This commit creates TemplateScript and associated classes so that
templates no longer need a special ScriptService.compileTemplate method.
The execute() method is equivalent to the old run() method.
relates #20426
* All public methods starting with get will be added as local variables
to the execute method.
* The execute method on a ScriptContext must be both public and
abstract. This method will be implemented by the Painless compiler.
* A static list of parameter names for the execute method must be
provided since the names will be eliminated at runtime.
* The uses$ methods will still be implemented as before.
* A single constructor may be provided by the ScriptContext. This
constructor will be overridden by the Painless compiler to include the
exact same arguments. This allows instances of a Painless script to
potentially contain state. If a constructor is not provided it is
assumed the default constructor with no arguments will be used.
This removes the `accumulateExceptions()` method (and its usage) from `TransportNodesAction` and `TransportTasksAction`, forcing both transport actions to always accumulate exceptions.
Without this change, some transport actions, like `TransportNodesStatsAction` would respond in very unexpected ways by returning no response due to some failure, but instead of returning an
error the response would simply be empty: no response and no error.
This results in a very trappy response structure where users can check for an error, then attempt to blindly use the response when no error is returned.
* Adds nodes usage API to monitor usages of actions
The nodes usage API has 2 main endpoints
/_nodes/usage and /_nodes/{nodeIds}/usage return the usage statistics
for all nodes and the specified node(s) respectively.
At the moment only one type of usage statistics is available, the REST
actions usage. This records the number of times each REST action class is
called and when the nodes usage api is called will return a map of rest
action class name to long representing the number of times each of the action
classes has been called.
Still to do:
* [x] Create usage service to store usage statistics
* [x] Record usage in REST layer
* [x] Add Transport Actions
* [x] Add REST Actions
* [x] Tests
* [x] Documentation
* Rafactors UsageService so counts are done by the handlers
* Fixing up docs tests
* Adds a name to all rest actions
* Addresses review comments
This change ensures that there is a single parent-join field defined per mapping.
The verification is done through the addition of a special field mapper (MetaJoinFieldMapper) with a unique name (_parent_join) that is registered to the mapping service
when the first parent-join field is defined. If a new parent-join is added, this field mapper will clash with the new one and the update will fail.
This change also simplifies the parent join fetch sub phase by retrieving the parent-join field without iterating on all fields in the mapping.
This commit adds an optional `context` url parameter to the put stored
script request. When a context is specified, the script is compiled
against that context before storing, as a validation the script will
work when used in that context.
* Introduce ParentJoinFieldMapper, a field mapper that creates parent/child relation within documents of the same index
This change adds a new field mapper named ParentJoinFieldMapper. This mapper is a replacement for the ParentFieldMapper but instead of using the types in the mapping
it uses an internal field to materialize parent/child relation within a single index.
This change also adds a fetch sub phase that automatically retrieves the join name (parent or child name) and the parent id for child documents in the response hit fields.
The compatibility with `has_parent`, `has_child` queries and `children` agg will be added in a follow up.
Relates #20257
ScriptContexts currently understand a FactoryType that can produce
instances of the script InstanceType. However, for search scripts, this
does not work as we have the concept of LeafSearchScript that is created
per lucene segment. This commit effectively renames the existing
SearchScript class into SearchScript.LeafFactory, which is a new,
optional, class that can be defined within a ScriptContext.
LeafSearchScript is effectively renamed back into SearchScript. This
change allows the model of stateless factory -> stateful factory ->
script instance to continue, but in a generic way that any script
context may take advantage of.
relates #20426
DateProcessor's DateFormat UNIX format parser resulted in
a floating point rounding error when parsing certain stringed
epoch times. Now Double.parseDouble is used, preserving the
intented input.
This commit adds a `doc_count` field to the response body of Matrix
Stats aggregation. It exposes the number of documents involved in
the computation of statistics, a value that can already be retrieved using
the method MatrixStats.getDocCount() in the Java API.
Removes the need for the `_UNRELEASED` suffix on versions by detecting if a version should be unreleased or not based on the versions around it. This should make it simpler to automate the task of adding a new version label.
This commit renames the concept of the "compiled type" to a "factory
type", along with all implementations of this class to be named Factory.
This brings it inline with the classes purpose.
This commit adds collection of all contexts to the parameters of
getScriptEngine. This will allow script engines like painless to
precache extra information about the contexts.
This is a simple refactoring to move the context definitions into the
type that they use. While we have multiple context names for the same
class at the moment, this will eventually become one ScriptContext per
instance type, so the pattern of a static member on the interface called
CONTEXT can be used. This commit also moves the consolidated list of
contexts provided by core ES into ScriptModule.
This commit changes the compile method of ScriptEngine to be generic in
the same way it is on ScriptService. This moves the shim of handling the
two existing context classes into each script engine, so that each
engine can be worked on independently to convert to real handling of
contexts.
This commit modifies the compile method of ScriptService to be context
aware. The ScriptContext is now a generic class which contains both the
instance type and compiled type for a script. Instance type may be
stateful (for example, pre loading field information for the index a
script will execute on, like in expressions), while the compiled type is
stateless and used to construct instance type instances. This change is
only a first step to cutover ScriptService to the new paradigm. It only
converts callers to the script service, and has a small shim to wrap
compilation from the script engines to support the current two fixed
instance types, SearchScript and ExecutableScript.
Since groovy was removed, we no longer have any ScriptEngines with
resources to release. We may want to keep the option open for a script
engine to close resources, but this would not be common. This commit
adds a default implementation to ScriptEngine for `close()` to reduce
the boiler plate that must be added for a ScriptEngine implementation.
This will be useful for the high level client to add support for the matrix stats aggregation, as we will ship with this jar by default like we do for parent-join-client which is aligned with distributing core with the modules already included.
Relates to #24796
This commit moves the handling of nested and parent/child inner hits to specialized classes that can be defined outside of ES core.
InnerHitBuilderContext is now used by the parent query (nested or hasChild, ...) to build the sub context from the InnerHitBuilder definition.
BWC is also ensured so that nodes in previous versions can still send/receive inner hits to/from this version.
Relates #20257
As we work towards contexts implying the return type of compilation, we
first need ScriptContext to not be an enum. This commit removes the
Standard enum and Plugin subclass of ScriptContext.
ScriptEngine implementations have an overridable method to indicate they
are safe to use as inline scripts. Since groovy was removed fro 6.0,
there are no longer any implementations which used the default false
value. Furthermore, the value was not actually read anywhere. This
commit removes the method. The ScriptEngineRegistry was also no longer
necessary as it only was used to build a map from language to engine.
Allows plugins to register pre-configured tokenizers. Much
of the decisions are the same as those in #24223, #24572,
and #24223. This only migrates the lowercase tokenizer but
I figure that is a good start because it proves out the features.
This change removes the field data specialization needed for the parent field and replaces it with
a simple DocValuesIndexFieldData. The underlying global ordinals are retrieved via a new function called
IndexOrdinalsFieldData#getOrdinalMap.
The children aggregation is also modified to use a simple WithOrdinals value source rather than the deleted WithOrdinals.Parent.
Relates #20257
Shared settings were added intially to allow the few common settings
names across aws plugins. However, in 6.0 these settings have been
removed. The last use was in netty, but since 6.0 also has the netty 3
modules removed, there is no longer a need for the shared property. This
commit removes the shared setting property.
Approaching the release of 6.0 we need to sort out the usage of
`Version#minimumCompatibilityVersion` which was still set to 5.0.0.
Now this change moves it to the latest released version of 5.x (5.4 at this point)
to ensure we are compatible with the latest minor of the previous major. This change
also removes all the `_UNRELEASED` from the versions that where released and drops versions
that were never released and are not expected to be released (bugfixes in minors that are not
the latest in the previous major).
We've switched to supporting only `yml` files but anyone who didn't
notice will commit a `yaml` file which won't be executed
which is bad because it is easy not to notice. The test to catch this is
simple enough that I think it is worth adding just to warn folks about
their mistake.
These tests are broken because I added them with the `yml` extension
and didn't realize that we weren't running tests with that extension
until we merged #24659. I used that extension in anticipation of #24659
but didn't verify that the tests were actually running. Ooops!
Closes#24734
This commit renames all rest test files to use the .yml extension
instead of .yaml. This way the extension used within all of
elasticsearch for yaml is consistent.
Moves the remaining preconfigured token figured into the analysis-common module. There were a couple of tests in core that depended on the pre-configured token filters so I had to touch them:
* `GetTermVectorsCheckDocFreqIT` depended on `type_as_payload` but didn't do anything important with it. I dropped the dependency. Then I moved the test to a single node test case because we're trying to cut down on the number of `ESIntegTestCase` subclasses.
* `AbstractTermVectorsTestCase` and its subclasses depended on `type_as_payload`. I dropped their usage of the token filter and added an integration test for the termvectors API that uses `type_as_payload` to the `analysis-common` module.
* `AnalysisModuleTests` expected a few pre-configured token filtes be registered by default. They aren't any more so I dropped this assertion. We assert that the `CommonAnalysisPlugin` registers these pre-built token filters in `CommonAnalysisFactoryTests`
* `SearchQueryIT` and `SuggestSearchIT` had tests that depended on the specific behavior of the token filters so I moved the tests to integration tests in `analysis-common`.
Today when an index is `read-only` the index is also blocked from
being deleted which sometimes is undesired since in-order to make
changes to a cluster indices must be deleted to free up space. This is
a likely scenario in a hosted environment when disk-space is limited to switch
indices read-only but allow deletions to free up space.
Range queries with now based date ranges were previously not allowed,
but since #23921 these queries were allowed. This change should really
fix range queries with now based date ranges.
Template script engines (mustache, the only one) currently return a
BytesReference that users must know is utf8 encoded. This commit
modifies all callers and mustache to have the template engine return
String. This is much simpler, and does not require decoding in order to
use (for example, in ingest).
Netty removed a logging guarded we added to prevent a scary logging
message. We added a hack to work around this. They've added the guard
back, so we can remove the hack now.
When constructing an array list, if we know the size of the list in
advance (because we are adding objects to it derived from another list),
we should size the array list to the appropriate capacity in advance (to
avoid resizing allocations). This commit does this in various places.
Relates #24439
* Add parent-join module
This change adds a new module named `parent-join`.
The goal of this module is to provide a replacement for the `_parent` field but as a first step this change only moves the `has_child`, `has_parent` queries and the `children` aggregation to this module.
These queries and aggregations are no longer in core but they are deployed by default as a module.
Relates #20257
Today we prune transport handlers in TransportService when a node is disconnected.
This can cause connections to starve in the TransportService if the connection is
opened as a short living connection ie. without sharing the connection to a node
via registering in the transport itself. This change now moves to pruning based
on the connections cache key to ensure we notify handlers as soon as the connection
is closed for all connections not just for registered connections.
Relates to #24632
Relates to #24575
Relates to #24557
If the request asks for the `_source` stored field then don't
duplicate it when forcing the `_source` parameter to onto the
request for reindex-from-remote from versions before 1.0.
Closes#24628
This allows other plugins to use a client to call the functionality
that is in the core modules without duplicating the logic.
Plugins can now safely send the request and response classes via the
client even if the requests are executed locally. All relevant classes
are loaded by the core classloader such that plugins can share them.
This is re-adds this commit that was revered in 952feb58e4
This allows other plugins to use a client to call the functionality
that is in the core modules without duplicating the logic.
Plugins can now safely send the request and response classes via the
client even if the requests are executed locally. All relevant classes
are loaded by the core classloader such that plugins can share them.
Adds tests for reindex-from-remote for the latest 2.4, 1.7, and
0.90 releases. 2.4 and 1.7 are fairly popular versions but 0.90
is a point of pride.
This fixes any issues those tests revealed.
Closes#23828Closes#24520
There are now three public static method to build instances of
PreConfiguredTokenFilter and the ctor is private. I chose static
methods instead of constructors because those allow us to change
out the implementation returned if we so desire.
Relates to #23658
The max concurrent searches logic is complex and we shouldn't duplicate that in multi search template api,
so we should template each individual template search request and then delegate to multi search api.
The max concurrent searches logic is complex and we shouldn't duplicate that in multi search template api,
so we should template each individual template search request and then delegate to multi search api.
This commit renames ScriptEngineService to ScriptEngine. It is often
confusing because we have the ScriptService, and then
ScriptEngineService implementations, but the latter are not services as
we see in other places in elasticsearch.
This changes the way we register pre-configured token filters so that
plugins can declare them and starts to move all of the pre-configured
token filters out of core. It doesn't finish the job because doing
so would make the change unreviewably large. So this PR includes
a shim that keeps the "old" way of registering pre-configured token
filters around.
The Lowercase token filter is special because there is a "special"
interaction between it and the lowercase tokenizer. I'm not sure
exactly what to do about it so for now I'm leaving it alone with
the intent of figuring out what to do with it in a followup.
This also renames these pre-configured token filters from
"pre-built" to "pre-configured" because that seemed like a more
descriptive name.
