- new `rank_feature`/`script_score` queries
- new `index_phrases`/`index_prefixes` options
- disabling `_field_names` doesn't help anymore
- adaptive replica selection is on by default
We were missing release notes for 7.0.0-alpha1. I generated them by running
the release-notes script with a quick hack that filtered out pull requests
that had been closed on or after 2018-11-15.
Some breaking changes had been documented in the release notes rather than
the migration guide so I moved them.
Prior to this commit (and after 6.5.0), if an ingest node changes
the _index in a pipeline, the original target index would be created.
For daily indexes this could create an extra, empty index per day.
This commit changes the TransportBulkAction to execute the ingest node
pipeline before attempting to create the index. This ensures that the
only index created is the original or one set by the ingest node pipeline.
This was the execution order prior to 6.5.0 (#32786).
The execution order was changed in 6.5 to better support default pipelines.
Specifically the execution order was changed to be able to read the settings
from the index meta data. This commit also includes a change in logic such
that if the target index does not exist when ingest node pipeline runs, it
will now pull the default pipeline (if one exists) from the settings of the
best matched of the index template.
Relates #32786
Relates #32758Closes#36545
This commit introduces the forget follower API. This API is needed in cases that
unfollowing a following index fails to remove the shard history retention leases
on the leader index. This can happen explicitly through user action, or
implicitly through an index managed by ILM. When this occurs, history will be
retained longer than necessary. While the retention lease will eventually
expire, it can be expensive to allow history to persist for that long, and also
prevent ILM from performing actions like shrink on the leader index. As such, we
introduce an API to allow for manual removal of the shard history retention
leases in this case.
This change does the following:
1. Makes the per-node setting xpack.ml.max_open_jobs
into a cluster-wide dynamic setting
2. Changes the job node selection to continue to use the
per-node attributes storing the maximum number of open
jobs if any node in the cluster is older than 7.1, and
use the dynamic cluster-wide setting if all nodes are on
7.1 or later
3. Changes the docs to reflect this
4. Changes the thread pools for native process communication
from fixed size to scaling, to support the dynamic nature
of xpack.ml.max_open_jobs
5. Renames the autodetect thread pool to the job comms
thread pool to make clear that it will be used for other
types of ML jobs (data frame analytics in particular)
Backport of #39320
This is related to #35975. It adds documentation on the remote recovery
process. Additionally, it adds documentation about the various settings
that can impact the process.
* SYS COLUMNS will skip UNSUPPORTED field types in ODBC and JDBC, as well.
NESTED and OBJECT types were already skipped in ODBC mode, now they are
skipped in JDBC mode, as well.
(cherry picked from commit 9e0df64b2d36c9069dfa506570468f0522c86417)
These docs are out of date, now that we override the infinite DNS cache
within Elasticsearch. This commit completely removes this content, as
specific guidance is no longer needed here.
* Add "columnar" option for REST requests (but be lenient for non-"plain"
modes) for json, yaml, smile and cbor formats.
* Updated documentation
(cherry picked from commit 5b7e0de237fb514d14a61a347bc669d4b4adbe56)
While running these commands from alias, facing issues using kill `cat pid`, In some situations, the more compact:
```
pkill -F /var/run/myProcess.pid
```
is the way to go.
* Remove Hipchat support from Watcher (#39199)
Hipchat has been shut down and has previously been deprecated in
Watcher (#39160), therefore we should remove support for these actions.
* Add migrate note
This fixes a bug in the sensing of the current OS family in the test cluster
formation code. Previously all builds would assume every environment
was windows and would jump to using the windows zip build. This fixes
the OS sensing code as well as updates some tests to account for
different build flavors.
Backport of #38457
Currently remote compression and ping schedule settings are dynamic.
However, we do not listen for changes. This commit adds listeners for
changes to those two settings. Additionally, when those settings change
we now close existing connections and open new ones with the settings
applied.
Fixes#37201.
In #30209 we deprecated the camel case `nGram` filter name in favour of `ngram` and
did the same for `edgeNGram` and `edge_ngram` and we are removing those names in
8.0. This change disallows using the deprecated names for new indices created in 7.0 by
throwing an error if these filters are used.
Relates to #38911
* missing 'test2' index example (#39055)
If I got the idea of aliases properly, I think that the index "test2" should have
a reference in the example above of the following sentence:
" ... we associate the alias `alias1` to both `test` and `test2` ... "
* add PUT test2
* Update aliases.asciidoc
swap which is write/read
Co-authored-by: Guilherme Ferreira <guilhermeaferreira_t@yahoo.com.br>
Rollup jobs should be stopped + deleted before the indices are removed.
It's possible for an active rollup job to issue a bulk request, the test
ends and the cleanup code deletes all indices. The in-flight bulk
request will then stall + error because the index no-longer exists...
but this process might take longer than the StopRollup timeout.
Which means the test fails, and often fails several other tests since
the job is still active (e.g. other tests cannot create the same-named
job, or fail to stop the job in their cleanup because it's still stalled).
This tends to knock over several tests before the bulk finally times
out and the job shuts down.
Instead, we need to simply stop jobs first. Inflight bulks will resolve
quickly, and we can carry on with deleting indices after the jobs are
confirmed inactive.
stop-job.asciidoc tended to trigger this issue because it executed
an async stop API and then exited, which setup the above situation. In
can and did happen with other tests though. As an extra precaution,
the doc test was modified to substitute in wait_for_completion
to help head off these issues too.
This defaults to "true" (current behavior) and will throw an exception
if there is a property that cannot be recognized. If "false", it will
ignore anything unrecognizable.
(cherry picked from commit 38fbf9792bcf4fe66bb3f17589e5fe6d29748d07)
- Notes that you can adjust the `s3.client.*.endpoint` setting to point to a
repository held on an S3-compatible service.
- Notes that the default is `s3.amazonaws.com` and not to auto-detect the
endpoint.
- Reformats docs to width.
Closes#35925
* Fix#38623 remove xpack namespace REST API
Except for xpack.usage and xpack.info API's, this moves the last remaining API's out of the xpack namespace
* rename xpack api's inside inside the files as well
* updated yaml tests references to xpack namespaces api's
* update callsApi calls in the IT subclasses
* make sure docs testing does not use xpack namespaced api's
* fix leftover xpack namespaced method names in docs/build.gradle
* found another leftover reference
(cherry picked from commit ccb5d934363c37506b76119ac050a254fa80b5e7)
The data frame plugin allows users to create feature indexes by pivoting a source index. In a
nutshell this can be understood as reindex supporting aggregations or similar to the so called entity
centric indexing.
