We believe there's no longer a need to be able to disable basic-license
features completely using the "xpack.*.enabled" settings. If users don't
want to use those features, they simply don't need to use them. Having
such features always available lets us build more complex features that
assume basic-license features are present.
This commit deprecates settings of the form "xpack.*.enabled" for
basic-license features, excluding "security", which is a special case.
It also removes deprecated settings from integration tests and unit
tests where they're not directly relevant; e.g. monitoring and ILM are
no longer disabled in many integration tests.
Today we pass the `RepositoriesService` to the searchable snapshots plugin
during the initialization of the `RepositoryModule`, forcing the plugin to be a
`RepositoryPlugin` even though it does not implement any repositories.
After discussion we decided it best for now to pass this in via
`Plugin#createComponents` instead, pending some future work in which plugins
can depend on services more dynamically.
Added testing of following on top of a closed index.
This could for instance be the old leader index in
cases where leader and follower clusters have been
swapped.
We can be a little more efficient when aborting a snapshot. Since we know the new repository
data after finalizing the aborted snapshot when can pass it down to the snapshot completion listeners.
This way, we don't have to fork off to the snapshot threadpool to get the repository data when the listener completes and can directly submit the delete task with high priority straight from the cluster state thread.
The isAuthAllowed() method for license checking is used by code that
wants to ensure security is both enabled and available. The enabled
state is dynamic and provided by isSecurityEnabled(). But since security
is available with all license types, an check on the license level is
not necessary. Thus, this change replaces isAuthAllowed() with calling
isSecurityEnabled().
Today, we do not clear the recent errors in AutoFollowCoordinator when
we successfully auto-follow indices. This can lead to confusion for the
operators.
A remote client can throw a NoSuchRemoteClusterException while fetching
the cluster state from the leader cluster. We also need to handle that
exception when retrying to add a retention lease to the leader shard.
Closes#53225
This is a simple naming change PR, to fix the fact that "metadata" is a
single English word, and for too long we have not followed general
naming conventions for it. We are also not consistent about it, for
example, METADATA instead of META_DATA if we were trying to be
consistent with MetaData (although METADATA is correct when considered
in the context of "metadata"). This was a simple find and replace across
the code base, only taking a few minutes to fix this naming issue
forever.
Today we assign CCR persistent tasks to nodes with the data role. It
could be that the data node is not capable of connecting to remote
clusters, in which case the task will fail since it can not connect to
the remote cluster with the leader shard. Instead, we need to assign
such tasks to nodes that are capable of connecting to remote
clusters. This commit addresses this by enabling such persistent tasks
to only be assigned to nodes that have the data role, and also have the
remote cluster client role.
This commit causes negative TimeValues, other than -1 which is sometimes used as
a sentinel value, to be rejected during parsing.
Also introduces a hack to allow ILM to load policies which were written to the
cluster state with a negative min_age, treating those values as 0, which should
match the behavior of prior versions.
Use sequence numbers and force merge UUID to determine whether a shard has changed or not instead before falling back to comparing files to get incremental snapshots on primary fail-over.
* Adds per context settings:
`script.context.${CONTEXT}.cache_max_size` ~
`script.cache.max_size`
`script.context.${CONTEXT}.cache_expire` ~
`script.cache.expire`
`script.context.${CONTEXT}.max_compilations_rate` ~
`script.max_compilations_rate`
* Context cache is used if:
`script.max_compilations_rate=use-context`. This
value is dynamically updatable, so users can
switch back to the general cache if desired.
* Settings for context caches take the first value
that applies:
1) Context specific settings if set, eg
`script.context.ingest.cache_max_size`
2) Correlated general setting is set to the non-default
value, eg `script.cache.max_size`
3) Context default
The reason for 2's inclusion is to allow an easy
transition for users who've customized their general
cache settings.
Using the general cache settings for the context caches
results in higher effective settings, since they are
multiplied across the number of contexts. So a general
cache max size of 200 will become 200 * # of contexts.
