This allows the user to update the reindex throttle on the fly, with changes
that speed up the throttling being applied immediately and changes that
slow down the throttling being applied during the next batch. This means
that if a user throttles reindex in such a way that it tries to sleep for
16 years and then realizes that they've done something wrong then they
can change the throttle and reindex will wake up again. We don't apply
slow downs immediately so we never get in danger of losing the scan context.
Also, if reindex is canceled while it is sleeping (how it honor throttling)
then it'll immediately wake up and cancel itself.
`text` fields will have fielddata disabled by default. Fielddata can still be
enabled on an existing index by setting `fielddata=true` in the mappings.
If a terms aggregation was ordered by a metric nested in a single bucket aggregator which did not collect any documents (e.g. a filters aggregation which did not match in that term bucket) an ArrayOutOfBoundsException would be thrown when the ordering code tried to retrieve the value for the metric. This fix fixes all numeric metric aggregators so they return their default value when a bucket ordinal is requested which was not collected.
Closes#17225
readFrom is confusing because it requires an instance of the type that it
is reading but it doesn't modify it. But we also have (deprecated) methods
named readFrom that *do* modify the instance. The "right" way to implement
the non-modifying readFrom is to delegate to a constructor that takes a
StreamInput so that the read object can be immutable. Now that we have
`@FunctionalInterface`s it is fairly easy to register things by referring
directly to the constructor.
This change modifying NamedWriteableRegistry so that it does that. It keeps
supporting `registerPrototype` which registers objects to be read by
readFrom but deprecates it and delegates it to a new `register` method
that allows passing a simple functional interface. It also cuts Task.Status
subclasses over to using that method.
The start of #17085
The test was checking that we'd set the headers properly but in some cases
the request had yet to come in because it was running on another thread.
Now we wait for the headers to show up before failing the test.
Closes#17299
If the user asks for a refresh but their reindex or update-by-query
operation touched no indexes we should just skip the resfresh call
entirely. Without this commit we refresh *all* indexes which is totally
wrong.
Closes#17296
The fielddata settings in mappings have been refatored so that:
- text and string have a `fielddata` (boolean) setting that tells whether it
is ok to load in-memory fielddata. It is true by default for now but the
plan is to make it default to false for text fields.
- text and string have a `fielddata_frequency_filter` which contains the same
thing as `fielddata.filter.frequency` used to (but validated at parsing time
instead of being unchecked settings)
- regex fielddata filtering is not supported anymore and will be dropped from
mappings automatically on upgrade.
- text, string and _parent fields have an `eager_global_ordinals` (boolean)
setting that tells whether to load global ordinals eagerly on refresh.
- in-memory fielddata is not supported on keyword fields anymore at all.
- the `fielddata` setting is not supported on other fields that text and string
and will be dropped when upgrading if specified.
Currently, both Gsub and Grok parse regex strings during
Pipeline creation. Thrown parsing exceptions were leaking out, this
commit wraps those exceptions in ElasticsearchParseExceptions.
We current have a ClusterService interface, implemented by InternalClusterService and a couple of test classes. Since the decoupling of the transport service and the cluster service, one can construct a ClusterService fairly easily, so we don't need this extra indirection.
Closes#17183
Also replaced the PercolatorQueryRegistry with the new PercolatorQueryCache.
The PercolatorFieldMapper stores the rewritten form of each percolator query's xcontext
in a binary doc values field. This make sure that the query rewrite happens only during
indexing (some queries for example fetch shapes, terms in remote indices) and
the speed up the loading of the queries in the percolator query cache.
Because the percolator now works inside the search infrastructure a number of features
(sorting fields, pagination, fetch features) are available out of the box.
The following feature requests are automatically implemented via this refactoring:
Closes#10741Closes#7297Closes#13176Closes#13978Closes#11264Closes#10741Closes#4317
Today we allow to set all kinds of index level settings on the node level which
is error prone and difficult to get right in a consistent manner.
For instance if some analyzers are setup in a yaml config file some nodes might
not have these analyzers and then index creation fails.
Nevertheless, this change allows some selected settings to be specified on a node level
for instance:
* `index.codec` which is used in a hot/cold node architecture and it's value is really per node or per index
* `index.store.fs.fs_lock` which is also dependent on the filesystem a node uses
All other index level setting must be specified on the index level. For existing clusters the index must be closed
and all settings must be updated via the API on each of the indices.
Closes#16799
Without this commit fetching the status of a reindex from a node that isn't
coordinating the reindex will fail. This commit properly registers reindex's
status so this doesn't happen. To do so it moves all task status registration
into NetworkModule and creates a method to register other statuses which the
reindex plugin calls.
The build currently uses the old maven support in gradle. This commit
switches to use the newer maven-publish plugin. This will allow future
changes, for example, easily publishing to artifactory.
An additional part of this change makes publishing of build-tools part
of the normal publishing, instead of requiring a separate upload step
from within buildSrc. That also sets us up for a follow up to enable
precomit checks on the buildSrc code itself.
Add infrastructure to run REST tests on a multi-version cluster
This change adds the infrastructure to run the rest tests on a multi-node
cluster that users 2 different minor versions of elasticsearch. It doesn't implement
any dedicated BWC tests but rather leverages the existing REST tests.
Since we don't have a real version to test against, the tests uses the current version
until the first minor / RC is released to ensure the infrastructure works.
Given the amount of problems this change already found I think it's worth having this run with our test suite by default. The structure of this infra will likely change over time but for now it's a step into the right direction. We will likely want to split it up into integTests and integBwcTests etc. so each plugin can have it's own bwc tests but that's left for future refactoring.