This commit introduces an AbstractSimpleSecurityTransportTestCase for
security transports. This classes provides transport tests that are
specific for security transports. Additionally, it fixes the tests referenced in
#33285.
The source only snapshot drops fully deleted segments before snapshotting
them. In order to compare them we need to drop all fully deleted segments
in the test as well.
Closes#33755
If numWrites is between 2 and 9, we will issue an invalid range because
the from_seq_no is negative. This commit makes sure that numWrites is at
least 10, and adds an explicit test to verify invalid request ranges.
SearchGroupsResolverInMemoryTests was (rarely) fail in a way that
suggests that the server-side delay (100ms) was not enough to trigger
the client-side timeout (5ms).
The server side delay has been increased to try and overcome this.
Resolves: #32913
Previously numeric values in the field_stats created by the
find_file_structure endpoint were always output with a
decimal point. This looked unfriendly and unnatural for
fields that clearly store integer values. This change
converts integer values to type Integer before output in
the file structure field stats.
This PR is the first step to use seq_no to optimize indexing operations.
The idea is to track the max seq_no of either update or delete ops on a
primary, and transfer this information to replicas, and replicas use it
to optimize indexing plan for index operations (with assigned seq_no).
The max_seq_no_of_updates on primary is initialized once when a primary
finishes its local recovery or peer recovery in relocation or being
promoted. After that, the max_seq_no_of_updates is only advanced internally
inside an engine when processing update or delete operations.
Relates #33656
This commit reverts most of #33157 as it introduces another race
condition and breaks a common case of watcher, when the first watch is
added to the system and the index does not exist yet.
This means, that the index will be created, which triggers a reload, but
during this time the put watch operation that triggered this is not yet
indexed, so that both processes finish roughly add the same time and
should not overwrite each other but act complementary.
This commit reverts the logic of cleaning out the ticker engine watches
on start up, as this is done already when the execution is paused -
which also gets paused on the cluster state listener again, as we can be
sure here, that the watches index has not yet been created.
This also adds a new test, that starts a one node cluster and emulates
the case of a non existing watches index and a watch being added, which
should result in proper execution.
Closes#33320
This change adds the OneStatementPerLineCheck to our checkstyle precommit
checks. This rule restricts the number of statements per line to one. The
resoning behind this is that it is very difficult to read multiple statements on
one line. People seem to mostly use it in short lambdas and switch statements in
our code base, but just going through the changes already uncovered some actual
problems in randomization in test code, so I think its worth it.
The job deletion logic was scattered around a few places:
the transport action, the job manager and the deletion task.
Overloading the task with deletion logic also meant extra
dependencies in the core package which should be unnecessary.
This commit consolidates all this logic into the transport action
and replaces the deletion task with a plain one that needs not be
aware of deletion logic.
* Added TRUNCATE function, modified ROUND to accept two parameters instead of one. Made the second parameter optional for both functions.
* Added documentation for both functions.
Removed rules in the grammar that were superfluous, as they
are already "caught" other rules in the same context.
Also switched to exact ambig detection for debug mode
Fixes: #31885
Changes the default of the `node.name` setting to the hostname of the
machine on which Elasticsearch is running. Previously it was the first 8
characters of the node id. This had the advantage of producing a unique
name even when the node name isn't configured but the disadvantage of
being unrecognizable and not being available until fairly late in the
startup process. Of particular interest is that it isn't available until
after logging is configured. This forces us to use a volatile read
whenever we add the node name to the log.
Using the hostname is available immediately on startup and is generally
recognizable but has the disadvantage of not being unique when run on
machines that don't set their hostname or when multiple elasticsearch
processes are run on the same host. I believe that, taken together, it
is better to default to the hostname.
1. Running multiple copies of Elasticsearch on the same node is a fairly
advanced feature. We do it all the as part of the elasticsearch build
for testing but we make sure to set the node name then.
2. That the node.name defaults to some flavor of "localhost" on an
unconfigured box feels like it isn't going to come up too much in
production. I expect most production deployments to at least set the
hostname.
As a bonus, production deployments need no longer set the node name in
most cases. At least in my experience most folks set it to the hostname
anyway.
We currently special-case SynonymFilterFactory and SynonymGraphFilterFactory, which need to
know their predecessors in the analysis chain in order to correctly analyze their synonym lists. This
special-casing doesn't work with Referring filter factories, such as the Multiplexer or Conditional
filters. We also have a number of filters (eg the Multiplexer) that will break synonyms when they
appear before them in a chain, because they produce multiple tokens at the same position.
This commit adds two methods to the TokenFilterFactory interface.
* `getChainAwareTokenFilterFactory()` allows a filter factory to rewrite itself against its preceding
filter chain, or to resolve references to other filters. It replaces `ReferringFilterFactory` and
`CustomAnalyzerProvider.checkAndApplySynonymFilter`, and by default returns `this`.
