ElasticsearchRestTests extends now ElasticsearchIntegrationTest and makes use of our ordinary test infrastructure, in particular all randomized aspects now come for free instead of having to maintain a separate (custom) tests runner
We previously parsed only the tests that needed to be run given the version of the cluster the tests are running against. This doesn't happen anymore as it didn't buy much and it would be harder to support as the tests get now parsed before the test cluster gets started. Thus all the tests are now parsed regardless of their skip sections, afterwards the ones that don't need to be run will be skipped through assume directives.
Fixed REST tests that rely on a specific number of shards as this change introduces also random number of shards and replicas (through randomIndexTemplate)
Closes#5654
Elasticsearch is release from release-branches but the modifications
to the documentation must be cherry-picked into the current development
branch. To make this easier this commit splits the commits of the
Version and the documenation into seperate commits.
this commit allows to run the release tool for smoke
testing without being on the actually released branch.
This commit also added a list of plugins that will be installed
for smoke testing to see if the plugin startup mechanism works
correctly.
the build_release.py tool now also downloads and verfyfies the
released packages from S3. It checks integrity based on the sha1
checksums and runs the smoketest against the specs in the current branch.
If RPM tools are not installed the release tool now fails with an
appropriate message. The tool now also fails if any of the required
artifacts is not present.
We use 'coming[x.y.z]' in our ref docs which needs to be updated
when doing a release to 'added[x.y.z]' This commit adds support
for replacing the references where applicable during preparing the release.
This tool builds a release and runs several checks to make sure the
release is in a reasonable shape (smoke test). From a top level
perspective it runs the following steps:
* clean the build environment `mvn clean`
* check if a Java 6 JDK is available
* run the tests with network and local
* generates the checksums for the binary packages
* uploads the binary packages to Amazon S3
* runs a 'mvn deploy' to publish the maven artifacts
The script will create an intermediate branch from a given 'release
branch' updates all versions based on the version we are currently
releasing. Updates the 'pom.xml' file as well as the 'Version.java'
class. Once this is done it commits the changes and rebase with the
branch we want to release from, merges the changes from the intermediate
branch and pushes to the given remote repository including the release
tag.