`scripted_metric` did not work with cross cluster search because it
assumed that you'd never perform a partial reduction, serialize the
results, and then perform a final reduction. That
serialized-after-partial-reduction step was broken.
This is also required to support #54758.
This is a backport of #54803 for 7.x.
This pull request cherry picks the squashed commit from #54803 with the additional commits:
6f50c92 which adjusts master code to 7.x
a114549 to mute a failing ILM test (#54818)
48cbca1 and 50186b2 that cleans up and fixes the previous test
aae12bb that adds a missing feature flag (#54861)
6f330e3 that adds missing serialization bits (#54864)
bf72c02 that adjust the version in YAML tests
a51955f that adds some plumbing for the transport client used in integration tests
Co-authored-by: David Turner <david.turner@elastic.co>
Co-authored-by: Yannick Welsch <yannick@welsch.lu>
Co-authored-by: Lee Hinman <dakrone@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Andrei Dan <andrei.dan@elastic.co>
This should avoid REST failures caused by the inability to delete said
policy
Fix#54759
(cherry picked from commit 3ba5e02b713c03b1bdf14e0367a2bce68c35dd30)
We recently cleaned up the use of the word "metadata" across the
codebase. A few additional uses have trickled in, likely from
in-progress work. This commit cleans up these last few instances.
Relates #54519
Some field name constants were not updaten when we moved from "string" to "text"
and "keyword" fields. Renaming them makes it easier and faster to know which
field type is used in test subclassing this base test case.
Removes pipeline aggregations from the aggregation result tree as they
are no longer used. This stops us from building the pipeline aggregators
at all on data nodes except for backwards compatibility serialization.
This will save a tiny bit of space in the aggregation tree which is
lovely, but the biggest benefit is that it is a step towards simplifying
pipeline aggregators.
This only does about half of the work to remove the pipeline aggs from
the tree. Removing all of it would, well, double the size of the change
and make it harder to review.
This fixes pipeline aggregations used in cross cluster search from an older
version of Elasticsearch to a newer version of Elasticsearch. I broke
this in #53730 when I was too aggressive in shutting off serialization
of pipeline aggs. In particular, this comes up when the coordinating
node is pre-7.8.0 and the gateway node is on or after 7.8.0.
The fix is another step down the line to remove pipeline aggregators
from the aggregation tree. Sort of. It create a new
`List<PipelineAggregator>` member in `InternalAggregation` *but* it is
only used for bwc serialization and it is fed by the mechanism
established in #53730 to read the pipelines from the
Adds tests for supported ValuesSourceTypes, unmapped fields, scripting,
and the missing param. The tests for unmapped fields and scripting are
migrated from the StatsIT integration test
* Refactor nodes stats request builders to match requests (#54363)
* Remove hard-coded setters from NodesInfoRequestBuilder
* Remove hard-coded setters from NodesStatsRequest
* Use static imports to reduce clutter
* Remove uses of old info APIs
Use the same ES cluster as both an SP and an IDP and perform
IDP initiated and SP initiated SSO. The REST client plays the role
of both the Cloud UI and Kibana in these flows
Backport of #54215
* fix compilation issues
We previously checked for a 405 response, but on 7.x BWC tests may be hitting versions that don't
support the 405 response (returning 400 or 500), so be more lenient in those cases.
Relates to #54513
This is a follow up to a previous commit that renamed MetaData to
Metadata in all of the places. In that commit in master, we renamed
META_DATA to METADATA, but lost this on the backport. This commit
addresses that.
This is a simple naming change PR, to fix the fact that "metadata" is a
single English word, and for too long we have not followed general
naming conventions for it. We are also not consistent about it, for
example, METADATA instead of META_DATA if we were trying to be
consistent with MetaData (although METADATA is correct when considered
in the context of "metadata"). This was a simple find and replace across
the code base, only taking a few minutes to fix this naming issue
forever.
* Comprehensively test supported/unsupported field type:agg combinations (#52493)
This adds a test to AggregatorTestCase that allows us to programmatically
verify that an aggregator supports or does not support a particular
field type. It fetches the list of registered field type parsers,
creates a MappedFieldType from the parser and then attempts to run
a basic agg against the field.
A supplied list of supported VSTypes are then compared against the
output (success or exception) and suceeds or fails the test accordingly.