Full history is provided in: feature/data-frame-transforms
`SearchShardIterator` inherits its `compareTo` implementation from `PlainShardIterator`. That is good in most of the cases, as such comparisons are based on the shard id which is unique, even when searching against indices with same names across multiple clusters (thanks to the index uuid being different). In case though the same cluster is registered multiple times with different aliases, the shard id is exactly the same, hence remote results will be returned before local ones with same shard id objects. That is because remote iterators are added before local ones, and we use a stable sorting method in `GroupShardIterators` constructor.
This PR enhances `compareTo` for `SearchShardIterator` to tie break on cluster alias and introduces consistent `equals` and `hashcode` methods. This allows to remove a TODO in `SearchResponseMerger` which otherwise has to handle this special case specifically. Also, while at it I added missing tests around equals/hashcode and compareTo and expanded existing ones.
the get-ml-info API documentation tested that the
response show that ML's `upgrade_mode` was false.
For reasons that may be true due to other tests running in
parallel or not cleaning themselves up, this may not be
guaranteed. Since the actual value here is not of importance,
this commit relaxes the requirement that upgrade_mode be
static.
Forward port of https://github.com/elastic/elasticsearch/pull/38757
This change reverts the initial 7.0 commits and replaces them
with the 6.7 variant that still allows for the ecs flag.
This commit differs from the 6.7 variants in that ecs flag will
now default to true.
6.7: `ecs` : default `false`
7.x: `ecs` : default `true`
8.0: no option, but behaves as `true`
* Revert "Ingest node - user agent, move device to an object (#38115)"
This reverts commit 5b008a34aa.
* Revert "Add ECS schema for user-agent ingest processor (#37727) (#37984)"
This reverts commit cac6b8e06f.
* cherry-pick 5dfe1935345da3799931fd4a3ebe0b6aa9c17f57
Add ECS schema for user-agent ingest processor (#37727)
* cherry-pick ec8ddc890a34853ee8db6af66f608b0ad0cd1099
Ingest node - user agent, move device to an object (#38115) (#38121)
* cherry-pick f63cbdb9b426ba24ee4d987ca767ca05a22f2fbb (with manual merge fixes)
Dep. check for ECS changes to User Agent processor (#38362)
* make true the default for the ecs option, and update 7.0 references and tests
`<expression>::<dataType>` is a simplified altenative syntax to
`CAST(<expression> AS <dataType> which exists in PostgreSQL and
provides an improved user experience and possibly more compact
SQL queries.
Fixes: #38717
Make substitution of \u200C with a space explicit
The problem with this symbol `\u200C` in a test string,
that **SHOULD** be substituted with space in the rebuilt Persian analyzer, but it is not.
Correcting this line `"mappings": [ "\\u200C=> "] <1>` to
`"mappings": [ "\\u200C=>\\u0020"] <1>` in solves the problem.
This change explicitly says to substitute ZWNJ with a space.
Closes#38188
Reindex from remote now supports configurable SSL/TLS (node level)
settings. This change adds documentation relating to those settings
Relates: #37527
Backport of: #38486
Now that ML configurations are stored in the .ml-config
index rather than in cluster state there is a possibility
that some users may try to add configurations directly to
the index. Allowing this creates a variety of problems
including possible data exflitration attacks (depending on
how security is set up), so this commit adds warnings
against allowing writes to the .ml-config index other than
via the ML APIs.
Backport of #38509
This commit adds the 7.1 version constant to the 7.x branch.
Co-authored-by: Andy Bristol <andy.bristol@elastic.co>
Co-authored-by: Tim Brooks <tim@uncontended.net>
Co-authored-by: Christoph Büscher <cbuescher@posteo.de>
Co-authored-by: Luca Cavanna <javanna@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: markharwood <markharwood@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Ioannis Kakavas <ioannis@elastic.co>
Co-authored-by: Nhat Nguyen <nhat.nguyen@elastic.co>
Co-authored-by: David Roberts <dave.roberts@elastic.co>
Co-authored-by: Jason Tedor <jason@tedor.me>
Co-authored-by: Alpar Torok <torokalpar@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: David Turner <david.turner@elastic.co>
Co-authored-by: Martijn van Groningen <martijn.v.groningen@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Tim Vernum <tim@adjective.org>
Co-authored-by: Albert Zaharovits <albert.zaharovits@gmail.com>
In #38333 and #38350 we moved away from the `discovery.zen` settings namespace
since these settings have an effect even though Zen Discovery itself is being
phased out. This change aligns the documentation and the names of related
classes and methods with the newly-introduced naming conventions.
We have had various reports of problems caused by the maxRetryTimeout
setting in the low-level REST client. Such setting was initially added
in the attempts to not have requests go through retries if the request
already took longer than the provided timeout.
The implementation was problematic though as such timeout would also
expire in the first request attempt (see #31834), would leave the
request executing after expiration causing memory leaks (see #33342),
and would not take into account the http client internal queuing (see #25951).
Given all these issues, it seems that this custom timeout mechanism
gives little benefits while causing a lot of harm. We should rather rely
on connect and socket timeout exposed by the underlying http client
and accept that a request can overall take longer than the configured
timeout, which is the case even with a single retry anyways.
This commit removes the `maxRetryTimeout` setting and all of its usages.
Elasticsearch has long [supported](https://www.elastic.co/guide/en/elasticsearch/reference/current/docs-index_.html#index-versioning) compare and set (a.k.a optimistic concurrency control) operations using internal document versioning. Sadly that approach is flawed and can sometime do the wrong thing. Here's the relevant excerpt from the resiliency status page:
> When a primary has been partitioned away from the cluster there is a short period of time until it detects this. During that time it will continue indexing writes locally, thereby updating document versions. When it tries to replicate the operation, however, it will discover that it is partitioned away. It won’t acknowledge the write and will wait until the partition is resolved to negotiate with the master on how to proceed. The master will decide to either fail any replicas which failed to index the operations on the primary or tell the primary that it has to step down because a new primary has been chosen in the meantime. Since the old primary has already written documents, clients may already have read from the old primary before it shuts itself down. The version numbers of these reads may not be unique if the new primary has already accepted writes for the same document
We recently [introduced](https://www.elastic.co/guide/en/elasticsearch/reference/6.x/optimistic-concurrency-control.html) a new sequence number based approach that doesn't suffer from this dirty reads problem.
