This commit adds a rest endpoint for freezing and unfreezing an index.
Among other cleanups mainly fixing an issue accessing package private APIs
from a plugin that got caught by integration tests this change also adds
documentation for frozen indices.
Note: frozen indices are marked as `beta` and available as a basic feature.
Relates to #34352
Removed extending of AbstractComponent and changed logger usage to
explicit declaration. Abstract classes still have logger
declaration using this.getClass() in order to show implementation class
name in its logs.
See #34488
This changes the test to not use a `CountDownlatch`, instead adding an assertion
for the final logging message and waiting until the `MockAppender` has seen it
before proceeding.
Resolves#23739
This pull request replaces some blocks of code that must be run once
and that are currently based on AtomicBoolean by the convient RunOnce
class added in #35489.
Refactors and simplifies the logic around stopping nodes, making sure that for a full cluster restart
onNodeStopped is only called after the nodes are actually all stopped (and in particular not while
starting up some nodes again). This change also ensures that a closed node client is not being used
anymore (which required a small change to a test).
Relates to #35049
This adds a `wait_for_completion` flag which allows the user to block
the Stop API until the task has actually moved to a stopped state,
instead of returning immediately. If the flag is set, a `timeout` parameter
can be specified to determine how long (at max) to block the API
call. If unspecified, the timeout is 30s.
If the timeout is exceeded before the job moves to STOPPED, a
timeout exception is thrown. Note: this is just signifying that the API
call itself timed out. The job will remain in STOPPING and evenutally
flip over to STOPPED in the background.
If the user asks the API to block, we move over the the generic
threadpool so that we don't hold up a networking thread.
The MockTcpTransport is not friendly in regards to memory usage. It must
allocate multiple byte arrays for every message. This improves the
memory situation by failing fast if the message is improperly formatted.
Additionally, it uses reusable big arrays for at least half of the
allocated byte arrays.
This change adds a logger for the query and fetch phases that prints all requests
before their execution at the trace level. This will help debugging cases where an issue
occurs during the execution since only completed queries are logged by the slow logs.
This is related to #34483. It introduces a namespaced setting for
compression that allows users to configure compression on a per remote
cluster basis. The transport.tcp.compress remains as a fallback
setting. If transport.tcp.compress is set to true, then all requests
and responses are compressed. If it is set to false, only requests to
clusters based on the cluster.remote.cluster_name.transport.compress
setting are compressed. However, after this change regardless of any
local settings, responses will be compressed if the request that is
received was compressed.
This change adds a `frozen` engine that allows lazily open a directory reader
on a read-only shard. The engine wraps general purpose searchers in a LazyDirectoryReader
that also allows to release and reset the underlying index readers after any and before
secondary search phases.
Relates to #34352
With this change, `Version` no longer carries information about the qualifier,
we still need a way to show the "display version" that does have both
qualifier and snapshot. This is now stored by the build and red from `META-INF`.
This is related to #29023. Additionally at other points we have
discussed a preference for removing the need to unnecessarily block
threads for opening new node connections. This commit lays the groudwork
for this by opening connections asynchronously at the transport level.
We still block, however, this work will make it possible to eventually
remove all blocking on new connections out of the TransportService
and Transport.
When the engine is asked for historical operations, we check if some of the requested operations
are not yet refreshed and if so we refresh before returning the operations. The refresh check is
based on capturing the local checkpoint before each refresh and comparing that value to the one
requested when `newChangesSnapshot` was called. If the requested range is above the captured
local checkpoint we issue a refresh.
This can currently cause unneeded extra refreshes if the method is called concurrently which may cause unwanted degradation in indexing performance. This is especially relevant for CCR where we always ask for a range below the global checkpoint. That range is guaranteed to be below the local
checkpoint of the shard and one refresh is enough to serve multiple changes requests.
This commit fixes this by introducing a dedicated mutex to make sure the test for whether a refresh
is needed actually wait for concurrents for concurrent refreshes that were caused by another
change refresh.
Note that this is not a big change in semantics as refreshes are serialized by lucene anyway. I also
opted not to keep the synchronization to the changes snapshot request only even if in theory we
can apply it to all refreshes, not matter where they come from.
Currently we create a new netty event loop group for client connections
and all server profiles. Each new group creates new threads for io
processing. This means 2 * num of processors new threads for each group.
A single group should be able to handle all io processing (for the
transports). This also brings the netty module inline with what we do
for nio.
Additionally, this PR renames the worker threads to be the same for
netty and nio.
* Introduce property to set version qualifier
- VersionProperties.elasticsearch is now a string which can have qualifier
and snapshot too
- The Version class in the build no longer cares about snapshot and
qualifier.
Stop passing `Settings` to `AbstractComponent`'s ctor. This allows us to
stop passing around `Settings` in a *ton* of places. While this change
touches many files, it touches them all in fairly small, mechanical
ways, doing a few things per file:
1. Drop the `super(settings);` line on everything that extends
`AbstractComponent`.