This is a part of #23658
In pre-release versions of Elasticsearch 5.0.0, users were subject to
log messages of the form "your platform does not.*reliably.*potential
system instability". This is because we disable Netty from being unsafe,
and Netty throws up this scary info-level message when unsafe is
unavailable, even if it was unavailable because the user requested that
it be unavailabe. Users were rightly confused, and concerned. So, we
contributed a guard to Netty to prevent this log message from showing up
when unsafe was explicitly disabled. This guard shipped with all
versions of Netty that shipped starting with Elasticsearch
5.0.0. Unfortunately, this guard was lost in an unrelated refactoring
and now with the 4.1.10.Final upgrade, users will again see this
message. This commit is a hack around this until we can get a fix
upstream again.
Relates #24469
This change makes the request builder code-path same as `Client#execute`. The request builder used to return a `ListenableActionFuture` when calling execute, which allows to associate listeners with the returned future. For async execution though it is recommended to use the `execute` method that accepts an `ActionListener`, like users would do when using `Client#execute`.
Relates to #24412
Relates to #9201
This adds `-XX:-OmitStackTraceInFastThrow` to the JVM arguments
which *should* prevent the JVM from omitting stack traces on
common exception sites. Even though these sites are common, we'd
still like the exceptions to debug them.
This also adds the flag when running tests and adapts some tests
that had workarounds for the absense of the flag.
Closes#24376
Netty uses the number of processors for sizing various resources (e.g.,
thread pools, buffer pools, etc.). However, it uses the runtime number
of available processors which might not match the configured number of
processors as set in Elasticsearch to limit the number of threads (for
example, in Docker containers). A new feature was added to Netty that
enables configuring the number of processors Netty should see for sizing
this various resources. This commit takes advantage of this feature to
set this number of available processors to be equal to the configured
number of processors set in Elasticsearch.
Relates #24420
* Fix wrong delegation to constructors when compiling lambdas with method references to ctors. Also remove the get$lambda factory.
* Cleanup code and remove unneeded transformations between binary and internal class names (uses ASM Type class instead)
* Cleanup Exception handling
* Simplification by moving the type adaption to the outside
* Remove STATIC access flag from our Lambda class (not required and also officially not allowed)
* Move the lambda counter to the classloader, so we have a per-script lambda ID
* Change Codesource of generated lambdas to be consistent
This adds the `index.mapping.single_type` setting, which enforces that indices
have at most one type when it is true. The default value is true for 6.0+ indices
and false for old indices.
Relates #15613
The one argument ctor for `Script` creates a script with the
default language but most usages of are for testing and either
don't care about the language or are for use with
`MockScriptEngine`. This replaces most usages of the one argument
ctor on `Script` with calls to `ESTestCase#mockScript` to make
it clear that the tests don't need the default scripting language.
I've also factored out some copy and pasted script generation
code into a single place. I would have had to change that code
to use `mockScript` anyway, so it was easier to perform the
refactor.
Relates to #16314
Another step down the road to dropping the
lucene-analyzers-common dependency from core.
Note that this removes some tests that no longer compile from
core. I played around with adding them to the analysis-common
module where they would compile but we already test these in
the tests generated from the example usage in the documentation.
I'm not super happy with the way that `requriesAnalysisSettings`
works with regards to plugins. I think it'd be fairly bug-prone
for plugin authors to use. But I'm making it visible as is for
now and I'll rethink later.
A part of #23658
The percolator doesn't close the IndexReader of the memory index any more.
Prior to 2.x the percolator had its own SearchContext (PercolatorContext) that did this,
but that was removed when the percolator was refactored as part of the 5.0 release.
I think an alternative way to fix this is to let percolator not use the bitset and fielddata caches,
that way we prevent the memory leak.
Closes#24108
It looks like auto-complete gave us a nasty surprise here with
Logger#equals being invoked instead of Logger#error swallowing the
absolute worst-possible level of a log message. This commit fixes the
invocation.
This commit adds a compileTemplate method to the ScriptService.
Eventually this will be used to easily cutover all consumers to a new
TemplateService.
relates #16314
Replaces LambdaMetaFactory with LambdaBootstrap, a custom solution for lambdas in Painless using a design similar to LambdaMetaFactory, but allows for custom adaptation of types which recent changes to LambdaMetaFactory no longer allowed.
ScriptService has two executable methods, one which takes a
CompiledScript, which is similar to search, and one that takes a raw
Script and both compiles and returns an ExecutableScript for it. The
latter is not needed, and the call sites which used one or the other
were mixed. This commit removes the extra executable method in favor of
callers first calling compile, then executable.
The unwrap method was leftover from support javascript and python. Since
those languages are removed in 6.0, this commit removes the unwrap
feature from scripts.
Start moving built in analysis components into the new analysis-common
module. The goal of this project is:
1. Remove core's dependency on lucene-analyzers-common.jar which should
shrink the dependencies for transport client and high level rest client.
2. Prove that analysis plugins can do all the "built in" things by moving all
"built in" behavior to a plugin.
3. Force tests not to depend on any oddball analyzer behavior. If tests
need anything more than the standard analyzer they can use the mock
analyzer provided by Lucene's test infrastructure.
`script_stack` is super useful when debugging Painless scripts
because it skips all the "weird" stuff involved that obfuscates
where the actual error is. It skips Painless's internals and
call site bootstrapping.
It works fine, but it didn't have many tests. This converts a
test that we had for line numbers into a test for the
`script_stack`. The line numbers test was an indirect test
for `script_stack`.
This change simplifies how the rest test runner finds test files and
removes all leniency. Previously multiple prefixes and suffixes would
be tried, and tests could exist inside or outside of the classpath,
although outside of the classpath never quite worked. Now only classpath
tests are supported, and only one resource prefix is supported,
`/rest-api-spec/tests`.
closes#20240
We'd like to be able to support context-sensitive whitelists in
Painless but we can't now because the whitelist is a static thing.
This begins to de-static the whitelist, in particular removing
the static keyword from most of the methods on `Definition` and
plumbing the static instance into the appropriate spots as though
it weren't static. Once we de-static all the methods we should be
able to fairly simply build context-sensitive whitelists.
The only "fun" bit of this is that I added another layer in the
chain of methods that bootstraps `def` calls. Instead of running
`invokedynamic` directly on `DefBootstrap` we now `invokedynamic`
`$bootstrapDef` on the script itself loads the `Definition` that
the script was compiled against and then calls `DefBootstrap`.
I chose to put `Definition` into `Locals` so I didn't have to
change the signature of all the `analyze` methods. I could have
do it another way, but that seems ok for now.
We want to upgrade to Lucene 7 ahead of time in order to be able to check whether it causes any trouble to Elasticsearch before Lucene 7.0 gets released. From a user perspective, the main benefit of this upgrade is the enhanced support for sparse fields, whose resource consumption is now function of the number of docs that have a value rather than the total number of docs in the index.
Some notes about the change:
- it includes the deprecation of the `disable_coord` parameter of the `bool` and `common_terms` queries: Lucene has removed support for coord factors
- it includes the deprecation of the `index.similarity.base` expert setting, since it was only useful to configure coords and query norms, which have both been removed
- two tests have been marked with `@AwaitsFix` because of #23966, which we intend to address after the merge
The JVM caches `Integer` objects. This is known. A test in Painless
was relying on the JVM not caching the particular integer `1000`.
It turns out that when you provide `-XX:+AggressiveOpts` the JVM
*does* cache `1000`, causing the test to fail when that is
specified.
This replaces `1000` with a randomly selected integer that we test
to make sure *isn't* cached by the JVM. *Hopefully* this test is
good enough. It relies on the caching not changing in between when
we check that the value isn't cached and when we run the painless
code. The cache now is a simple array but there is nothing
preventing it from changing. If it does change in a way that thwarts
this test then the test fail fail again. At least when that happens
the next person can see the comment about how it is important
that the integer isn't cached and can follow that line of inquiry.
Closes#24041
When indexing a document via the bulk API where IDs can be explicitly
specified, we currently accept an empty ID. This is problematic because
such a document can not be obtained via the get API. Instead, we should
rejected these requets as accepting them could be a dangerous form of
leniency. Additionally, we already have a way of specifying
auto-generated IDs and that is to not explicitly specify an ID so we do
not need a second way. This commit rejects the individual requests where
ID is specified but empty.
Relates #24118
This commit makes closing a ReleasableBytesStreamOutput release the underlying BigArray so
that we can use try-with-resources with these streams and avoid leaking memory by not returning
the BigArray. As part of this change, the ReleasableBytesStreamOutput adds protection to only
release the BigArray once.
In order to make some of the changes cleaner, the ReleasableBytesStream interface has been
removed. The BytesStream interface is changed to a abstract class so that we can use it as a
useable return type for a new method, Streams#flushOnCloseStream. This new method wraps a
given stream and overrides the close method so that the stream is simply flushed and not closed.
This behavior is used in the TcpTransport when compression is used with a
ReleasableBytesStreamOutput as we need to close the compressed stream to ensure all of the data
is written from this stream. Closing the compressed stream will try to close the underlying stream
but we only want to flush so that all of the written bytes are available.
Additionally, an error message method added in the BytesRestResponse did not use a builder
provided by the channel and instead created its own JSON builder. This changes that method to use
the channel builder and in turn the bytes stream output that is managed by the channel.
Note, this commit differs from 6bfecdf921 in that it updates
ReleasableBytesStreamOutput to handle the case of the BigArray decreasing in size, which changes
the reference to the BigArray. When the reference is changed, the releasable needs to be updated
otherwise there could be a leak of bytes and corruption of data in unrelated streams.
This reverts commit afd45c1432, which reverted #23572.
This commit collapses the SyncBulkRequestHandler and
AsyncBulkRequestHandler into a single BulkRequestHandler. The new
handler executes a bulk request and awaits for the completion if the
BulkProcessor was configured with a concurrentRequests setting of 0.
Otherwise the execution happens asynchronously.
As part of this change the Retry class has been refactored.
withSyncBackoff and withAsyncBackoff have been replaced with two
versions of withBackoff. One method takes a listener that will be
called on completion. The other method returns a future that will been
complete on request completion.
This commit skips the two Painless tests
EqualsTests#testBranchEqualsDefAndPrimitive and
EqualsTests#testBranchNotEqualsDefAndPrimitive on Windows as the tests
are repeatedly failing there.
The getProperty method is an internal method needed to run pipeline aggregations and retrieve info by path from the aggs tree. It is not needed in the MultiBucketsAggregation.Bucket interface, which is returned to users running aggregations from the transport client. The method is moved to the InternalMultiBucketAggregation class as that's where it belongs.
reindex_from_remote was using `TimeValue#toString` to generate the
scroll timeout which is bad because that generates fractional
time values that are useful for people but bad for Elasticsearch
which doesn't like to parse them. This switches it to using
`TimeValue#getStringRep` which spits out whole time values.
Closes to #23945
Makes #23828 even more desirable
Before now ranges where forbidden, because the percolator query itself could get cached and then the percolator queries with now ranges that should no longer match, incorrectly will continue to match.
By disabling caching when the `percolator` is being used, the percolator can now correctly support range queries with now based ranges.
I think this is the right tradeoff. The percolator query is likely to not be the same between search requests and disabling range queries with now ranges really disabled people using the percolator for their use cases.
Also fixed an issue that existed in the percolator fieldmapper, it was unable to find forbidden queries inside `dismax` queries.
Closes#23859
This commit modifies the BulkProcessor to be decoupled from the
client implementation. Instead it just takes a
BiConsumer<BulkRequest, ActionListener<BulkResponse>> that executes
the BulkRequest.
This commit makes closing a ReleasableBytesStreamOutput release the underlying BigArray so
that we can use try-with-resources with these streams and avoid leaking memory by not returning
the BigArray. As part of this change, the ReleasableBytesStreamOutput adds protection to only release the BigArray once.
In order to make some of the changes cleaner, the ReleasableBytesStream interface has been
removed. The BytesStream interface is changed to a abstract class so that we can use it as a
useable return type for a new method, Streams#flushOnCloseStream. This new method wraps a
given stream and overrides the close method so that the stream is simply flushed and not closed.
This behavior is used in the TcpTransport when compression is used with a
ReleasableBytesStreamOutput as we need to close the compressed stream to ensure all of the data
is written from this stream. Closing the compressed stream will try to close the underlying stream
but we only want to flush so that all of the written bytes are available.
Additionally, an error message method added in the BytesRestResponse did not use a builder
provided by the channel and instead created its own JSON builder. This changes that method to use the channel builder and in turn the bytes stream output that is managed by the channel.
This commit renames the random ASCII helper methods in ESTestCase. This
is because this method ultimately uses the random ASCII methods from
randomized runner, but these methods actually only produce random
strings generated from [a-zA-Z].
Relates #23886
This commit changes the listener passed to sendMessage from a Runnable
to a ActionListener.
This change also removes IOException from the sendMessage signature.
That signature is misleading as it allows implementers to assume an
exception will be thrown in case of failure. That does not happen due
to Netty's async nature.
As the query of a search request defaults to match_all,
calling _delete_by_query without an explicit query may
result in deleting all data.
In order to protect users against falling into that
pitfall, this commit adds a check to require the explicit
setting of a query.
