Modifies SLM's and ILM's history indices to be hidden indices for added
protection against accidental querying and deletion, and improves
IndexTemplateRegistry to handle upgrading index templates.
Also modifies the REST test cleanup to delete hidden indices.
* Allow forcemerge in the hot phase for ILM policies
This commit changes the `forcemerge` action to also be allowed in the `hot` phase for policies. The
forcemerge will occur after a rollover, and allows users to take advantage of higher disk speeds for
performing the force merge (on a separate node type, for example).
On caveat with this is that a `forcemerge` in the `hot` phase *MUST* be accompanied by a `rollover`
action. ILM validates policies to ensure this is the case.
Resolves#43165
* Use anyMatch instead of findAny in validation
* Make randomTimeseriesLifecyclePolicy single-pass
This commit changes how RestHandlers are registered with the
RestController so that a RestHandler no longer needs to register itself
with the RestController. Instead the RestHandler interface has new
methods which when called provide information about the routes
(method and path combinations) that are handled by the handler
including any deprecated and/or replaced combinations.
This change also makes the publication of RestHandlers safe since they
no longer publish a reference to themselves within their constructors.
Closes#51622
Co-authored-by: Jason Tedor <jason@tedor.me>
Backport of #51950
* Adding best_compression (#49974)
This commit adds a `codec` parameter to the ILM `forcemerge` action. When setting the codec to `best_compression` ILM will close the index, then update the codec setting, re-open the index, and finally perform a force merge.
* Fix ForceMergeAction toSteps construction (#51825)
There was a duplicate force merge step and the test continued to fail. This commit clarifies the
`toStep` method and changes the `assertBestCompression` method for better readability.
Resolves#51822
* Update version constants
Co-authored-by: Sivagurunathan Velayutham <sivadeva.93@gmail.com>
We suspect the flakiness could’ve come from the fact that the rollover
step used to create the new index and roll the write alias to the new
index in separate cluster state updates. So the assertion that the
rolled index exists could’ve passed in the test but, before the
alias was rolled over to the new index, the subsequent write we execute
in the test (namely
`indexDocs("test_user", "x-pack-test-password", "foo_alias", 1)`)
would’ve sent the new document to the source index (ie. foo-logs-000001)
This would see the source index containing 3 documents and the rolled
index (foo-logs-000002) 0 documents.
However, we fixed this and the rollover step executes the “create index
and roll alias” in one single cluster update, so this situation should
not occur anymore.
(cherry picked from commit 834261c4fe7dd93f437eeec43c00d01ff2279f86)
Signed-off-by: Andrei Dan <andrei.dan@elastic.co>
* Fix SnapshotLifecycleRestIT.testFullPolicySnapshot
This previously was missing some key information in the output of the failure. This captures that
information and adds logging at each step so we can determine the cause *if* it fails again.
Resolves#50358
Currently when an ILM policy finishes its execution, the index moves into the `TerminalPolicyStep`,
denoted by a completed/completed/completed phase/action/step lifecycle execution state.
This commit changes the behavior so that the index lifecycle execution state halts at the last
configured phase's `PhaseCompleteStep`, so for instance, if an index were configured with a policy
containing a `hot` and `cold` phase, the index would stop at the `cold/complete/complete`
`PhaseCompleteStep`. This allows an ILM user to update the policy to add any later phases and have
indices configured to use that policy pick up execution at the newly added "later" phase. For
example, if a `delete` phase were added to the policy specified about, the index would then move
from `cold/complete/complete` into the `delete` phase.
Relates to #48431
This commit switches the strategy for managing dot-prefixed indices that
should be hidden indices from using "fake" system indices to an explicit
exclusions list that must be updated when those indices are converted to
hidden indices.
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.
* 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>
* 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
* Use ESSingleNodeTestCase instead of ESIntegTestCase (#51345)
(cherry picked from commit abcf1c41faf05a0b0196fb06e57c3de8c3d67688)
Signed-off-by: Andrei Dan <andrei.dan@elastic.co>
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
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>
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
It's possible that the index could return no settings and thus throw a
`NullPointerException`.
I wasn't able to reproduce the original issue, but this should guard
against in the future.
Resolves#50646
Co-authored-by: Elastic Machine <elasticmachine@users.noreply.github.com>
This test failed a couple of different ways, related to timing, as well
as concurrent snapshots, and also naming.
