This is related to #31017. That issue identified that these three http
methods were treated like GET requests. This commit adds them to
RestRequest. This means that these methods will be handled properly and
generate 405s.
This commit introduces the ability for a client to communicate to the
server features that it can support and for these features to be used in
influencing the decisions that the server makes when communicating with
the client. To this end we carry the features from the client to the
underlying stream as we carry the version of the client today. This
enables us to enhance the logic where we make protocol decisions on the
basis of the version on the stream to also make protocol decisions on
the basis of the features on the stream. With such functionality, the
client can communicate to the server if it is a transport client, or if
it has, for example, X-Pack installed. This enables us to support
rolling upgrades from the OSS distribution to the default distribution
without breaking client connectivity as we can now elect to serialize
customs in the cluster state depending on whether or not the client
reports to us using the feature capabilities that it can under these
customs. This means that we would avoid sending a client pieces of the
cluster state that it can not understand. However, we want to take care
and always send the full cluster state during node-to-node communication
as otherwise we would end up with different understanding of what is in
the cluster state across nodes depending on which features they reported
to have. This is why when deciding whether or not to write out a custom
we always send the custom if the client is not a transport client and
otherwise do not send the custom if the client is transport client that
does not report to have the feature required by the custom.
Co-authored-by: Yannick Welsch <yannick@welsch.lu>
This commit removes the RequestBuilder generic type from Action. It was
needed to be used by the newRequest method, which in turn was used by
client.prepareExecute. Both of these methods are now removed, along with
the existing users of prepareExecute constructing the appropriate
builder directly.
Currently failures to compile a script usually lead to a ScriptException, which
inherits the 500 INTERNAL_SERVER_ERROR from ElasticsearchException if it does
not contain another root cause. Instead, this should be a 400 Bad Request error.
This PR changes this more generally for script compilation errors by changing
ScriptException to return 400 (bad request) as status code.
Closes#12315
Currently AbstractHttpServerTransport is in a netty4 module. This is the
incorrect location. This commit moves it out of netty4 module.
Additionally, it moves unit tests that test AbstractHttpServerTransport
logic to server.
The stored scripts API today accepts malformed requests instead of throwing an exception.
This PR deprecates accepting malformed put stored script requests (requests not using the official script format).
Relates to #27612
Currently nio and netty modules use the CompletableFuture class for
managing listeners. This is unfortunate as that class accepts
Throwable. This commit adds a class CompletableContext that wraps
the CompletableFuture but does not accept Throwable. This allows the
modification of netty and nio logic to no longer handle Throwable.
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.
Lucene has a new `FeatureField` which gives the ability to record numeric
features as term frequencies. Its main benefit is that it allows to boost
queries with the values of these features and efficiently skip non-competitive
documents at the same time using block-max WAND and indexed impacts.
The new snapshot includes LUCENE-8324 which fixes missing checkpoint
after a fully deletes segment is dropped on flush. This snapshot should
resolves failed tests in the CorruptedFileIT suite.
Closes#30741Closes#30577
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.
=== Char Group Tokenizer
The `char_group` tokenizer breaks text into terms whenever it encounters
a
character which is in a defined set. It is mostly useful for cases where
a simple
custom tokenization is desired, and the overhead of use of the
<<analysis-pattern-tokenizer, `pattern` tokenizer>>
is not acceptable.
=== Configuration
The `char_group` tokenizer accepts one parameter:
`tokenize_on_chars`::
A string containing a list of characters to tokenize the string on.
Whenever a character
from this list is encountered, a new token is started. Also supports
escaped values like `\\n` and `\\f`,
and in addition `\\s` to represent whitespace, `\\d` to represent
digits and `\\w` to represent letters.
Defaults to an empty list.