This commit removes support for internal versioning as a concurrency control mechanism in favor of the sequence number approach.
Relates to #1078
`CreateIndexRequest#source(Map<String, Object>, ... )`, which is used when
deserializing index creation requests, accidentally accepts mappings that are
nested twice under the type key (as described in the bug report #38266).
This in turn causes us to be too lenient in parsing typeless mappings. In
particular, we accept the following index creation request, even though it
should not contain the type key `_doc`:
```
PUT index?include_type_name=false
{
"mappings": {
"_doc": {
"properties": { ... }
}
}
}
```
There is a similar issue for both 'put templates' and 'put mappings' requests
as well.
This PR makes the minimal changes to detect and reject these typed mappings in
requests. It does not address #38266 generally, or attempt a larger refactor
around types in these server-side requests, as I think this should be done at a
later time.
With this change we no longer support pluggable discovery implementations. No
known implementations of `DiscoveryPlugin` actually override this method, so in
practice this should have no effect on the wider world. However, we were using
this rather extensively in tests to provide the `test-zen` discovery type. We
no longer need a separate discovery type for tests as we no longer need to
customise its behaviour.
Relates #38410
Renames the following settings to remove the mention of `zen` in their names:
- `discovery.zen.hosts_provider` -> `discovery.seed_providers`
- `discovery.zen.ping.unicast.concurrent_connects` -> `discovery.seed_resolver.max_concurrent_resolvers`
- `discovery.zen.ping.unicast.hosts.resolve_timeout` -> `discovery.seed_resolver.timeout`
- `discovery.zen.ping.unicast.hosts` -> `discovery.seed_addresses`
X-Pack security supports built-in authentication service
`token-service` that allows access tokens to be used to
access Elasticsearch without using Basic authentication.
The tokens are generated by `token-service` based on
OAuth2 spec. The access token is a short-lived token
(defaults to 20m) and refresh token with a lifetime of 24 hours,
making them unsuitable for long-lived or recurring tasks where
the system might go offline thereby failing refresh of tokens.
This commit introduces a built-in authentication service
`api-key-service` that adds support for long-lived tokens aka API
keys to access Elasticsearch. The `api-key-service` is consulted
after `token-service` in the authentication chain. By default,
if TLS is enabled then `api-key-service` is also enabled.
The service can be disabled using the configuration setting.
The API keys:-
- by default do not have an expiration but expiration can be
configured where the API keys need to be expired after a
certain amount of time.
- when generated will keep authentication information of the user that
generated them.
- can be defined with a role describing the privileges for accessing
Elasticsearch and will be limited by the role of the user that
generated them
- can be invalidated via invalidation API
- information can be retrieved via a get API
- that have been expired or invalidated will be retained for 1 week
before being deleted. The expired API keys remover task handles this.
Following are the API key management APIs:-
1. Create API Key - `PUT/POST /_security/api_key`
2. Get API key(s) - `GET /_security/api_key`
3. Invalidate API Key(s) `DELETE /_security/api_key`
The API keys can be used to access Elasticsearch using `Authorization`
header, where the auth scheme is `ApiKey` and the credentials, is the
base64 encoding of API key Id and API key separated by a colon.
Example:-
```
curl -H "Authorization: ApiKey YXBpLWtleS1pZDphcGkta2V5" http://localhost:9200/_cluster/health
```
Closes#34383
As mapping types are being removed throughout Elasticsearch, the use of
`_type` in pipeline simulation requests is deprecated. Additionally, the
default `_type` used if one is not supplied has been changed to `_doc` for
consistency with the rest of Elasticsearch.
Coalesces two calls into one in a scroll example so all callouts are at
the end of the line. This is the only sort of callouts that are
supported by asciidoctor and we'd like to start building our docs with
asciidoctor.
At present we don't have any mechanism to stop folks adding more inline
callouts but we ought to be able to have one in a few weeks. For now,
though, removing these inline callouts is a step in the right direction.
Relates to #38335
Reduces the leader and follower check timeout to 3 * 10 = 30s instead of 3 * 30 = 90s, with 30s still
being a very long time for a node to be completely unresponsive.
This adds a dedicated field mapper that supports nanosecond resolution -
at the price of a reduced date range.
When using the date field mapper, the time is stored as milliseconds since the epoch
in a long in lucene. This field mapper stores the time in nanoseconds
since the epoch - which means its range is much smaller, ranging roughly from
1970 to 2262.
Note that aggregations will still be in milliseconds.
However docvalue fields will have full nanosecond resolution
Relates #27330
Introduce client-side sorting of groups based on aggregate
functions. To allow this, the Analyzer has been extended to push down
to underlying Aggregate, aggregate function and the Querier has been
extended to identify the case and consume the results in order and sort
them based on the given columns.
The underlying QueryContainer has been slightly modified to allow a view
of the underlying values being extracted as the columns used for sorting
might not be requested by the user.
The PR also adds minor tweaks, mainly related to tree output.
Close#35118
Because concurrent sync requests from a primary to its replicas could be
in flight, it can be the case that an older retention leases collection
arrives and is processed on the replica after a newer retention leases
collection has arrived and been processed. Without a defense, in this
case the replica would overwrite the newer retention leases with the
older retention leases. This commit addresses this issue by introducing
a versioning scheme to retention leases. This versioning scheme is used
to resolve out-of-order processing on the replica. We persist this
version into Lucene and restore it on recovery. The encoding of
retention leases is starting to get a little ugly. We can consider
addressing this in a follow-up.
There are a two major features that are not yet supported by BKD Backed geo_shape: MultiPoint queries, and CONTAINS relation. It is important we are explicitly clear in the documentation that using the new approach may not work for users that depend on these features. This commit adds an IMPORTANT NOTE section to geo_shape docs that explicitly highlights these missing features and what should be done if they are an absolute necessity.
In 7.x Java timestamp formats are the default timestamp format and
there is no need to prefix them with "8". (The "8" prefix was used
in 6.7 to distinguish Java timestamp formats from Joda timestamp
formats.)
This change removes the "8" prefixes from timestamp formats in the
output of the ML file structure finder.
