This is related to #27260. The transport-nio plugin needs socket
permissions to operate as a transport. This commit gives it these
permissions in the policy file.
fixed bugs that were exposed by this:
* Duplicates query leafs were not detected in a multi level boolean query
* Tracking fields for numeric range queries did not work properly.
* The sorting that was used to find the less restrictive clauses in
disjunction query did not work too.
This reverts commit f057fc294a.
The rescorer does not resort the collapsed values inside the top docs
during rescoring. For this reason the Lucene rescorer is not compatible
with collapsing.
Relates #27243
This commit fixes the test progress logging to not produce an NPE when
there are no tests run. The onQuit method is always called, but onStart
would not be called if no tests match the test patterns.
This removes the readFrom and writeTo methods from XContentType, instead using
the more generic `readEnum` and `writeEnum` methods. Luckily they are both
encoded exactly the same way, so there is no compatibility layer needed for
backwards compatibility.
Relates to #28504
* Remove BytesRef usage from XContentParser and its subclasses
This removes all the BytesRef usage from XContentParser in favor of directly
returning a CharBuffer (this was originally what was returned, it was just
immediately wraped in a BytesRef).
Relates to #28504
* Rename method after Ryan's feedback
The original example resulted in a 400 error due to the example being `-` separated instead of the default `.` separation.
```
failed to parse date field [2001-01-01] with format [YYYY.MM.dd]
```
Adds a usage example of the JLH score used in significant terms aggregation.
All other methods to calculate significance score have such an example
Closes#28513
* Wrap stream passed to createParser in try-with-resources
This wraps the stream (`.streamInput()`) that is passed to many of the
`createParser` instances in the enclosing (or a new) try-with-resources block.
This ensures the `BytesReference.streamInput()` is closed.
Relates to #28504
* Use try-with-resources instead of closing in a finally block
This change ensures that we ignore terms removed from the analysis rather than returning a match_no_docs query for the part
that contain the stop word. For instance a query like "the AND fox" should ignore "the" if it is considered as a stop word instead of
adding a match_no_docs query.
This change also fixes the analysis of prefix terms that start with a stop word (e.g. `the*`). In such case if `analyze_wildcard` is true and `the`
is considered as a stop word this part of the query is rewritten into a match_no_docs query. Since it's a prefix query this change forces the prefix query
on `the` even if it is removed from the analysis.
Fixes#28855Fixes#28856
Pruning tombstones is quite expensive since we have to walk though all
deletes in the live version map and acquire a lock on every value even though
it's impossible to prune it. This change does a pre-check if a delete is old enough
and if not it skips acquireing the lock.
Increase the default limit of `index.highlight.max_analyzed_offset` to 1M instead of previous 10K.
Enhance an error message when offset increased to include field name, index name and doc_id.
Relates to https://github.com/elastic/kibana/issues/16764
* Clarifies how the query_string splits textual part to build a query
Whitespaces are not considered as operators anymore in 6x but the documentation is not clear about it.
This commit changes the example in the documentation and adds a note regarding whitespaces and operators.
Closes#28719
It is only a comment, but can confuse those reading the code
Used 6.0 as an arbitrary elasticsearch.version value since it is version that required Java 8
Values for the network.host setting can often contain a colon which is a
character that is considered special by YAML (these arise in IPv6
addresses and some of the special tags like ":ipv4"). As such, these
values need to be quoted or a YAML parser will be unhappy with
them. This commit adds a note to the docs regarding this.
When virtual lock is not possible because JNA is unavailable, we log a
warning message. Yet, this log message refers to mlockall rather than
virtual lock, presumably because of a copy/paste error. This commit
fixes this issue.
This commit specifies that the working directory of the destroy task for
destroying test VMs is the root of the build. This is necessary in case
the build was run from a sub-directory, the Vagrant command would then
not be able to locate the Vagrantfile for the VMs in question.
Today we do not destroy Vagrant boxes before tests. This is because
constantly reprovisioning these boxes is time-consuming. Yet, not
destroying these boxes can lead to state being left around that impacts
subsequent test runs. To address this, we now always destroy these boxes
before tests and provide a flag to set if this is not desired while
iterating locally.
This commit replaces `org.apache.logging.log4j.util.Supplier` by
`java.util.function.Supplier` in non-logging code. These usages are
neither incorrect nor wrong but rather than accidental. I think our
intention was to use the JDK's Supplier in these places.
Applying the rest test gradle plugin already uses the zip distribution
by default, so specifying it explicitly is not necessary. These are
leftovers from before zip was the default for rest tests.
* Reject regex search if regex string is too long (#28344)
* Add docs
* Introduce index level setting `index.max_regex_length`
to control the maximum length of the regular expression
Closes#28344
Today we have two test base classes that have a lot in common when it comes to testing wire and xcontent serialization: `AbstractSerializingTestCase` and `AbstractXContentStreamableTestCase`. There are subtle differences though between the two, in the way they work, what can be overridden and features that they support (e.g. insertion of random fields).
This commit introduces a new base class called `AbstractWireTestCase` which holds all of the serialization test code in common between `Streamable` and `Writeable`. It has two minimal subclasses called `AbstractWireSerializingTestCase` and `AbstractStreamableTestCase` which are specialized for `Writeable` and `Streamable`.
This commit also introduces a new test class called `AbstractXContentTestCase` for all of the xContent testing, which holds a testFromXContent method for parsing and rendering to xContent. This one can be delegated to from the existing `AbstractStreamableXContentTestCase` and `AbstractSerializingTestCase` so that we avoid code duplicate as much as possible and all these base classes offer the same functionalities in the same way. Having this last base class decoupled from the serialization testing may also help with the REST high-level client testing, as there are some classes where it's hard to implement equals/hashcode and this makes it possible to override `assertEqualInstances` for custom equality comparisons (also this base class doesn't require implementing equals/hashcode as it doesn't test such methods.
This commit fixes a bug that was introduced in PR #27415 for 6.1
and 7.0 where a change to support MULTIPOINT shapes mucked up
indexing of standalone points.
Previously the message reported when `node_concurrent_outgoing_recoveries`
resulted in a `THROTTLE` decision included the reporting node's ID rather than
that of the primary. This commit fixes that.
Fixes#28777.
This commit is related to #27260. Currently there is a weird
relationship between channel contexts and nio channels. The selectors
use the context for read and writing. But the selector operates directly
on the nio channel for registering, closing, and connecting.
This commit works on improving this relationship. The selector operates
directly on the context which wraps the low level java.nio.channels. The
NioChannel class is simply an API that is used to interact with the
channel (sending messages from outside the selector event loop,
scheduling a close, adding listeners, etc). The context is only used
internally by the channel to implement these apis and by the selector to
perform these operations.
With this commit we reduce the maximum amount of memory that the javac
compiler can use from 1g to 512mb. While the build would succeed even
with 256mb, it influences compile time slightly negatively.
We have measured that the runtime overhead stays tolerable by running
the following command five times under repeatable conditions (i.e. we
execute `./gradlew clean`, then drop the caches and TRIM the disk):
```
./gradlew compileGroovy compileJava compileJava9Java\
compileTestGroovy compileTestJava compileGroovy
```
The results in seconds (as reported by Gradle) are:
* 1gb: avg: 253s, min: 252s, max: 256s
* 512mb: avg: 257s, min: 256s, max: 259s