This commit ensures that we always restore the thread's original context after execution of
a context preserving runnable. We always wrap runnables in a wrapper that restores the context
at the time it was submitted to the execute method. The ContextPreservingAbstractRunnable
would restore the calling context in the doRun method and then in a try with resources
block would restore the thread's original context. However, the onFailure and onAfter methods
of a AbstractRunnable could modify the thread context and this modified thread context would
continue on as the thread's context after it was returned to the pool and potentially used
for a different purpose.
This change simply makes the level of the ant timestamp for waiting on
the integ test cluster echo at the info level instead of warn (the
default) so that it is only output when running with gradle --info, or
when the wait condition fails.
* Plugins: Convert custom discovery to pull based plugin
This change primarily moves registering custom Discovery implementations
to the pull based DiscoveryPlugin interface. It also keeps the cloud
based discovery plugins re-registering ZenDiscovery under their own name
in order to maintain backwards compatibility. However,
discovery.zen.hosts_provider is changed here to no longer fallback to
discovery.type. Instead, each plugin which previously relied on the
value of discovery.type now sets the hosts_provider to itself if
discovery.type is set to itself, along with a deprecation warning.
If you try to reindex with multiple slices against a node that
doesn't support it we throw an `IllegalArgumentException` so
`assertVersionSerializable` is ok with it and so if this happens
in REST it comes back as a 400 error.
* Rest client: don't reuse that same HttpAsyncResponseConsumer across multiple retries
Turns out that AbstractAsyncResponseConsumer from apache async http client is stateful and cannot be reused across multiple requests. The failover mechanism was mistakenly reusing that same instance, which can be provided by users, across retries in case nodes are down or return 5xx errors. The downside is that we have to change the signature of two public methods, as HttpAsyncResponseConsumer cannot be provided directly anymore, rather its factory needs to be provided which is going to be used to create one instance of the consumer per request attempt.
Up until now we tested our RestClient against multiple nodes only in a mock environment, where we don't really send http requests. In that scenario we can verify that retries etc. work properly but the interaction with the http client library in a real scenario is different and can catch other problems. With this commit we also add an integration test that sends requests to multiple hosts, and some of them may also get stopped meanwhile. The specific test for pathPrefix was also removed as pathPrefix is now randomly applied by default, hence implicitly tested. Moved also a small test method that checked the validity of the path argument to the unit test RestClientSingleHostTests.
Also increase default buffer limit to 100MB and make it required in default consumer
The default buffer limit used to be 10MB but that proved not to be high enough for scroll requests (see reindex from remote). With this commit we increase the limit to 100MB and make it a bit more visibile in the consumer factory.
This commit cleans up the formatting of some Javadocs in
BootstrapCheck.java, and corrects some docs that had become stale as the
bootstrap checks evolved.
The ClusterState class currently has a mutable volatile field "status" that is only used by the ClusterStateObserver to differentiate between a cluster state that is being applied or one that has already been applied. This commit removes the field from cluster state, making it a truly immutable class. This information is stored instead by ClusterService, which is the only place that should update this field (PublishClusterStateAction was also updating it, but that information was never used anywhere). A new class is introduced (ClusterServiceState) which emcompasses the current cluster state as well as the current status, which is only used by the ClusterStateObserver mechanism.
Applied (almost) the same rules we use to validate index names
to new alias names. The only rule not applies it "must be lowercase".
We have tests that don't follow that rule and I except there are lots
of examples of camelCase alias names in the wild. We can add that
validation but I'm not sure it is worth it.
Closes#20748
Adds an alias that starts with `#` to the BWC index and validates
that you can read from it and remove it. Starting with `#` isn't
allowed after 5.1.0/6.0.0 so we don't create the alias or check it
after those versions.
Before this change Eclipse (4.6.1) would show compile errors in `ClusterRerouteRequestTests` for the elements in `RANDOM_COMMAND_GENERATORS`. This seems to be because the eclipse compiler does not recognised that the elements in the list are all `Supplier`s of bjects that are subclasses of `AllocationCommand`.
This change fixes the problem by adding a generics hint to the `Arrays.toList()` call.
We currently often use ensureGreen or ensureYellow to check whether the cluster is in a good state again after shutting down a node. With the change in #21092, however, it can happen that if the node that is stopped is the master node, another node will become master and publish a cluster state where it is master but where the node that was stopped hasn't been removed yet from the cluster state. It will only publish a second state thereafter where the old master is removed. If the ensureGreen/ensureYellow is timed just right, it will get to execute before the second cluster state update removing the old master and the condition ensureGreen / ensureYellow might not hold at that point anymore.