This commit enables the use of TLSv1.3 with security by enabling us to
properly map `TLSv1.3` in the supported protocols setting to the
algorithm for a SSLContext. Additionally, we also enable TLSv1.3 by
default on JDKs that support it.
An issue was uncovered with the MockWebServer when TLSv1.3 is used that
ultimately winds up in an endless loop when the client does not trust
the server's certificate. Due to this, SSLConfigurationReloaderTests
has been pinned to TLSv1.2.
Closes#32276
Currently aggregate functions can operate only directly on fields.
They cannot be used on top of scalar functions as painless scripting
is currently not supported.
With #37000 we made sure that fnial reduction is automatically disabled
whenever a localClusterAlias is provided with a SearchRequest.
While working on #37838, we found a scenario where we do need to set a
localClusterAlias yet we would like to perform a final reduction in the
remote cluster: when searching on a single remote cluster.
Relates to #32125
This commit adds support for a separate finalReduce flag to
SearchRequest and makes use of it in TransportSearchAction in case we
are searching against a single remote cluster.
This also makes sure that num_reduce_phases is correct when searching
against a single remote cluster: it makes little sense to return
`num_reduce_phases` set to `2`, which looks especially weird in case
the search was performed against a single remote shard. We should
perform one reduction phase only in this case and `num_reduce_phases`
should reflect that.
* line length
This change forbids negative field boost in the `query_string`, `simple_query_string`
and `multi_match` queries.
Negative boosts are not allowed in Lucene 8 (scores must be positive).
The backport of this change to 6x will turn the error into a deprecation warning
in order to raise the awareness of this breaking change in 7.0.
Closes#33309
In 6.3 trial licenses were changed to default to security
disabled, and ee added some heuristics to detect when security should
be automatically be enabled if `xpack.security.enabled` was not set.
This change removes those heuristics, and requires that security be
explicitly enabled (via the `xpack.security.enabled` setting) for
trial licenses.
Relates: #38009
Implements `geotile_grid` aggregation
This patch refactors previous implementation https://github.com/elastic/elasticsearch/pull/30240
This code uses the same base classes as `geohash_grid` agg, but uses a different hashing
algorithm to allow zoom consistency. Each grid bucket is aligned to Web Mercator tiles.
When the ingest node user agent parses the device field, it
will result in a string value. To match the ecs schema
this commit moves the value of the parsed device to an
object with an inner field named 'name'. There are not
any passivity concerns since this modifies an unreleased change.
closes#38094
relates #37329
FIRST and LAST can be used with one argument and work similarly to MIN
and MAX but they are implemented using a Top Hits aggregation and
therefore can also operate on keyword fields. When a second argument is
provided then they return the first/last value of the first arg when its
values are ordered ascending/descending (respectively) by the values of
the second argument. Currently because of the usage of a Top Hits
aggregation FIRST and LAST cannot be used in the HAVING clause of a
GROUP BY query to filter on the results of the aggregation.
Closes: #35639
With #37566 we have introduced the ability to merge multiple search responses into one. That makes it possible to expose a new way of executing cross-cluster search requests, that makes CCS much faster whenever there is network latency between the CCS coordinating node and the remote clusters. The coordinating node can now send a single search request to each remote cluster, which gets reduced by each one of them. from + size results are requested to each cluster, and the reduce phase in each cluster is non final (meaning that buckets are not pruned and pipeline aggs are not executed). The CCS coordinating node performs an additional, final reduction, which produces one search response out of the multiple responses received from the different clusters.
This new execution path will be activated by default for any CCS request unless a scroll is provided or inner hits are requested as part of field collapsing. The search API accepts now a new parameter called ccs_minimize_roundtrips that allows to opt-out of the default behaviour.
Relates to #32125
* Added SSL configuration options tests
Removed the allow.self.signed option from the documentation since we allow
by default self signed certificates as well.
* Added more tests
Today we pass `discovery.zen.minimum_master_nodes` to nodes started up in
tests, but for 7.x nodes this setting is not required as it has no effect.
This commit removes this setting so that nodes are started with more realistic
configurations, and deprecates it.
* Add ECS schema for user-agent ingest processor (#37727)
This switches the format of the user agent processor to use the schema from [ECS](https://github.com/elastic/ecs).
So rather than something like this:
```
{
"patch" : "3538",
"major" : "70",
"minor" : "0",
"os" : "Mac OS X 10.14.1",
"os_minor" : "14",
"os_major" : "10",
"name" : "Chrome",
"os_name" : "Mac OS X",
"device" : "Other"
}
```
The structure is now like this:
```
{
"name" : "Chrome",
"original" : "Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; Intel Mac OS X 10_14_1) AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/70.0.3538.102 Safari/537.36",
"os" : {
"name" : "Mac OS X",
"version" : "10.14.1",
"full" : "Mac OS X 10.14.1"
},
"device" : "Other",
"version" : "70.0.3538.102"
}
```
This is now the default for 7.0. The deprecated `ecs` setting in 6.x is not
supported.
Resolves#37329
* Remove `ecs` setting from docs
(a restore needs to be complete, which happens in the background and
by default the ccr put follow api doesn't wait for this)
(this was a recent change and the pr that added this docs test,
did not include this change)
Relates to #37917
Doc-value fields now return a value that is based on the mappings rather than
the script implementation by default.
This deprecates the special `use_field_mapping` docvalue format which was added
in #29639 only to ease the transition to 7.x and it is not necessary anymore in
7.0.
Currently if you mix typed templates and typeless index creation or typeless
templates and typed index creation then you will end up with an error because
Elasticsearch tries to create an index that has multiple types: `_doc` and
the explicit type name that you used.
This commit proposes to give precedence to the index creation call so that
the type from the template will be ignored if the index creation call is
typeless while the template is typed, and the type from the index creation
call will be used if there is a typeless template.
This is consistent with the fact that index creation already "wins" if a field
is defined differently in the index creation call and in a template: the
definition from the index creation call is used in such cases.
Closes#37773
* Make repository settings override static settings
* Cache clients according to settings
* Introduce custom implementations for the AWS credentials here to be able to use them as part of a hash key
Added deprecation warnings for use of include_type_name in put/get index templates.
HLRC changes:
GetIndexTemplateRequest has a new client-side class which is a copy of server's GetIndexTemplateResponse but modified to be typeless.
