This commit overrides the stdout and stderr print streams to be
redirected to the main elasticsearch.log file. While the Elasticsearch
project ensures stdout and stderr are not written to, the jdk or 3rd
party libs may do this, which can be unexepected for users used to
looking the elasticsearch log.
closes#50156
If a worktree is used, say for 7.x, and packaging tests are run, the
build within the VM will fail due to the parent checkout not being
accessible. This is because the path of the worktree is for the host
systtem, not the VM. This commit makes the git info unknown, just as if
the .git directory did not exist.
It is the job of the http server transport to release the request in the handler
but the mock fails to do so since we never override `incomingRequest`.
* 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
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.
Instead, we can use the cursor capablity of journald to retrieve journal
entries that occur only after a certain cursor. This avoids any effort
to interfere with the underlying file operations of journald.
Wait for the cluster to have settled down and have the same accepted version on all nodes before
executing and cancelling request so that a slow CS accept on one node doesn't make it fall behind
and then get sent the full CS because of the diff-version mismatch, breaking the mechanics of this test.
Closes#51308
Added node closed exception to the retryable remote exceptions as it's possible to run into this exception instead of a connect exception when the master node is just shutting down but still responding to requests.
When building clusters for integration tests, today we install plugins
sequentially. We recently introduced the ability to install plugins in a
single invocation of the install plugin command. Using this can save
substantial time starting up JVMs. This commit changes the build
infrastructure to install multiple plugins at once when building
clusters for integration tests.
For the docs integration tests in particular, where we install many
plugins, this change makes a substantial difference. On my laptop, prior
to this change, installing the plugins sequentially took 115
seconds. After this change, it takes 14 seconds.
* 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
* Fix Inconsistent Shard Failure Count in Failed Snapshots
This fix was necessary to allow for the below test enhancement:
We were not adding shard failure entries to a failed snapshot for those
snapshot entries that were never attempted because the snapshot failed during
the init stage and wasn't partial. This caused the never attempted snapshots
to be counted towards the successful shard count which seems wrong and
broke repository consistency tests.
Also, this change adjusts snapshot resiliency tests to run another snapshot
at the end of each test run to guarantee a correct `index.latest` blob exists
after each run.
Closes#47550
The way it was originally written, it sounds like
we are boosting at query time.
Of course, the effect is at query time,
but the point here is that boosting is done at index time
* [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 regex for the response to `GET _cat/health?v` in `getting-started.asciidoc`
requires `max_task_wait_time` to match `(-|\\d+(micros|ms|s))`, which doesn't
match times such as `3.9ms` that contain a decimal point. This commit adjusts
the regex to match times formatted like this too.
Fixes#47537
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>
The order indices are returned in in the metadata is not guaranteed.
This commit accounts for any possible ordering in assertions about
hidden indices.
closes#51340
It is permitted for nodes to accept transport connections at addresses other
than their publish address, which allows a good deal of flexibility when
configuring discovery. However, it is not unusual for users to misconfigure
nodes to pick a publish address which is inaccessible to other nodes. We see
this happen a lot if the nodes are on different networks separated by a proxy,
or if the nodes are running in Docker with the wrong kind of network config.
In this case we offer no useful feedback to the user unless they enable
TRACE-level logs. It's particularly tricky to diagnose because if we test
connectivity between the nodes (using their discovery addresses) then all will
appear well.
This commit adds a WARN-level log if this kind of misconfiguration is detected:
the probe connection has succeeded (to indicate that we are really talking to a
healthy Elasticsearch node) but the followup connection attempt fails.
It also tidies up some loose ends in `HandshakingTransportAddressConnector`,
removing some TODOs that need not be completed, and registering its
accidentally-unregistered timeout settings.
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
We were loading `RepositoryData` twice during snapshot initialization,
redundantly checking if a snapshot existed already.
The first snapshot existence check is somewhat redundant because a snapshot could be
created between loading `RepositoryData` and updating the cluster state with the `INIT`
state snapshot entry.
Also, it is much safer to do the subsequent checks for index existence in the repo and
and the presence of old version snapshots once the `INIT` state entry prevents further
snapshots from being created concurrently.
While the current state of things will never lead to corruption on a concurrent snapshot
creation, it could result in a situation (though unlikely) where all the snapshot's work
is done on the data nodes, only to find out that the repository generation was off during
snapshot finalization, failing there and leaving a bunch of dead data in the repository
that won't be used in a subsequent snapshot (because the shard generation was never referenced
due to the failed snapshot finalization).
Note: This is a step on the way to parallel repository operations by making snapshot related CS
and repo related CS more tightly correlated.
This reverts commit c7fd24ca1569a809b499caf34077599e463bb8d6.
Now that JDK-8236582 is fixed in JDK 14 EA, we can revert the workaround.
Relates #50523 and #50512