Closes#23629
The current rest backcompat tests, which run against a mixed cluster of
5.x and 6.0 nodes, depend on snapshot builds of 5.x. However, this has
the potential for inconsistency that results in CI failures, and happens
quite often, whenever some backcompat logic is added to 5.x, but the bwc
test on master fails because the 5.x code has not yet been published as
a snapshot.
This change creates a git clone of the 5.x branch,
builds the zip distribution, and ties that into gradle substitutions for
the 5.x version.
Removed `parse(String index, String type, String id, BytesReference source)` in DocumentMapper.java and replaced all of its use in Test files with `parse(SourceToParse source)`.
`parse(String index, String type, String id, BytesReference source)` was only used in test files and never in the main code so it was removed. All of the test files that used it was then modified to use `parse(SourceToParse source)` method that existing in DocumentMapper.java
Without this change, if write a script with multiple regexes
*sometimes* the lexer will decide to look at them like one
big regex and then some trailing garbage. Like this discuss post:
https://discuss.elastic.co/t/error-with-the-split-function-in-painless-script/79021
```
def val = /\\\\/.split(ctx._source.event_data.param17);
if (val[2] =~ /\\./) {
def val2 = /\\./.split(val[2]);
ctx._source['user_crash'] = val2[0]
} else {
ctx._source['user_crash'] = val[2]
}
```
The error message you get from the lexer is `lexer_no_viable_alt_exception`
right after the *second* regex.
With this change each regex is just a single regex like it ought to be.
As a bonus, while looking into this issue I found that the error
reporting for regexes wasn't very nice. If you specify an invalid
pattern then you get an error marker on the start of the pattern
with the JVM's regex error message which attempts to point you to the
location in the regex but is totally unreadable in the JSON response.
This change fixes the location to point to the appropriate spot
inside the pattern and removes the portion of the JVM's error message
that doesn't render well. It is no longer needed now that we point
users to the appropriate spot in the pattern.
Changes reindex and friends to wait until the entire request has
been "cleaned up" before responding. "Clean up" in this context
is clearing the scroll and (for reindex-from-remote) shutting
down the client. Failures to clean up are still only logged, not
returned to the user.
Closes#23653
This commit upgrades the Netty dependencies from version 4.1.8 to
version 4.1.9. This commit picks up a few bug fixes that impacted us:
- Netty was incorrectly ignoring interfaces with self-assigned MAC
addresses (e.g., instances running in Docker containers or on EC2)
- incorrect handling of the Expect: 100-continue header
Relates #23540
With this commit we change the default receive predictor size for Netty
from 32kB to 64kB as our testing has shown that this leads to less
allocations on smaller heaps like the default out of the box
configuration and this value also works reasonably well for larger
heaps.
Closes#23185
This commit mutes a ton of Painless lambda tests on JDK 9. This commit
did not attempt to discover exactly which tests are failing, but instead
just blanket muted all tests in LambdaTests, FunctionRefTests, and
AugmentationTests.
Relates #23473
Previously, the RestController would stash the context prior to copying headers. However, there could be deprecation
log messages logged and in turn warning headers being added to the context prior to the stashing of the context. These
headers in the context would then be removed from the request and also leaked back into the calling thread's context.
This change moves the stashing of the context to the HttpTransport so that the network threads' context isn't
accidentally populated with warning headers and to ensure the headers added early on in the RestController are not
excluded from the response.
Throw error when skip or do sections are malformed, such as they don't start with the proper token (START_OBJECT). That signals bad indentation, which would be ignored otherwise. Thanks (or due to) our pull parsing code, we were still able to properly parse the sections, yet other runners weren't able to.
Closes#21980
* [TEST] fix indentation in matrix_stats yaml tests
* [TEST] fix indentation in painless yaml test
* [TEST] fix indentation in analysis yaml tests
* [TEST] fix indentation in generated docs yaml tests
* [TEST] fix indentation in multi_cluster_search yaml tests
We have many version constants in master that have already been
released, but are still marked (by naming convention) as unreleased.
This commit renames those version constants.
The dependencyLicenses check has the ability to map multiple jar files
to the same license file. However, netty was not taking advantage of
this, and had duplicate copies of its license/notice files for each jar.
This commit reduces the copies to one and uses the mapping feature.
This commit sets the intial size of the pipeline handler queue small to
prevent waste if pipelined requests are never sent. Since the queue will
grow quickly if pipeline requests are indeed set, this should not be
problematic.
Relates #23335
When pipelined responses are sent to the pipeline handler for writing,
they are not necessarily written immediately. They must be held in a
priority queue until all responses preceding the given response are
written. This means that when write is invoked on the handler, the
promise that is attached to the write invocation will not necessarily be
the promise associated with the responses that are written while the
queue is drained. To address this, the promise associated with a
pipelined response must be held with the response and then used when the
channel context is actually written to. This was introduced when
ensuring that the releasing promise is always chained through on write
calls lest the releasing promise never be invoked. This leads to many
failing test cases, so no new test cases are needed here.
Relates #23317
Gradle's finalizedBy on tasks only ensures one task runs after another,
but not immediately after. This is problematic for our integration tests
since it allows multiple project's integ test clusters to be
simultaneously. While this has not been a problem thus far (gradle 2.13
happened to keep the finalizedBy tasks close enough that no clusters
were running in parallel), with gradle 3.3 the task graph generation has
changed, and numerous clusters may be running simultaneously, causing
memory pressure, and thus generally slower tests, or even failure if the
system has a limited amount of memory (eg in a vagrant host).
This commit reworks how integ tests are configured. It adds an
`integTestCluster` extension to gradle which is equivalent to the current
`integTest.cluster` and moves the rest test runner task to
`integTestRunner`. The `integTest` task is then just a dummy task,
which depends on the cluster runner task, as well as the cluster stop
task. This means running `integTest` in one project will both run the
rest tests, and shut down the cluster, before running `integTest` in
another project.
When sending a response to a client, we attach a releasing listener to
the channel promise. If the client disappears before the response is
sent, the releasing listener was never notified. The reason the
listeners were never notified was due to a mistaken invocation of write
and flush on the channel which has two overrides: one that takes an
existing promise, and one that does not and instead creates a new
promise. When the client disappears, it is this latter promise that is
notified, which does not contain the releasing listener. This commit
addreses this issue by invoking the override that passes our channel
promise through.
Relates #23310
Now that search templates always get converted to json, we don't need to try and auto-detect their content-type, which anyways didn't work as expected before given that only json was really working.
Elasticsearch accepts multiple content-type formats, hence scripts can be stored/provided in json, yaml, cbor or smile. Yet the format that should be used internally is json. This is a problem mainly around search templates, as they only support json out of the four content-types, so instead of maintaining the content-type of the request we should rather convert the scripts/templates to json.
Binary formats were not previously supported. If you stored a template in yaml format, you'd get back an error "No encoder found for MIME type [application/yaml]" when trying to execute it. With this commit the request content-type is independent from the template, which always gets converted to json internally. That is transparent to users and doesn't affect the content type of the response obtained when executing the template.
Fixes Painless to properly implement scripts that return primitives
and void. Adds some simple tests that we emit sane opcodes and some
other tests that we implement primitives as expected.
Mostly this is just a fix following up from #22983 but there is one
thing I did really worth talking about, I think. So, before this script
Painless scripts could only ever return Object and they did would always
return null for paths that didn't return any values. Now that they
can return primitives the question is "what should Painless return
from paths that don't return any values?" And I answered that with
"whatever the JLS default value is". So 0/0L/0f/0d/false.
Generalizes three previously hard coded things in painless into
generic concepts:
1. The "main method" is no longer hardcoded to:
```
public abstract Object execute(Map<String, Object> params,
Scorer scorer, LeafDocLookup doc, Object value);
```
Instead Painless's compiler takes an interface and implements it. It looks like:
```
public interface SomeScript {
// Argument names we expose to Painless scripts
String[] ARGUMENTS = new String[] {"a", "b"};
// Method implemented by Painless script. Must be named execute but can have any parameters or return any value.
Object execute(String a, int b);
// Is the "a" argument used by the script?
boolean uses$a();
}
SomeScript script = scriptEngine.compile(SomeScript.class, null, "the_script_here", emptyMap());
Object result = script.execute("a", 1);
```
`PainlessScriptEngine` now compiles all scripts to the new
`GenericElasticsearchScript` interface by default for compatibility
with the rest of Elasticsearch until it is able to use this new
ability.
2. `_score` and `ctx` are no longer hardcoded to be extracted from
`#score` and `params` respectively. Instead Painless's default
implementation of Elasticsearch scripts uses the `uses$_score` and
`uses$ctx` methods to determine if it is used and gives them
dummy values if they are not used.
3. Throwing the `ScriptException` is now handled by the Painless
script itself. That way Painless doesn't have to leak the metadata
that is required to build the fancy stack trace. And all painless scripts
get the fancy stack trace.
Previously we calculated Netty' receive predictor size for HTTP and transport
traffic based on available memory and worker nodes. This resulted in a receive
predictor size between 64kb and 512kb. In our benchmarks this leads to increased
GC pressure.
With this commit we set Netty's receive predictor size to 32kb. This value is in
a sweet spot between heap memory waste (-> GC pressure) and effect on request
metrics (achieved throughput and latency numbers).
Closes#23185
This commit enforces the requirement of Content-Type for the REST layer and removes the deprecated methods in transport
requests and their usages.
While doing this, it turns out that there are many places where *Entity classes are used from the apache http client
libraries and many of these usages did not specify the content type. The methods that do not specify a content type
explicitly have been added to forbidden apis to prevent more of these from entering our code base.
Relates #19388
Get HEAD requests incorrectly return a content-length header of 0. This
commit addresses this by removing the special handling for get HEAD
requests, and just relying on the general mechanism that exists for
handling HEAD requests in the REST layer.
Relates #23186
Get source HEAD requests incorrectly return a content-length header of
0. This commit addresses this by removing the special handling for get
source HEAD requests, and just relying on the general mechanism that
exists for handling HEAD requests in the REST layer.
Relates #23151
Today all search phases are inner classes of AbstractSearchAsyncAction or one of it's
subclasses. This makes unit testing of these classes practically impossible. This commit
Extracts `DfsQueryPhase` and `FetchSearchPhase` or of the code that composes the actual
query execution types and moves most of the fan-out and collect code into an `InitialSearchPhase`
class that can be used to build initial search phases (phases that retry on shards). This will
make modification to these classes simpler and allows to easily compose or add new search phases
down the road if additional roundtrips are required.
When Netty decodes a bad HTTP request, it marks the decoder result on
the HTTP request as a failure, and reroutes the request to GET
/bad-request. This either leads to puzzling responses when a bad request
is sent to Elasticsearch (if an index named "bad-request" does not exist
then it produces an index not found exception and otherwise responds
with the index settings for the index named "bad-request"). This commit
addresses this by inspecting the decoder result on the HTTP request and
dispatching the request to a bad request handler preserving the initial
cause of the bad request and providing an error message to the client.
Relates #23153
This commit adds a new method to the TransportChannel that provides access to the version of the
remote node that the response is being sent on and that the request came from. This is helpful
for serialization of data attached as headers.
Template HEAD requests incorrectly return a content-length header of
0. This commit addresses this by removing the special handling for
template HEAD requests, and just relying on the general mechanism that
exists for handling HEAD requests in the REST layer.
Relates #23130
Index HEAD requests incorrectly return a content-length header of
0. This commit addresses this by removing the special handling for index
HEAD requests, and just relying on the general mechanism that exists for
handling HEAD requests in the REST layer.
Relates #23112
Alias HEAD requests incorrectly return a content-length header of
0. This commit addresses this by removing the special handling for alias
HEAD requests, and just relying on the general mechanism that exists for
handling HEAD requests in the REST layer.
Relates #23094
This pull request reuses the typed_keys parameter added in #22965, but this time it applies it to suggesters. When set to true, the suggester names in the search response will be prefixed with a prefix that reflects their type.
Netty 4.1.8 wraps connect and accept operations in doPrivileged blocks.
This means that we not need to give permissions to the entire transport
module. Additionally this commit deletes the privileged socket channel
and privileged server socket chanel.
This pull request adds a new parameter to the REST Search API named `typed_keys`. When set to true, the aggregation names in the search response will be prefixed with a prefix that reflects the internal type of the aggregation.
Here is a simple example:
```
GET /_search?typed_keys
{
"aggs": {
"tweets_per_user": {
"terms": {
"field": "user"
}
}
},
"size": 0
}
```
And the response:
```
{
"aggs": {
"sterms:tweets_per_user": {
...
}
}
}
```
This parameter is intended to make life easier for REST clients that could parse back the prefix and could detect the type of the aggregation to parse. It could also be implemented for suggesters.
We have a bunch of interfaces that have only a single implementation
for 6 years now. These interfaces are pretty useless from a SW development
perspective and only add unnecessary abstractions. They also require
lots of casting in many places where we expect that there is only one
concrete implementation. This change removes the interfaces, makes
all of the classes final and removes the duplicate `foo` `getFoo` accessors
in favor of `getFoo` from these classes.
This is related to #22116. This commit adds calls that require
SocketPermission connect to forbidden APIs.