PutIndexTemplateRequest has a new client-side counterpart which doesn't use types in the mappings
Relates to #35190
This commit adds classifiers to the distributions indicating the
OS (for archives) and platform. The current OSes are for windows, darwin (ie
macos) and linux. This change will allow future OS/architecture specific
changes to the distributions. Note the docs using distribution links
have been updated, but will be reworked in a followup to make OS
specific instructions for the archives.
Restricted indices (currently only .security-6 and .security) are special
internal indices that require setting the `allow_restricted_indices` flag
on every index permission that covers them. If this flag is `false`
(default) the permission will not cover these and actions against them
will not be authorized.
However, the monitoring APIs were the only exception to this rule.
This exception is herein forfeited and index monitoring privileges have to be
granted explicitly, using the `allow_restricted_indices` flag on the permission,
as is the case for any other index privilege.
* Update the top-level 'getting started' guide.
* Remove custom types from the painless getting started documentation.
* Fix an incorrect references to '_doc' in the cardinality query docs.
* Update the _update docs to use the typeless API format.
This commit modifies the put follow index action to use a
CcrRepository when creating a follower index. It routes
the logic through the snapshot/restore process. A
wait_for_active_shards parameter can be used to configure
how long to wait before returning the response.
The delete and update by query APIs both offer protection against overriding concurrent user changes to the documents they touch. They currently are using internal versioning. This PR changes that to rely on sequences numbers and primary terms.
Relates #37639
Relates #36148
Relates #10708
The update request has a lesser known support for a one off update of a known document version. This PR adds an a seq# based alternative to power these operations.
Relates #36148
Relates #10708
Abdicates to another master-eligible node once the active master is reconfigured out of the voting
configuration, for example through the use of voting configuration exclusions.
Follow-up to #37712
In order to support JSON log format, a custom pattern layout was used and its configuration is enclosed in ESJsonLayout. Users are free to use their own patterns, but if smooth Beats integration is needed, they should use ESJsonLayout. EvilLoggerTests are left intact to make sure user's custom log patterns work fine.
To populate additional fields node.id and cluster.uuid which are not available at start time,
a cluster state update will have to be received and the values passed to log4j pattern converter.
A ClusterStateObserver.Listener is used to receive only one ClusteStateUpdate. Once update is received the nodeId and clusterUUid are set in a static field in a NodeAndClusterIdConverter.
Following fields are expected in JSON log lines: type, tiemstamp, level, component, cluster.name, node.name, node.id, cluster.uuid, message, stacktrace
see ESJsonLayout.java for more details and field descriptions
Docker log4j2 configuration is now almost the same as the one use for ES binary.
The only difference is that docker is using console appenders, whereas ES is using file appenders.
relates: #32850
We inject an Unfollow action before Shrink because the Shrink action
cannot be safely used on a following index, as it may not be fully
caught up with the leader index before the "original" following index is
deleted and replaced with a non-following Shrunken index. The Unfollow
action will verify that 1) the index is marked as "complete", and 2) all
operations up to this point have been replicated from the leader to the
follower before explicitly disconnecting the follower from the leader.
Injecting an Unfollow action before the Rollover action is done mainly
as a convenience: This allow users to use the same lifecycle policy on
both the leader and follower cluster without having to explictly modify
the policy to unfollow the index, while doing what we expect users to
want in most cases.
* ML: Add MlMetadata.upgrade_mode and API
* Adding tests
* Adding wait conditionals for the upgrade_mode call to return
* Adding tests
* adjusting format and tests
* Adjusting wait conditions for api return and msgs
* adjusting doc tests
* adding upgrade mode tests to black list
We changed the `action.auto_create_index` setting to be a dynamic cluster-level
setting in #20274 but today the reference manual indicates that it is still a
static node-level setting. This commit addresses this, and clarifies the
semantics of patterns that may both permit and forbid the creation of certain
indices.
Relates #7513
The docs silently accept duplicate note markers (such as `<3>` here) but
formats them in an unexpected way. This change removes this duplication so that
the rendered documentation looks as intended.
From previous PRs, we've already added support for include_type_name to
the get mapping API. We had also taken an approach to the HLRC where the
server-side `GetMappingResponse#fromXContent` could only handle typeless
input.
This PR updates the HLRC for 'get mapping' to be in line with our new approach:
* Add a typeless 'get mappings' method to the Java HLRC, that accepts new
client-side request and response objects. This new response only handles
typeless mapping definitions.
* Switch the old version of `GetMappingResponse` back to expecting typed
mappings, and deprecate the corresponding method on the HLRC.
Finally, the PR also does some small, related clean-up around 'get field mappings'.
The ML file structure finder has always reported both Joda
and Java time format strings. This change makes the Java time
format strings the ones that are incorporated into mappings
and ingest pipeline definitions.
The BWC syntax of prepending "8" to these formats is used.
This will need to be removed once Java time format strings
become the default in Elasticsearch.
This commit also removes direct imports of Joda classes in the
structure finder unit tests. Instead the core Joda BWC class
is used.
This changes adds the support to handle `nested` fields in the `composite`
aggregation. A `nested` aggregation can be used as parent of a `composite`
aggregation in order to target `nested` fields in the `sources`.
Closes#28611
This commit changes the default for the `track_total_hits` option of the search request
to `10,000`. This means that by default search requests will accurately track the total hit count
up to `10,000` documents, requests that match more than this value will set the `"total.relation"`
to `"gte"` (e.g. greater than or equals) and the `"total.value"` to `10,000` in the search response.
Scroll queries are not impacted, they will continue to count the total hits accurately.
The default is set back to `true` (accurate hit count) if `rest_total_hits_as_int` is set in the search request.
I choose `10,000` as the default because that's also the number we use to limit pagination. This means that users will be able to know how far they can jump (up to 10,000) even if the total number of hits is not accurate.
Closes#33028
The default value for ssl.supported_protocols no longer includes TLSv1
as this is an old protocol with known security issues.
Administrators can enable TLSv1.0 support by configuring the
appropriate `ssl.supported_protocols` setting, for example:
xpack.security.http.ssl.supported_protocols: ["TLSv1.2","TLSv1.1","TLSv1"]
Relates: #36021
Ranaming as follows:
feature -> rank_feature
feature_vector -> rank_features
feature query -> rank_feature query
Ranaming is done to distinguish from other vector types.
Closes#36723
This deprecates the `xpack.watcher.history.cleaner_service.enabled` setting,
since all newly created `.watch-history` indices in 7.0 will use ILM to manage
their retention.
In 8.0 the setting itself and cleanup actions will be removed.
