Many gradle projects specifically use the -try exclude flag, because
there are many cases where auto-closeable resource ignore is never
referenced in body of corresponding try statement. Suppressing this
warning specifically in each case that it happens using
`@SuppressWarnings("try")` would be very verbose.
This change removes `-try` from any gradle project and adds it to the
build plugin. Also this change removes exclude flags from gradle projects
that is already specified in build plugin (for example -deprecation).
Relates to #40366
It is important that resync actions are not rejected on the primary even if its
`write` threadpool is overloaded. Today we do this by exposing
`registerRequestHandlers` to subclasses and overriding it in
`TransportResyncReplicationAction`. This isn't ideal because it obscures the
difference between this action and other replication actions, and also might
allow subclasses to try and use some state before they are properly
initialised. This change replaces this override with a constructor parameter to
solve these issues.
Relates #40706
Currently the TransportMessageListener is applied and used in the
Transport class. However, local requests and responses never make it to
this class. This PR moves the listener add/remove methods to the
TransportService. After this change the Transport can only have one
listener set with it. This one listener is the TransportService, which
will then propogate the events to the external listeners.
Additionally this commit back ports #40237
Remove Tracer from MockTransportService
Currently the TransportMessageListener is applied and used in the
Transport class. However, local requests and responses never make it to
this class. This PR moves the listener add/remove methods to the
TransportService. After this change the Transport can only have one
listener set with it. This one listener is the TransportService, which
will then propogate the events to the external listeners.
In some cases, a request to perform a retention lease action can arrive
on a primary shard before it is active. In this case, the primary shard
would not yet be in primary mode, tripping an assertion in the
replication tracker. Instead, we should not attempt to perform such
actions on an initializing shard. This commit addresses this by not
returning the primary shard in the single shard iterator if the primary
shard is not yet active.
If there's a failover on the follower, then its max_seq_no_of_updates is
bootstrapped from its max_seq_no which might be higher than the
max_seq_no_of_updates of the leader. We need to relax this check.
Relates #40249
This commit adjusts the frequency with which CCR renews retention leases
and with which primaries sync retention leases to replicas. This helps
Lucene reclaim soft-deleted documents more aggressively, which we have
found in some use-cases can help improve performance, and either way
will help keep disk space under more control.
Currently, we cannot update index setting index.translog.sync_interval if index is open, because it's
not dynamic which can be updated for closed index only.
Closes#32763
If a replica were first reset due to one primary failover and then
promoted (before resync completes), its MSU would not include changes
since global checkpoint, leading to errors during translog replay.
Fixed by re-initializing MSU before restoring local history.
This named writable was never registered, so it means that we could not
read auto-follow patterns that were registered in the cluster
state. This causes them to be lost on restarts, a bad bug. This commit
addresses this by registering this named writable, and we add a basic
CCR restart test to ensure that CCR keeps functioning properly when the
follower is restarted.
We introduced WAIT_CLUSTERSTATE action in #19287 (5.0), but then stopped
using it since #25692 (6.0). This change removes that action and related
code in 7.x and 8.0.
Relates #19287
Relates #25692
We were leaking a reference to an AutoFollowCoordinator during
construction, violating safe publication according to the JLS
specification. This commit addresses this by waiting to register
AutoFollowCoordinator with the ClusterApplierService after the
AutoFollowCoordinator is fully constructed. We also remove ourselves as
a listener when stopping.
When shutting down a node, auto-followers will keep trying to run. This
is happening even as transport services and other components are being
closed. In some cases, this can lead to a stack overflow as we rapidly
try to check the license state of the remote cluster, can not because
the transport service is shutdown, and then immeidately retry
again. This can happen faster than the shutdown, and we die with stack
overflow. This commit adds a stop command to auto-followers so that this
retry loop occurs at most once on shutdown.
When an auto-follower coordinator times out waiting for the remote
cluster state, we do not log any indication of this. While this is
expected behavior in quiet deployments, it is still useful to see this
information for tracing the behavior of the auto-follow
coordinator. This commit adds a trace log message indicating that the
timeout.
This commit removes the cluster state size field from the cluster state
response, and drops the backwards compatibility layer added in 6.7.0 to
continue to support this field. As calculation of this field was
expensive and had dubious value, we have elected to remove this field.
This commit removes the "doc" type from monitoring internal indexes.
The template still carries the "_doc" type since that is needed for
the internal representation.
This change impacts the following templates:
monitoring-alerts.json
monitoring-beats.json
monitoring-es.json
monitoring-kibana.json
monitoring-logstash.json
As part of the required changes, the system_api_version has been
bumped from "6" to "7" and support for version "2" has been dropped.
A new empty pipeline is now introduced for the version "7", and
the formerly empty "6" pipeline will now remove the type and re-direct
the request to the "7" index.
Additionally, to due to a difference in the internal representation
(which requires the inclusion of "_doc" type) and external representation
(which requires the exclusion of any type) a helper method is introduced
to help convert internal to external representation, and used by the
monitoring HTTP template exporter.
Relates #38637
* reduce the number of leader indices to be auto followed
* also check the number of follower indices being created
* also check the whether leader indices are marked as auto followed
Relates to #36761
This test was more complicated than necessary, where we were capturing
requests to prevent removal of retention leases, so that our forget
follower request could remove the retention leases instead. Instead, a
pause is enough to ensure that the retention leases are not re-added
after we remove them by the forget follower request. This commit
simplifies this test, and should remove some spurious failures.
Relates #39850
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.
Today the `GroupedActionListener` accepts a `defaults` parameter but all
callers pass an empty list. Also it is permitted to pass an empty group but
this is trappy because the delegated listener is never be called in that case.
This commit removes the `defaults` parameter and forbids an empty group.