The following calls are now forbidden:
- java.net.URL#openStream()
- java.net.URLConnection#connect()
- java.net.URLConnection#getInputStream()
- java.net.Socket#connect(java.net.SocketAddress)
- java.net.Socket#connect(java.net.SocketAddress, int)
- java.nio.channels.SocketChannel#open(java.net.SocketAddress)
- java.nio.channels.SocketChannel#connect(java.net.SocketAddress)
#22194 gave us the ability to open low level temporary connections to remote node based on their address. With this use case out of the way, actual full blown connections should validate the node on the other side, making sure we speak to who we think we speak to. This helps in case where multiple nodes are started on the same host and a quick node restart causes them to swap addresses, which in turn can cause confusion down the road.
As part of #22116 we are going to forbid usage of api
java.net.URL#openStream(). However in a number of places across the
we use this method to read files from the local filesystem. This commit
introduces a helper method openFileURLStream(URL url) to read files
from URLs. It does specific validation to only ensure that file:/
urls are read.
Additionlly, this commit removes unneeded method
FileSystemUtil.newBufferedReader(URL, Charset). This method used the
openStream () method which will soon be forbidden. Instead we use the
Files.newBufferedReader(Path, Charset).
This commit adds support for the newline delimited JSON Content-Type, which is how
the bulk, multi-search, and multi-search template APIs expect data to be formatted. The
`elasticsearch-js` client has also been using this content type for these types of requests.
Closes#22943
In order to support the evolving GeoPoint encodings in Lucene 5 and 6, ES 2.x and 5.x implements an abstraction layer to the GeoPointFieldMapper classes. As of 5.x the geo_point field mapper settled on using Lucene's more performant LatLonPoint field type and deprecated all other encodings. In 6.0 all encodings except LatLonPoint have been removed rendering this abstraction layer useless. This commit removes the abstraction layer and renames the LatLonPointFieldMapper back to GeoPointFieldMapper to mantain consistency with ES field naming.
Painless can cast anything into the magic type `def` but it
really shouldn't try to cast **nothing** into `def`. That causes
the byte code generation library to freak out a little.
Closes#22908
This test was using initial count of slices instead of the count
of unfinished slices to pick the expected throttle. Unfortunely
due to race conditions the actual rethrottle count is between the
two. So we weaken the assertion from "the new throttle is exactly X"
to "the new throttle is between X and Y (inclusive)".
This is related to #22116. Core no longer needs `SocketPermission`
`connect`.
This permission is relegated to these modules/plugins:
- transport-netty4 module
- reindex module
- repository-url module
- discovery-azure-classic plugin
- discovery-ec2 plugin
- discovery-gce plugin
- repository-azure plugin
- repository-gcs plugin
- repository-hdfs plugin
- repository-s3 plugin
And for tests:
- mocksocket jar
- rest client
- httpcore-nio jar
- httpasyncclient jar
Versions of Elasticsearch prior to 2.0 would return a scroll id
even with the last scroll response. They'd then automatically
clear the scroll because it is empty. When terminating reindex
will attempt to clear the last scroll it received, regardless of
the remote version. This quiets the warning when the scroll cannot
be cleared for versions before 2.0.
Closes#22937
This commit upgrades the checkstyle configuration from version 5.9 to
version 7.5, the latest version as of today. The main enhancement
obtained via this upgrade is better detection of redundant modifiers.
Relates #22960
`UpdateByQueryWhileModifyingTests#testUpdateWhileReindexing`
runs update-by-query and concurrently updates, asserting that
the update-by-query never reverts any changes made by the update.
It is a smoke test for concurrent updates.
Now, it expects to hit a certain number of version conflicts
during the updates. This is normal as it is racing the
update-by-query. We have a maximum number of failures we
expect (10) and I'd never seen us come close until
https://elasticsearch-ci.elastic.co/job/elastic+elasticsearch+5.x+multijob-unix-compatibility/os=sles/495/console
This bumps the max failures from 10 to 50 and improves
logging a bit. If we continue to see this failure then we have
some other issue.
Closes#22938
This change adds a strict mode for xcontent parsing on the rest layer. The strict mode will be off by default for 5.x and in a separate commit will be enabled by default for 6.0. The strict mode, which can be enabled by setting `http.content_type.required: true` in 5.x, will require that all incoming rest requests have a valid and supported content type header before the request is dispatched. In the non-strict mode, the Content-Type header will be inspected and if it is not present or not valid, we will continue with auto detection of content like we have done previously.
The content type header is parsed to the matching XContentType value with the only exception being for plain text requests. This value is then passed on with the content bytes so that we can reduce the number of places where we need to auto-detect the content type.
As part of this, many transport requests and builders were updated to provide methods that
accepted the XContentType along with the bytes and the methods that would rely on auto-detection have been deprecated.
In the non-strict mode, deprecation warnings are issued whenever a request with body doesn't provide the Content-Type header.
See #19388
In 5.2 we stopped sending the source parameter if the user didn't
specify it. This was a mistake as versions before 2.0 look like
they don't always include the `_source`. This is because reindex
requests some metadata fields. Anyway, now we say `"_source": true`
if there isn't a `_source` configured in the reindex request.
Closes#22893
We were incorrectly resolving qualified method references at run
time when invoked on `def`. This lead to errors like
`The struct with name [org] has not been defined.` when attempting
```
doc.date.dates.stream().map(
org.joda.time.ReadableDateTime::centuryOfEra
).collect(Collectors.toList())
```
Implemented by wrapping an array of reused `ModuleDateTime`s that
we grow when needed. The `ModuleDateTime`s are reused when we
move to the next document.
Also improves the error message returned when attempting to modify
the `ScriptdocValues`, removes a couple of allocations, and documents
that the date functions are available in Painless.
Relates to #22162
Currently, stored scripts use a namespace of (lang, id) to be put, get, deleted, and executed. This is not necessary since the lang is stored with the stored script. A user should only have to specify an id to use a stored script. This change makes that possible while keeping backwards compatibility with the previous namespace of (lang, id). Anywhere the previous namespace is used will log deprecation warnings.
The new behavior is the following:
When a user specifies a stored script, that script will be stored under both the new namespace and old namespace.
Take for example script 'A' with lang 'L0' and data 'D0'. If we add script 'A' to the empty set, the scripts map will be ["A" -- D0, "A#L0" -- D0]. If a script 'A' with lang 'L1' and data 'D1' is then added, the scripts map will be ["A" -- D1, "A#L1" -- D1, "A#L0" -- D0].
When a user deletes a stored script, that script will be deleted from both the new namespace (if it exists) and the old namespace.
Take for example a scripts map with {"A" -- D1, "A#L1" -- D1, "A#L0" -- D0}. If a script is removed specified by an id 'A' and lang null then the scripts map will be {"A#L0" -- D0}. To remove the final script, the deprecated namespace must be used, so an id 'A' and lang 'L0' would need to be specified.
When a user gets/executes a stored script, if the new namespace is used then the script will be retrieved/executed using only 'id', and if the old namespace is used then the script will be retrieved/executed using 'id' and 'lang'
This moves the building blocks for delete by query into core. This
should enabled two thigns:
1. Plugins other than reindex to implement "bulk by scroll" style
operations.
2. Plugins to directly call delete by query. Those plugins should
be careful to make sure that task cancellation still works, but
this should be possible.
Notes:
1. I've mostly just moved classes and moved around tests methods.
2. I haven't been super careful about cohesion between these core
classes and reindex. They are quite interconnected because I wanted
to make the change as mechanical as possible.
Closes#22616
Adds "Appending B. Painless API Reference", a reference of all classes
and methods available from Painless. Removes links to java packages
because they contain methods that we don't expose and don't contain
methods that we do expose (the ones in Augmentation). Instead this
generates a list of every class and every exposed method using the same
type information available to the
interpreter/compiler/whatever-we-call-it. From there you can jump to
the relevant docs.
Right now you build all the asciidoc files by running
```
gradle generatePainlessApi
```
These files are expected to be committed because we build the docs
without running `gradle`.
Also changes the output of `Debug.explain` so that it is easy to
search for the class in the generated reference documentation.
You can also run it in an IDE safely if you pass the path to the
directory in which to generate the docs as the first parameter. It'll
blow away the entire directory an recreate it from scratch so be careful.
And then you can build the docs by running something like:
```
../docs/build_docs.pl --out ../built_docs/ --doc docs/reference/index.asciidoc --open
```
That is, if you have checked out https://github.com/elastic/docs in
`../docs`. Wait a minute or two and your browser will pop open in with
all of Elasticsearch's reference documentation. If you go to
`http://localhost:8000/painless-api-reference.html` you can see this
list. Or you can get there by following the links to `Modules` and
`Scripting` and `Painless` and then clicking the link in the paragraphs
below titled `Appendix B. Painless API Reference`.
I like having these in asciidoc because we can deep link to them from the
rest of the guide with constructs like
`<<painless-api-reference-Object-hashCode-0>>` and
`<<painless-api-reference->>` and we get link checking. Then the only
brittle link maintenance bit is the link generation for javadoc. Which
sucks. But I think it is important that we link to the methods directly
so they are easy to find.
Relates to #22720
This is related to #22116. URLRepository requires SocketPermission
connect. This commit introduces a new module called "repository-url"
where URLRepository will reside. With the new module, permissions can
be removed from core.
Beforehand, the DateProcessor constructs its joda pattern formatter during processor
construction. This led to newly ingested documents being defaulted to
the year that the pipeline was constructed, not that of processing.
Fixes#22547.
This adds the necessary `AuthCache` needed to support preemptive authorization. By adding every host to the cache, the automatically added `RequestAuthCache` interceptor will add credentials on the first pass rather than waiting to do it after _each_ anonymous request is rejected (thus always sending everything twice when basic auth is required).
move "es." internal headers to separate metadata set in ElasticsearchException and stop returning them as response headers
Closes#17593
* [TEST] remove ESExceptionTests, move its methods to ElasticsearchExceptionTests or ExceptionSerializationTests
* Add top hits collapsing to search request
The field collapsing is done with a custom top docs collector that "collapse" search hits with same field value.
The distributed aspect is resolve using the two passes that the regular search uses. The first pass "collapse" the top hits, then the coordinating node merge/collapse the top hits from each shard.
```
GET _search
{
"collapse": {
"field": "category",
}
}
```
This change also adds an ExpandCollapseSearchResponseListener that intercepts the search response and expands collapsed hits using the CollapseBuilder#innerHit} options.
The retrieval of each inner_hits is done by sending a query to all shards filtered by the collapse key.
```
GET _search
{
"collapse": {
"field": "category",
"inner_hits": {
"size": 2
}
}
}
```
This commit adds a SpecialPermission constant and uses that constant
opposed to introducing new instances everywhere.
Additionally, this commit introduces a single static method to check that
the current code has permission. This avoids all the duplicated access
blocks that exist currently.
* Upgrade to Lucene 6.4.0
`ValueSource`s are now converted to `DoubleValueSource`s using the Lucene adapter made for the migration to the new API in 6.4.0.
There are presently 7 ctor args used in any rest handlers:
* `Settings`: Every handler uses it to initialize a logger and
some other strange things.
* `RestController`: Every handler registers itself with it.
* `ClusterSettings`: Used by `RestClusterGetSettingsAction` to
render the default values for cluster settings.
* `IndexScopedSettings`: Used by `RestGetSettingsAction` to get
the default values for index settings.
* `SettingsFilter`: Used by a few handlers to filter returned
settings so we don't expose stuff like passwords.
* `IndexNameExpressionResolver`: Used by `_cat/indices` to
filter the list of indices.
* `Supplier<DiscoveryNodes>`: Used to fill enrich the response
by handlers that list tasks.
We probably want to reduce these arguments over time but
switching construction away from guice gives us tighter
control over the list of available arguments.
These parameters are passed to plugins using
`ActionPlugin#initRestHandlers` which is expected to build and
return that handlers immediately. This felt simpler than
returning an reference to the ctors given all the different
possible args.
Breaks java plugins by moving rest handlers off of guice.
This is related to #22116. Core no longer needs SocketPermission
accept. This permission is relegated to the transport-netty4 module
and (for tests) to the mocksocket jar.
This commit adds a MessyRestTestPlugin to the gradle build. It extends
StandaloneRestTestPlugin. The main piece of functionality that it adds
is to copy plugin-metadata from dependencies into the
generated-resources for the current test source. This is necessary to
ensure that permissions for dependencies are applied when running the
tests.
A current limitation is that the permissions are applied differently
than in the distribution sources. When permissions are granted to all
depedencies for a module or plugin, the permissions are granted to all
dependencies on the classpath for tests besides a few hardcoded
exclusions:
- es core
- es test framework
- lucene test framework
- randomized runner
- junit library
We don't want to expose `String#getBytes` which is required for
`Base64.getEncoder.encode` to work because we're worried about
character sets. This adds `encodeBase64` and `decodeBase64`
methods to `String` in Painless that are duals of one another
such that:
`someString == someString.encodeBase64().decodeBase64()`.
Both methods work with the UTF-8 encoding of the string.
Closes#22648
Everything that extended `AbstractAsyncBulkByScrollAction` also
extended `AbstractAsyncBulkIndexByScrollAction` so this removes
`AbstractAsyncBulkIndexByScrollAction`, merging it into
`AbstractAsyncBulkByScrollAction`.