Resolves#32041
From #29453 and #37285, the include_type_name parameter was already present and defaulted to false. This PR makes the following updates:
* Add deprecation warnings to RestCreateIndexAction, plus tests in RestCreateIndexActionTests.
* Add a typeless 'create index' method to the Java HLRC, and deprecate the old typed version. To do this cleanly, I created new CreateIndexRequest and CreateIndexResponse objects that differ from the existing server ones.
This commit removes the Index Audit Output type, following its deprecation
in 6.7 by 8765a31d4e6770. It also adds the migration notice (settings notice).
In general, the problem with the index audit output is that event indexing
can be slower than the rate with which audit events are generated,
especially during the daily rollovers or the rolling cluster upgrades.
In this situation audit events will be lost which is a terrible failure situation
for an audit system.
Besides of the settings under the `xpack.security.audit.index` namespace, the
`xpack.security.audit.outputs` setting has also been deprecated and will be
removed in 7. Although explicitly configuring the logfile output does not touch
any deprecation bits, this setting is made redundant in 7 so this PR deprecates
it as well.
Relates #29881
The EmptyResponse is essentially the same as returning a boolean, which
is done in other places. This commit deprecates all the existing
EmptyResponse methods and creates new boolean methods that have method
params reordered so they can exist with the deprecated methods. A
followup PR in master will remove the existing deprecated methods, fix
the parameter ordering and deprecate the incorrectly ordered parameter
methods.
Relates #36938
- Add deprecation warning to RestGetFieldMappingAction
- Add two new java HRLC classes GetFieldMappingsRequest and
GetFieldMappingsResponse. These classes use new typeless forms
of a request and response, and differ in that from the server
versions.
Relates to #35190
* Use ILM for Watcher history deletion
This commit adds an index lifecycle policy for the `.watch-history-*` indices.
This policy is automatically used for all new watch history indices.
This does not yet remove the automatic cleanup that the monitoring plugin does
for the .watch-history indices, and it does not touch the
`xpack.watcher.history.cleaner_service.enabled` setting.
Relates to #32041
Users may require the sequence number and primary terms to perform optimistic concurrency control operations. Currently, you can get the sequence number via the `docvalues_fields` API but the primary term is not accessible because it is maintained by the `SeqNoFieldMapper` and the infrastructure can't find it.
This commit adds a dedicated sub fetch phase to return both numbers that is connected to a new `seq_no_primary_term` parameter.
With this commit we add a note to the API conventions documentation that
all date math expressions are resolved independently of any locale. This
behavior might be puzzling to users that try to specify a different
calendar than a Gregorian calendar.
Closes#37330
Relates #37663
The integ tests currently use the raw zip project name as the
distribution type. This commit simplifies this specification to be
"default" or "oss". Whether zip or tar is used should be an internal
implementation detail of the integ test setup, which can (in the future)
be platform specific.
Removes all sensitive settings (passwords, auth tokens, urls, etc...) for
watcher notifications accounts. These settings were deprecated (and
herein removed) in favor of their secure sibling that is set inside the
elasticsearch keystore. For example:
`xpack.notification.email.account.<id>.smtp.password`
is no longer a valid setting, and it is replaced by
`xpack.notification.email.account.<id>.smtp.secure_password`
From #29453 and #37285, the `include_type_name` parameter was already present and defaulted to false. This PR makes the following updates:
- Add deprecation warnings to `RestPutMappingAction`, plus tests in `RestPutMappingActionTests`.
- Add a typeless 'put mappings' method to the Java HLRC, and deprecate the old typed version. To do this cleanly, I opted to create a new `PutMappingRequest` object that differs from the existing server one.
This change adds the unfollow action for CCR follower indices.
This is needed for the shrink action in case an index is a follower index.
This will give the follower index the opportunity to fully catch up with
the leader index, pause index following and unfollow the leader index.
After this the shrink action can safely perform the ilm shrink.
The unfollow action needs to be added to the hot phase and acts as
barrier for going to the next phase (warm or delete phases), so that
follower indices are being unfollowed properly before indices are expected
to go in read-only mode. This allows the force merge action to execute
its steps safely.
The unfollow action has three steps:
* `wait-for-indexing-complete` step: waits for the index in question
to get the `index.lifecycle.indexing_complete` setting be set to `true`
* `wait-for-follow-shard-tasks` step: waits for all the shard follow tasks
for the index being handled to report that the leader shard global checkpoint
is equal to the follower shard global checkpoint.
* `pause-follower-index` step: Pauses index following, necessary to unfollow
* `close-follower-index` step: Closes the index, necessary to unfollow
* `unfollow-follower-index` step: Actually unfollows the index using
the CCR Unfollow API
* `open-follower-index` step: Reopens the index now that it is a normal index
* `wait-for-yellow` step: Waits for primary shards to be allocated after
reopening the index to ensure the index is ready for the next step
In the case of the last two steps, if the index in being handled is
a regular index then the steps acts as a no-op.
Relates to #34648
Co-authored-by: Martijn van Groningen <martijn.v.groningen@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Gordon Brown <gordon.brown@elastic.co>
* Add ccr follow info api
This api returns all follower indices and per follower index
the provided parameters at put follow / resume follow time and
whether index following is paused or active.
Closes#37127
* iter
* [DOCS] Edits the get follower info API
* [DOCS] Fixes link to remote cluster
* [DOCS] Clarifies descriptions for configured parameters
The "include_type_name" parameter was temporarily introduced in #37285 to facilitate
moving the default parameter setting to "false" in many places in the documentation
code snippets. Most of the places can simply be reverted without causing errors.
In this change I looked for asciidoc files that contained the
"include_type_name=true" addition when creating new indices but didn't look
likey they made use of the "_doc" type for mappings. This is mostly the case
e.g. in the analysis docs where index creating often only contains settings. I
manually corrected the use of types in some places where the docs still used an
explicit type name and not the dummy "_doc" type.
This change adds deprecation warning to the indices.get_mapping API in case the
"inlcude_type_name" parameter is set to "true" and changes the parsing code in
GetMappingsResponse to parse the type-less response instead of the one
containing types. As a consequence the HLRC client doesn't need to force
"include_type_name=true" any more and the GetMappingsResponseTests can be
adapted to the new format as well. Also removing some "include_type_name"
parameters in yaml test and docs where not necessary.