This commit renames the retention lease setting
index.soft_deletes.retention.lease so that it is under the namespace
index.soft_deletes.retention_lease. As such, we rename the setting to
index.soft_deletes.retention_lease.period.
This cleans up the Engine implementation by separating the sequence number generation from the
planning step in the engine, to avoid for the planning step to have any side effects. This makes it
easier to see that every sequence number is properly accounted for.
Backport support for replicating closed indices (#39499)
Before this change, closed indexes were simply not replicated. It was therefore
possible to close an index and then decommission a data node without knowing
that this data node contained shards of the closed index, potentially leading to
data loss. Shards of closed indices were not completely taken into account when
balancing the shards within the cluster, or automatically replicated through shard
copies, and they were not easily movable from node A to node B using APIs like
Cluster Reroute without being fully reopened and closed again.
This commit changes the logic executed when closing an index, so that its shards
are not just removed and forgotten but are instead reinitialized and reallocated on
data nodes using an engine implementation which does not allow searching or
indexing, which has a low memory overhead (compared with searchable/indexable
opened shards) and which allows shards to be recovered from peer or promoted
as primaries when needed.
This new closing logic is built on top of the new Close Index API introduced in
6.7.0 (#37359). Some pre-closing sanity checks are executed on the shards before
closing them, and closing an index on a 8.0 cluster will reinitialize the index shards
and therefore impact the cluster health.
Some APIs have been adapted to make them work with closed indices:
- Cluster Health API
- Cluster Reroute API
- Cluster Allocation Explain API
- Recovery API
- Cat Indices
- Cat Shards
- Cat Health
- Cat Recovery
This commit contains all the following changes (most recent first):
* c6c42a1 Adapt NoOpEngineTests after #39006
* 3f9993d Wait for shards to be active after closing indices (#38854)
* 5e7a428 Adapt the Cluster Health API to closed indices (#39364)
* 3e61939 Adapt CloseFollowerIndexIT for replicated closed indices (#38767)
* 71f5c34 Recover closed indices after a full cluster restart (#39249)
* 4db7fd9 Adapt the Recovery API for closed indices (#38421)
* 4fd1bb2 Adapt more tests suites to closed indices (#39186)
* 0519016 Add replica to primary promotion test for closed indices (#39110)
* b756f6c Test the Cluster Shard Allocation Explain API with closed indices (#38631)
* c484c66 Remove index routing table of closed indices in mixed versions clusters (#38955)
* 00f1828 Mute CloseFollowerIndexIT.testCloseAndReopenFollowerIndex()
* e845b0a Do not schedule Refresh/Translog/GlobalCheckpoint tasks for closed indices (#38329)
* cf9a015 Adapt testIndexCanChangeCustomDataPath for replicated closed indices (#38327)
* b9becdd Adapt testPendingTasks() for replicated closed indices (#38326)
* 02cc730 Allow shards of closed indices to be replicated as regular shards (#38024)
* e53a9be Fix compilation error in IndexShardIT after merge with master
* cae4155 Relax NoOpEngine constraints (#37413)
* 54d110b [RCI] Adapt NoOpEngine to latest FrozenEngine changes
* c63fd69 [RCI] Add NoOpEngine for closed indices (#33903)
Relates to #33888
Today when users upgrade to 7.0, existing indices will automatically
switch to soft-deletes without an opt-out option. With this change,
we only enable soft-deletes by default for new indices.
Relates #36141
This commit is the final piece of the integration of CCR with retention
leases. Namely, we periodically renew retention leases and advance the
retaining sequence number while following.
With this change, we won't wait for the local checkpoint to advance to
the max_seq_no before starting phase2 of peer-recovery. We also remove
the sequence number range check in peer-recovery. We can safely do these
thanks to Yannick's finding.
The replication group to be used is currently sampled after indexing
into the primary (see `ReplicationOperation` class). This means that
when initiating tracking of a new replica, we have to consider the
following two cases:
- There are operations for which the replication group has not been
sampled yet. As we initiated the new replica as tracking, we know that
those operations will be replicated to the new replica and follow the
typical replication group semantics (e.g. marked as stale when
unavailable).
- There are operations for which the replication group has already been
sampled. These operations will not be sent to the new replica. However,
we know that those operations are already indexed into Lucene and the
translog on the primary, as the sampling is happening after that. This
means that by taking a snapshot of Lucene or the translog, we will be
getting those ops as well. What we cannot guarantee anymore is that all
ops up to `endingSeqNo` are available in the snapshot (i.e. also see
comment in `RecoverySourceHandler` saying `We need to wait for all
operations up to the current max to complete, otherwise we can not
guarantee that all operations in the required range will be available
for replaying from the translog of the source.`). This is not needed,
though, as we can no longer guarantee that max seq no == local
checkpoint.
Relates #39000Closes#38949
Co-authored-by: Yannick Welsch <yannick@welsch.lu>
when dealing with TimeoutException
The `IndexFollowingIT#testDeleteLeaderIndex()`` test failed,
because a NPE was captured as fatal error instead of an IndexNotFoundException.
Closes#39308
Finally! This commit should fix the issues with the CCR retention lease
that has been plaguing build failures. The issue here is that we are
trying to prevent the clear session requests from being executed until
after we have been able to validate that retention leases are being
renewed. However, we were only blocking the clear session requests but
not blocking them when they are proxied through another node. This
commit addresses that.
Relates #39268
This commit changes the sort order of shard stats that are collected in
CCR retention lease integration tests. This change is done so that
primaries appear first in sort order.
This test fails rarely but it is flaky in its current form. The problem
here is that we lack a guarantee on the retention leases having been
synced to all shard copies. We need to sleep long enough to ensure that
that occurs, and then we can sample the retention leases, possibly sleep
again (we usually will not have too since the first sleep will have been
long enough to allow a sync and a renewal to happen, if one was going to
happen), and the sample the retention leases for comparison.
