The `rewrite` option has been removed from the parser with
commit da5fa6c4 and won't parse anymore, however we still
have a setter for it in the builder that gets rendered out
when used and potentially leads to parsing errors. This PR
removes the setter for the unsupported `rewrite` option.
The `rewrite` option has been removed from the parser with
commit da5fa6c4 and won't parse anymore, however we still
have a setter for it in the builder that gets rendered out
when used and potentially leads to parsing errors. This PR
removes the setter for the unsupported `rewrite` option.
This change makes modules added by plugins come before others, as it was
before #12783. The order of configuration, and thereby binding, happens
in the order modules are received, and without this change, some plugins
can get *insane* guice errors (500mb stack trace).
* makes most classes final and package private
* removes duplicate and confusing multiple entry points
* adds javadocs to some classes like JarHell,Security
* adds a public class BootStrapInfo that exposes any stats
needed by outside code.
When we create a plugin's classloader, we should allow it to register things in
the lucene SPI (registry of Tokenizers, TokenFilters, CharFilters, Codec,
PostingsFormat, DocValuesFormat).
Plugins should be able to do this so they can extend Lucene.
We do check if a directory is present and then open a dir stream on
it. Yet the file can be concurrrently deleted which is OK but we fail
with a hard exception. This change tries to open the dir directly (listing via stream)
and catches NoSuchFileEx | FNFEx.
This commit enforces that at most a single settings file is found. If
multiple settings files are found, a SettingsException will be thrown
Closes#13042
This commit fixes an issue that was causing Elasticsearch to silently
ignore settings files that contain garbage. The underlying issue was
swallowing an SettingsException under the assumption that the only
reason that an exception could be throw was due to the settings file
not existing (in this case the IOException would be the cause of the
swallowed SettingsException). This assumption is mistaken as an
IOException could also be thrown due to an access error or a read
error. Additionally, a SettingsException could be thrown exactly
because garbage was found in the settings file. We should instead
explicitly check that the settings file exists, and bomb on an
exception thrown for any reason.
Closes#13028