However, this behavior it will avoid users snapping to a
value that is too low for them.
Backport of: #52855
Refs: #50152
The setting, `xpack.logstash.enabled`, exists to enable or disable the
logstash extensions found within x-pack. In practice, this setting had
no effect on the functionality of the extension. Given this, the
setting is now deprecated in preparation for removal.
Backport of #53367
This commit moves the global checkpoint listeners used in CCR to the CCR
thread pool. This removes the last use of the listener thread pool in
the codebase.
Today when notifying a global checkpoint listener, we use the listener
thread pool. This commit turns this inside out so that the global
checkpoint listener must provide an executor on which to notify the
listener.
This commit changes the `index.hidden` setting from being final to a
dynamic setting. While the setting being final allows for easier
reasoning about an index, making this setting update-able has more
benefits in that we can upgrade existing indices to be hidden and it
will enable future features that would dynamically make indices hidden.
Backport of #52772
* Smarter copying of the rest specs and tests (#52114)
This PR addresses the unnecessary copying of the rest specs and allows
for better semantics for which specs and tests are copied. By default
the rest specs will get copied if the project applies
`elasticsearch.standalone-rest-test` or `esplugin` and the project
has rest tests or you configure the custom extension `restResources`.
This PR also removes the need for dozens of places where the x-pack
specs were copied by supporting copying of the x-pack rest specs too.
The plugin/task introduced here can also copy the rest tests to the
local project through a similar configuration.
The new plugin/task allows a user to minimize the surface area of
which rest specs are copied. Per project can be configured to include
only a subset of the specs (or tests). Configuring a project to only
copy the specs when actually needed should help with build cache hit
rates since we can better define what is actually in use.
However, project level optimizations for build cache hit rates are
not included with this PR.
Also, with this PR you can no longer use the includePackaged flag on
integTest task.
The following items are included in this PR:
* new plugin: `elasticsearch.rest-resources`
* new tasks: CopyRestApiTask and CopyRestTestsTask - performs the copy
* new extension 'restResources'
```
restResources {
restApi {
includeCore 'foo' , 'bar' //will include the core specs that start with foo and bar
includeXpack 'baz' //will include x-pack specs that start with baz
}
restTests {
includeCore 'foo', 'bar' //will include the core tests that start with foo and bar
includeXpack 'baz' //will include the x-pack tests that start with baz
}
}
```
In #42838 we moved the terms index of all fields off-heap except the
`_id` field because we were worried it might make indexing slower. In
general, the indexing rate is only affected if explicit IDs are used, as
otherwise Elasticsearch almost never performs lookups in the terms
dictionary for the purpose of indexing. So it's quite wasteful to
require the terms index of `_id` to be loaded on-heap for users who have
append-only workloads. Furthermore I've been conducting benchmarks when
indexing with explicit ids on the http_logs dataset that suggest that
the slowdown is low enough that it's probably not worth forcing the terms
index to be kept on-heap. Here are some numbers for the median indexing
rate in docs/s:
| Run | Master | Patch |
| --- | ------- | ------- |
| 1 | 45851.2 | 46401.4 |
| 2 | 45192.6 | 44561.0 |
| 3 | 45635.2 | 44137.0 |
| 4 | 46435.0 | 44692.8 |
| 5 | 45829.0 | 44949.0 |
And now heap usage in MB for segments:
| Run | Master | Patch |
| --- | ------- | -------- |
| 1 | 41.1720 | 0.352083 |
| 2 | 45.1545 | 0.382534 |
| 3 | 41.7746 | 0.381285 |
| 4 | 45.3673 | 0.412737 |
| 5 | 45.4616 | 0.375063 |
Indexing rate decreased by 1.8% on average, while memory usage decreased
by more than 100x.
The `http_logs` dataset contains small documents and has a simple
indexing chain. More complex indexing chains, e.g. with more fields,
ingest pipelines, etc. would see an even lower decrease of indexing rate.