Closes#39331
The shard logged here is the leader shard but it should be the follower
shard since this background retention lease renewal is happening on the
follower side. This commit fixes that.
This commit simplifies the use of transport mocking in the CCR retention
lease integration tests. Instead of adding a send rule between nodes, we
add a default send rule. This greatly simplifies the code here, and
speeds the test up a little bit too.
This fixes#39245. Currently it is possible in this test that the clear
session call times-out. This means that the index commit will not be
released and there will be an assertion triggered in the test teardown.
This commit ensures that we wipe the leader index in the test to avoid
this assertion.
It is okay if the clear session call times-out in normal usage. This
scenario is unavoidable due to potential network issues. We have a local
timeout on the leader to clean it up when this scenario happens.
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.
Sleeps in tests smell funny, and we try to avoid them to the extent
possible. We are using a small one in a CCR test. This commit clarifies
the purpose of that sleep by adding a comment explaining it. We also
removed a hard-coded value from the test, that if we ever modified the
value higher up where it was set, we could end up forgetting to change
the value here. Now we ensure that these would move in lock step if we
ever maintain them later.
We have some CCR tests where we use mock transport send rules to control
the behavior that we desire in these tests. Namely, we want to simulate
an exception being thrown on the leader side, or a variety of other
situations. These send rules were put in place between the data nodes on
each side. However, it might not be the case that these requests are
being sent between data nodes. For example, a request that is handled on
a non-data master node would not be sent from a data node. And it might
not be the case that the request is sent to a data node, as it could be
proxied through a non-data coordinating node. This commit addresses this
by putting these send rules in places between all nodes on each side.
Closes#39011Closes#39201
Initially in #38910, ShardFollowTask was reusing ImmutableFollowParameters'
serialization logic. After merging, bwc tests failed sometimes and
the binary serialization that ShardFollowTask was originally was using
was added back. ImmutableFollowParameters is using optional fields (optional vint)
while ShardFollowTask was not (vint).
Today we always refresh when looking up the primary term in
FollowingEngine. This is not necessary for we can simply
return none for operations before the global checkpoint.
The follower won't always have the same history as the leader for its
soft-deletes retention can be different. However, if some operation
exists on the history of the follower, then the same operation must
exist on the leader. This change relaxes the history check in
ShardFollowTaskReplicationTests.
Closes#39093
This commit fixes a broken CCR retention lease unfollow test. The
problem with the test is that the random subset of shards that we picked
to disrupt would not necessarily overlap with the actual shards in
use. We could take a non-empty subset of [0, 3] (e.g., { 2 }) when the
only shard IDs in use were [0, 1]. This commit fixes this by taking into
account the number of shards in use in the test.
With this change, we also take measure to ensure that a successful
branch is tested more frequently than would otherwise be the case. On
that branch, we want to sometimes pretend that the retention lease is
already removed. The randomness here was also sometimes selecting a
subset of shards that did not overlap with the shards actually in use
during the test. While this does not break the test, it is confusing and
reduces the amount of coverage of that branch.
Relates #39185
This commit attempts to remove the retention leases on the leader shards
when unfollowing an index. This is best effort, since the leader might
not be available.
Prior to this commit, if during fetch leader / follower GCP
a fatal error occurred, then the shard follow task was removed.
This is unexpected, because if such an error occurs during the lifetime of shard follow task then replication is stopped and the fatal error flag is set. This allows the ccr stats api to report the fatal exception that has occurred (instead of the user grepping through the elasticsearch logs).
This issue was found by a rare failure of the `FollowStatsIT#testFollowStatsApiIncludeShardFollowStatsWithRemovedFollowerIndex` test.
Closes#38779
* During fetching remote mapping if remote client is missing then
`NoSuchRemoteClusterException` was not handled.
* When adding remote connection, check that it is really connected
before continue-ing to run the tests.
Relates to #38695
This commit is the first step in integrating shard history retention
leases with CCR. In this commit we integrate shard history retention
leases with recovery from remote. Before we start transferring files, we
take out a retention lease on the primary. Then during the file copy
phase, we repeatedly renew the retention lease. Finally, when recovery
from remote is complete, we disable the background renewing of the
retention lease.
This commit adds a `ListenerTimeouts` class that will wrap a
`ActionListener` in a listener with a timeout scheduled on the generic
thread pool. If the timeout expires before the listener is completed,
`onFailure` will be called with an `ElasticsearchTimeoutException`.
Timeouts for the get ccr file chunk action are implemented using this
functionality. Additionally, this commit attempts to fix#38027 by also
blocking proxied get ccr file chunk actions. This test being un-muted is
useful to verify the timeout functionality.
Today when processing an operation on a replica engine (or the
following engine), we first add it to Lucene, then add it to translog,
then finally marks its seq_no as completed. If a flush occurs after step1,
but before step-3, the max_seq_no in the commit's user_data will be
smaller than the seq_no of some documents in the Lucene commit.
We verify seq_no_stats is aligned between copies at the end of some
disruption tests. Sometimes, the assertion `assertSeqNos` is tripped due
to a lagged global checkpoint on replicas. The global checkpoint on
replicas is lagged because we sync the global checkpoint 30 seconds (by
default) after the last replication operation. This change reduces the
global checkpoint sync-internal to 1s in the disruption tests.
Closes#38318Closes#36789
The CCR REST tests that rely on these assertions are flaky. They are
flaky since the introduction of recovery from the remote.
The underlying problem is this: these tests are making assertions about
the number of operations read by the shard following task. However, with
recovery from remote, we no longer have guarantees that the assumptions
these tests were relying on hold. Namely, these tests were assuming that
the only way that a document could land in the follower index is via the
shard following task. With recovery from remote, there is another way,
which is via the files that are copied over during the recovery
phase. Most of the time this will not be a problem because with the
small number of documents that we are indexing in these tests, it is
usally not the case that a flush would occur and so there would not be
any documents in the files copied over. However, a flush can occur any
time at which point all of the indexed documents could end up in a safe
commit and copied over during recovery from remote. This commit modifies
these assertions to ones that are not prone to this issue, yet still
validate the health of the follower shard.