Co-Authored-By: Mark Tozzi <mark.tozzi@gmail.com>
* Skip fields that are not aggregatable
* Use newIndexSearcher() to avoid incompatible readers (#52723)
Lucene's `newSearcher()` can generate readers like ParallelCompositeReader
which we can't use. We need to instead use our helper `newIndexSearcher`
* Add warnings/errors when V2 templates would match same indices… (#54367)
* Add warnings/errors when V2 templates would match same indices as V1
With the introduction of V2 index templates, we want to warn users that templates they put in place
might not take precedence (because v2 templates are going to "win"). This adds this validation at
`PUT` time for both V1 and V2 templates with the following rules:
** When creating or updating a V2 template
- If the v2 template would match indices for an existing v1 template or templates, provide a
warning (through the deprecation logging so it shows up to the client) as well as logging the
warning
The v2 warning looks like:
```
index template [my-v2-template] has index patterns [foo-*] matching patterns from existing older
templates [old-v1-template,match-all-template] with patterns (old-v1-template =>
[foo*],match-all-template => [*]); this template [my-v2-template] will take
precedence during new index creation
```
** When creating a V1 template
- If the v1 template is for index patterns of `"*"` and a v2 template exists, warn that the v2
template may take precedence
- If the v1 template is for index patterns other than all indices, and a v2 template exists that
would match, throw an error preventing creation of the v1 template
** When updating a V1 template (without changing its existing `index_patterns`!)
- If the v1 template is for index patterns that would match an existing v2 template, warn that the
v2 template may take precedence.
The v1 warning looks like:
```
template [my-v1-template] has index patterns [*] matching patterns from existing index templates
[existing-v2-template] with patterns (existing-v2-template => [foo*]); this template [my-v1-template] may be ignored in favor of an index template at index creation time
```
And the v1 error looks like:
```
template [my-v1-template] has index patterns [foo*] matching patterns from existing index templates
[existing-v2-template] with patterns (existing-v2-template => [f*]), use index templates (/_index_template) instead
```
Relates to #53101
* Remove v2 index and component templates when cleaning up tests
* Finish half-finished comment sentence
* Guard template removal and ignore for earlier versions of ES
Co-authored-by: Elastic Machine <elasticmachine@users.noreply.github.com>
* Also ignore 500 errors when clearing index template v2 templates
Co-authored-by: Elastic Machine <elasticmachine@users.noreply.github.com>
Currently all of our transport protocol decoding and aggregation occurs
in the individual transport modules. This means that each implementation
(test, netty, nio) must implement this logic. Additionally, it means
that the entire message has been read from the network before the server
package receives it.
This commit creates a pipeline in server which can be passed arbitrary
bytes to handle. Internally, the pipeline will decode, decompress, and
aggregate the messages. Additionally, this allows us to run many
megabytes of bytes through the pipeline in tests to ensure that the
logic works.
This work will enable future work:
Circuit breaking or backoff logic based on message type and byte
in the content aggregator.
Sharing bytes with the application layer using the ref counted
releasable network bytes.
Improved network monitoring based specifically on channels.
Finally, this fixes the bug where we do not circuit break on the correct
message size when compression is enabled.
Changes ThreadPool's schedule method to run the schedule task in the context of the thread
that scheduled the task.
This is the more sensible default for this method, and eliminates a range of bugs where the
current thread context is mistakenly dropped.
Closes#17143
This drop the "top level" pipeline aggregators from the aggregation
result tree which should save a little memory and a few serialization
bytes. Perhaps more imporantly, this provides a mechanism by which we
can remove *all* pipelines from the aggregation result tree. This will
save quite a bit of space when pipelines are deep in the tree.
Sadly, doing this isn't simple because of backwards compatibility. Nodes
before 7.7.0 *need* those pipelines. We provide them by setting passing
a `Supplier<PipelineTree>` into the root of the aggregation tree that we
only call if we need to serialize to a version before 7.7.0.
This solution works for cross cluster search because we always reduce
the aggregations in each remote cluster and then forward them back to
the coordinating node. Its quite possible that the coordinating node
needs the pipeline (say it is version 7.1.0) and the gateway node in the
remote cluster doesn't (version 7.7.0). In that case the data nodes
won't send the pipeline aggregations back to the gateway node.