This commit modifies the codebase so that our production code uses a
single instance of the IndexNameExpressionResolver class. This change
is being made in preparation for allowing name expression resolution
to be augmented by a plugin.
In order to remove some instances of IndexNameExpressionResolver, the
single instance is added as a parameter of Plugin#createComponents and
PersistentTaskPlugin#getPersistentTasksExecutor.
Backport of #52596
* Refactor Inflexible Snapshot Repository BwC (#52365)
Transport the version to use for a snapshot instead of whether to use shard generations in the snapshots in progress entry. This allows making upcoming repository metadata changes in a flexible manner in an analogous way to how we handle serialization BwC elsewhere.
Also, exposing the version at the repository API level will make it easier to do BwC relevant changes in derived repositories like source only or encrypted.
Add enterprise operation mode to properly map enterprise license.
Aslo refactor XPackLicenstate class to consolidate license status and mode checks.
This class has many sychronised methods to check basically three things:
* Minimum operation mode required
* Whether security is enabled
* Whether current license needs to be active
Depends on the actual feature, either 1, 2 or all of above checks are performed.
These are now consolidated in to 3 helper methods (2 of them are new).
The synchronization is pushed down to the helper methods so actual checking
methods no longer need to worry about it.
resolves: #51081
The shard follow task cleaner executes on behalf of the user to clean up
a shard follow task after the follower index has been
deleted. Otherwise, these persistent tasks are left laying around, and
they fail to execute because the follower index has been deleted. In the
face of security, attempts to complete these persistent tasks would
fail. This is because these cleanups are executed under the system
context (this makes sense, they are happening on behalf of the user
after the user has executed an action) but the system role was never
granted the permission for persistent task completion. This commit
addresses this by adding this cluster privilege to the system role.
It's perfectly fine if a bulk request on the follower hits
IndexShardClosedException in some CCR tests because we sometimes
close some follower shards while the follow-task is replicating operations.
Instead of failing the test immediately, this commit bubbles up that
failure to the shard follow task.
Closes#52052
This commit changes how RestHandlers are registered with the
RestController so that a RestHandler no longer needs to register itself
with the RestController. Instead the RestHandler interface has new
methods which when called provide information about the routes
(method and path combinations) that are handled by the handler
including any deprecated and/or replaced combinations.
This change also makes the publication of RestHandlers safe since they
no longer publish a reference to themselves within their constructors.
Closes#51622
Co-authored-by: Jason Tedor <jason@tedor.me>
Backport of #51950
We can just put the `IndexId` instead of just the index name into the recovery soruce and
save one load of `RepositoryData` on each shard restore that way.
When clenaing a shard follow task after an index has been deleted, an
exception can occur submitting the complete persistent task
action. However, this exception message is not logged. This commit
addresses this by including the exception that led to the failure in the
log message.
AutoFollowIT tests are regularly failing on CI because they rely
on how cluster state updates are processed within the integration
clusters. We tried to limit this in #49141 by moving to latches
instead of waiting for assertions to pass but there are still some
places were it still need to wait for the cluster state updates to
be processed and auto-follow stats to be updated.
This commit gives more time to assertBusy() that verifies the
AutoFollowStats (up to 60 seconds) and also always log the
auto-follow stats in case the assertions failed.
Closes#48982
* Allow Repository Plugins to Filter Metadata on Create
Add a hook that allows repository plugins to filter the repository metadata
before it gets written to the cluster state.
* Track Snapshot Version in RepositoryData (#50930)
Add tracking of snapshot versions to RepositoryData to make BwC logic more efficient.
Follow up to #50853
We have about 800 `ObjectParsers` in Elasticsearch, about 700 of which
are final. This is *probably* the right way to declare them because in
practice we never mutate them after they are built. And we certainly
don't change the static reference. Anyway, this adds `final` to a bunch
of these parsers, mostly the ones in xpack and their "paired" parsers in
the high level rest client. I picked these just to have somewhere to
break the up the change so it wouldn't be huge.