This commit splits the giant `assertBusy` into separate parts so that we don't
perform ~5 different requests and tests in the same loop. It also gives each
test a unique repository so that no other test can accidentally re-use
snapshots.
Resolves#50358 (hopefully!)
* ILM action to wait for SLM policy execution (#50454)
This change add new ILM action to wait for SLM policy execution to ensure that index has snapshot before deletion.
Closes#45067
* Fix flaky TimeSeriesLifecycleActionsIT#testWaitForSnapshot test
This change adds some randomness and cleanup step to TimeSeriesLifecycleActionsIT#testWaitForSnapshot and testWaitForSnapshotSlmExecutedBefore tests in attempt to make them stable.
Reletes to #50781
* Formatting changes
* Longer timeout
* Fix Map.of in Java8
* Unused import removed
* Refresh cached phase policy definition if possible on new policy
There are some cases when updating a policy does not change the
structure in a significant way. In these cases, we can reread the
policy definition for any indices using the updated policy.
This commit adds this refreshing to the `TransportPutLifecycleAction`
to allow this. It allows us to do things like change the configuration
values for a particular step, even when on that step (for example,
changing the rollover criteria while on the `check-rollover-ready` step).
There are more cases where the phase definition can be reread that just
the ones checked here (for example, removing an action that has already
been passed), and those will be added in subsequent work.
Relates to #48431
* Fix SLM check for restore in progress (#50868)
* Fix SLM check for restore in progress
This commit fixes the check in SLM where the `RestoreInProgress`
metadata was checked for existence. Rather than check existence we
should instead check the `isEmpty` method. Prior to this, a successful
restore for a repository that used SLM retention would prevent SLM
retention from running in subsequent invocations, due to SLM thinking
that a restore was still running.
* Fix 7.x-isms
This commits makes the "init" ILM step retryable. It also adds a test
where an index is created with a non-parsable index name and then fails.
Related to #48183
This makes the "update-rollover-lifecycle-date" step, which is part of the
rollover action, retryable. It also adds an integration test to check the
step is retried and it eventually succeeds.
(cherry picked from commit 5bf068522deb2b6cd2563bcf80f34fdbf459c9f2)
Signed-off-by: Andrei Dan <andrei.dan@elastic.co>
* Add aditional logging for ILM history store tests (#50624)
These tests use the same index name, making it hard to read logs when
diagnosing the failures. Additionally more information about the current
state of the index could be retrieved when failing.
This changes these two things in the hope of capturing more data about
why this fails on some CI nodes but not others.
Relates to #50353
This adds support for retrying AsyncActionSteps by triggering the async
step after ILM was moved back on the failed step (the async step we'll
be attempting to run after the cluster state reflects ILM being moved
back on the failed step).
This also marks the RolloverStep as retryable and adds an integration
test where the RolloverStep is failing to execute as the rolled over
index already exists to test that the async action RolloverStep is
retried until the rolled over index is deleted.
(cherry picked from commit 8bee5f4cb58a1242cc2ef4bc0317dae6c8be49d3)
Signed-off-by: Andrei Dan <andrei.dan@elastic.co>
* Add ILM histore store index (#50287)
* Add ILM histore store index
This commit adds an ILM history store that tracks the lifecycle
execution state as an index progresses through its ILM policy. ILM
history documents store output similar to what the ILM explain API
returns.
An example document with ALL fields (not all documents will have all
fields) would look like:
```json
{
"@timestamp": 1203012389,
"policy": "my-ilm-policy",
"index": "index-2019.1.1-000023",
"index_age":123120,
"success": true,
"state": {
"phase": "warm",
"action": "allocate",
"step": "ERROR",
"failed_step": "update-settings",
"is_auto-retryable_error": true,
"creation_date": 12389012039,
"phase_time": 12908389120,
"action_time": 1283901209,
"step_time": 123904107140,
"phase_definition": "{\"policy\":\"ilm-history-ilm-policy\",\"phase_definition\":{\"min_age\":\"0ms\",\"actions\":{\"rollover\":{\"max_size\":\"50gb\",\"max_age\":\"30d\"}}},\"version\":1,\"modified_date_in_millis\":1576517253463}",
"step_info": "{... etc step info here as json ...}"
},
"error_details": "java.lang.RuntimeException: etc\n\tcaused by:etc etc etc full stacktrace"
}
```
These documents go into the `ilm-history-1-00000N` index to provide an
audit trail of the operations ILM has performed.