Critically, the gateway node *will* send the pipeline aggregations back
to the coordinating node. This is all managed with that
`Supplier<PipelineTree>`, but *how* it is managed is a bit tricky.
This reverts commit 23cccf088810b8416ed278571352393cc2de9523.
Unfortunately SAS token auth still doesn't work with bulk deletes so we can't use them yet.
Closes#54080
Fixes an issue where the elasticsearch-node command-line tools would not work correctly
because PersistentTasksCustomMetaData contains named XContent from plugins. This PR
makes it so that the parsing for all custom metadata is skipped, even if the core system would
know how to handle it.
Closes#53549
DocsClientYamlTestSuiteIT sometimes fails for CCR
related tests because tests are started before the license
is fully applied and active within the cluster. The first
tests to be executed then fails with the error noticed
in #53430. This can be easily reproduced locally by
only running CCR docs tests.
This commit adds some @Before logic in
DocsClientYamlTestSuiteIT so that it waits for the
license to be active before running CCR tests.
Closes#53430
This moves the pipeline aggregation validation from the data node to the
coordinating node so that we, eventually, can stop sending pipeline
aggregations to the data nodes entirely. In fact, it moves it into the
"request validation" stage so multiple errors can be accumulated and
sent back to the requester for the entire request. We can't always take
advantage of that, but it'll be nice for folks not to have to play
whack-a-mole with validation.
This is implemented by replacing `PipelineAggretionBuilder#validate`
with:
```
protected abstract void validate(ValidationContext context);
```
The `ValidationContext` handles the accumulation of validation failures,
provides access to the aggregation's siblings, and implements a few
validation utility methods.
Benchmarking showed that the effect of the ExitableDirectoryReader
is reduced considerably when checking every 8191 docs. Moreover,
set the cancellable task before calling QueryPhase#preProcess()
and make sure we don't wrap with an ExitableDirectoryReader at all
when lowLevelCancellation is set to false to avoid completely any
performance impact.
Follows: #52822
Follows: #53166
Follows: #53496
(cherry picked from commit cdc377e8e74d3ca6c231c36dc5e80621aab47c69)
Use sequence numbers and force merge UUID to determine whether a shard has changed or not instead before falling back to comparing files to get incremental snapshots on primary fail-over.
This change adds a "grant API key action"
POST /_security/api_key/grant
that creates a new API key using the privileges of one user ("the
system user") to execute the action, but creates the API key with
the roles of the second user ("the end user").
This allows a system (such as Kibana) to create API keys representing
the identity and access of an authenticated user without requiring
that user to have permission to create API keys on their own.
This also creates a new QA project for security on trial licenses and runs
the API key tests there
Backport of: #52886
Today in the `CoordinatorTests` each node uses multiple threadpools. This is
mostly fine as they are almost completely stateless, except for the
`ThreadContext`: by using multiple threadpools we cannot make assertions that
the thread context is/isn't preserved as we expect. This commit consolidates
the threadpool instances in use so that each node uses just one.
This fixes two issues:
1. Currently, the future here is never resolved on assertion error so a failing test would take a full minute
to complete until the future times out.
2. S3 tests overide this method to busy assert on this method. This only works if an assertion error makes it
to the calling thread.
Closes#53508
It's simple to deprecate a field used in an ObjectParser just by adding deprecation
markers to the relevant ParseField objects. The warnings themselves don't currently
have any context - they simply say that a deprecated field has been used, but not
where in the input xcontent it appears. This commit adds the parent object parser
name and XContentLocation to these deprecation messages.
Note that the context is automatically stripped from warning messages when they
are asserted on by integration tests and REST tests, because randomization of
xcontent type during these tests means that the XContentLocation is not constant
Today cluster states are sometimes (rarely) applied in the default context
rather than system context, which means that any appliers which capture their
contexts cannot do things like remote transport actions when security is
enabled.
There are at least two ways that we end up applying the cluster state in the
default context:
1. locally applying a cluster state that indicates that the master has failed
2. the elected master times out while waiting for a response from another node
This commit ensures that cluster states are always applied in the system
context.
