This commit updates our transport settings for 7.0. It generally takes a
few approaches. First, for normal transport settings, it usestransport.
instead of transport.tcp. Second, it uses transport.tcp, http.tcp,
or network.tcp for all settings that are proxies for OS level socket
settings. Third, it marks the network.tcp.connect_timeout setting for
removal. Network service level settings are only settings that apply to
both the http and transport modules. There is no connect timeout in
http. Fourth, it moves all the transport settings to a single class
TransportSettings similar to the HttpTransportSettings class.
This commit does not actually remove any settings. It just adds the new
renamed settings and adds todos for settings that will be deprecated.
This commit modifies BigArrays to take a circuit breaker name and
the circuit breaking service. The default instance of BigArrays that
is passed around everywhere always uses the request breaker. At the
network level, we want to be using the inflight request breaker. So this
change will allow that.
Additionally, as this change moves away from a single instance of
BigArrays, the class is modified to not be a Releasable anymore.
Releasing big arrays was always dispatching to the PageCacheRecycler,
so this change makes the PageCacheRecycler the class that needs to be
managed and torn-down.
Finally, this commit closes#31435 be making the serialization of
transport messages use the inflight request breaker. With this change,
we no longer push the global BigArrays instnace to the network level.
This is related to #34483. It introduces a namespaced setting for
compression that allows users to configure compression on a per remote
cluster basis. The transport.tcp.compress remains as a fallback
setting. If transport.tcp.compress is set to true, then all requests
and responses are compressed. If it is set to false, only requests to
clusters based on the cluster.remote.cluster_name.transport.compress
setting are compressed. However, after this change regardless of any
local settings, responses will be compressed if the request that is
received was compressed.
This is related to #29023. Additionally at other points we have
discussed a preference for removing the need to unnecessarily block
threads for opening new node connections. This commit lays the groudwork
for this by opening connections asynchronously at the transport level.
We still block, however, this work will make it possible to eventually
remove all blocking on new connections out of the TransportService
and Transport.
This is related to #30876. The AbstractSimpleTransportTestCase initiates
many tcp connections. There are normally over 1,000 connections in
TIME_WAIT at the end of the test. This is because every test opens at
least two different transports that connect to each other with 13
channel connection profiles. This commit modifies the default
connection profile used by this test to 6. One connection for each
type, except for REG which gets 2 connections.
Currently a bad regex in CORS settings throws a PatternSyntaxException, which
then bubbles up through the bootstrap code, meaning users have to parse a
stack trace to work out where the problem is. We should instead catch this
exception and rethrow with a more useful error message.
This commit introduces an AbstractSimpleSecurityTransportTestCase for
security transports. This classes provides transport tests that are
specific for security transports. Additionally, it fixes the tests referenced in
#33285.
Drops `Settings` from some of the methods to lookup loggers and
deprecates another logger lookup that takes `Settings` because
`Settings` is no longer required to build a logger.
Historically we have had a ESLoggingHandler in the netty module that
logs low-level connection operations. This class just extends the netty
logging handler with some (broken) message deserialization. This commit
fixes this message serialization and moves the class to server.
This new logger logs inbound and outbound messages. Eventually, we
should move other event logging to this class (connect, close, flush).
That way we will have consistent logging regards of which transport is
loaded.
Resolves#27306 on master. Older branches will need a different fix.
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 #27260. This commit replaces the netty driven http
client (Netty4HttpClient) with one that is driven by (NioHttpClient).
This client exists in the test package and is used for making http
requests.
* Upgrade to `4.1.28` since the problem reported in #32487 is a bug in Netty itself (see https://github.com/netty/netty/issues/7337)
* Fixed other leaks in test code that now showed up due to fixes improvements in leak reporting in the newer version
* Needed to extend permissions for netty common package because it now sets a classloader at runtime after changes in 63bae0956a
* Adjusted forbidden APIs check accordingly
* Closes#32487
* TESTS: Fix Buf Leaks in HttpReadWriteHandlerTests
* Release all ref counted things that weren't getting properly released
* Mannually force channel promise to be completed because mock channel doesn't do it and it prevents one `release` call in `io.netty.channel.ChannelOutboundHandlerAdapter#write` from firing
This is a general cleanup of channels and exception handling in http.