This history storage is enabled by default but can be disabled by setting
`index.lifecycle.history_index_enabled` to `false.`
Resolves#49180
* Make ILMHistoryStore.putAsync truly async (#50403)
This moves the `putAsync` method in `ILMHistoryStore` never to block.
Previously due to the way that the `BulkProcessor` works, it was possible
for `BulkProcessor#add` to block executing a bulk request. This was bad
as we may be adding things to the history store in cluster state update
threads.
This also moves the index creation to be done prior to the bulk request
execution, rather than being checked every time an operation was added
to the queue. This lessens the chance of the index being created, then
deleted (by some external force), and then recreated via a bulk indexing
request.
Resolves#50353
Adjusts the subclasses of `TransportMasterNodeAction` to use their own loggers
instead of the one for the base class.
Relates #50056.
Partial backport of #46431 to 7.x.
This commit refactors the `IndexLifecycleRunner` to split out and
consolidate the number of methods that change state from within ILM. It
adds a new class `IndexLifecycleTransition` that contains a number of
static methods used to modify ILM's state. These methods all return new
cluster states rather than making changes themselves (they can be
thought of as helpers for modifying ILM state).
Rather than having multiple ways to move an index to a particular step
(like `moveClusterStateToStep`, `moveClusterStateToNextStep`,
`moveClusterStateToPreviouslyFailedStep`, etc (there are others)) this
now consolidates those into three with (hopefully) useful names:
- `moveClusterStateToStep`
- `moveClusterStateToErrorStep`
- `moveClusterStateToPreviouslyFailedStep`
In the move, I was also able to consolidate duplicate or redundant
arguments to these functions. Prior to this commit there were many calls
that provided duplicate information (both `IndexMetaData` and
`LifecycleExecutionState` for example) where the duplicate argument
could be derived from a previous argument with no problems.
With this split, `IndexLifecycleRunner` now contains the methods used to
actually run steps as well as the methods that kick off cluster state
updates for state transitions. `IndexLifecycleTransition` contains only
the helpers for constructing new states from given scenarios.
This also adds Javadocs to all methods in both `IndexLifecycleRunner`
and `IndexLifecycleTransition` (this accounts for almost all of the
increase in code lines for this commit). It also makes all methods be as
restrictive in visibility, to limit the scope of where they are used.
This refactoring is part of work towards capturing actions and
transitions that ILM makes, by consolidating and simplifying the places
we make state changes, it will make adding operation auditing easier.
This test must check for state `SUCCESS` as well. `SUCESS` in
`SnapshotsInProgress` means "all data nodes finished snapshotting sucessfully but master must still finalize the snapshot in the repo".
`SUCESS` does not mean that the snapshot is actually fully finished in this object.
You can easily reporduce the scenario in #49303 that has an in-progress snapshot in `SUCCESS` state
by waiting 20s before running the busy assert loop on the snapshot status so that all steps but the blocked
finalization can finish.
Closes#49303
* SLM set the operation mode to RUNNING on first run
Set the SLM operation mode to RUNNING when setting the first SLM lifecycle
policy. Historically, SLM was not decoupled from ILM but now they are
independent components. Setting the SLM operation mode to what the ILM running
mode was when we set the first SLM lifecycle policy was a remain from those
times.
* SLM update package info
* SLM suppress unusued warning
* SLM use logger for the correct class
* SLM Add integration test for operation mode
* Use ESSingleNodeTestCase instead of ESIntegTestCase
(cherry picked from commit 4ad3d93f89d03bf9a25685a990d1a439f33ce0e6)
Signed-off-by: Andrei Dan <andrei.dan@elastic.co>
This commit changes the ThreadContext to just use a regular ThreadLocal
over the lucene CloseableThreadLocal. The CloseableThreadLocal solves
issues with ThreadLocals that are no longer needed during runtime but
in the case of the ThreadContext, we need it for the runtime of the
node and it is typically not closed until the node closes, so we miss
out on the benefits that this class provides.
Additionally by removing the close logic, we simplify code in other
places that deal with exceptions and tracking to see if it happens when
the node is closing.
Closes#42577
This commit wraps the calls to retrieve the current step in a try/catch
so that the exception does not bubble up. Instead, step info is added
containing the exception to the existing step.