=== Example output
```The 2 QUICK Brown-Foxes jumped over the lazy dog's bone for $2```
When the configuration `\\s-:<>` is used for `tokenize_on_chars`, the
above sentence would produce the following terms:
```[ The, 2, QUICK, Brown, Foxes, jumped, over, the, lazy, dog's, bone,
for, $2 ]```
The getDate() and getDates() existed prior to 5.x on long fields in
scripting. In 5.x, a new Date type for ScriptDocValues was added. The
getDate() and getDates() methods were left on long fields and added to date
fields to ease the transition. This commit removes those methods for
7.0.
The camel case name `nGram` should be removed in favour of `ngram` and
similar for `edgeNGram` and `edge_ngram`. Before removal, we need to
deprecate the camel case names first. This change adds deprecation
warnings for indices with versions 6.4.0 and higher and logs deprecation
warnings.
This pipeline aggregation gives the user the ability to script functions that "move" across a window
of data, instead of single data points. It is the scripted version of MovingAvg pipeline agg.
Through custom script contexts, we expose a number of convenience methods:
- MovingFunctions.max()
- MovingFunctions.min()
- MovingFunctions.sum()
- MovingFunctions.unweightedAvg()
- MovingFunctions.linearWeightedAvg()
- MovingFunctions.ewma()
- MovingFunctions.holt()
- MovingFunctions.holtWinters()
- MovingFunctions.stdDev()
The user can also define any arbitrary logic via their own scripting, or combine with the above methods.
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 changes the default out-of-the-box configuration for the
number of shards from five to one. We think this will help address a
common problem of oversharding. For users with time-based indices that
need a different default, this can be managed with index templates. For
users with non-time-based indices that find they need to re-shard with
the split API in place they no longer need to resort only to
reindexing.
Since this has the impact of changing the default number of shards used
in REST tests, we want to ensure that we still have coverage for issues
that could arise from multiple shards. As such, we randomize (rarely)
the default number of shards in REST tests to two. This is managed via a
global index template. However, some tests check the templates that are
in the cluster state during the test. Since this template is randomly
there, we need a way for tests to skip adding the template used to set
the number of shards to two. For this we add the default_shards feature
skip. To avoid having to write our docs in a complicated way because
sometimes they might be behind one shard, and sometimes they might be
behind two shards we apply the default_shards feature skip to all docs
tests. That is, these tests will always run with the default number of
shards (one).
Currently the ranking evaluation API accepts the full query syntax for
the queries specified in the evaluation set and executes them via multi
search. This potentially runs costly aggregations and suggestions too.
This change adds checks that forbid using aggregations, suggesters,
highlighters and the explain and profile options in the queries that are
run as part of the ranking evaluation since they are irrelevent in the
context of this API.
The following tokenizers were moved: classic, edge_ngram,
letter, lowercase, ngram, path_hierarchy, pattern, thai, uax_url_email and
whitespace.
Left keyword tokenizer factory in server module, because
normalizers directly depend on it.This should be addressed on a
follow up change.
Relates to #23658
With this commit we determine the maximum number of buffers that Netty keeps
while accumulating one HTTP request based on the maximum content length (default
1500 bytes, overridable with the system property `es.net.mtu`). Previously, we
kept the default value of 1024 which is too small for bulk requests which leads
to unnecessary copies of byte buffers internally.
Relates #29448
This folds the `:qa:smoke-test-reindex-with-all-modules` project into
`:modules:reindex` by declaring the reindex's integration testing
cluster requires the `parent-join` and `lang-painless` plugins and then
moving all of the integration tests that depended on parent-join and
painless into reindex.
It saves us one cluster start up during the build at the cost of a
little of the reindex module's "purity". Since the reindex module *does*
have unit tests that test scripting without painless I'm fairly ok with
that.
Previously `BulkProcessor` retry logic was based on the exception type of the failed response (`EsRejectedExecutionException`). This commit changes it to be based on the returned status code. This allows us to reproduce the same retry behaviour when the `BulkProcessor` is used from the high-level REST client, which was previously not the case as we cannot rebuild the same exception type when parsing back the response. This change has no effect on the transport client.