The previous logic for concurrent file chunk fetching did not allow for multiple chunks from the same
file to be fetched in parallel. The parallelism only allowed to fetch chunks from different files in
parallel. This required complex logic on the follower to be aware from which file it was already
fetching information, in order to ensure that chunks for the same file would be fetched in sequential
order. During benchmarking, this exhibited throughput issues when recovery came towards the end,
where it would only be sequentially fetching chunks for the same largest segment file, with
throughput considerably going down in a high-latency network as there was no parallelism anymore.
The new logic here follows the peer recovery model more closely, and sends multiple requests for
the same file in parallel, and then reorders the results as necessary. Benchmarks show that this
leads to better overall throughput and the implementation is also simpler.
The should fix the following NPE:
```
[2019-02-11T23:27:48,452][WARN ][o.e.p.PersistentTasksNodeService] [node_s_0] task kD8YzUhHTK6uKNBNQI-1ZQ-0 failed with an exception
1> java.lang.NullPointerException: null
1> at org.elasticsearch.xpack.ccr.action.ShardFollowTasksExecutor.lambda$fetchFollowerShardInfo$7(ShardFollowTasksExecutor.java:305) ~[main/:?]
1> at org.elasticsearch.action.ActionListener$1.onResponse(ActionListener.java:61) [elasticsearch-8.0.0-SNAPSHOT.jar:8.0.0-SNAPSHOT]
1> at org.elasticsearch.action.support.TransportAction$1.onResponse(TransportAction.java:68) [elasticsearch-8.0.0-SNAPSHOT.jar:8.0.0-SNAPSHOT]
1> at org.elasticsearch.action.support.TransportAction$1.onResponse(TransportAction.java:64) [elasticsearch-8.0.0-SNAPSHOT.jar:8.0.0-SNAPSHOT]
1> at org.elasticsearch.action.support.broadcast.node.TransportBroadcastByNodeAction$AsyncAction.onCompletion(TransportBroadcastByNodeAction.java:383) [elasticsearch-8.0.0-SNAPSHOT.jar:8.0.0-SNAPSHOT]
1> at org.elasticsearch.action.support.broadcast.node.TransportBroadcastByNodeAction$AsyncAction.onNodeResponse(TransportBroadcastByNodeAction.java:352) [elasticsearch-8.0.0-SNAPSHOT.jar:8.0.0-SNAPSHOT]
1> at org.elasticsearch.action.support.broadcast.node.TransportBroadcastByNodeAction$AsyncAction$1.handleResponse(TransportBroadcastByNodeAction.java:324) [elasticsearch-8.0.0-SNAPSHOT.jar:8.0.0-SNAPSHOT]
1> at org.elasticsearch.action.support.broadcast.node.TransportBroadcastByNodeAction$AsyncAction$1.handleResponse(TransportBroadcastByNodeAction.java:314) [elasticsearch-8.0.0-SNAPSHOT.jar:8.0.0-SNAPSHOT]
1> at org.elasticsearch.transport.TransportService$ContextRestoreResponseHandler.handleResponse(TransportService.java:1108) [elasticsearch-8.0.0-SNAPSHOT.jar:8.0.0-SNAPSHOT]
1> at org.elasticsearch.transport.TransportService$DirectResponseChannel.processResponse(TransportService.java:1189) [elasticsearch-8.0.0-SNAPSHOT.jar:8.0.0-SNAPSHOT]
1> at org.elasticsearch.transport.TransportService$DirectResponseChannel.sendResponse(TransportService.java:1169) [elasticsearch-8.0.0-SNAPSHOT.jar:8.0.0-SNAPSHOT]
1> at org.elasticsearch.transport.TaskTransportChannel.sendResponse(TaskTransportChannel.java:54) [elasticsearch-8.0.0-SNAPSHOT.jar:8.0.0-SNAPSHOT]
1> at org.elasticsearch.action.support.broadcast.node.TransportBroadcastByNodeAction$BroadcastByNodeTransportRequestHandler.messageReceived(TransportBroadcastByNodeAction.java:417) [elasticsearch-8.0.0-SNAP
SHOT.jar:8.0.0-SNAPSHOT]
1> at org.elasticsearch.action.support.broadcast.node.TransportBroadcastByNodeAction$BroadcastByNodeTransportRequestHandler.messageReceived(TransportBroadcastByNodeAction.java:391) [elasticsearch-8.0.0-SNAP
SHOT.jar:8.0.0-SNAPSHOT]
1> at org.elasticsearch.transport.RequestHandlerRegistry.processMessageReceived(RequestHandlerRegistry.java:63) [elasticsearch-8.0.0-SNAPSHOT.jar:8.0.0-SNAPSHOT]
1> at org.elasticsearch.transport.TransportService$7.doRun(TransportService.java:687) [elasticsearch-8.0.0-SNAPSHOT.jar:8.0.0-SNAPSHOT]
1> at org.elasticsearch.common.util.concurrent.ThreadContext$ContextPreservingAbstractRunnable.doRun(ThreadContext.java:751) [elasticsearch-8.0.0-SNAPSHOT.jar:8.0.0-SNAPSHOT]
1> at org.elasticsearch.common.util.concurrent.AbstractRunnable.run(AbstractRunnable.java:37) [elasticsearch-8.0.0-SNAPSHOT.jar:8.0.0-SNAPSHOT]
1> at java.util.concurrent.ThreadPoolExecutor.runWorker(ThreadPoolExecutor.java:1149) [?:1.8.0_202]
1> at java.util.concurrent.ThreadPoolExecutor$Worker.run(ThreadPoolExecutor.java:624) [?:1.8.0_202]
1> at java.lang.Thread.run(Thread.java:748) [?:1.8.0_202]
```
Relates to #38779
* Add rolling upgrade multi cluster test module (#38277)
This test starts 2 clusters, each with 3 nodes.