Semi-related to #49128
(cherry picked from commit 72530f8a7f40ae1fca3704effb38cf92daf29057)
Signed-off-by: Andrei Dan <andrei.dan@elastic.co>
The logic for `cleanupInProgress()` was backwards everywhere (method itself and
all but one user). Also, we weren't checking it when removing a repository.
This lead to a bug (in the one spot that didn't use the method backwards) that prevented
the cleanup cluster state entry from ever being removed from the cluster state if master
failed over during the cleanup process.
This change corrects the backwards logic, adds a test that makes sure the cleanup
is always removed and adds a check that prevents repository removal during cleanup
to the repositories service.
Also, the failure handling logic in the cleanup action was broken. Repeated invocation would lead to the cleanup being removed from the cluster state even if it was in progress. Fixed by adding a flag that indicates whether or not any removal of the cleanup task from the cluster state must be executed. Sorry for mixing this in here, but I had to fix it in the same PR, as the first test (for master-failover) otherwise would often just delete the blocked cleanup action as a result of a transport master action retry.
When triggered either by becoming master, a new cluster state, or a
periodic schedule, an ILM policy execution through
`maybeRunAsyncAction`, `runPolicyAfterStateChange`, or
`runPeriodicStep` throwing an exception will cause the loop the
terminate. This means that any indices that would have been processed
after the index where the exception was thrown will not be processed by
ILM.
For most execution this is not a problem because the actual running of
steps is protected by a try/catch that moves the index to the ERROR step
in the event of a problem. If an exception occurs prior to step
execution (for example, in fetching and parsing the current
policy/step) however, it causes the loop termination previously
mentioned.
This commit wraps the invocation of the methods specified above in a
try/catch block that provides better logging and does not bubble the
exception up.
The rollover action is now a retryable step (see #48256)
so ILM will keep retrying until it succeeds as opposed to stopping and
moving the execution in the ERROR step.
Fixes#49073
(cherry picked from commit 3ae90898121b43032ec8f3b50514d93a86e14d0f)
Signed-off-by: Andrei Dan <andrei.dan@elastic.co>
# Conflicts:
# x-pack/plugin/ilm/qa/multi-node/src/test/java/org/elasticsearch/xpack/ilm/TimeSeriesLifecycleActionsIT.java
Backport of #48849. Update `.editorconfig` to make the Java settings the
default for all files, and then apply a 2-space indent to all `*.gradle`
files. Then reformat all the files.
When using the move-to-step API, we should reread the phase JSON from
the latest version of the ILM policy. This allows a user to move to the
same step while re-reading the policy's latest version. For example,
when changing rollover criteria.
While manually messing around with some other things I discovered that
we only reread the policy when using the retry API, not the move-to-step
API. This commit changes the move-to-step API to always read the latest
version of the policy.
The loading of `RepositoryData` is not an atomic operation.
It uses a list + get combination of calls.
This lead to accidentally returning an empty repository data
for generations >=0 which can never not exist unless the repository
is corrupted.
In the test #48122 (and other SLM tests) there was a low chance of
running into this concurrent modification scenario and the repository
actually moving two index generations between listing out the
index-N and loading the latest version of it. Since we only keep
two index-N around at a time this lead to unexpectedly absent
snapshots in status APIs.
Fixing the behavior to be more resilient is non-trivial but in the works.
For now I think we should simply throw in this scenario. This will also
help prevent corruption in the unlikely event but possible of running into this
issue in a snapshot create or delete operation on master failover on a
repository like S3 which doesn't have the "no overwrites" protection on
writing a new index-N.
Fixes#48122
Previously this step moved to the forcemerge step, however, if the
machine running the test was fast enough, it would execute the
forcemerge and move to the next step (`segment-count`) so the comparison
would fail. This commit changes the step to be a step that will never go
anywhere else, the terminal step.
Resolves#48761
* ILM Test asserts on the same ilm/_explain output
With the introduction of retryable steps subsequent ilm/_explain calls
can see the state of an ilm cycle move out of the error step. This test
made several assertions assuming that the cycle remains in the error
step so this commit changes the test to make one _explain call and have
all the asserts work on the same ilm state (so subsequent assumptions to
the cycle being in the error step are valid).
* Drop unused field in test.
(cherry picked from commit 44c74bb487151c886a08b27f32b13f7a72056997)
Signed-off-by: Andrei Dan <andrei.dan@elastic.co>