This commit adds a set_priority action to the hot, warm, and cold
phases for an ILM policy. This action sets the `index.priority`
on the managed index to allow different priorities between the
hot, warm, and cold recoveries.
This commit also includes the HLRC and documentation changes.
closes#36905
* SQL: Rename SQL data type DATE to DATETIME
SQL data type DATE has only the date part (e.g.: 2019-01-14)
without any time information. Previously the SQL type DATE was
referring to the ES DATE which contains also the time part along
with TZ information. To conform with SQL data types the data type
`DATE` is renamed to `DATETIME`, since it includes also the time,
as a new runtime SQL `DATE` data type will be introduced down the road,
which only contains the date part and meets the SQL standard.
Closes: #36440
* Address comments
Some systems default to a nofile ulimit of 65535. To reduce the pain of
deploying Elasticsearch to such systems, this commit lowers the required
limit from 65536 to 65535.
In order to distinguish the ES-SQL type from the standard SQL type
add a new ES-SQL column that will make clear this distingstion,
e.g.: datetime vs TIMSTAMP
Fixes: #37519
The semantics of the API changed considerably since the documentation was written.
The main change is to remove references to memory reduction (this is related to refresh).
Instead, flush refers to recovery times. I also removed the references to trimming the translog
as the translog may be required for other purposes (operation history for ops based recovery
and complement ongoing file based recoveries).
Closes#32869
* Default include_type_name to false for get and put mappings.
* Default include_type_name to false for get field mappings.
* Add a constant for the default include_type_name value.
* Default include_type_name to false for get and put index templates.
* Default include_type_name to false for create index.
* Update create index calls in REST documentation to use include_type_name=true.
* Some minor clean-ups around the get index API.
* In REST tests, use include_type_name=true by default for index creation.
* Make sure to use 'expression == false'.
* Clarify the different IndexTemplateMetaData toXContent methods.
* Fix FullClusterRestartIT#testSnapshotRestore.
* Fix the ml_anomalies_default_mappings test.
* Fix GetFieldMappingsResponseTests and GetIndexTemplateResponseTests.
We make sure to specify include_type_name=true during xContent parsing,
so we continue to test the legacy typed responses. XContent generation
for the typeless responses is currently only covered by REST tests,
but we will be adding unit test coverage for these as we implement
each typeless API in the Java HLRC.
This commit also refactors GetMappingsResponse to follow the same appraoch
as the other mappings-related responses, where we read include_type_name
out of the xContent params, instead of creating a second toXContent method.
This gives better consistency in the response parsing code.
* Fix more REST tests.
* Improve some wording in the create index documentation.
* Add a note about types removal in the create index docs.
* Fix SmokeTestMonitoringWithSecurityIT#testHTTPExporterWithSSL.
* Make sure to mention include_type_name in the REST docs for affected APIs.
* Make sure to use 'expression == false' in FullClusterRestartIT.
* Mention include_type_name in the REST templates docs.
This commit removes the fallback for SSL settings. While this may be
seen as a non user friendly change, the intention behind this change
is to simplify the reasoning needed to understand what is actually
being used for a given SSL configuration. Each configuration now needs
to be explicitly specified as there is no global configuration or
fallback to some other configuration.
Closes#29797
Today file-chunks are sent sequentially one by one in peer-recovery. This is a
correct choice since the implementation is straightforward and recovery is
network bound in most of the time. However, if the connection is encrypted, we
might not be able to saturate the network pipe because encrypting/decrypting
are cpu bound rather than network-bound.
With this commit, a source node can send multiple (default to 2) file-chunks
without waiting for the acknowledgments from the target.
Below are the benchmark results for PMC and NYC_taxis.
- PMC (20.2 GB)
| Transport | Baseline | chunks=1 | chunks=2 | chunks=3 | chunks=4 |
| ----------| ---------| -------- | -------- | -------- | -------- |
| Plain | 184s | 137s | 106s | 105s | 106s |
| TLS | 346s | 294s | 176s | 153s | 117s |
| Compress | 1556s | 1407s | 1193s | 1183s | 1211s |
- NYC_Taxis (38.6GB)
| Transport | Baseline | chunks=1 | chunks=2 | chunks=3 | chunks=4 |
| ----------| ---------| ---------| ---------| ---------| -------- |
| Plain | 321s | 249s | 191s | * | * |
| TLS | 618s | 539s | 323s | 290s | 213s |
| Compress | 2622s | 2421s | 2018s | 2029s | n/a |
Relates #33844
Update the scroll example ascii and Java docs, so it is more clear when to
consume the scroll documents. Before this change the user could loose
the first results if one uses copy & paste.
This adds a configurable whitelist to the HTTP client in watcher. By
default every URL is allowed to retain BWC. A dynamically configurable
setting named "xpack.http.whitelist" was added that allows to
configure an array of URLs, which can also contain simple regexes.
Closes#29937
`+` for index name inclusions is no longer supported for 6.x+. This
commit removes references of the `+` from the documenation. System
indices additional example is also included.
fixes#37237
Added warnings checks to existing tests
Added “defaultTypeIfNull” to DocWriteRequest interface so that Bulk requests can override a null choice of document type with any global custom choice.
Related to #35190
Previously these were only linked in a circuitous way rather than being
available from the top level API documentation and "Put Lifecycle" API docs.
This makes them slightly easier to find for a user.
* provide overriden `hashCode` and toString methods to account for `DISTINCT`
* change the analyzer for scenarios where `COUNT <field_name>` and `COUNT DISTINCT` have different paths
* defined a new `filter` aggregation encapsulating an `exists` query to filter out null or missing values
Upgrading the Elastic Stack perfectly documents the process to
upgrade ES from 5 to 6 when internal indices are present. However,
the rolling upgrade docs do not mention anything about internal indices.
This adds a warning in the rolling upgrade procedure, highlighting that
internal indices should be upgraded before the rolling upgrade procedure
can be started.
This change adds support for the 'include_type_name' parameter for the
indices.get API. This parameter, which defaults to `false` starting in 7.0,
changes the response to not include the indices type names any longer.
If the parameter is set in the request, we additionally emit a deprecation
warning since using the parameter should be only temporarily necessary while
adapting to the new response format and we will remove it with the next major
version.
* [Analysis] Deprecate Standard Html Strip Analyzer
Deprecate only Standard Html Strip Analyzer
If user create index with the analyzer since 7.0, es throws an exception.