2. Drop the `settings` argument to the ctor if it is no longer used.
3. If the file doesn't use `logger` then drop `extends
AbstractComponent` from it.
4. Clean up all compilation failure caused by the `settings` removal
and drop any now unused `settings` isntances and method arguments.
I've intentionally *not* removed the `settings` argument from a few
files:
1. TransportAction
2. AbstractLifecycleComponent
3. BaseRestHandler
These files don't *need* `settings` either, but this change is large
enough as is.
Relates to #34488
* NETWORKING: MockTransportService Wait for Close
* Make `MockTransportService` wait `30s` for close listeners to run before failing the assertion
* Closes#34990
Today when ESIntegTestCase starts some nodes it writes out the unicast hosts
files each time a node starts its transport service. This does mean that a
number of nodes can start and perform their first pinging round without any
unicast hosts which, if the timing is unlucky and a lot of nodes are all
started at the same time, can lead to a split brain as in #35052.
Prior to #33554 this was unlikely to happen since the MockUncasedHostsProvider
would always have yielded the existing hosts, so the timing would have to have
been implausibly unlucky. Since #33554, however, it's more likely because the
race occurs between the start of the first round of pinging and the writing of
the unicast hosts file. It is realistic that new nodes will be configured with
the existing nodes from startup, so this change reinstates that behaviour.
Closes#35052.
The java yaml test runner supports sending request headers, yet not all clients support headers. This commit makes sure that we enforce adding a skip section with feature "headers" whenever headers are used in a do section as part of a test. That decreases the chance for new tests to break client builds due to the missing skip section.
Closes#34650
This PR renames the CRUD APIS for ILM
GET _ilm/<policy>, _ilm -> _ilm/policy/<policy>, _ilm/policy
PUT _ilm/<policy> -> _ilm/policy/<policy>
DELETE _ilm/<policy> -> _ilm/policy/<policy>
closes#34929.
Drops the `Settings` member from `AbstractComponent`, moving it from the
base class on to the classes that use it. For the most part this is a
mechanical change that doesn't drop `Settings` accesses. The one
exception to this is naming threads where it switches from an invocation
that passes `Settings` and extracts the node name to one that explicitly
passes the node name.
This change doesn't drop the `Settings` argument from
`AbstractComponent`'s ctor because this change is big enough as is.
We'll do that in a follow up change.
This commit filters out usage of deprecated tzs by tests. These are
tested separately and should not require checking for warnings on any
test using random timezones.
closes#34188
Validation of test sections and suites consists of checking that the proper skip features sections are in place depending on the features used in tests.
The validation logic was previously only performed on do sections included in each test section, and the skip needed to be present in the same test section. What happens often though is that the skip is added to the setup section, or the teardown section.
This commit improves the validation of test suites by validating setup and teardown section first, then looking at each test section while still eventually reading the skip section from setup or teardown.
We are also making SkipSection, SetupSection, TearDownSection, ClientYamlTestSection and ClientYamlTestSuite immutable. Previously it was possible to utilize constants like SetupSection.EMPTY, which were modifiable and affect every other future users by modifiying them. This has been corrected.
Also, validation has been improved to cumulate errors so that all the errors from a suite will be listed at once.
Relates to #34735
This commit adds a new single value metric aggregation that calculates
the statistic called median absolute deviation, which is a measure of
variability that works on more types of data than standard deviation
Our calculation of MAD is approximated using t-digests. In the collect
phase, we collect each value visited into a t-digest. In the reduce
phase, we merge all value t-digests, then create a t-digest of
deviations using the first t-digest's median and centroids
Bulk Request in High level rest client should be consistent with what is
possible in Rest API, therefore should support global parameters. Global
parameters are passed in URL in Rest API.
Some parameters are mandatory - index, type - and would fail validation
if not provided before before the bulk is executed.
Optional parameters - routing, pipeline.
The usage of these should be consistent across sync/async execution,
bulk processor and BulkRequestBuilder
closes#26026
`AbstractComponent` is trouble because its name implies that
*everything* should extend from it. It *is* useful, but maybe too
broadly useful. The things it offers access too, the `Settings` instance
for the entire server and a logger are nice to have around, but not
really needed *everywhere*. The `Settings` instance especially adds a
fair bit of ceremony to testing without any value.
This removes the `nodeName` method from `AbstractComponent` so it is
more clear where we actually need the node name.
In order to remove Streamable from the codebase, Response objects need
to be read using the Writeable.Reader interface which this change
enables. This change enables the use of Writeable.Reader by adding the
`Action#getResponseReader` method. The default implementation simply
uses the existing `newResponse` method and the readFrom method. As
responses are migrated to the Writeable.Reader interface, Action
classes can be updated to throw an UnsupportedOperationException when
`newResponse` is called and override the `getResponseReader` method.
Relates #34389
This is a forward port of a change made to clean up backwards
compatibility for the rollup cleanups. It makes the version of each node
available very early on in test execution. The 6.x version of the change
used those versions to control the cleanup backwards compatibility but
that isn't needed in this branch. But having the versions around *is*
useful. So this makes them available.
Closes#34629