First the leader cluster is started and tests are run against it and
then the follower cluster is started and tests execute against this two cluster.
Then the follower cluster is upgraded, one node at a time.
After that the leader cluster is upgraded, one node at a time.
Every time a node is upgraded tests are ran while both clusters are online.
(and either leader cluster has mixed node versions or the follower cluster)
This commit only tests CCR index following, but could be used for CCS tests as well.
In particular for CCR, unidirectional index following is tested during a rolling upgrade.
During the test several indices are created and followed in the leader cluster before or
while the follower cluster is being upgraded.
This tests also verifies that attempting to follow an index in the upgraded cluster
from the not upgraded cluster fails. After both clusters are upgraded following the
index that previously failed should succeed.
Relates to #37231 and #38037
* Filter out upgraded version index settings when starting index following (#38838)
The `index.version.upgraded` and `index.version.upgraded_string` are likely
to be different between leader and follower index. In the event that
a follower index gets restored on a upgraded node while the leader index
is still on non-upgraded nodes.
Closes#38835
Currently we index documents concurrently to attempt to ensure that we
update mappings during the restore process. However, this does not
actually test that the mapping will be correct and is dangerous as it
can lead to a misalignment between the max sequence number and the local
checkpoint. If these are not aligned, peer recovery cannot be completed
without initiating following which this test does not do. That causes
teardown assertions to fail.
This commit removes the concurrent indexing and flushes after the
documents are indexed. Additionally it modifies the mapping specific
test to ensure that there is a mapping update when the restore session
is initiated. This mapping update is picked up at the end of the restore
by the follower.
There were two documents (seq=2 and seq=103) missing on the follower in
one of the failures of `testFailOverOnFollower`. I spent several hours
on that failure but could not figure out the reason. I adjust log and
unmute this test so we can collect more information.
Relates #38633
The Close Index API has been refactored in 6.7.0 and it now performs
pre-closing sanity checks on shards before an index is closed: the maximum
sequence number must be equals to the global checkpoint. While this is a
strong requirement for regular shards, we identified the need to relax this
check in the case of CCR following shards.
The following shards are not in charge of managing the max sequence
number or global checkpoint, which are pulled from a leader shard. They
also fetch and process batches of operations from the leader in an unordered
way, potentially leaving gaps in the history of ops. If the following shard lags
a lot it's possible that the global checkpoint and max seq number never get
in sync, preventing the following shard to be closed and a new PUT Follow
action to be issued on this shard (which is our recommended way to
resume/restart a CCR following).
This commit allows each Engine implementation to define the specific
verification it must perform before closing the index. In order to allow
following/frozen/closed shards to be closed whatever the max seq number
or global checkpoint are, the FollowingEngine and ReadOnlyEngine do
not perform any check before the index is closed.
Co-authored-by: Martijn van Groningen <martijn.v.groningen@gmail.com>
Adds the ability to fetch chunks from different files in parallel, configurable using the new `ccr.indices.recovery.max_concurrent_file_chunks` setting, which defaults to 5 in this PR.
The implementation uses the parallel file writer functionality that is also used by peer recoveries.
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.
This is related to #35975. We do not want a slow master to fail a
recovery from remote process due to a slow put mappings call. This
commit increases the master node timeout on this call to 30 mins.
Currently the snapshot/restore process manually sets the global
checkpoint to the max sequence number from the restored segements. This
does not work for Ccr as this will lead to documents that would be
recovered in the normal followering operation from being recovered.
This commit fixes this issue by setting the initial global checkpoint to
the existing local checkpoint.
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
Introduced FollowParameters class that put follow, resume follow,
put auto follow pattern requests and follow info response classes reuse.
The FollowParameters class had the fields, getters etc. for the common parameters
that all these APIs have. Also binary and xcontent serialization /
parsing is handled by this class.
The follow, resume follow, put auto follow pattern request classes originally
used optional non primitive fields, so FollowParameters has that too and the follow info api can handle that now too.
Also the followerIndex field can in production only be specified via
the url path. If it is also specified via the request body then
it must have the same value as is specified in the url path. This
option only existed to xcontent testing. However the AbstractSerializingTestCase
base class now also supports createXContextTestInstance() to provide
a different test instance when testing xcontent, so allowing followerIndex
to be specified via the request body is no longer needed.
By moving the followerIndex field from Body to ResumeFollowAction.Request
class and not allowing the followerIndex field to be specified via
the request body the Body class is redundant and can be removed. The
ResumeFollowAction.Request class can then directly use the
FollowParameters class.
For consistency I also removed the ability to specified followerIndex
in the put follow api and the name in put auto follow pattern api via
the request body.
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
There are two issues regarding the way that we sync mapping from leader
to follower when a ccr restore is completed:
1. The returned mapping from a cluster service might not be up to date
as the mapping of the restored index commit.
2. We should not compare the mapping version of the follower and the
leader. They are not related to one another.
Moreover, I think we should only ensure that once the restore is done,
the mapping on the follower should be at least the mapping of the copied
index commit. We don't have to sync the mapping which is updated after
we have opened a session.
Relates #36879Closes#37887
This is related to #35975. Currently when an index falls behind a leader
it encounters a fatal exception. This commit adds a test for that
scenario. Additionally, it tests that the user can stop following, close
the follower index, and put follow again. After the indexing is
re-bootstrapped, it will recover the documents it lost in normal
following operations.
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.
This suite still fails one per week sometimes with a worrying assertion.
Sadly we are still unable to find the actual source.