All plugins currently have their own licenses dir for the
dependencyLicenses task, but core disables this and has the check inside
distribution. This may have been better for maven, but for
gradle it makes more sense to just use the dependencyLicenses task that
automatically exists inside :core, and remove the hacked up version that
is inside distribution.
At one point in the past when moving out the rest tests from core to
their own subproject, we had multiple test classes which evenly split up
the tests to run. However, we simplified this and went back to a single
test runner to have better reproduceability in tests. This change
removes the remnants of that multiplexing support.
This commit changes the Javadocs in OsProbe.java to take advantage of
the fact that the line-length limit is 140 characters. This change makes
these Javadocs easier to read and easier to maintain.
This commit removes JVMCheck. Previously there were three checks in this
class:
- check for super word bug in JDK 7
- check for G1GC bugs in JDK 8
- check for broken IBM JDKs
The first check is obsolete since we require JDK 8 now. The second check
is refactored into a bootstrap check. The third check is removed since
we do not even support the IBM JDK.
Relates #21389
Before, when requesting to get the snapshots in a repository, if `_all` was
specified for the set of snapshots to get, any in-progress snapshots would
be returned twice. This commit fixes the issue ensuring that each snapshot,
whether in-progress or completed, is only returned once when making a call to
get snapshots (GET /_snapshot/{repository_name}/_all).
This commit also enables `_current` to appear anywhere in
the get snapshots list, and will be used as a pseudo regex to
mean "match any currently running snapshots".
Closes#21335
Today when acquiring load average stats, this method is rather lenient
when reading /proc/loadavg. This commit removes this leniency so that
any such issues are more likely to be exposed to the end-user.
Relates #21380
On ubuntu 14.04, which uses upstart, where as our debian package uses
sysvinit, there is no stdout/stderr message printed when starting up,
because the start-stop-daemon swallows it.
As Elasticsearch is started to daemonize, we can remove the background
flag from the start-stop-daemon and thus see, if the system does not have
enough memory for starting up - something that happens often on VMs, since
Elasticsearch 5.0 uses 2gb by default instead of one.
Relates #21300
Relates #12716
We plan to deprecate `_suggest` during 5.0 so it isn't worth fixing
it to support the `_source` parameter for `_source` filtering. But we
should fix the docs so they are accurate.
Since this removes the last non-`// CONSOLE` line in
`completion-suggest.asciidoc` this also removes it from the list of
files that have non-`// CONSOLE` docs.
Closes#20482
Adds support for `?slices=N` to reindex which automatically
parallelizes the process using parallel scrolls on `_uid`. Performance
testing sees a 3x performance improvement for simple docs
on decent hardware, maybe 30% performance improvement
for more complex docs. Still compelling, especially because
clusters should be able to get closer to the 3x than the 30%
number.
Closes#20624
Today when writing an unbounded queue_size in the cat thread pool API,
we write null. This commit modifies this so that the output is -1 so
that the output is always present, and always a numeric value.
Relates #21342
Exist requests are supposed to never throw an exception, but rather return true or false depending on whether some resource exists or not. Indices exists does that for indices and accepts wildcard expressions too. The way the api works internally is by resolving indices and catching IndexNotFoundException: if an exception is thrown the index does not exist hence it returns false, otherwise it returns true. That works ok only if ignore_unavailable and allow_no_indices indices options are both set to false, meaning that they are strict and any missing index or wildcard expressions that resolves to no indices will lead to an exception that can be thrown and cause false to be returned.
Unfortunately the indices options have been configurable up until now for this request, meaning that one can set ignore_unavailable or allow_no_indices to true and have the indices exist request return true for indices that really don't exist, which makes very little sense in the context of this api.
This commit removes the indicesOptions setter from the IndicesExistsRequest and makes settable only expandWildcardsOpen and expandWildcardsClosed, hence a subset of the available indices options. This way we can guarantee more consistent behaviour of the indices exists api. We can then remove the ignore_unavailable and allow_no_indices option from indices exists api spec
Today if you start Elasticsearch with the status logger configured to
the warn level, or use a transport client with the default status logger
level, you will see warn messages about deprecation loggers being
created with different message factories and that formatting might be
broken. This happens because the deprecation logger is constructed using
the message factory from its parent, an artifact leftover from the first
Log4j 2 implementation that used a custom message factory. When that
custom message factory was removed, this constructor invocation should
have been changed to not explicitly use the message factory from the
parent. This commit fixes this invocation. However, we also had some
status checking to all tests to ensure that there are no warn status log
messages that might indicate a configuration problem with Log4j 2. These
assertions blow up badly without the fix for the deprecation logger
construction, and also caught a misconfiguration in one of the logging
tests.
Relates #21339