I found the non-final parsers with this:
```
diff \
<(find . -type f -name '*.java' -exec grep -iHe 'static.*PARSER\s*=' {} \+ | sort) \
<(find . -type f -name '*.java' -exec grep -iHe 'static.*final.*PARSER\s*=' {} \+ | sort) \
2>&1 | grep '^<'
```
* Update remote cluster stats to support simple mode (#49961)
Remote cluster stats API currently only returns useful information if
the strategy in use is the SNIFF mode. This PR modifies the API to
provide relevant information if the user is in the SIMPLE mode. This
information is the configured addresses, max socket connections, and
open socket connections.
* Send hostname in SNI header in simple remote mode (#50247)
Currently an intermediate proxy must route conncctions to the
appropriate remote cluster when using simple mode. This commit offers
a additional mechanism for the proxy to route the connections by
including the hostname in the TLS SNI header.
* Rename the remote connection mode simple to proxy (#50291)
This commit renames the simple connection mode to the proxy connection
mode for remote cluster connections. In order to do this, the mode specific
settings which we namespaced by their mode (ex: sniff.seed and
proxy.addresses) have been reverted.
* Modify proxy mode to support a single address (#50391)
Currently, the remote proxy connection mode uses a list setting for the
proxy address. This commit modifies this so that the setting is
proxy_address and only supports a single remote proxy address.
Since 7.4, we switch from translog to Lucene as the source of history
for peer recoveries. However, we reduce the likelihood of
operation-based recoveries when performing a full cluster restart from
pre-7.4 because existing copies do not have PPRL.
To remedy this issue, we fallback using translog in peer recoveries if
the recovering replica does not have a peer recovery retention lease,
and the replication group hasn't fully migrated to PRRL.
Relates #45136
Today we do not use retention leases in peer recovery for closed indices
because we can't sync retention leases on closed indices. This change
allows that ability and adjusts peer recovery to use retention leases
for all indices with soft-deletes enabled.
Relates #45136
Co-authored-by: David Turner <david.turner@elastic.co>
Adjusts the subclasses of `TransportMasterNodeAction` to use their own loggers
instead of the one for the base class.
Relates #50056.
Partial backport of #46431 to 7.x.
Makes sure that CCR also properly works with _source disabled.
Changes one exception in LuceneChangesSnapshot as the case of missing _recovery_source
because of a missing lease was not properly properly bubbled up to CCR (testIndexFallBehind
was failing).
This commit fixes a number of issues with data replication:
- Local and global checkpoints are not updated after the new operations have been fsynced, but
might capture a state before the fsync. The reason why this probably went undetected for so
long is that AsyncIOProcessor is synchronous if you index one item at a time, and hence working
as intended unless you have a high enough level of concurrent indexing. As we rely in other
places on the assumption that we have an up-to-date local checkpoint in case of synchronous
translog durability, there's a risk for the local and global checkpoints not to be up-to-date after
replication completes, and that this won't be corrected by the periodic global checkpoint sync.
- AsyncIOProcessor also has another "bad" side effect here: if you index one bulk at a time, the
bulk is always first fsynced on the primary before being sent to the replica. Further, if one thread
is tasked by AsyncIOProcessor to drain the processing queue and fsync, other threads can
easily pile more bulk requests on top of that thread. Things are not very fair here, and the thread
might continue doing a lot more fsyncs before returning (as the other threads pile more and
more on top), which blocks it from returning as a replication request (e.g. if this thread is on the
primary, it blocks the replication requests to the replicas from going out, and delaying
checkpoint advancement).
This commit fixes all these issues, and also simplifies the code that coordinates all the after
write actions.
This stems from a time where index requests were directly forwarded to
TransportReplicationAction. Nowadays they are wrapped in a BulkShardRequest, and this logic is
obsolete.