Mitigates #53751
* Adds per context settings:
`script.context.${CONTEXT}.cache_max_size` ~
`script.cache.max_size`
`script.context.${CONTEXT}.cache_expire` ~
`script.cache.expire`
`script.context.${CONTEXT}.max_compilations_rate` ~
`script.max_compilations_rate`
* Context cache is used if:
`script.max_compilations_rate=use-context`. This
value is dynamically updatable, so users can
switch back to the general cache if desired.
* Settings for context caches take the first value
that applies:
1) Context specific settings if set, eg
`script.context.ingest.cache_max_size`
2) Correlated general setting is set to the non-default
value, eg `script.cache.max_size`
3) Context default
The reason for 2's inclusion is to allow an easy
transition for users who've customized their general
cache settings.
Using the general cache settings for the context caches
results in higher effective settings, since they are
multiplied across the number of contexts. So a general
cache max size of 200 will become 200 * # of contexts.
However, this behavior it will avoid users snapping to a
value that is too low for them.
Backport of: #52855
Refs: #50152
Re-applies the change from #53523 along with test fixes.
closes#53626closes#53624closes#53622closes#53625
Co-authored-by: Nik Everett <nik9000@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Lee Hinman <dakrone@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Jake Landis <jake.landis@elastic.co>
The logger usage check uses its own version of ASM to inspect class
files for logging usages. Master was updated to support java 11
compilation in #40754. However, 7.x still used ASM 5, which could not
read newer java bytecode versions. This commit bumps ASM in 7.x used in
the logger usage check.
closes#52408
Today it can happen that a transport message fails to send (for example,
because a transport interceptor rejects the request). In this case, the
response handler is never invoked, which can lead to necessary cleanups
not being performed. There are two ways to handle this. One is to expect
every callsite that sends a message to try/catch these exceptions and
handle them appropriately. The other is merely to invoke the response
handler to handle the exception, which is already equipped to handle
transport exceptions.
This begins to clean up how `PipelineAggregator`s and executed.
Previously, we would create the `PipelineAggregator`s on the data nodes
and embed them in the aggregation tree. When it came time to execute the
pipeline aggregation we'd use the `PipelineAggregator`s that were on the
first shard's results. This is inefficient because:
1. The data node needs to make the `PipelineAggregator` only to
serialize it and then throw it away.
2. The coordinating node needs to deserialize all of the
`PipelineAggregator`s even though it only needs one of them.
3. You end up with many `PipelineAggregator` instances when you only
really *need* one per pipeline.
4. `PipelineAggregator` needs to implement serialization.
This begins to undo these by building the `PipelineAggregator`s directly
on the coordinating node and using those instead of the
`PipelineAggregator`s in the aggregtion tree. In a follow up change
we'll stop serializing the `PipelineAggregator`s to node versions that
support this behavior. And, one day, we'll be able to remove
`PipelineAggregator` from the aggregation result tree entirely.
Importantly, this doesn't change how pipeline aggregations are declared
or parsed or requested. They are still part of the `AggregationBuilder`
tree because *that* makes sense.
This change introduces a new API in x-pack basic that allows to track the progress of a search.
Users can submit an asynchronous search through a new endpoint called `_async_search` that
works exactly the same as the `_search` endpoint but instead of blocking and returning the final response when available, it returns a response after a provided `wait_for_completion` time.
````
GET my_index_pattern*/_async_search?wait_for_completion=100ms
{
"aggs": {
"date_histogram": {
"field": "@timestamp",
"fixed_interval": "1h"
}
}
}
````
If after 100ms the final response is not available, a `partial_response` is included in the body:
````
{
"id": "9N3J1m4BgyzUDzqgC15b",
"version": 1,
"is_running": true,
"is_partial": true,
"response": {
"_shards": {
"total": 100,
"successful": 5,
"failed": 0
},
"total_hits": {
"value": 1653433,
"relation": "eq"
},
"aggs": {
...
}
}
}
````
The partial response contains the total number of requested shards, the number of shards that successfully returned and the number of shards that failed.
It also contains the total hits as well as partial aggregations computed from the successful shards.
To continue to monitor the progress of the search users can call the get `_async_search` API like the following:
````
GET _async_search/9N3J1m4BgyzUDzqgC15b/?wait_for_completion=100ms
````
That returns a new response that can contain the same partial response than the previous call if the search didn't progress, in such case the returned `version`
should be the same. If new partial results are available, the version is incremented and the `partial_response` contains the updated progress.