Closes#28885
Upgrade to lucene-7.4.0-snapshot-1ed95c097b
This version contains:
* An Analyzer for Korean
* An IntervalQuery and IntervalsSource that retrieve minimum intervals of positional queries.
* A new API to retrieve matches (offsets and positions) of a query for a single document.
* Support for soft deletes in the index writer.
* A fixed shingle filter that handles index time synonyms.
* Support for emoji sequence in ICUTokenizer (with an upgrade to icu 61.1)
This commit removes the http.enabled setting. While all real nodes (started with bin/elasticsearch) will always have an http binding, there are many tests that rely on the quickness of not actually needing to bind to 2 ports. For this case, the MockHttpTransport.TestPlugin provides a dummy http transport implementation which is used by default in ESIntegTestCase.
closes#12792
Many tests are added with a version check so that they do not run against a
version that doesn't have the feature yet. Master is 7.0, so all tests that
do not run against 6.0+ can be removed and the version check can be removed
on all tests that always run on 6.0+.
Adds two new methods to `RestClient` that take a `Request` object. These
methods will allows us to add more per-request customizable options
without creating more and more and more overloads of the `performRequest`
and `performRequestAsync` methods. These new methods look like:
```
Response performRequest(Request request)
```
and
```
void performRequestAsync(Request request, ResponseListener responseListener)
```
This change doesn't add any actual features but enables adding things like
per request timeouts and per request node selectors. This change *does*
rework the `HighLevelRestClient` and its tests to use these new `Request`
objects and it does update the docs.
We disable the reindex-from-old tests if we're running on windows or in
a directory that contains a space. This adds a warning to the logs when
we do that so that you can tell that it happened. This will be nice to
have when looking at CI and will be a hint to anyone developing locally.
This *mostly* silences `javadoc`'s warning about defaulting to
generating html4 files by enabling generating html5 file for the
projects for which that works. It didn't work in a half dozen projects,
about half of which I've fixed in this PR, entirely by replacing
`<tt>thing</tt>` with `{@code thing}`.
There are a few remaining projects that contain javadoc with invalid
html5. I'll fix those projects in a followup.
We *think* that #28600 is caused by warnings not being collected during
one of the fan out phases of search but we're not 100% sure how this is
happening. This commit drops the number of shards used for the test to 1
so there *isn't* a fan out phase. If this makes the issue go away we'll
have more information.
This folds the `:qa:reindex-from-old` project into the `:modules:reindex`
project. This should speed up the build marginally by removing a single
clsuter start up at the cost of having to wait for old versions of
Elasticsearch to start up when checking reindex's integration tests.
Those don't take that long so this feels worth it.
The ranking evaluation requests so far were not tested against aliases
but they should run regardless of the targeted index is a real index or
an alias. This change adds cases for this to the integration and rest
tests.
The camel case name `htmlStip` should be removed in favour of `html_strip`, but
we need to deprecate it first. This change adds deprecation warnings for indices
with version starting with 6.3.0 and logs deprecation warnings in this cases.
Allow high level java rest client to access details of the metric
calculation by making them accessible across packages. Also renaming the
inner `Breakdown` classes of the evaluation metrics to `Detail` to
better communicate their use.
This commit renames the bulk thread pool to the write thread pool. This
is to better reflect the fact that the underlying thread pool is used to
execute any document write request (single-document index/delete/update
requests, and bulk requests).
With this change, we add support for fallback settings
thread_pool.bulk.* which will be supported until 7.0.0.
We also add a system property so that the display name of the thread
pool remains as "bulk" if needed to avoid breaking users.
Added an api that allows to execute an arbitrary script and a result to be returned.
```
POST /_scripts/painless/_execute
{
"script": {
"source": "params.var1 / params.var2",
"params": {
"var1": 1,
"var2": 1
}
}
}
```
Relates to #27875
This allows the grammar to determine when and what delimiters statements will use by
splitting up the statements into regular statements and delimited statements, those that do
not require a delimiter versus those that do. This allows consumers of the statements to
determine what delimiters the statements will use so that in certain cases semicolons are
not necessary like when there's a closing right bracket.