Changes the error message when `action.auto_create_index` or
`index.mapper.dynamic` forbids automatic creation of an index
from `no such index` to one of:
* `no such index and [action.auto_create_index] is [false]`
* `no such index and [index.mapper.dynamic] is [false]`
* `no such index and [action.auto_create_index] contains [-<pattern>] which forbids automatic creation of the index`
* `no such index and [action.auto_create_index] ([all patterns]) doesn't match`
This should make it more clear *why* there is `no such index`.
Closes#22435
Today we do not preserve response headers if they are present on a transport protocol
response. While preserving these headers is not always desired, in the most cases we
should pass on these headers to have consistent results for depreciation headers etc.
yet, this hasn't been much of a problem since most of the deprecations are detected early
ie. on the coordinating node such that this bug wasn't uncovered until #22647
This commit allow to optionally preserve headers when a context is restored and also streamlines
the context restore since it leaked frequently into the callers thread context when the callers
context wasn't restored again.
Instead of forcing each task to register all nodes where its children are running, this commit runs cancellation on all nodes. The task cancellation operation doesn't run too frequently, so this optimization doesn't seem to be worth additional complexity of the interface.
Previously, certain settings that could take multiple comma delimited
values would pick up incorrect values for all entries but the first if
each comma separated value was followed by a whitespace character. For
example, the multi-value "A,B,C" would be correctly parsed as
["A", "B", "C"] but the multi-value "A, B, C" would be incorrectly parsed
as ["A", " B", " C"].
This commit allows a comma separated list to have whitespace characters
after each entry. The specific settings that were affected by this are:
cluster.routing.allocation.awareness.attributes
index.routing.allocation.require.*
index.routing.allocation.include.*
index.routing.allocation.exclude.*
cluster.routing.allocation.require.*
cluster.routing.allocation.include.*
cluster.routing.allocation.exclude.*
http.cors.allow-methods
http.cors.allow-headers
For the allocation filtering related settings, this commit also provides
validation of each specified entry if the filtering is done by _ip,
_host_ip, or _publish_ip, to ensure that each entry is a valid IP
address.
Closes#22297
This commit tries to simplify the way ElasticsearchException are rendered to xcontent. It adds some documentation and renames and merges some methods. Current behavior is preserved, the goal is to be more readable and centralize everything in the ElasticsearchException class.
Today we have quite some abstractions that are essentially providing a simple
dispatch method to the plugins defining a `HttpServerTransport`. This commit
removes `HttpServer` and `HttpServerAdaptor` and introduces a simple `Dispatcher` functional
interface that delegate to `RestController` by default.
Relates to #18482
The IndexingOperationListener interface did not provide any
information about the shard id when a document was indexed.
This commit adds the shard id as the first parameter to all methods
in the IndexingOperationListener.
This is related to #22116. netty channels require socket `connect` and
`accept` privileges. Netty does not currently wrap these operations
with `doPrivileged` blocks. These changes extend the netty channels
and wrap calls to the relevant super methods in doPrivileged blocks.
Adds a message about how the remote is unlikely to be Elasticsearch.
This isn't as good as including the whole message from the remote but
we can't do that because we are stream parsing it and we don't want
to mark the whole request.
Closes#22330
Moves fetching the local node id into `NodeClient` which is a
fairly useful place to put it so you can generate task ids from
`NodeClient#executeLocally`.
It is no longer needed. It used to contain a lot of strings
used by serialization but those have since been removed. Now
it is just another thing to pass around that we don't really
need.
Reindex-from-remote had a race when it tried to clear the scroll. It
first starts the request to clear the scroll and then submits a task
to the generic threadpool to shutdown the client. These two things
race and, in my experience, closing the scroll generally loses. That
means that most of the time reindex-from-remote isn't clearing the
scrolls that it uses. This isn't the end of the world because we
flush old scroll contexts after a while but this isn't great.
Noticed while experimenting with #22514.
Reindex-from-remote was accepting source filtering in the request
but ignoring it and setting `_source=true` on the search URI. This
fixes the filtering so it is piped through to the remote node and
adds tests for that.
Closes#22507
Removes `AggregatorParsers`, replacing all of its functionality with
`XContentParser#namedObject`.
This is the third bit of payoff from #22003, one less thing to pass
around the entire application.
If the remote doesn't return a content type then reindex
tried to guess the content-type. This didn't work most
of the time and produced a rather useless error message.
Given that Elasticsearch always returns the content-type
we are dropping content-type detection in favor of just
failing the request if the remote didn't return a content-type.
Closes#22329
1. Escape sequences we're working. For example `\\` is now correctly
interpreted as `\` instead of `\\`. Same with `\'` being `'` and
`\"` being `"`.
2. `'` delimited strings weren't allowed to contain `"`s but it looked
like they were intended to support it. Now they do.
3. Improves the error message when the script contains an invalid
escape sequence inside a string to include a list of the valid
escape sequences.
Closes#22372
This integrates the mocksocket jar with elasticsearch tests. Mocksocket wraps actions requiring SocketPermissions in doPrivilege blocks. This will eventually allow SocketPermissions to be assigned to the mocksocket jar opposed to the entire elasticsearch codebase.
We previously named the thread using a frame from the stack trace, but
this was removed to simplify the code here. However, the comment
explaining this was left behind and this commit cleans that up.
* Remove a checked exception, replacing it with `ParsingException`.
* Remove all Parser classes for the yaml sections, replacing them with static methods.
* Remove `ClientYamlTestFragmentParser`. Isn't used any more.
* Remove `ClientYamlTestSuiteParseContext`, replacing it with some static utility methods.
I did not rewrite the parsers using `ObjectParser` because I don't think it is worth it right now.
As the translog evolves towards a full operations log as part of the
sequence numbers push, there is a need for the translog to be able to
represent operations for which a sequence number was assigned, but the
operation did not mutate the index. Examples of how this can arise are
operations that fail after the sequence number is assigned, and gaps in
this history that arise when an operation is assigned a sequence number
but the operation never completed (e.g., a node crash). It is important
that these operations appear in the history so that they can be
replicated and replayed during recovery as otherwise the history will be
incomplete and local checkpoints will not be able to advance. This
commit introduces a no-op to the translog to set the stage for these
efforts.
Relates #22291
Introduces `XContentParser#namedObject which works a little like
`StreamInput#readNamedWriteable`: on startup components register
parsers under names and a superclass. At runtime we look up the
parser and call it to parse the object.
Right now the parsers take a context object they use to help with
the parsing but I hope to be able to eliminate the need for this
context as most what it is used for at this point is to move
around parser registries which should be replaced by this method
eventually. I make no effort to do so in this PR because it is
big enough already. This is meant to the a start down a road that
allows us to remove classes like `QueryParseContext`,
`AggregatorParsers`, `IndicesQueriesRegistry`, and
`ParseFieldRegistry`.
The goal here is to reduce the amount of plumbing required to
allow parsing pluggable things. With this you don't have to pass
registries all over the place. Instead you must pass a super
registry to fewer places and use it to wrap the reader. This is
the same tradeoff that we use for NamedWriteable and it allows
much, much simpler binary serialization. We think we want that
same thing for xcontent serialization.
The only parsing actually converted to this method is parsing
`ScoreFunctions` inside of `FunctionScoreQuery`. I chose this
because it is relatively self contained.
It looks like the exception reason can differ in different default
locales, so the build would fail in any non-English locale. This
switches the catch to the name of the exception which shouldn't
vary.
We are currenlty checking that no deprecation warnings are emitted in our query tests. That can be moved to ESTestCase (disabled in ESIntegTestCase) as it allows us to easily catch where our tests use deprecated features and assert on the expected warnings.
We return deprecation warnings as response headers, besides logging them. Strict parsing mode stayed around, but was only used in query tests, though we also introduced checks for deprecation warnings there that don't need strict parsing anymore (see #20993).
We can then safely remove support for strict parsing mode. The final goal is to remove the ParseFieldMatcher class, but there are many many users of it. This commit prepares the field for the removal, by deprecating ParseFieldMatcher and making it effectively not needed. Strict parsing is removed from ParseFieldMatcher, and strict parsing is replaced in tests where needed with deprecation warnings checks.
Note that the setting to enable strict parsing was never ported to the new settings infra hance it cannot be set in production. It is really only used in our own tests.
Relates to #19552
This commit makes mapping updates atomic when multiple types in an index are updated. Mappings for an index are now applied in a single atomic operation, which also allows to optimize some of the cross-type updates and checks.
Problem: So far all rank eval requests are being executed in parallel. If there
are more than the search thread pool can handle, or if there are other search
requests executed in parallel rank eval can fail.
Solution: Make number of max_concurrent_searches configurable.
Name of configuration parameter is analogous to msearch. Default
max_concurrent_searches set to 10: Rank_eval isn't particularly time critical so
trying to avoid being more clever than probably needed here. Can set this value
through the API to a higher value anytime.
Fixes#21403
Problem: We introduced the ability to shorten the rank eval request by using a
template in #20231. When playing with the API it turned out that there might be
use cases where - e.g. due to various heuristics - folks might want to translate
the original user query into more than just one type of Elasticsearch query.
Solution: Give each template an id that can later be referenced in the
actual requests.
Closes#21257
In #22094 we introduce a test-only setting to simulate transport
impls that don't support handshakes. This commit implements the same logic
without a setting.
The JSON processor has an optional field called "target_field".
If you don't specify target_field then target_field becomes what you specified as "field".
There isn't anyway to add the fields to the root of a document. By
setting `add_to_root`, now serialized fields will be inserted into the
top-level fields of the ingest document.
Closes#21898.
Today we initialize Netty in a static initializer. We trigger this
method via static initializers from Netty-related classes, but we can
trigger this method earlier than we do to ensure that Netty is
initialized how we want it to be.
Inline scripts defined in Ingest Pipelines are now compiled at creation time to preemptively catch errors on initialization of the pipeline.
Fixes#21842.
Low level handshake code doesn't handle situations gracefully if the connection
is concurrently closed or reset by peer. This commit adds the relevant code to
fail the handshake if the connection is closed.
Moves the last of the "easy" parser construction into
`RestRequest`, this time with a new method
`RestRequest#contentParser`. The rest of the production
code that builds `XContentParser` isn't "easy" because it is
exposed in the Transport Client API (a Builder) object.
The creation of the `ValuesSource` used to pass `DateTimeZone.UTC` as a time
zone all the time in case of empty fields in spite of the fact that all doc
value formats but the date one reject this parameter.
This commit centralizes the creation of the `ValuesSource` and adds unit tests
to it.
Closes#22009
With this commit we enable the Jackson feature 'STRICT_DUPLICATE_DETECTION'
by default. This ensures that JSON keys are always unique. While this has
a performance impact, benchmarking has indicated that the typical drop in
indexing throughput is around 1 - 2%.
As a last resort, we allow users to still disable strict duplicate checks
by setting `-Des.json.strict_duplicate_detection=false` which is
intentionally undocumented.
Closes#19614
Grok was originally ignoring potential matches to named-capture groups
larger than one. For example, If you had two patterns containing the
same named field, but only the second pattern matched, it would fail to
pick this up.
This PR fixes this by exploring all potential places where a
named-capture was used and chooses the first one that matched.
Fixes#22117.
Today we rely on the version that the API user passes in together with the DiscoveryNode. This commit introduces a low level handshake where nodes exchange their version to be used with the transport protocol that is executed every time a connection to a node is established. This, on the one hand allows to change the wire protocol based on the version we are talking to even without a full cluster restart. Today we would need to carry on a BWC layer across major versions but with a handshake we can rely on the fact that the latest version of the previous minor executes a handshake and uses the latest protocol version across all communication with the N+1 version nodes.
This change is yet fully backwards compatible, a followup PR will remove the BWC in 6.0 once this has been back-ported to the 5.x branch
Add checks to RankEvalSpec to safe guard against missing parameters.
Fail early in case no metric is supplied, no rated requests are supplied or the search source builder is missing but no template is supplied neither.
Add stricter checks around rank eval request parsing: Fail if in a rated request we see both, a verbatim request as well as request
template parameters.
Relates to #21260
This class is just a wrapper around `SearchContext`, so let's use
`SearchContext` directly. The change is mechanical, except the
`ValuesSourceConfig` class, where I moved the logic to get a `ValuesSource`
given a config.
Our query DSL supports empty queries (`{}`), which have a different meaning depending on the query that holds it, either ignored, match_all or match_none. We deprecated the support for empty queries in 5.0, where we log a deprecation warning wherever they are used.
The way we supported it once we moved query parsing to the coordinating node was having an Optional<QueryBuilder> return type in all of our parse methods (called fromXContent). See #17624. The central place for this was QueryParseContext#parseInnerQueryBuilder. We can now remove all the optional return types and simply throw an exception whenever an empty query is found.
Today we connect and publish the nodes connection before we execute a
handshake with the node we connect to. In the case of connecting to a node
that won't pass the handshake this connection is already `published` and other
code paths can use it. This commit detaches the connection and the publish of the
connection such that `TransportService` can do a handshake before actually connect
and publish the connection.