Expected: <SeqNoStats{maxSeqNo=229, localCheckpoint=86, globalCheckpoint=86}>
but: was <SeqNoStats{maxSeqNo=229, localCheckpoint=-1, globalCheckpoint=86}>
This change enables trace log in the suite so we will have a better
picture if this fails again.
Relates #3333
This PR removes the temporary change we made to the yml test harness in #37285
to automatically set `include_type_name` to `true` in index creation requests
if it's not already specified. This is possible now that the vast majority of
index creation requests were updated to be typeless in #37611. A few additional
tests also needed updating here.
Additionally, this PR updates the test harness to set `include_type_name` to
`false` in index creation requests when communicating with 6.x nodes. This
mirrors the logic added in #37611 to allow for typeless document write requests
in test set-up code. With this update in place, we can remove many references
to `include_type_name: false` from the yml tests.
Unlike assertBusy, awaitBusy does not retry if the code-block throws an
AssertionError. A refresh in atLeastDocsIndexed can fail because we call
this method while we are closing some node in FollowerFailOverIT.
Currently we use the raw byte array length when calling the IndexInput
read call to determine how many bytes we want to read. However, due to
how BigArrays works, the array length might be longer than the reference
length. This commit fixes the issue and uses the BytesRef length when
calling read. Additionally, it expands the index follow test to index
many more documents. These documents should potentially lead to large
enough segment files to trigger scenarios where this fix matters.
Scheduler.schedule(...) would previously assume that caller handles
exception by calling get() on the returned ScheduledFuture.
schedule() now returns a ScheduledCancellable that no longer gives
access to the exception. Instead, any exception thrown out of a
scheduled Runnable is logged as a warning.
This is a continuation of #28667, #36137 and also fixes#37708.
This commit allows implementors of the `HandledTransportAction` to
specify what thread the action should be executed on. The motivation for
this commit is that certain CCR requests should be performed on the
generic threadpool.
This fixes#38027. Currently we assert that all shards have failed.
However, it is possible that some shards do not have segement files
created yet. The action that we block is fetching these segement files
so it is possible that some shards successfully recover.
This commit changes the assertion to ensure that at least some of the
shards have failed.
This commit fixes a potential race in the IndexFollowingIT. Currently it
is possible that we fetch the task metadata, it is null, and that throws
a null pointer exception. Assertbusy does not catch null pointer
exceptions. This commit assertions that the metadata is not null.
This is related to #35975. It adds a action timeout setting that allows
timeouts to be applied to the individual transport actions that are
used during a ccr recovery.
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.
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
If the index request is executed before the mapping update is applied on
the IndexShard, the index request will perform a dynamic mapping update.
This mapping update will be timeout (i.e, ProcessClusterEventTimeoutException)
because the latch is not open. This leads to the failure of the index
request and the test. This commit makes sure the mapping is ready
before we execute the index request.
Closes#37807
* Changed `LuceneSnapshot` to throw an `OperationsMissingException` if the requested ops are missing.
* Changed the shard changes api to handle the `OperationsMissingException` and wrap the exception into `ResourceNotFound` exception and include metadata to indicate the requested range can no longer be retrieved.
* Changed `ShardFollowNodeTask` to handle this `ResourceNotFound` exception with the included metdata header.
Relates to #35975
Replace `threadPool().schedule()` / catch
`EsRejectedExecutionException` pattern with direct calls to
`ThreadPool#scheduleUnlessShuttingDown()`.
Closes#36318
The TransportUnfollowAction updates the index settings but does not
increase the settings version to reflect that change.
This issue has been caught while working on the replication of closed
indices (#33888). The IndexFollowingIT.testUnfollowIndex() started to
fail and this specific assertion tripped. It does not happen on master
branch today because index metadata for closed indices are never
updated in IndexService instances, but this is something that is going
to change with the replication of closed indices.
Today, the mapping on the follower is managed and replicated from its
leader index by the ShardFollowTask. Thus, we should prevent users
from modifying the mapping on the follower indices.
Relates #30086
The filtering by follower index was completely broken.
Also the wrong persistent tasks were selected, causing the
wrong status to be reported.
Closes#37738
Today we keep the mapping on the follower in sync with the leader's
using the mapping version from changes requests. There are two rare
cases where the mapping on the follower is not synced properly:
1. The returned mapping version (from ClusterService) is outdated than
the actual mapping. This happens because we expose the latest cluster
state in ClusterService after applying it to IndexService.
2. It's possible for the FollowTask to receive an outdated mapping than
the min_required_mapping. In that case, it should fetch the mapping
again; otherwise, the follower won't have the right mapping.
Relates to #31140
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.
Currently we add the CcrRestoreSourceService as a index event
listener. However, if ccr is disabled, this service is null and we
attempt to add a null listener throwing an exception. This commit only
adds the listener if ccr is enabled.
This is related to #35975. This commit adds timeout functionality to
the local session on a leader node. When a session is started, a timeout
is scheduled using a repeatable runnable. If the session is not accessed
in between two runs the session is closed. When the sssion is closed,
the repeating task is cancelled.
Additionally, this commit moves session uuid generation to the leader
cluster. And renames the PutCcrRestoreSessionRequest to
StartCcrRestoreSessionRequest to reflect that change.
* 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
Commit #37535 removed an internal restore request in favor of the
RestoreSnapshotRequest. Commit #37449 added a new test that used the
internal restore request. This commit modifies the new test to use the
RestoreSnapshotRequest.
The AbstracLifecycleComponent used to extend AbstractComponent, so it had to pass settings to the constractor of its supper class.
It no longer extends the AbstractComponent so there is no need for this constructor
There is also no need for AbstracLifecycleComponent subclasses to have Settings in their constructors if they were only passing it over to super constructor.