In contrast to prior PR (#49647), this PR also fixes (see b3697cc) a situation where the previous
index expression logic had an interesting side effect. For bulk requests (which had resolveIndex
= false), the reroute phase was waiting for the index to appear in case where it was not present,
and for all other replication requests (resolveIndex = true) it would right away throw an
IndexNotFoundException while resolving the name and exit. With #49647, every replication
request was now waiting for the index to appear, which was problematic when the given index
had just been deleted (e.g. deleting a follower index while it's still receiving requests from the
leader, where these requests would now wait up to a minute for the index to appear). This PR
now adds b3697cc on top of that prior PR to make sure to reestablish some of the prior behavior
where the reroute phase waits for the bulk request for the index to appear. That logic was in
place to ensure that when an index was created and not all nodes had learned about it yet, that
the bulk would not fail somewhere in the reroute phase. This is now only restricted to the
situation where the current node has an older cluster state than the one that coordinated the
bulk request (which checks that the index is present). This also means that when an index is
deleted, we will no longer unnecessarily wait up to the timeout for the index o appear, and
instead fail the request.
Closes#20279
* Make BlobStoreRepository Aware of ClusterState (#49639)
This is a preliminary to #49060.
It does not introduce any substantial behavior change to how the blob store repository
operates. What it does is to add all the infrastructure changes around passing the cluster service to the blob store, associated test changes and a best effort approach to tracking the latest repository generation on all nodes from cluster state updates. This brings a slight improvement to the consistency
by which non-master nodes (or master directly after a failover) will be able to determine the latest repository generation. It does not however do any tricky checks for the situation after a repository operation
(create, delete or cleanup) that could theoretically be used to get even greater accuracy to keep this change simple.
This change does not in any way alter the behavior of the blobstore repository other than adding a better "guess" for the value of the latest repo generation and is mainly intended to isolate the actual logical change to how the
repository operates in #49060
This stems from a time where index requests were directly forwarded to
TransportReplicationAction. Nowadays they are wrapped in a BulkShardRequest, and this logic is
obsolete.
Closes#20279
This commit back ports three commits related to enabling the simple
connection strategy.
Allow simple connection strategy to be configured (#49066)
Currently the simple connection strategy only exists in the code. It
cannot be configured. This commit moves in the direction of allowing it
to be configured. It introduces settings for the addresses and socket
count. Additionally it introduces new settings for the sniff strategy
so that the more generic number of connections and seed node settings
can be deprecated.
The simple settings are not yet registered as the registration is
dependent on follow-up work to validate the settings.
Ensure at least 1 seed configured in remote test (#49389)
This fixes#49384. Currently when we select a random subset of seed
nodes from a list, it is possible for 0 seeds to be selected. This test
depends on at least 1 seed being selected.
Add the simple strategy to cluster settings (#49414)
This is related to #49067. This commit adds the simple connection
strategy settings and strategy mode setting to the cluster settings
registry. With these changes, the simple connection mode can be used.
Additionally, it adds validation to ensure that settings cannot be
misconfigured.
This commit enhances the required pipeline functionality by changing it
so that default/request pipelines can also be executed, but the required
pipeline is always executed last. This gives users the flexibility to
execute their own indexing pipelines, but also ensure that any required
pipelines are also executed. Since such pipelines are executed last, we
change the name of required pipelines to final pipelines.
This API call in most implementations is fairly IO heavy and slow
so it is more natural to be async in the first place.
Concretely though, this change is a prerequisite of #49060 since
determining the repository generation from the cluster state
introduces situations where this call would have to wait for other
operations to finish. Doing so in a blocking manner would break
`SnapshotResiliencyTests` and waste a thread.
Also, this sets up the possibility to in the future make use of async IO
where provided by the underlying Repository implementation.
In a follow-up `SnapshotsService#getRepositoryData` will be made async
as well (did not do it here, since it's another huge change to do so).
Note: This change for now does not alter the threading behaviour in any way (since `Repository#getRepositoryData` isn't forking) and is purely mechanical.