To get #22003 in cleanly we need to centralize as much `XContentParser` creation as possible into `RestRequest`. That'll mean we have to plumb the `NamedXContentRegistry` into fewer places.
This removes `RestAction.hasBody`, `RestAction.guessBodyContentType`, and `RestActions.getRestContent`, moving callers over to `RestRequest.hasContentOrSourceParam`, `RestRequest.contentOrSourceParam`, and `RestRequest.contentOrSourceParamParser` and `RestRequest.withContentOrSourceParamParserOrNull`. The idea is to use `withContentOrSourceParamParserOrNull` if you need to handle requests without any sort of body content and to use `contentOrSourceParamParser` otherwise.
I believe the vast majority of this PR to be purely mechanical but I know I've made the following behavioral change (I'll add more if I think of more):
* If you make a request to an endpoint that requires a request body and has cut over to the new APIs instead of getting `Failed to derive xcontent` you'll get `Body required`.
* Template parsing is now non-strict by default. This is important because we need to be able to deprecate things without requests failing.
If you try to close the rest client inside one of its callbacks then
it blocks itself. The thread pool switches the status to one that
requests a shutdown and then waits for the pool to shutdown. When
another thread attempts to honor the shutdown request it waits
for all the threads in the pool to finish what they are working on.
Thus thread a is waiting on thread b while thread b is waiting
on thread a. It isn't quite that simple, but it is close.
Relates to #22027
This is an attempt to start moving aggs parsing to `ObjectParser`. There is
still A LOT to do, but ObjectParser is way better than the way aggregations
parsing works today. For instance in most cases, we reject numbers that are
provided as strings, which we are supposed to accept since some client languages
(looking at you Perl) cannot make sure to use the appropriate types.
Relates to #22009
* Remove 2.0 prerelease version constants
This is a start to addressing #21887. This removes:
* pre 2.0 snapshot format support
* automatic units addition to cluster settings
* bwc check for delete by query in pre 2.0 indexes
This adds the `_primary_term` field internally to the mappings. This field is
populated with the current shard's primary term.
It is intended to be used for collision resolution when two document copies have
the same sequence id, therefore, doc_values for the field are stored but the
filed itself is not indexed.
This also fixes the `_seq_no` field so that doc_values are retrievable (they
were previously stored but irretrievable) and changes the `stats` implementation
to more efficiently use the points API to retrieve the min/max instead of
iterating on each doc_value value. Additionally, even though we intend to be
able to search on the field, it was previously not searchable. This commit makes
it searchable.
There is no user-visible `_primary_term` field. Instead, the fields are
updated by calling:
```java
index.parsedDoc().updateSeqID(seqNum, primaryTerm);
```
This includes example methods in `Versions` and `Engine` for retrieving the
sequence id values from the index (see `Engine.getSequenceID`) that are only
used in unit tests. These will be extended/replaced by actual implementations
once we make use of sequence numbers as a conflict resolution measure.
Relates to #10708
Supercedes #21480
P.S. As a side effect of this commit, `SlowCompositeReaderWrapper` cannot be
used for documents that contain `_seq_no` because it is a Point value and SCRW
cannot wrap documents with points, so the tests have been updated to loop
through the `LeafReaderContext`s now instead.
This adds a fromXContent method and unit test to the HighlightField class so we
can parse it as part of a serch response. This is part of the preparation for
parsing search responses on the client side.
Adds tests around serialisation/validation checks for rank evaluation request components
* Add null/ empty string checks to RatedDocument constructor
* Add mutation test to RatedDocument serialization tests.
* Reorganise rank-eval RatedDocument tests and add serialisation test.
* Add roundtrip serialisation testing for RatedRequests
* Adds serialisation testing and equals/hashcode testing for RatedRequest.
* Fixes a bug in previous equals implementation of RatedRequest along the way.
* Add roundtrip tests for Precision and ReciprocalRank
* Also fixes a bug with serialising ReciprocalRank.
* Add roundtrip testing for DiscountedCumulativeGain
* Add serialisation test for DocumentKey and fix test init
* Add check that relevant doc threshold is always positive for precision.
* Check that relevant threshold is always positive for precision and reciprocal
rank
Closes#21401
`_update_by_query` supports specifying the `pipeline` to process the
documents as a url parameter but `_reindex` doesn't. It doesn't because
everything about the `_reindex` request that has to do with writing
the documents is grouped under the `dest` object in the request body.
This changes the response parameter from
`request [_reindex] contains unrecognized parameter: [pipeline]` to
`_reindex doesn't support [pipeline] as a query parmaeter. Specify it in the [dest] object instead.`
Move rank-eval template compilation down to TransportRankEvalAction
Closes#21777 and #21465
Search templates for rank_eval endpoint so far only worked when sent through
REST end point
However we also allow templates to be set through a Java API call to
"setTemplate" on that same spec. This doesn't go through template execution so
fails further down the line.
To make this work, moved template execution further down, probably to
TransportRankEvalAction.
* Add template IT test for Java API
* Move template compilation to TransportRankEvalAction
Action filters currently have the ability to filter both the request and
response. But the response side was not actually used. This change
removes support for filtering responses with action filters.
Changes the default socket and connection timeouts for the rest
client from 10 seconds to the more generous 30 seconds.
Defaults reindex-from-remote to those timeouts and make the
timeouts configurable like so:
```
POST _reindex
{
"source": {
"remote": {
"host": "http://otherhost:9200",
"socket_timeout": "1m",
"connect_timeout": "10s"
},
"index": "source",
"query": {
"match": {
"test": "data"
}
}
},
"dest": {
"index": "dest"
}
}
```
Closes#21707
I added an assertion to Netty4/Netty3Transport in 5.x that is not in
master yet. This commit port the assert to ensure we consumed all connection
in `connectToChannels`
We don't use the test infra nor do we run the tests. They might all be
entirely out of date. We also have a different BWC test infra in-place.
This change removes all of the legacy infra.
Timeouts are global today across all connections this commit allows to specify
a connection timeout per node such that depending on the context connections can
be established with different timeouts.
Relates to #19719
We currently treat every node equally when we establish connections to a node.
Yet, if we are not master eligible or can't hold any data there is no point in creating
a dedicated connection for sending the cluster state or running remote recoveries respectively.
The usage of STATE and RECOVERY connections on non-master and/or non-data nodes will result in an IllegalStateException.
For the record, I also had to remove the geo-hash cell and geo-distance range
queries to make the code compile. These queries already throw an exception in
all cases with 5.x indices, so that does not hurt any more.
I also had to rename all 2.x bwc indices from `index-${version}` to
`unsupported-${version}` to make `OldIndexBackwardCompatibilityIT`
happy.
SearchTemplateRequest to implement CompositeIndicesRequest
Given that SearchTemplateRequest effectively delegates to search when a search is being executed, it should implement the CompositeIndicesRequest interface. The subrequests method should return a single search request. When a search is not going to be executed, because we are in simulate mode, there are no inner requests, and there are no corresponding indices to that request either.
Closes#21747
Set lucene version to 6.4.0-snapshot-ec38570 and update all the sha1s/license
Fix invalid combo after upgrade in query_string query. split_on_whitespace=false is disallowed if auto_generate_phrase_queries=true
Adapt the expectations of some tests to the new format of the Lucene explain output
Lucene 6.2 added index and query support for numeric ranges. This commit adds a new RangeFieldMapper for indexing numeric (int, long, float, double) and date ranges and creating appropriate range and term queries. The design is similar to NumericFieldMapper in that it uses a RangeType enumerator for implementing the logic specific to each type. The following range types are supported by this field mapper: int_range, float_range, long_range, double_range, date_range.
Lucene does not provide a DocValue field specific to RangeField types so the RangeFieldMapper implements a CustomRangeDocValuesField for handling doc value support.
When executing a Range query over a Range field, the RangeQueryBuilder has been enhanced to accept a new relation parameter for defining the type of query as one of: WITHIN, CONTAINS, INTERSECTS. This provides support for finding all ranges that are related to a specific range in a desired way. As with other spatial queries, DISJOINT can be achieved as a MUST_NOT of an INTERSECTS query.
The Transport#connectToNodeLight concepts is confusing and not very flexible.
neither really testable on a unittest level. This commit cleans up the code used
to connect to nodes and simplifies transport implementations to share more code.
This also allows to connect to nodes with custom profiles if needed, for instance
future improvements can be added to connect to/from nodes that are non-data nodes without
dedicated bulks and recovery connections.
When Netty listens on a socket, it specifies the established connection
backlog for the socket. On Linux, Netty tries to read the system-wide
configuration for this from /proc/sys/net/core/somaxconn and falls back
to a default value when it can not read this value. This commit grants
Netty permission to read this file so that it can honor the system-wide
configuration for the connection backlog for sockets that it is
listening on. This also removes an obnoxious stack trace that appears
when Netty logging is set to debug logging.
Relates #21840
In the past we ran yaml tests against an internal cluster, which would get restarted after each test failure, hence the client objects needed to eventually be refreshed before each test. That is why we had the initClient method to re-initialize the YamlTestClient in the execution context. We ended up though re-initializing the client unconditionally, which is not needed.
Also, ESRestTestCase recreates the RestClient against the external cluster before each test, which is not needed given that nothing changes in the external cluster.
This commit removes the initClient method from the yaml tests execution context. The YamlTestClient can be eagerly created before the first yaml test runs and then re-used in subsequent tests. Also api calls to check for nodes versions etc. are moved out of YamlTestClient to ESClientYamlSuiteTestCase. Also the RestClient is now initialized in ESRestTestCase before the first test runs, and kept around afterwards as a static member.
Basically each subclass of EsRestTestCase will have its own RestClient instance, but the client will be shared across the different tests within the same class. The yaml test suite is just a special suite, composed of 600+ tests that are loaded from files, which will share the same client instance.
This change should speed tests up as well, as we don't recreate the RestClient before each single test, and we don't call _cat/nodes either before each single test.
This commit simplifies the handling of fatal errors on the network
layer. The simplification here is to remove the use of a
StringWriter/PrintWriter pair to format the stack trace, removing the
need for the method to declare that it throws a checked IOException.
Currently we fail the whole ranking evaluation request when we receive an
exception for any of the search requests. We should collect those errors and
report them back to the user in the rest response. This change adds collecting
the errors and propagating them back via the RankEvalResponse.
Closes#19889
If a bug occurs in painless compilation (not from a user, but from the
painless infrastructure), a VerifyError may be thrown when compiling the
broken generated class. This commit wraps VerifyErrors in
ScriptException so that useful information is returned to the user,
which can be passed on to the ES team for analysis.
This bug would cause a VerifyError when scripts using the === operator
were comparing a def type against a primitive type since the primitive
type wasn't being appropriately boxed.
Today when handling unreleased versions for backwards compatilibity
support, we scatted version constants across the code base and add some
asserts to support removing these constants when the version in question
is actually released. This commit improves this situation, enabling us
to just add a single unreleased version constant that can be renamed
when the version is actually released. This should make maintenance of
these versions simpler.
Relates #21760
NOTE: The result of `?.` and `?:` can't be assigned to primitives. So
`int[] someArray = null; int l = someArray?.length` and
`int s = params.size ?: 100` don't work. Do
`def someArray = null; def l = someArray?.length` and
`def s = params.size ?: 100` instead.
Relates to #21748
* Scripting: Remove groovy scripting language
Groovy was deprecated in 5.0. This change removes it, along with the
legacy default language infrastructure in scripting.
You can use `Debug.explain(someObject)` in painless to throw an
`Error` that can't be caught by painless code and contains an
object's class. This is useful because painless's sandbox doesn't
allow you to call `someObject.getClass()`.
Closes#20263
When a fatal error is thrown on the network layer, such an error never
makes its way to the uncaught exception handler. This prevents the node
from being torn down if an out of memory error or other fatal error is
thrown while handling HTTP or transport traffic. This commit adds logic
to ensure that such errors bubble their way up to the uncaught exception
handler, even though Netty tries really hard to swallow everything.
Relates #21720
This should make debugging painless' analysis and code generation a
little easier.
The `toString` implementations mirror the AST somewhat, and look like
`(SSource (SReturn (ENumeric 1)))`.
Today we read a vint from the stream to allocate the size of an array up-front
before we start reading the values. This can be dangerous if for instance we read
from a corrupted stream or if some manipulated bytes are send for instance from
an attacker or a fuzzer. In most of the cases we can apply some best effort and
validate the array size to be _sane_ by ensuring we can at read at least N bytes
where N is the expected size of the array.
When Groovy detects a bug in its runtime because an internal assertion
was violated, it throws an GroovyBugError. This descends from
AssertionError and if it goes uncaught will land in the uncaught
exception handler and will not deliver any useful information to the
user. This commit wraps GroovyBugErrors in ScriptExceptions so that
useful information is returned to the user.
Implements a null coalescing operator in painless that looks like `?:`. This form was chosen to emulate Groovy's `?:` operator. It is different in that it only coalesces null values, instead of Groovy's `?:` operator which coalesces all falsy values. I believe that makes it the same as Kotlin's `?:` operator. In other languages this operator looks like `??` (C#) and `COALESCE` (SQL) and `:-` (bash).