This change removes the need for semicolon insertion in the lexer, simplifying the existing
lexer quite a bit. It also ensures that there isn't a need to track semicolons being inserted
into places that aren't necessary such as array initializers.
This change removes the check for extra tokens when parsing a source generated by a templated
_msearch request. This was added unintentionally in #29428 but the intent of this modification was to validate
simple _search request only.
This change validates that the `_search` request does not have trailing
tokens after the main object and fails the request with a parsing exception otherwise.
Closes#28995
Some features have been deprecated since `6.0` like the `_parent` field or the
ability to have multiple types per index. This allows to remove quite some
code, which in-turn will hopefully make it easier to proceed with the removal
of types.
In the case that a document with a percolator field is matched when using the `percolate` query then
the fetch phase can fail due to the fact that the percolator can't resolve any query from that document.
Closes#29429
In case of a disjunction query with both range and term based clauses and
msm specified, the query analyzer needs to also reduce the msn if a range
based clause for the same field is encountered. This did not happen.
Instead of fixing this bug the logic has been simplified to just set a
percolator query's msm to 1 if a disjunction contains range clauses and
msm on disjunction has been specified. The logic would otherwise just get
to complex and the performance gain isn't that much for this kind of
percolator queries.
In case a percolator query has clauses that have duplicate terms or ranges then
for disjunction clauses with a minimum should match the query extraction of the
clause with the lowest msm should be used and for conjunction queries query
extractions wiht duplicate terms/ranges the msn should be ignored. If this
is not done then percolator queries that should match never match.
Example percolator query: value1 OR value2 OR value2 OR value3 OR value3 OR value3 OR value4 OR value5 (msm set to 3)
In the above example query the extracted msm would be 3
Example document1: value1 value2 value3
With the msm and extracted terms this would match and is expected behaviour
Example document2: value3
This document should match too (value3 appears in 3 clauses), but with msm set to 3 and the fact
that fact that only distinct values are indexed in extracted terms field this document would
Also added another random duel test.
Closes#29393
This change tries to simplify the extraction logic of boolean queries by
concentrating the logic into two methods: one that merges results for
conjunctions, and another one for disjunctions. Other concerns, like the impact
of prohibited clauses or how an `UnsupportedQueryException` should be treated
are applied on top of those two methods.
This is mostly a code reorganization, it doesn't change the result of query
extraction except in the case that a query both has required clauses and a
minimum number of `SHOULD` clauses that is greater than 1, which we now
rewrite into a pure conjunction. For instance `(+A B C)~1` is rewritten into
`(+A +(B C))` prior to extraction.
* Move ObjectParser into the x-content lib
This moves `ObjectParser`, `AbstractObjectParser`, and
`ConstructingObjectParser` into the libs/x-content dependency. This decoupling
allows them to be used for parsing for projects that don't want to depend on the
entire Elasticsearch jar.
Relates to #28504
Currently the ranking evaluation API doesn't support many of the
standard parameters of the search API. Some of these make sense, like
adding support for the common indices options parameters, which this
change adds.
I found the following bugs:
- The 6.0 logic for conjunctions didn't work when there were only `match_all`
queries in MUST/FILTER clauses as they didn't propagate the `matchAllDocs`
flag.
- Some queries still had the same issue as `BooleanQuery` used to have with
duplicate terms (see #28353), eg. `MultiPhraseQuery`.
Closes#29376
From 7.0 on, using `delimited_payload_filter` should throw an error.
It was deprecated in 6.2 in favour of `delimited_payload` (#26625).
Relates to #27704
This commit adds a YAML integration test for the repository-url module
that uses a fixture to test URL based repositories on both http:// and
file:// prefixes.
