This commit ensures that we bootstrap a new history_uuid when force
allocating a stale primary. A stale primary should never be the source
of an operation-based recovery to another shard which exists before the
forced-allocation.
Closes#26712
Change the logging infrastructure to handle when the node name isn't
available in `elasticsearch.yml`. In that case the node name is not
available until long after logging is configured. The biggest change is
that the node name logging no longer fixed at pattern build time.
Instead it is read from a `SetOnce` on every print. If it is unset it is
printed as `unknown` so we have something that fits in the pattern.
On normal startup we don't log anything until the node name is available
so we never see the `unknown`s.
Instead of passing DirectoryService which causes yet another dependency
on Store we can just pass in a Directory since we will just call
`DirectoryService#newDirectory()` on it anyway.
This change collapses all metrics aggregations classes into a single package `org.elasticsearch.aggregations.metrics`.
It also restricts the visibility of some classes (aggregators and factories) that should not be used outside of the package.
Relates #22868
When we rollover and index we write the conditions of the rollover that
the old index met into the old index. Loading this index metadata
requires a working `NamedXContentRegistry` that has been populated with
parsers from the rollover infrastructure. We had a few loads that didn't
use a working `NamedXContentRegistry` and so would fail if they ever
encountered an index that had been rolled over. Here are the locations
of the loads and how I fixed them:
* IndexFolderUpgrader - removed entirely. It existed to support opening
indices made in Elasticsearch 2.x. Since we only need this change as far
back as 6.4.1 which will supports reading from indices created as far
back as 5.0.0 we should be good here.
* TransportNodesListGatewayStartedShards - wired the
`NamedXContentRegistry` into place.
* TransportNodesListShardStoreMetaData - wired the
`NamedXContentRegistry` into place.
* OldIndexUtils - removed entirely. It existed to support the zip based
index backwards compatibility tests which we've since replaced with code
that actually runs old versions of Elasticsearch.
In addition to fixing the actual problem I added full cluster restart
integration tests for rollover which would have caught this problem and
I added an extra assertion to IndexMetaData's deserialization code which
will trip if we try to deserialize and index's metadata without a fully
formed `NamedXContentRegistry`. It won't catch if use the *wrong*
`NamedXContentRegistry` but it is better than nothing.
Closes#33316
This commit allows us to use different TranslogRecoveryRunner when
recovering an engine from its local translog. This change is a
prerequisite for the commit-based rollback PR.
Relates #32867
The main benefit of the upgrade for users is the search optimization for top scored documents when the total hit count is not needed. However this optimization is not activated in this change, there is another issue opened to discuss how it should be integrated smoothly.
Some comments about the change:
* Tests that can produce negative scores have been adapted but we need to forbid them completely: #33309Closes#32899
This commit is related to #32517. It allows an "server_name"
attribute on a DiscoveryNode to be propagated to the server using
the TLS SNI extentsion. This functionality is only implemented for
the netty security transport.
Now that types are unique per mapping we can retrieve the document mapper
without referencing the type. This fixes an NPE when stored fields are disabled.
For 6x we'll need a different fix since mappings can still have multiple types.
Relates #32941
This commit introduces the formal notion of a private setting. This
enables us to register some settings that we had previously not
registered as fully-fledged settings to avoid them being exposed via
APIs such as the create index API. For example, we had hacks in the
codebase to allow index.version.created to be passed around inside of
settings objects, but was not registered as a setting so that if a user
tried to use the setting on any API then they would get an
exception. This prevented users from setting index.version.created on
index creation, or updating it via the index settings API. By
introducing private settings, we can continue to reject these attempts,
yet now we can represent these settings as actual settings. In this
change, we register index.version.created as an actual setting. We do
not cutover all settings that we had been treating as private in this
pull request, it is already quite large due to moving some tests around
to account for the fact that some tests need to be able to set the
index.version.created. This can be done in a follow-up change.
Drops `Settings` from some logging ctors now that they are no longer
needed. This should allow us to stop passing `Settings` around to quite
as many places.
This PR integrates Lucene soft-deletes(LUCENE-8200) into Elasticsearch.