This is part 1. which will be backported to 6.x with a migration guide/deprecation log.
part 2 will have this constructor removed in 7
relates #35560
relates #34488
Currently when there are no more auto follow patterns for a remote cluster then
the AutoFollower instance for this remote cluster will be removed. If
a new auto follow pattern for this remote cluster gets added quickly enough
after the last delete then there may be two AutoFollower instance running
for this remote cluster instead of one.
Each AutoFollower instance stops automatically after it sees in the
start() method that there are no more auto follow patterns for the
remote cluster it is tracking. However when an auto follow pattern
gets removed and then added back quickly enough then old AutoFollower
may never detect that at some point there were no auto follow patterns
for the remote cluster it is monitoring. The creation and removal of
an AutoFollower instance happens independently in the `updateAutoFollowers()`
as part of a cluster state update.
By adding the `removed` field, an AutoFollower instance will not miss the
fact there were no auto follow patterns at some point in time. The
`updateAutoFollowers()` method now marks an AutoFollower instance as
removed when it sees that there are no more patterns for a remote cluster.
The updateAutoFollowers() method can then safely start a new AutoFollower
instance.
Relates to #36761
* 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 is related to #35975. It implements a file based restore in the
CcrRepository. The restore transfers files from the leader cluster
to the follower cluster. It does not implement any advanced resiliency
features at the moment. Any request failure will end the restore.
Fail with a 403 when indexing a document directly into a follower index.
In order to test this change, I had to move specific assertions into a dedicated class and
disable assertions for that class in the rest qa module. I think that is the right trade off.
If a running shard follow task needs to be restarted and
the remote connection seeds have changed then
a shard follow task currently fails with a fatal error.
The change creates the remote client lazily and adjusts
the errors a shard follow task should retry.
This issue was found in test failures in the recently added
ccr rolling upgrade tests. The reason why this issue occurs
more frequently in the rolling upgrade test is because ccr
is setup in local mode (so remote connection seed will become stale) and
all nodes are restarted, which forces the shard follow tasks to get
restarted at some point during the test. Note that these tests
cannot be enabled yet, because this change will need to be backported
to 6.x first. (otherwise the issue still occurs on non upgraded nodes)
I also changed the RestartIndexFollowingIT to setup remote cluster
via persistent settings and to also restart the leader cluster. This
way what happens during the ccr rolling upgrade qa tests, also happens
in this test.
Relates to #37231
This commit implements a straightforward approach to retention lease
expiration. Namely, we inspect which leases are expired when obtaining
the current leases through the replication tracker. At that moment, we
clean the map that persists the retention leases in memory.
This commit is the first in a series which will culminate with
fully-functional shard history retention leases.
Shard history retention leases are aimed at preventing shard history
consumers from having to fallback to expensive file copy operations if
shard history is not available from a certain point. These consumers
include following indices in cross-cluster replication, and local shard
recoveries. A future consumer will be the changes API.
Further, index lifecycle management requires coordinating with some of
these consumers otherwise it could remove the source before all
consumers have finished reading all operations. The notion of shard
history retention leases that we are introducing here will also be used
to address this problem.
Shard history retention leases are a property of the replication group
managed under the authority of the primary. A shard history retention
lease is a combination of an identifier, a retaining sequence number, a
timestamp indicating when the lease was acquired or renewed, and a
string indicating the source of the lease. Being leases they have a
limited lifespan that will expire if not renewed. The idea of these
leases is that all operations above the minimum of all retaining
sequence numbers will be retained during merges (which would otherwise
clear away operations that are soft deleted). These leases will be
periodically persisted to Lucene and restored during recovery, and
broadcast to replicas under certain circumstances.
This commit is merely putting the basics in place. This first commit
only introduces the concept and integrates their use with the soft
delete retention policy. We add some tests to demonstrate the basic
management is correct, and that the soft delete policy is correctly
influenced by the existence of any retention leases. We make no effort
in this commit to implement any of the following:
- timestamps
- expiration
- persistence to and recovery from Lucene
- handoff during primary relocation
- sharing retention leases with replicas
- exposing leases in shard-level statistics
- integration with cross-cluster replication
These will occur individually in follow-up commits.
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 the routing of a SourceToParse is assigned in a separate step
after the object is created. We can easily forget to set the routing.
With this commit, the routing must be provided in the constructor of
SourceToParse.
Relates #36921
The AutoFollowCoordinator should be resilient to the fact that the follower
index has already been created and in that case it should only update
the auto follow metadata with the fact that the follower index was created.
Relates to #33007
Currently auto follow stats users are unable to see whether an auto follow
error was recent or old. The new timestamp field will help user distinguish
between old and new errors.
Both index following and auto following should be resilient against missing remote connections.
This happens in the case that they get accidentally removed by a user. When this happens
auto following and index following will retry to continue instead of failing with unrecoverable exceptions.
Both the put follow and put auto follow APIs validate whether the
remote cluster connection. The logic added in this change only exists
in case during the lifetime of a follower index or auto follow pattern
the remote connection gets removed. This retry behavior similar how CCR
deals with authorization errors.
Closes#36667Closes#36255
This commit adds a RemoteClusterAwareRequest interface that allows a
request to specify which remote node it should be routed to. The remote
cluster aware client will attempt to route the request directly to this
node. Otherwise it will send it as a proxy action to eventually end up
on the requested node.
It implements the ccr clean_session action with this client.
This is related to #35975. When the shard restore process is complete,
the index mappings need to be updated to ensure that the data in the
files restores is compatible with the follower mappings. This commit
implements a mapping update as the final step in a shard restore.
Currently if a leader index with soft deletes disabled is auto followed then this index is silently ignored.
This commit changes this behavior to mark these indices as auto followed and report an error, which is visible in auto follow stats. Marking the index as auto follow is important, because otherwise the auto follower will continuously try to auto follow and fail.