This operator is lazy, meaning the right hand side is only evaluated at all if the left hand side is null.
This commit exposes the executor service interface from thread
pool. This will enable some high-level concurrency primitives that will
make some code cleaner and simpler.
Relates #21608
We kept `netty_3` as a fallback in the 5.x series but now that master
is 6.0 we don't need this or in other words all issues coming up with
netty 4 will be blockers for 6.0.
* master: (22 commits)
Add proper toString() method to UpdateTask (#21582)
Fix `InternalEngine#isThrottled` to not always return `false`. (#21592)
add `ignore_missing` option to SplitProcessor (#20982)
fix trace_match behavior for when there is only one grok pattern (#21413)
Remove dead code from GetResponse.java
Fixes date range query using epoch with timezone (#21542)
Do not cache term queries. (#21566)
Updated dynamic mapper section
Docs: Clarify date_histogram bucket sizes for DST time zones
Handle release of 5.0.1
Fix skip reason for stats API parameters test
Reduce skip version for stats API parameter tests
Strict level parsing for indices stats
Remove cluster update task when task times out (#21578)
[DOCS] Mention "all-fields" mode doesn't search across nested documents
InternalTestCluster: when restarting a node we should validate the cluster is formed via the node we just restarted
Fixed bad asciidoc in boolean mapping docs
Fixed bad asciidoc ID in node stats
Be strict when parsing values searching for booleans (#21555)
Fix time zone rounding edge case for DST overlaps
...
There is an issue in the Grok Processor, where trace_match: true does not inject the _ingest._grok_match_index into the ingest-document when there is just one pattern provided. This is due to an optimization in the regex construction. This commit adds a check for when this is the case, and injects a static index value of "0", since there is only one pattern matched (at the first index into the patterns).
To make this clearer, more documentation was added to the grok-processor docs.
Fixes#21371.
* master:
Hack around cluster service and logging race
Do not prematurely shutdown Log4j
Support decimal constants with trailing [dD] in painless (#21412)
In painless suggest a long constant if int won't do (#21415)
Account for different paths for sysctl utilities
[TEST] testRebalancePossible() may not have an assigned node id
Tests: Disable merge in SearchCancellationTests
Tests: clean search scroll at the end of SearchCancellationIT
This adds support to painless for decimal constants with trailing `d` or
`D` to make it compatible with Java. It already supported integer
constants with a trailing `d` or `D` but this adds tests for it.
Closes#21116
In painless we prefer explicit types over implicit ones whereas
groovy is the other way around. Take this groovy code:
```
> 86400000.class
java.lang.Integer
> 864000000000.class
java.lang.Long
```
Painless accepts `86400000` just fine because that is a valid `int`
in the jvm. It rejects `864000000000` as an invlid `int` constant
because, in painless as in java, `long` constants always end in `L`
or `l`.
To ease the transition from groovy to painless, this changes the
compilation error returned from these invalid constants from:
```
Invalid int constant [864000000000].
```
to
```
Invalid int constant [864000000000]. If you want a long constant then change it to [864000000000L].
```
Inspired by #21313
* master: (516 commits)
Avoid angering Log4j in TransportNodesActionTests
Add trace logging when aquiring and releasing operation locks for replication requests
Fix handler name on message not fully read
Remove accidental import.
Improve log message in TransportNodesAction
Clean up of Script.
Update Joda Time to version 2.9.5 (#21468)
Remove unused ClusterService dependency from SearchPhaseController (#21421)
Remove max_local_storage_nodes from elasticsearch.yml (#21467)
Wait for all reindex subtasks before rethrottling
Correcting a typo-Maan to Man-in README.textile (#21466)
Fix InternalSearchHit#hasSource to return the proper boolean value (#21441)
Replace all index date-math examples with the URI encoded form
Fix typos (#21456)
Adapt ES_JVM_OPTIONS packaging test to ubuntu-1204
Add null check in InternalSearchHit#sourceRef to prevent NPE (#21431)
Add VirtualBox version check (#21370)
Export ES_JVM_OPTIONS for SysV init
Skip reindex rethrottle tests with workers
Make forbidden APIs be quieter about classpath warnings (#21443)
...
In the test for reindex and friend's rethrottling feature we were waiting
only for a single reindex sub task to start before rethrottling. This
mostly worked because starting tasks is fast. But it didn't *always work
and CI found that for us. This fixes the test to wait for all subtasks
to start before rethrottling.
I reproduced this locally semi-consistently with some fairly creative
`Thread.sleep` calls and this test fix fixes the issue even with the
sleeps so I'm fairly sure this will work consistently.
Closes#21446
The method used to be called `isSourceEmpty`, and was renamed to `hasSource`, but the return value never changed. Updated tests and users accordingly.
Closes#21419
Our current default behaviour to ignore unrated documents when calculating the
precision seems a bit counter intuitive. Instead we should treat those documents
as "irrelevant" by default and provide an optional parameter to ignore those
documents if that is the behaviour the user wants.
Null safe dereferences make handling null or missing values shorter.
Compare without:
```
if (ctx._source.missing != null && ctx._source.missing.foo != null) {
ctx._source.foo_length = ctx.source.missing.foo.length()
}
```
To with:
```
Integer length = ctx._source.missing?.foo?.length();
if (length != null) {
ctx._source.foo_length = length
}
```
Combining this with the as of yet unimplemented elvis operator allows
for very concise defaults for nulls:
```
ctx._source.foo_length = ctx._source.missing?.foo?.length() ?: 0;
```
Since you have to start somewhere, we started with null safe dereferenes.
Anyway, this is a feature borrowed from groovy. Groovy allows writing to
null values like:
```
def v = null
v?.field = 'cat'
```
And the writes are simply ignored. Painless doesn't support this at this
point because it'd be complex to implement and maybe not all that useful.
There is no runtime cost for this feature if it is not used. When it is
used we implement it fairly efficiently, adding a jump rather than a
temporary variable.
This should also work fairly well with doc values.
If you try to reindex with multiple slices against a node that
doesn't support it we throw an `IllegalArgumentException` so
`assertVersionSerializable` is ok with it and so if this happens
in REST it comes back as a 400 error.
* Rest client: don't reuse that same HttpAsyncResponseConsumer across multiple retries
Turns out that AbstractAsyncResponseConsumer from apache async http client is stateful and cannot be reused across multiple requests. The failover mechanism was mistakenly reusing that same instance, which can be provided by users, across retries in case nodes are down or return 5xx errors. The downside is that we have to change the signature of two public methods, as HttpAsyncResponseConsumer cannot be provided directly anymore, rather its factory needs to be provided which is going to be used to create one instance of the consumer per request attempt.
Up until now we tested our RestClient against multiple nodes only in a mock environment, where we don't really send http requests. In that scenario we can verify that retries etc. work properly but the interaction with the http client library in a real scenario is different and can catch other problems. With this commit we also add an integration test that sends requests to multiple hosts, and some of them may also get stopped meanwhile. The specific test for pathPrefix was also removed as pathPrefix is now randomly applied by default, hence implicitly tested. Moved also a small test method that checked the validity of the path argument to the unit test RestClientSingleHostTests.
Also increase default buffer limit to 100MB and make it required in default consumer
The default buffer limit used to be 10MB but that proved not to be high enough for scroll requests (see reindex from remote). With this commit we increase the limit to 100MB and make it a bit more visibile in the consumer factory.
At one point in the past when moving out the rest tests from core to
their own subproject, we had multiple test classes which evenly split up
the tests to run. However, we simplified this and went back to a single
test runner to have better reproduceability in tests. This change
removes the remnants of that multiplexing support.
Adds support for `?slices=N` to reindex which automatically
parallelizes the process using parallel scrolls on `_uid`. Performance
testing sees a 3x performance improvement for simple docs
on decent hardware, maybe 30% performance improvement
for more complex docs. Still compelling, especially because
clusters should be able to get closer to the 3x than the 30%
number.
Closes#20624
There's a currently unhandled edge case for the precion@ metric. When none of
the search hits in the result are rated, we have neither true nor false
positives which currently leads to division by zero. We should return a precion
of 0.0 in this case.
This adds checks for expected warning headers to the query builder test
infrastructure. Tests that are adding deprecation warnings to the response
headers need to check those, otherwise the abstract base class for the test
class will complain at teardown.
The `IndexService#newQueryShardContext()` method creates a QueryShardContext on
shard `0`, with a `null` reader and that uses `System.currentTimeMillis()` to
resolve `now`. This may hide bugs, since the shard id is sometimes used for
query parsing (it is used to salt random score generation in `function_score`),
passing a `null` reader disables query rewriting and for some use-cases, it is
simply not ok to rely on the current timestamp (eg. percolation). So this pull
request removes this method and instead requires that all call sites provide
these parameters explicitly.
It was 10mb and that was causing trouble when folks reindex-from-remoted
with large documents.
We also improve the error reporting so it tells folks to use a smaller
batch size if they hit a buffer size exception. Finally, adds some docs
to reindex-from-remote mentioning the buffer and giving an example of
lowering the size.
Closes#21185
When multiple ratings for the same document (identified by _index, _type,
_id) are specified in the request we should throw an error. This change adds a
check for this in the RatedRequest setter (and ctor that uses that setter).
Closes#20997
This adds support for templating in rank eval requests.
Relates to #20231
Problem: In it's current state the rank-eval request API forces the user to repeat complete queries for each test request. In most use cases the structure of the query to test will be stable with only parameters changing across requests, so this looks like lots of boilerplate json for something that could be expressed in a more concise way.
Uses templating/ ScriptServices to enable users to submit only one test request template and let them only specify template parameters on a per test request basis.
Previously Elasticsearch would only use the package name for logging
levels, truncating the package prefix and the class name. This meant
that logger names for Netty were just prefixed by netty3 and netty. We
changed this for Elasticsearch so that it's the fully-qualified class
name now, but never corrected this for Netty. This commit fixes the
logger names for the Netty modules so that their levels are controlled
by the fully-qualified class name.
Relates #21223
Refactored ScriptType to clean up some of the variable and method names. Added more documentation. Deprecated the 'in' ParseField in favor of 'stored' to match the indexed scripts being replaced by stored scripts.
Java 9's exception message when lists have an out of bounds index
is much better than java 8 but the painless code asserted on the
java 8 message. Now it'll accept either.
I'm tempted to weaken the assertion but I like asserting that the
message is readable.
Adds support for indexing into lists and arrays with negative
indexes meaning "counting from the back". So for if
`x = ["cat", "dog", "chicken"]` then `x[-1] == "chicken"`.
This adds an extra branch to every array and list access but
some performance testing makes it look like the branch predictor
successfully predicts the branch every time so there isn't a
in execution time for this feature when the index is positive.
When the index is negative performance testing showed the runtime
is the same as writing `x[x.length - 1]`, again, presumably thanks
to the branch predictor.
Those performance metrics were calculated for lists and arrays but
`def`s get roughly the same treatment though instead of inlining
the test they need to make a invoke dynamic so we don't screw up
maps.
Closes#20870
Lucene 6.3 is expected to be released in the next weeks so it'd be good to give
it some integration testing. I had to upgrade randomized-testing too so that
both Lucene and Elasticsearch are on the same version.
This commit fixes responses to HEAD requests so that the value of the
Content-Length is correct per the HTTP spec. Namely, the value of this
header should be equal to the Content-Length if the request were not a
HEAD request.
This commit also fixes a memory leak on HEAD requests to the main action
that arose from the bytes on a builder not being released due to them
being dropped on the floor to ensure that the response to the main
action did not have a body.
Relates #21123
Versions before 2.0 needed to be told to return interesting fields
like `_parent`, `_routing`, `_ttl`, and `_timestamp`. And they come
back inside a `fields` block which we need to parse.
Closes#21044
This commit upgrades the transport-netty4 module dependency from Netty
version 4.1.5 to version 4.1.6. This is a bug fix release of Netty.
Relates #21051
This allows you to whitelist `localhost:*` or `127.0.10.*:9200`.
It explicitly checks for patterns like `*` in the whitelist and
refuses to start if the whitelist would match everything. Beyond
that the user is on their own designing a secure whitelist.
When running `gradle run`, a developer usually intends to get a running
instance as if they had run elasticsearch from the command line. This is
different than the isolated environment we use for integration testing
plugins. This change switches the run task to use the zip distribution,
so that all modules included in the normal distribution are included.
* Scripting: Add support for booleans in scripts
Since 2.0, booleans have been represented as numeric fields (longs).
However, in scripts, this is odd, since you expect doing a comparison
against a boolean to work. While languages like groovy will auto convert
between booleans and longs, painless does not.
This changes the doc values accessor for boolean fields in scripts to
return Boolean objects instead of Long objects.
closes#20949
* Make Booleans final and remove wrapping of `this` for getValues()
This commit fixes an issue with the handling of the value "keep-alive"
on the Connection header in the Netty 4 HTTP implementation while
handling an HTTP 1.0 request. The issue was using the wrong equals
method to compare an AsciiString instance and a String instance (they
could never be equal). This commit fixes this to use the correct equals
method to compare for content equality.