This commit introduces a CloseableChannel that is a superclass of
TcpChannel and HttpChannel. This allows us to unify the closing logic
between tcp and http transports. Additionally, the normal http channels
are extracted to the abstract server transport.
Finally, this commit (mostly) unifies the exception handling between nio
and netty4 http server transports.
This is related to #28898. This PR implements pooling of bytes arrays
when reading from the wire in the http server transport. In order to do
this, we must integrate with netty reference counting. That manner in
which this PR implements this is making Pages in InboundChannelBuffer
reference counted. When we accessing the underlying page to pass to
netty, we retain the page. When netty releases its bytebuf, it releases
the underlying pages we have passed to it.
This is related to #28898. With the addition of the http nio transport,
we now have two different modules that provide http transports.
Currently most of the http logic lives at the module level. However,
some of this logic can live in server. In particular, some of the
setting of headers, cors, and pipelining. This commit begins this moving
in that direction by introducing lower level abstraction (HttpChannel,
HttpRequest, and HttpResonse) that is implemented by the modules. The
higher level rest request and rest channel work can live entirely in
server.
Currently the http pipelining handlers seem to support chunked http
content. However, this does not make sense. There is a content
aggregator in the pipeline before the pipelining handler. This means the
pipelining handler should only see full http messages. Additionally, the
request handler immediately after the pipelining handler only supports
full messages.
This commit modifies both nio and netty4 pipelining handlers to assert
that an inbound message is a full http message. Additionally it removes
the tests for chunked content.
This commit upgrades us to Netty 4.1.25. This upgrade is more
challenging than past upgrades, all because of a new object cleaner
thread that they have added. This thread requires an additional security
permission (set context class loader, needed to avoid leaks in certain
scenarios). Additionally, there is not a clean way to shutdown this
thread which means that the thread can fail thread leak control during
tests. As such, we have to filter this thread from thread leak control.
This is related to #27260 and #28898. This commit adds the transport-nio
plugin as a random option when running the http smoke tests. As part of
this PR, I identified an issue where cors support was not properly
enabled causing these tests to fail when using transport-nio. This
commit also fixes that issue.
This is related to #28898. This commit adds cors support to the nio http
transport. Most of the work is copied directly from the netty module
implementation. Additionally, this commit adds tests for the nio http
channel.
This commit reintroduces 31251c9 and 63a5799. These commits introduced a
memory leak and were reverted. This commit brings those commits back
and fixes the memory leak by removing unnecessary retain method calls.
This reverts commit 31251c9 introduced in #30695.
We suspect this commit is causing the OOME's reported in #30811 and we will use this PR to test this assertion.
This is related to #29500 and #28898. This commit removes the abilitiy
to disable http pipelining. After this commit, any elasticsearch node
will support pipelined requests from a client. Additionally, it extracts
some of the http pipelining work to the server module. This extracted
work is used to implement pipelining for the nio plugin.
This commit is related to #28898. It adds an nio driven http server
transport. Currently it only supports basic http features. Cors,
pipeling, and read timeouts will need to be added in future PRs.
This commit is related to #27260. It moves the TcpChannelFactory into
NioTransport so that consumers do not have to be passed around.
Additionally it deletes an unused read handler.
This is related to #27260. This commit moves the NioTransport from
:test:framework to a new nio-transport plugin. Additionally, supporting
tcp decoding classes are moved to this plugin. Generic byte reading and
writing contexts are moved to the nio library.
Additionally, this commit adds a basic MockNioTransport to
:test:framework that is a TcpTransport implementation for testing that
is driven by nio.