Relates to #33007
This commit is related to #36127. It adds a CcrRestoreSourceService to
track Engine.IndexCommitRef need for in-process file restores. When a
follower starts restoring a shard through the CcrRepository it opens a
session with the leader through the PutCcrRestoreSessionAction. The
leader responds to the request by telling the follower what files it
needs to fetch for a restore. This is not yet implemented.
Once, the restore is complete, the follower closes the session with the
DeleteCcrRestoreSessionAction action.
Currently, the CcrRepositoryManger only listens for settings updates
and installs new repositories. It does not install the repositories that
are in the initial settings. This commit, modifies the manager to
install the initial repositories. Additionally, it modifies the ccr
integration test to configure the remote leader node at startup, instead
of using a settings update.
For each remote cluster the auto follow coordinator, starts an auto
follower that checks the remote cluster state and determines whether an
index needs to be auto followed. The time since last auto follow is
reported per remote cluster and gives insight whether the auto follow
process is alive.
Relates to #33007
Originates from #35895
If a primary promotion happens in the test testAddRemoveShardOnLeader, the
max_seq_no_of_updates_or_deletes on a new primary might be higher than the
max_seq_no_of_updates_or_deletes on the replicas or copies of the follower.
Relates #36607
This commit add support for using sequence numbers to power [optimistic concurrency control](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Optimistic_concurrency_control)
in the delete and index transport actions and requests. A follow up will come with adding sequence
numbers to the update and get results.
Relates #36148
Relates #10708
For class fields of type collection whose order is not important
and for which duplicates are not permitted we declare them as `Set`s.
Usually the definition is a `HashSet` but in this case `TreeSet` is used
instead to aid testing.
* Enable parallel restore operations
* Add uuid to restore in progress entries to uniquely identify them
* Adjust restore in progress entries to be a map in cluster state
* Added tests for:
* Parallel restore from two different snapshots
* Parallel restore from a single snapshot to different indices to test uuid identifiers are correctly used by `RestoreService` and routing allocator
* Parallel restore with waiting for completion to test transport actions correctly use uuid identifiers
testFailLeaderReplicaShard periodically fails because we concurrently
index to the leader group and close one of its replicas. If a
replication request hits a closing shard, we will fail that shard;
however, failing a shard is supported by the test framework - this makes
the test fail.
This commit add support to engine operations for resolving and verifying the sequence number and
primary term of the last modification to a document before performing an operation. This is
infrastructure to move our (optimistic concurrency control)[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Optimistic_concurrency_control] API to use sequence numbers instead of internal versioning.
Relates #36148
Relates #10708
Changed AutofollowCoordinator makes use of the wait_for_metadata_version
feature in cluster state API and removed hard coded poll interval.
Originates from #35895
Relates to #33007
The auto follow coordinator keeps track of the UUIDs of indices that it has followed. The index UUID strings need to be cleaned up in the case that these indices are removed in the remote cluster.
Relates to #33007
1. CCR tests work without any changes
2. `testDanglingIndices` require changes the source code (added TODO).
3. `testIndexDeletionWhenNodeRejoins` because it's using just two
nodes, adding the node to exclusions is needed on restart.
4. `testCorruptTranslogTruncationOfReplica` starts dedicated master
one, because otherwise, the cluster does not form, if nodes are stopped
and one node is started back.
5. `testResolvePath` needs TEST cluster, because all nodes are stopped
at the end of the test and it's not possible to perform checks needed
by SUITE cluster.
6. `SnapshotDisruptionIT`. Without changes, the test fails because Zen2
retries snapshot creation as soon as network partition heals. This
results into the race between creating snapshot and test cleanup logic
(deleting index). Zen1 on the
other hand, also schedules retry, but it takes some time after network
partition heals, so cleanup logic executes latter and test passes. The
check that snapshot is eventually created is added to
the end of the test.
Renamed the follow qa modules:
`multi-cluster-downgraded-to-basic-license` to `downgraded-to-basic-license`
`multi-cluster-with-non-compliant-license` to `non-compliant-license`
`multi-cluster-with-security` to `security`
Moved the `chain` module into the `multi-cluster` module and
changed the `multi-cluster` to start 3 clusters.
Followup from #36031
This is related to #35975. It implements a basic restore functionality
for the CcrRepository. When the restore process is kicked off, it
configures the new index as expected for a follower index. This means
that the index has a different uuid, the version is not incremented, and
the Ccr metadata is installed.
When the restore shard method is called, an empty shard is initialized.
In #34474, we added a new assertion to ensure that the
LocalCheckpointTracker is always consistent with Lucene index. However,
we reset LocalCheckpoinTracker in testDedupByPrimaryTerm cause this
assertion to be violated.
This commit removes resetCheckpoint from LocalCheckpointTracker and
rewrites testDedupByPrimaryTerm without resetting the local checkpoint.
Relates #34474
This commit moves back to use explicit dependsOn for test tasks on
check. Not all tasks extending RandomizedTestingTask should be run by
check directly.
This commit changes the format of the `hits.total` in the search response to be an object with
a `value` and a `relation`. The `value` indicates the number of hits that match the query and the
`relation` indicates whether the number is accurate (in which case the relation is equals to `eq`)
or a lower bound of the total (in which case it is equals to `gte`).
This change also adds a parameter called `rest_total_hits_as_int` that can be used in the
search APIs to opt out from this change (retrieve the total hits as a number in the rest response).
Note that currently all search responses are accurate (`track_total_hits: true`) or they don't contain
`hits.total` (`track_total_hits: true`). We'll add a way to get a lower bound of the total hits in a
follow up (to allow numbers to be passed to `track_total_hits`).
Relates #33028
This is a follow-up to #36086. It renames the internal repository
actions to be prefixed by "internal". This allows the system user to
execute the actions.
Additionally, this PR stops casting Client to NodeClient. The client we
have is a NodeClient so executing the actions will be local.