If an index was created before 7.0, es issue deprecation log
We will remove it in 8.0
Related #4704
In Lucene 8 searches can skip non-competitive hits if the total hit count is not requested.
It is also possible to track the number of hits up to a certain threshold. This is a trade off to speed up searches while still being able to know a lower bound of the total hit count. This change adds the ability to set this threshold directly in the track_total_hits search option. A boolean value (true, false) indicates whether the total hit count should be tracked in the response. When set as an integer this option allows to compute a lower bound of the total hits while preserving the ability to skip non-competitive hits when enough matches have been collected.
Relates #33028
Today it's very difficult to see which indices are frozen or rather
throttled via the commonly used monitoring APIs. This change adds
a cell to the `_cat/indices` API to render if an index is `search.throttled`
Relates to #34352
Adds an example on translating geohashes returned by geohashgrid
agg as bucket keys into geo bounding box filters in elasticsearch as well
as 3rd party applications.
Closes#36413
Enhance error message for the case that the 2nd argument of PERCENTILE
and PERCENTILE_RANK is not a foldable, as it doesn't make sense to have
a dynamic value coming from a field.
Fixes: #36903
Types can be used both in the source and dest section of the body which will
be translated to search and index requests respectively. Adding a deprecation warning
for those cases and removing examples using more than one type in reindex since
support for this is going to be removed.
There are a handful of examples in the ILM documentation that could result in
rolling over indices more quickly than we might normally recommend,
contributing to over-sharding in cases where the examples are copied without
modification. This change makes some numbers bigger to try and avoid this.
With this commit we rename `node.store.allow_mmapfs` to
`node.store.allow_mmap`. Previously this setting has controlled whether
`mmapfs` could be used as a store type. With the introduction of
`hybridfs` which also relies on memory-mapping,
`node.store.allow_mmapfs` also applies to `hybridfs` and thus we rename
it in order to convey that it is actually used to allow memory-mapping
but not a specific store type.
Relates #36668
Relates #37070
When executing terms aggregations we set the shard_size, meaning the
number of buckets to collect on each shard, to a value that's higher than
the number of requested buckets, to guarantee some basic level of
precision. We have an optimization in place so that we leave shard_size
set to size whenever we are searching against a single shard, in which
case maximum precision is guaranteed by definition.
Such optimization requires us access to the total number of shards that
the search is executing against. In the context of cross-cluster search,
once we will introduce multiple reduction steps (one per cluster) each
cluster will only know the number of local shards, which is problematic
as we should only optimize if we are searching against a single shard in a
single cluster. It could be that we are searching against one shard per cluster
in which case the current code would optimize number of terms causing
a loss of precision.
While discussing how to address the CCS scenario, we decided that we do
not want to introduce further complexity caused by this single shard
optimization, as it benefits only a minority of cases, especially when
the benefits are not so great.
This commit removes the single shard optimization, meaning that we will
always have heuristic enabled on how many number of buckets to collect
on the shards, even when searching against a single shard.
This will cause more buckets to be collected when searching against a single
shard compared to before. If that becomes a problem for some users, they
can work around that by setting the shard_size equal to the size.
Relates to #32125
With this commit we introduce a new store type `hybridfs` that is a
hybrid between `mmapfs` and `niofs`. This store type chooses different
strategies to read Lucene files based on the read access pattern (random
or linear) in order to optimize performance.
This store type has been available in earlier versions of Elasticsearch
as `default_fs`. We have chosen a different name now in order to convey
the intent of the store type instead of tying it to the fact whether it
is the default choice.
Relates #36668
This commit fixes some cross-doc links from the old ingest plugins page
to the new ingest processor pages that arose after converting
ingest-geoip and ingest-user-agent to modules.
This commit adds a placeholder ingest-geoip plugin page as there are
other components in the Elastic Stack that still refer to these
pages. These docs would be broken without this placeholder page forcing
teams responsible for those docs to scramble to fix the build over the
weekend before a holiday period. Instead, we add a placeholder page so
the docs build continues to function, and those teams can fix their docs
without the constraint of a broken build. We also cleanup a few minor
docs issues that were missed during the initial changes to convert
ingest-geoip to a module.
This extra scenario describes the case where an updated
policy increases the current phase's `min_age`. Now, the
docs explicitly describe this scenario as to what is
expected -- old min_age is used.
Closes#35356.
* Added Limitations page
* Made the aggregations page follow the common template for functions
* Modified all tables to have the first row's cells content centered
* Polishing in other various sections
This is a follow-up to some discussions around #36399. Currently we have
relatively confusing compression behavior where compression can be
configured for requests based on transport.compress or a specific
setting for a remote cluster. However, we can only compress responses
based on transport.compress as we do not know where a request is
coming from (currently).
This commit modifies the behavior to NEVER compress responses based on
settings. Instead, a response will only be compressed if the request was
compressed. This commit also updates the documentation to more clearly
described transport level compression.
Allow scripts to correctly reference grouping functions
Fix bug in translation of date/time functions mixed with histograms.
Enhance Verifier to prevent histograms being nested inside other
functions inside GROUP BY (as it implies double grouping)
Extend Histogram docs
This commit breaks the single ingest docs file into multiple files,
factoring out the processor docs into a documentation file per
processor. This will help make this content easier to maintain.
This commit overhauls the documentation of discovery and cluster coordination,
removing mention of the Zen Discovery module and replacing it with docs for the
new cluster coordination mechanism introduced in 7.0.
Relates #32006
Leaving `index.lifecycle.indexing_complete` in place when removing the
lifecycle policy from an index can cause confusion, as if a new policy
is associated with the policy, rollover will be silently skipped.
Removing that setting when removing the policy from an index makes
associating a new policy with the index more involved, but allows ILM to
fail loudly, rather than silently skipping operations which the user may
assume are being performed.
* Adjust order of checks in WaitForRolloverReadyStep
This allows ILM to error out properly for indices that have a valid
alias, but are not the write index, while still handling
`indexing_complete` on old-style aliases and rollover (that is, those
which only point to a single index at a time with no explicit write
index)
This is related to #36652. In 7.0 we plan to deprecate a number of
settings that make reference to the concept of a tcp transport. We
mostly just have a single transport type now (based on tcp). Settings
should only reference tcp if they are referring to socket options. This
commit updates the settings in the docs. And removes string usages of
the old settings. Additionally it adds a missing remote compress setting
to the docs.