Highlight works in this PR include:
- Replace hard-deletes by soft-deletes in InternalEngine
- Use _recovery_source if _source is disabled or modified (#31106)
- Soft-deletes retention policy based on the global checkpoint (#30335)
- Read operation history from Lucene instead of translog (#30120)
- Use Lucene history in peer-recovery (#30522)
Relates #30086Closes#29530
---
These works have been done by the whole team; however, these individuals
(lexical order) have significant contribution in coding and reviewing:
Co-authored-by: Adrien Grand <jpountz@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Boaz Leskes <b.leskes@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Jason Tedor <jason@tedor.me>
Co-authored-by: Martijn van Groningen <martijn.v.groningen@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Nhat Nguyen <nhat.nguyen@elastic.co>
Co-authored-by: Simon Willnauer <simonw@apache.org>
This PR integrates Lucene soft-deletes(LUCENE-8200) into Elasticsearch.
Highlight works in this PR include:
- Replace hard-deletes by soft-deletes in InternalEngine
- Use _recovery_source if _source is disabled or modified (#31106)
- Soft-deletes retention policy based on the global checkpoint (#30335)
- Read operation history from Lucene instead of translog (#30120)
- Use Lucene history in peer-recovery (#30522)
Relates #30086Closes#29530
---
These works have been done by the whole team; however, these individuals
(lexical order) have significant contribution in coding and reviewing:
Co-authored-by: Adrien Grand jpountz@gmail.com
Co-authored-by: Boaz Leskes b.leskes@gmail.com
Co-authored-by: Jason Tedor jason@tedor.me
Co-authored-by: Martijn van Groningen martijn.v.groningen@gmail.com
Co-authored-by: Nhat Nguyen nhat.nguyen@elastic.co
Co-authored-by: Simon Willnauer simonw@apache.org
Some AbstractDisruptionTestCase tests start failing since we enabled
assertSeqNos (in #33130). They fail because the assertSeqNos assertion
queries cluster stats while the cluster is disrupted or not formed yet.
This commit switches to use the cluster state and shard stats directly
from the test cluster.
Closes#33251
This commit checks that when we manually add a class to
the codebase map, that it does in-fact not exist on the classpath
in a jar. This will only be true if we are using the test framework
externally such as when a user develops a plugin.
Exclude classes meant for newer versions than what we are auditing against, those classes won't be found. There's no reason to exclude JDK classes from newer versions, with this PR, we will not extract them in the first place.
The new implementation is functional equivalent with the old, ant based one.
It parses task standard error to get the missing classes and violations in the same way.
I considered re-using ForbiddenApisCliTask but Gradle makes it hard to build inheritance with tasks that have task actions , since the order of the task actions can't be controlled.
This inheritance isn't dully desired either as the third party audit task is much more opinionated and we don't want to expose some of the configuration.
We could probably extract a common base class without any task actions, but probably more trouble than it's worth.
Closes#31715
We generate slightly different NoOps in InternalEngine and
TransportShardBulkAction for the same failure.
1. InternalEngine uses Exception#getFailure to generate a message
without the class name: newOp [NoOp{seqNo=1, primaryTerm=1,
reason='Contexts are mandatory in context enabled completion field
[suggest_context]'}].
2. TransportShardBulkAction uses Exception#toString to generate a
message with the class name: NoOp{seqNo=1, primaryTerm=1,
reason='java.lang.IllegalArgumentException: Contexts are mandatory in
context enabled completion field [suggest_context]'}.
If a write operation fails while a replica is recovering, that replica
will possibly receive two different NoOps: one from recovery and one
from replication. These two different NoOps will trip
TranslogWriter#assertNoSeqNumberConflict assertion.
This commit ensures that we generate the same Noop for the same failure.
Closes#32986
This adds support for connecting to a remote cluster through
a tcp proxy. A remote cluster can configured with an additional
`search.remote.$clustername.proxy` setting. This proxy will be used
to connect to remote nodes for every node connection established.
We still try to sniff the remote clsuter and connect to nodes directly
through the proxy which has to support some kind of routing to these nodes.
Yet, this routing mechanism requires the handshake request to include some
kind of information where to route to which is not yet implemented. The effort
to use the hostname and an optional node attribute for routing is tracked
in #32517Closes#31840
If a shard was closed, we return null for SeqNoStats. Therefore the
assertion assertSeqNos will hit NPE when it verifies a closed shard.
This commit skips closed shards in assertSeqNos and enables this
assertion in AbstractDisruptionTestCase.
