests that the field that
categorization is working on is not well suited to the ML
categorization functionality.