Finally if the response is fully available while or after waiting for completion, the `partial_response` is replaced by a `response` section that contains the usual _search response:
````
{
"id": "9N3J1m4BgyzUDzqgC15b",
"version": 10,
"is_running": false,
"response": {
"is_partial": false,
...
}
}
````
Asynchronous search are stored in a restricted index called `.async-search` if they survive (still running) after the initial submit. Each request has a keep alive that defaults to 5 days but this value can be changed/updated any time:
`````
GET my_index_pattern*/_async_search?wait_for_completion=100ms&keep_alive=10d
`````
The default can be changed when submitting the search, the example above raises the default value for the search to `10d`.
`````
GET _async_search/9N3J1m4BgyzUDzqgC15b/?wait_for_completion=100ms&keep_alive=10d
`````
The time to live for a specific search can be extended when getting the progress/result. In the example above we extend the keep alive to 10 more days.
A background service that runs only on the node that holds the first primary shard of the `async-search` index is responsible for deleting the expired results. It runs every hour but the expiration is also checked by running queries (if they take longer than the keep_alive) and when getting a result.
Like a normal `_search`, if the http channel that is used to submit a request is closed before getting a response, the search is automatically cancelled. Note that this behavior is only for the submit API, subsequent GET requests will not cancel if they are closed.
Asynchronous search are not persistent, if the coordinator node crashes or is restarted during the search, the asynchronous search will stop. To know if the search is still running or not the response contains a field called `is_running` that indicates if the task is up or not. It is the responsibility of the user to resume an asynchronous search that didn't reach a final response by re-submitting the query. However final responses and failures are persisted in a system index that allows
to retrieve a response even if the task finishes.
````
DELETE _async_search/9N3J1m4BgyzUDzqgC15b
````
The response is also not stored if the initial submit action returns a final response. This allows to not add any overhead to queries that completes within the initial `wait_for_completion`.
The `.async-search` index is a restricted index (should be migrated to a system index in +8.0) that is accessible only through the async search APIs. These APIs also ensure that only the user that submitted the initial query can retrieve or delete the running search. Note that admins/superusers would still be able to cancel the search task through the task manager like any other tasks.
Relates #49091
Co-authored-by: Luca Cavanna <javanna@users.noreply.github.com>
Using a Long alone is not strong enough for the id of search contexts
because we reset the id generator whenever a data node is restarted.
This can lead to two issues:
1. Fetch phase can fetch documents from another index
2. A scroll search can return documents from another index
This commit avoids these issues by adding a UUID to SearchContexId.
This commit introduces hidden aliases. These are similar to hidden
indices, in that they are not visible by default, unless explicitly
specified by name or by indicating that hidden indices/aliases are
desired.
The new alias property, `is_hidden` is implemented similarly to
`is_write_index`, except that it must be consistent across all indices
with a given alias - that is, all indices with a given alias must
specify the alias as either hidden, or all specify it as non-hidden,
either explicitly or by omitting the `is_hidden` property.
This commit updates the template used for watch history indices with
the hidden index setting so that new indices will be created as hidden.
Relates #50251
Backport of #52962
When we test backwards compatibility we often end up in a situation
where we *sometimes* get a warning, and sometimes don't. Like, we won't
get the warning if we're testing against an older version, but we will
in a newer one. Or we won't get the warning if the request randomly
lands on a node with an old version of the code. But we wouldn't if it
randomed into a node with newer code.
This adds `allowed_warnings` to our yaml test runner for those cases:
warnings declared this way are "allowed" but not "required".
Blocks #52959
Co-authored-by: Benjamin Trent <ben.w.trent@gmail.com>
Implement an Exitable DirectoryReader that wraps the original
DirectoryReader so that when a search task is cancelled the
DirectoryReaders also stop their work fast. This is usuful for
expensive operations like wilcard/prefix queries where the
DirectoryReaders can spend lots of time and consume resources,
as previously their work wouldn't stop even though the original
search task was cancelled (e.g. because of timeout or dropped client
connection).
(cherry picked from commit 67acaf61f33bc5f54e26541514d07e375c202e03)