* `getSynonymFilter()` defines whether or not a filter should be applied when building a synonym
list `Analyzer`. By default it returns `true`.
Fixes#33609
The fix in #33757 introduces some workaround since FilterCodecReader didn't
support unwrapping. This cuts over to a more elegant fix to access the readers
segment infos.
Previously multiple comma separated lists of options where not
recognized correctly which resulted in only the last of them
to be taked into account, e.g.:
For the following query:
SELECT * FROM test WHERE QUERY('search', 'default_field=foo', 'default_operator=and')"
only the `default_operator=and` was finally passed to the ES query.
Fixes: #32602
Instead of having one constructor that accepts all arguments, all parameters
should be provided via setters. Only leader and follower index are required
arguments. This makes using this class in tests and transport client easier.
DAYNAME and MONTHNAME functions tests will be skipped if the right JVM parameter (-Djava.locale.providers=COMPAT) is not used in unit testing environment
Currently a watch execution results in one bulk request, when the
triggered watches are written into the that index, that need to be
executed. However the update of the watch status, the creation of the
watch history entry as well as the deletion of the triggered watches
index are all single document operations.
This can have quite a negative impact, once you are executing a lot of
watches, as each execution results in 4 documents writes, three of them
being single document actions.
This commit switches to a bulk processor instead of a single document
action for writing watch history entries and deleting triggered watch
entries. However the defaults are to run synchronous as before because
the number of concurrent requests is set to 0. This also fixes a bug,
where the deletion of the triggered watch entry was done asynchronously.
However if you have a high number of watches being executed, you can
configure watcher to delete the triggered watches entries as well as
writing the watch history entries via bulk requests.
The triggered watches deletions should still happen in a timely manner,
where as the history entries might actually be bound by size as one
entry can easily have 20kb.
The following settings have been added:
- xpack.watcher.bulk.actions (default 1)
- xpack.watcher.bulk.concurrent_requests (default 0)
- xpack.watcher.bulk.flush_interval (default 1s)
- xpack.watcher.bulk.size (default 1mb)
The drawback of this is of course, that on a node outage you might end
up with watch history entries not being written or watches needing to be
executing again because they have not been deleted from the triggered
watches index. The window of these two cases increases configuring the bulk processor to wait to reach certain thresholds.
The following stats are being kept track of:
1) The total number of times that auto following a leader index succeed.
2) The total number of times that auto following a leader index failed.
3) The total number of times that fetching a remote cluster state failed.
4) The most recent 256 auto follow failures per auto leader index
(e.g. create_and_follow api call fails) or cluster alias
(e.g. fetching remote cluster state fails).
Each auto follow run now produces a result that is being used to update
the stats being kept track of in AutoFollowCoordinator.
Relates to #33007
* Implement xpack.monitoring.elasticsearch.collection.enabled setting
* Fixing line lengths
* Updating constructor calls in test
* Removing unused import
* Fixing line lengths in test classes
* Make monitoringService.isElasticsearchCollectionEnabled() return true for tests
* Remove wrong expectation
* Adding unit tests for new flag to be false
* Fixing line wrapping/indentation for better readability
* Adding docs
* Fixing logic in ClusterStatsCollector::shouldCollect
* Rebasing with master and resolving conflicts
* Simplifying implementation by gating scheduling
* Doc fixes / improvements
* Making methods package private
* Fixing wording
* Fixing method access
This PR removes fields that are not actually used by the Monitoring UI. This will greatly simplify the eventual migration to using Metricbeat for monitoring Elasticsearch (see https://github.com/elastic/beats/pull/8260#discussion_r215885868 for more context and discussion around removing these fields from ES collection).
* [CCR] Do not unnecessarily wrap fetch exception in a ElasticSearch exception and
properly map fetch_exception.exception field as object.
The extra caused by level is not necessary here:
```
"fetch_exceptions": [
{
"from_seq_no": 1,
"retries": 106,
"exception": {
"type": "exception",
"reason": "[index1] IndexNotFoundException[no such index]",
"caused_by": {
"type": "index_not_found_exception",
"reason": "no such index",
"index_uuid": "_na_",
"index": "index1"
}
}
}
],
```
When a leader index is created, it may not have a mapping yet.
Currently if you follow such an index the shard follow tasks fail with
NoSuchElementException, because they expect a single mapping.
This commit fixes that, by allowing that a leader index does not yet have
a mapping.
We can't rely on the leaf reader ordinal in a wrapped reader since
it might not correspond to the ordinal in the SegmentInfos for it's
SegmentCommitInfo.
Relates to #32844Closes#33689Closes#33755