This commit adds a hook to AbstractSerializingTestCase to enable
skipping asserting that the x-content of the test instance and an
instance parsed from the x-content of the test instance are the
same. While we usually expect these to be the same, they will not be the
same when exceptions are involved because the x-content there is lossy.
* `foobar.txGet()` appears to return before `serviceB.stop()` returns, causing `ServiceB.close()` to run concurrently with the `stop` call and running into a race codition
* Closes#32863
We used to set `maxScore` to `0` within `TopDocs` in situations where there is really no score as the size was set to `0` and scores were not even tracked. In such scenarios, `Float.Nan` is more appropriate, which gets converted to `max_score: null` on the REST layer. That's also more consistent with lucene which set `maxScore` to `Float.Nan` when merging empty `TopDocs` (see `TopDocs#merge`).
This change allows an engine to recover from its local translog up to
the given seqno. The extended API can be used in these use cases:
When a replica starts following a new primary, it resets its index to
the safe commit, then replays its local translog up to the current
global checkpoint (see #32867).
When a replica starts a peer-recovery, it can initialize the
start_sequence_number to the persisted global checkpoint instead of the
local checkpoint of the safe commit. A replica will then replay its
local translog up to that global checkpoint before accepting remote
translog from the primary. This change will increase the chance of
operation-based recovery. I will make this in a follow-up.
Relates #32867
Today, CapturingTransport#createCapturingTransportService creates a transport
service with a connection manager with reasonable default behaviours, but
overriding this behaviour in a consumer is a litle tricky. Additionally, the
default behaviour for opening a connection duplicates the content of the
CapturingTransport#openConnection() method.
This change removes this duplication by delegating to openConnection() and
introduces overridable nodeConnected() and onSendRequest() methods so that
consumers can alter this behaviour more easily.
Relates #32246 in which we test the mechanisms for opening connections to
unknown (and possibly unreachable) nodes.
This change introduces a dedicated ConnectionManager for every RemoteClusterConnection
such that there is not state shared with the TransportService internal ConnectionManager.
All connections to a remote cluster are isolated from the TransportService but still uses
the TransportService and it's internal properties like the Transport, tracing and internal
listener actions on disconnects etc.
This allows a remote cluster connection to have a different lifecycle than a local cluster connection,
also local discovery code doesn't get notified if there is a disconnect on from a remote cluster and
each connection can use it's own dedicated connection profile which allows to have a reduced set of
connections per cluster without conflicting with the local cluster.
Closes#31835
This is related to #32517. This commit passes the DiscoveryNode to the
initiateChannel method for different Transport implementation. This
will allow additional attributes (besides just the socket address) to be
used when opening channels.
This is a followup to #31886. After that commit the
TransportConnectionListener had to be propogated to both the
Transport and the ConnectionManager. This commit moves that listener
to completely live in the ConnectionManager. The request and response
related methods are moved to a TransportMessageListener. That listener
continues to live in the Transport class.
This is related to #31835. It moves the default connection profile into
the ConnectionManager class. The will allow us to have different
connection managers with different profiles.
This removes custom Response classes that extend `AcknowledgedResponse` and do nothing, these classes are not needed and we can directly use the non-abstract super-class instead.
While this appears to be a large PR, no code has actually changed, only class names have been changed and entire classes removed.
This commit fixes existing uses of forbidden apis in the test framework
and re-enables the forbidden apis check. It was previously completely
disabled and had missed a rename of the forbidden apis signatures files.
closes#32772
This is related to #31835. This commit adds a connection manager that
manages client connections to other nodes. This means that the
TcpTransport no longer maintains a map of nodes that it is connected
to.
Our rest testing framework has support for sniffing the host metadata on
startup and, before this change, it'd sniff that metadata before running
the first test. This prevents running these tests against
elasticsearch installations that won't support sniffing like Elastic
Cloud. This change allows tests to only sniff for metadata when they
encounter a test with a `node_selector`. These selectors are the things
that need the metadata anyway and they are super rare. Tests that use
these won't be able to run against installations that don't support
sniffing but we can just skip them. In the case of Elastic Cloud, these
tests were never going to work against Elastic Cloud anyway.