This commit fixes an issue with the handling of the value "close" on the
Connection header in the Netty 4 HTTP implementation. The issue was
using the wrong equals method to compare an AsciiString instance and a
String instance (they could never be equal). This commit fixes this to
use the correct equals method to compare for content equality.
Relates #20956
The unknown document section in the response for each query can be rendered
using the rated hits that are now also part of the response by just filtering
the documents without a rating.
Currently each implementation of RankedListQualityMetric does some initial
joining operation that links the input search hits with a rated document rating,
if available. Also all metrics collect unknown docs and now also need to add the
list of rated search hits to the partial query evaluation. This change
centralizes this work in some new helper methods in RankedListQualityMetric.
This change adds a `hits` section to the response part for each ranking
evaluation query, containing a list of documents (index/type/id) and ratings (if
the document was rated in the request). This section can be used to better
understand the calculation of the ranking quality of this particular query, but
it can also be used to identify the "unknown" (that is unrated) documents that
were part of the seach hits, for example because a UI later wants to present
those documents to the user to get a rating for them.
If the user specifies a set of field names using a parameter called
`summary_fields` in the request, those fields are also included as part of the
response in addition to "_index", "_type", "_id".
Today Elasticsearch limits the number of processors used in computing
thread counts to 32. This was from a time when Elasticsearch created
more threads than it does now and users would run into out of memory
errors. It appears the real cause of these out of memory errors was not
well understood (it's often due to ulimit settings) and so users were
left hitting these out of memory errors on boxes with high core
counts. Today Elasticsearch creates less threads (but still a lot) and
we have a bootstrap check in place to ensure that the relevant ulimit is
not too low.
There are some caveats still to having too many concurrent indexing
threads as it can lead to too many little segments, and it's not a
magical go faster knob if indexing is already bottlenecked by disk, but
this limitation is artificial and surprising to users and so it should
be removed.
This commit also increases the lower bound of the max processes ulimit,
to prepare for a world where Elasticsearch instances might be running
with more the previous cap of 32 processors. With the current settings,
Elasticsearch wants to create roughly 576 + 25 * p / 2 threads, where p
is the number of processors. Add in roughly 7 * p / 8 threads for the GC
threads and a fudge factor, and 4096 should cover us pretty well up to
256 cores.
Relates #20874
Both netty3 and netty4 http implementation printed the default
toString representation of PortRange if ports couldn't be bound.
This commit adds a better default toString method to PortRange and
uses the string representation for the error message in the http
implementations.
Some objects like maps, iterables or arrays of objects can self-reference themselves. This is mostly due to a bug in code but the XContentBuilder should be able to detect such situations and throws an IllegalArgumentException instead of building objects over and over until a stackoverflow occurs.
closes#20540closes#19475
Update scripts might want to update the documents `_timestamp` but need a notion of `now()`.
Painless doesn't support any notion of now() since it would make scripts non-pure functions. Yet,
in the update case this is a valid value and we can pass it with the context together to allow the
script to record the timestamp the document was updated.
Relates to #17895
* Replace org.elasticsearch.common.lucene.search.MatchNoDocsQuery with its Lucene version (org.apache.lucene.search.MatchNoDocsQuery)
This change removes the ES version of the match no docs query and replaces it with the Lucene version.
relates #18030
* Add missing change
Today we throw an assertion error if we release an AbstractArray more than once.
Yet, it's recommended to implement close methods such that they can be invoked
more than once. Guaranteed single release calls are hard to implement and some
situations might not be tested causing for instance `CircuitBreaker` to operate on
corrupted memory stats.
UpdateHelper, MetaDataIndexUpgradeService, and some recovery
stuff.
Move ClusterSettings to nullable ctor parameter of TransportService
so it isn't forgotten.
This change proposes the removal of all non-tcp transport implementations. The
mock transport can be used by default to run tests instead of local transport that has
roughly the same performance compared to TCP or at least not noticeably slower.
This is a master only change, deprecation notice in 5.x will be committed as a
separate change.
Today SearchContext expose the current context as a thread local which makes any kind of sane interface design very very hard. This PR removes the thread local entirely and instead passes the relevant context anywhere needed. This simplifies state management dramatically and will allow for a much leaner SearchContext interface down the road.
Today when parsing a request, Elasticsearch silently ignores incorrect
(including parameters with typos) or unused parameters. This is bad as
it leads to requests having unintended behavior (e.g., if a user hits
the _analyze API and misspell the "tokenizer" then Elasticsearch will
just use the standard analyzer, completely against intentions).
This commit removes lenient URL parameter parsing. The strategy is
simple: when a request is handled and a parameter is touched, we mark it
as such. Before the request is actually executed, we check to ensure
that all parameters have been consumed. If there are remaining
parameters yet to be consumed, we fail the request with a list of the
unconsumed parameters. An exception has to be made for parameters that
format the response (as opposed to controlling the request); for this
case, handlers are able to provide a list of parameters that should be
excluded from tripping the unconsumed parameters check because those
parameters will be used in formatting the response.
Additionally, some inconsistencies between the parameters in the code
and in the docs are corrected.
Relates #20722
The invalid ingest configuration field name used to show itself,
even when it was null, in error messages. Sometimes this does not make
sense.
e.g.
```[null] Only one of [file], [id], or [inline] may be configure```
vs.
```Only one of [file], [id], or [inline] may be configure```
The above deals with three fields, therefore this no one property
responsible.
* master: (1199 commits)
[DOCS] Remove non-valid link to mapping migration document
Revert "Default `include_in_all` for numeric-like types to false"
test: add a test with ipv6 address
docs: clearify that both ip4 and ip6 addresses are supported
Include complex settings in settings requests
Add production warning for pre-release builds
Clean up confusing error message on unhandled endpoint
[TEST] Increase logging level in testDelayShards()
change health from string to enum (#20661)
Provide error message when plugin id is missing
Document that sliced scroll works for reindex
Make reindex-from-remote ignore unknown fields
Remove NoopGatewayAllocator in favor of a more realistic mock (#20637)
Remove Marvel character reference from guide
Fix documentation for setting Java I/O temp dir
Update client benchmarks to log4j2
Changes the API of GatewayAllocator#applyStartedShards and (#20642)
Removes FailedRerouteAllocation and StartedRerouteAllocation
IndexRoutingTable.initializeEmpty shouldn't override supplied primary RecoverySource (#20638)
Smoke tester: Adjust to latest changes (#20611)
...
reindex-from-remote should ignore unknown fields so it is mostly
future compatible. This makes it ignore unknown fields by adding an
option to `ObjectParser` and `ConstructingObjectParser` that, if
enabled, causes them to ignore unknown fields.
Closes#20504
Today we hold on to all possible tokenizers, tokenfilters etc. when we create
an index service on a node. This was mainly done to allow the `_analyze` API to
directly access all these primitive. We fixed this in #19827 and can now get rid of
the AnalysisService entirely and replace it with a simple map like class. This
ensures we don't create a gazillion long living objects that are entirely useless since
they are never used in most of the indices. Also those objects might consume a considerable
amount of memory since they might load stopwords or synonyms etc.
Closes#19828
In order to understand how well particular queries in a joint ranking evaluation
request work we want to break down the overall metric into its components, each
contributed by a particular query. The response structure now has a
`details` section under which we can summarize this information. Each
sub-section is keyed by the query-id and currently only contains the partial
metric and the unknown_docs section for each query.
To be consitent with the output of the search API, we should use the same field
names for specifying the document ("_index", "_type", "_id") when providing the
rated documents in the `rank_eval` request.
This commit removes `ByteSizeValue`'s methods that are duplicated (ex: `mbFrac()` and `getMbFrac()`) in order to only keep the `getN` form.
It also renames `mb()` -> `getMb()`, `kb()` -> `getKB()` in order to be more coherent with the `ByteSizeUnit` method names.
* Build: Remove old maven deploy support
This change removes the old maven deploy that we have in parallel to
maven-publish, and makes maven-publish fully work with publishing to
maven local. Using `gradle publishToMavenLocal` should be used to
publish to .m2.
Note that there is an unfortunate hack that means for
zip artifacts we must first create/publish a dummy pom file, and then
follow that with the real pom file. It would be nice to have the pom
file contains packaging=zip, but maven central then requires sources and
javadocs. But our zips are really just attached artifacts, so we already
set the packaging type to pom for our zip files. This change just works
around a limitation of the underlying maven publishing library which
silently skips attached artifacts when the packaging type is set to pom.
relates #20164closes#20375
* Remove unnecessary extra spacing
This change removes all guice interaction from Transport, HttpServerTransport,
HttpServer and TransportService. All these classes as well as their subclasses
or extended version configured via plugins are now created by using plain old
bloody java constructors. YAY!
We can now run templates using `explain` and/or `profile` parameters.
Which is interesting when you have defined a complicated profile but want to debug it in an easier way than running the full query again.
You can use `explain` parameter when running a template:
```js
GET /_search/template
{
"file": "my_template",
"params": {
"status": [ "pending", "published" ]
},
"explain": true
}
```
You can use `profile` parameter when running a template:
```js
GET /_search/template
{
"file": "my_template",
"params": {
"status": [ "pending", "published" ]
},
"profile": true
}
```
TransportService is such a central part of the core server, replacing
it's implementation is risky and can cause serious issues. This change removes the ability to
plug in TransportService but allows registering a TransportInterceptor that enables
plugins to intercept requests on both the sender and the receiver ends. This is a commonly used
and overwritten functionality but encapsulates the custom code in a contained manner.
This change replaces the fields parameter with stored_fields when it makes sense.
This is dictated by the renaming we made in #18943 for the search API.
The following list of endpoint has been changed to use `stored_fields` instead of `fields`:
* get
* mget
* explain
The documentation and the rest API spec has been updated to cope with the changes for the following APIs:
* delete_by_query
* get
* mget
* explain
The `fields` parameter has been deprecated for the following APIs (it is replaced by _source filtering):
* update: the fields are extracted from the _source directly.
* bulk: the fields parameter is used but fields are extracted from the source directly so it is allowed to have non-stored fields.
Some APIs still have the `fields` parameter for various reasons:
* cat.fielddata: the fields paramaters relates to the fielddata fields that should be printed.
* indices.clear_cache: used to indicate which fielddata fields should be cleared.
* indices.get_field_mapping: used to filter fields in the mapping.
* indices.stats: get stats on fields (stored or not stored).
* termvectors: fields are retrieved from the stored fields if possible and extracted from the _source otherwise.
* mtermvectors:
* nodes.stats: the fields parameter is used to concatenate completion_fields and fielddata_fields so it's not related to stored_fields at all.
Fixes#20155
Currently the top level spec_id serves as a human-readable description of the
ranking evaluation API call. Since there is only one id possible, it can be
dropped to simplify the request.
Closes#20438
Every rated document needs an index/type/id parameter, so adding a "key" object
like we currently do only leads to an additional unneeded level of nesting in
the rest request.
Closes#20417
In 5.x we allowed this with a deprecation warning. This removes the code
added for that deprecation, requiring the cluster name to not be in the
data path.
Resolves#20391
** The default script language is now maintained in `Script` class.
* Added `script.legacy.default_lang` setting that controls the default language for scripts that are stored inside documents (for example percolator queries). This defaults to groovy.
** Added `QueryParseContext#getDefaultScriptLanguage()` that manages the default scripting language. Returns always `painless`, unless loading query/search request in legacy mode then the returns what is configured in `script.legacy.default_lang` setting.
** In the aggregation parsing code added `ParserContext` that also holds the default scripting language like `QueryParseContext`. Most parser don't have access to `QueryParseContext`. This is for scripts in aggregations.
* The `lang` script field is always serialized (toXContent).
Closes#20122
PrecisionAtN and ReciprocalRank are binary evaluation metrics by default that
only distiguish between relevant/irrelevant search results. So far we assumed
that relevant documents are labaled with 1 (irrelevant docs with 0) in the
evaluation request, but this is cumbersome if the ratings are provided on a
larger integer scale and would need to get mapped to a 0/1 value.
This change introduces a threshold parameter on the PrecisionAtN and
ReciprocalRank metric than can be used to set the threshold from which on a
document is considered "relevant". It defaults to 1, so in case of 0/1 ratings
the threshold doesn't have to be set and only ratings with value 0 are
considered to be irrelevant.
* master:
Avoid NPE in LoggingListener
Randomly use Netty 3 plugin in some tests
Skip smoke test client on JDK 9
Revert "Don't allow XContentBuilder#writeValue(TimeValue)"
[docs] Remove coming in 2.0.0
Don't allow XContentBuilder#writeValue(TimeValue)
[doc] Remove leftover from CONSOLE conversion
Parameter improvements to Cluster Health API wait for shards (#20223)
Add 2.4.0 to packaging tests list
Docs: clarify scale is applied at origin+offest (#20242)
When Netty 4 was introduced, it was not the default network
implementation. Some tests were constructed to randomly use Netty 4
instead of the default network implementation. When Netty 4 was made the
default implementation, these tests were not updated. Thus, these tests
are randomly choosing between the default network implementation (Netty
4) and Netty 4. This commit updates these tests to reverse the role of
Netty 3 and Netty 4 so that the randomization is choosing between Netty
3 and the default (again, now Netty 4).
Relates #20265