Currently AbstractBuilderTestCase generates certain random values in its
`beforeTest()` method annotated with @Before only the first time that a test
method in the suite is run while initializing the serviceHolder that we use for
the rest of the test. This changes the values of subsequent random values
and has the effect that when running single methods from a test suite with
"-Dtests.method=*", the random values it sees are different from when the same
test method is run as part of the whole test suite. This makes it hard to use
the reproduction lines logged on failure.
This change runs the inialization of the serviceHolder and the randomization
connected to it using the test runners master seed, so reproduction by running
just one method is possible again.
Closes#32400
Processing bulk request goes item by item. Sometimes during processing, we need to stop execution and wait for a new mapping update to be processed by the node. This is currently achieved by throwing a `RetryOnPrimaryException`, which is caught higher up. When the exception is caught, we wait for the next cluster state to arrive and process the request again. Sadly this is a problem because all operations that were already done until the mapping change was required are applied again and get new sequence numbers. This in turn means that the previously issued sequence numbers are never replicated to the replicas. That causes the local checkpoint of those shards to be stuck and with it all the seq# based infrastructure.
This commit refactors how we deal with retries with the goal of removing `RetryOnPrimaryException` and `RetryOnReplicaException` (not done yet). It achieves so by introducing a class `BulkPrimaryExecutionContext` that is used the capture the execution state and allows continuing from where the execution stopped. The class also formalizes the steps each item has to go through:
1) A translation phase for updates
2) Execution phase (always index/delete)
3) Waiting for a mapping update to come in, if needed
4) Requires a retry (for updates and cases where the mapping are still not available after the put mapping call returns)
5) A finalization phase which allows updates to the index/delete result to an update result.
Enhance reproduction line with info about jdks
Provide the ability to control compiler and hava versions just by
passing a property. The actual java home comes from the
`JAVA<major>_HOME` env vars that we allready require.
This works better with the Gradle daemon as well.
Output is also changed a bit.
for `-Druntime.java=8 -Dcompiler.java=9`:
```
=======================================
Elasticsearch Build Hamster says Hello!
Gradle Version : 4.9
OS Info : Linux 4.17.8-1-ARCH (amd64)
Compiler JDK Version : 11 (Oracle Corporation 11-ea [OpenJDK 64-Bit Server VM 11-ea+22])
Runtime JDK Version : 11 (Oracle Corporation 11-ea [OpenJDK 64-Bit Server VM 11-ea+22])
Gradle JDK Version : 10 (Oracle Corporation 10.0.1 [OpenJDK 64-Bit Server VM 10.0.1+10])
Compiler java.home : /home/alpar/opt/jdk-11-ea22/
Runtime java.home : /home/alpar/opt/jdk-11-ea22/
Gradle java.home : /usr/lib/jvm/java-10-openjdk
Random Testing Seed : EA858533191E8DFB
=======================================
```
Without configuration:
```
=======================================
Elasticsearch Build Hamster says Hello!
=======================================
Gradle Version : 4.9
OS Info : Linux 4.17.8-1-ARCH (amd64)
JDK Version : 10 (Oracle Corporation 10.0.1 [OpenJDK 64-Bit Server VM 10.0.1+10])
JAVA_HOME : /usr/lib/jvm/java-10-openjdk
Random Testing Seed : 4BD5B2A839C8FCA1
=======================================
```
Here's how a reproduction line will look like (test made to fail):
```
./gradlew :modules:lang-painless:test -Dtests.seed=2DA2379065A4EEAB -Dtests.class=org.elasticsearch.painless.AdditionTests -Dtests.method="testInt" -Dtests.security.manager=true -Dtests.locale=es-PE -Dtests.timezone=WET -Dcompiler.java=10 -Druntime.java=10
```
It will be useful for future efforts to know if the global checkpoint
was updated. To this end, we need to expose whether or not the global
checkpoint was updated when the state of the replication tracker
updates. For this, we add to the tracker a callback that is invoked
whenever the global checkpoint is updated. For primaries this will be
invoked when the computed global checkpoint is updated based on state
changes to the tracker. For replicas this will be invoked when the local
knowledge of the global checkpoint is advanced from the primary.
The MockNioTransport (similar to the MockTcpTransport) is used for integ
tests. The MockTcpTransport has always only opened a single for all of
its work. The MockNioTransport has awlays opened the default number of
connections (13). This means that every test where two transports
connect requires 26 connections. This is more than is necessary. This
commit modifies the MockNioTransport to only require 3 connections.