This improves the way similarities are plugged in in order to:
- reject the classic similarity on 7.x indices and emit a deprecation
warning otherwise
- reject unkwown parameters on 7.x indices and emit a deprecation
warning otherwise
Even though this breaks the plugin API, I'd like to backport to 7.x so
that users can get deprecation warnings when they are doing something
that will become unsupported in the future.
Closes#23208Closes#29035
While playing with the percolator I found two bugs:
- Sometimes we set a min_should_match that is greater than the number of
extractions. While this doesn't cause direct trouble, it does when the query
is nested into a boolean query and the boolean query tries to compute the
min_should_match for the entire query based on its own min_should_match and
those of the sub queries. So I changed the code to throw an exception when
min_should_match is greater than the number of extractions.
- Boolean queries claim matches are verified when in fact they shouldn't. This
is due to the fact that boolean queries assume that they are verified if all
sub clauses are verified but things are more complex than that, eg.
conjunctions that are nested in a disjunction or disjunctions that are nested
in a conjunction can generally not be verified without running the query.
Fixes and edge case where DiscountedCumulativeGain can return NaN as
result of the quality metric calculation. This can happen when the
search result set is empty and normalization is used. We should return 0
in this case. Also adding related unit tests to the other two metrics.
I am not sure why we have this leniency for HTTP max content length, it
has been there since the beginning
(5ac51ee93f) with no explanation of its
source. That said, our philosophy today is different than the philosophy
of the past where Elasticsearch would be quite lenient in its handling
of settings and today we aim for predictability for both users and
us. This commit removes leniency in the parsing of
http.max_content_length.
* Begin moving XContent to a separate lib/artifact
This commit moves a large portion of the XContent code from the `server` project
to the `libs/xcontent` project. For the pieces that have been moved, some
helpers have been duplicated to allow them to be decoupled from ES helper
classes. In addition, `Booleans` and `CheckedFunction` have been moved to the
`elasticsearch-core` project.
This decoupling is a move so that we can eventually make things like the
high-level REST client not rely on the entire ES jar, only the parts it needs.
There are some pieces that are still not decoupled, in particular some of the
XContent tests still remain in the server project, this is because they test a
large portion of the pluggable xcontent pieces through
`XContentElasticsearchException`. They may be decoupled in future work.
Additionally, there may be more piecese that we want to move to the xcontent lib
in the future that are not part of this PR, this is a starting point.
Relates to #28504
We use a latch when sending requests during tests so that we do not hang
forever waiting for replies on those requests. This commit increases the
timeout on that latch to 30 seconds because sometimes 10 seconds is just
not enough.
Today we have a few problems with how we handle bad requests:
- handling requests with bad encoding
- handling requests with invalid value for filter_path/pretty/human
- handling requests with a garbage Content-Type header
There are two problems:
- in every case, we give an empty response to the client
- in most cases, we leak the byte buffer backing the request!
These problems are caused by a broader problem: poor handling preparing
the request for handling, or the channel to write to when the response
is ready. This commit addresses these issues by taking a unified
approach to all of them that ensures that:
- we respond to the client with the exception that blew us up
- we do not leak the byte buffer backing the request
In 5.2 `ignore_unmapped` was added to `inner_hits` in order to ignore invalid mapping.
This value was automatically set to the value defined in the parent query (`nested`, `has_child`, `has_parent`) but the refactoring of the parent/child in 5.6 removed this behavior unintentionally.
This commit restores this behavior but also makes sure that we always automatically enforce this value when the query builder is used directly (previously this was only done by the XContent deserialization).
Closes#29071
* Remove BytesArray and BytesReference usage from XContentFactory
This removes the usage of `BytesArray` and `BytesReference` from
`XContentFactory`. Instead, a regular `byte[]` should be passed. To assist with
this a helper has been added to `XContentHelper` that will preserve the offset
and length from the underlying BytesReference.
This is part of ongoing work to separate the XContent parts from ES so they can
be factored into their own jar.
Relates to #28504
Currently we store the indices specified in the request URL together with all
the other ranking evaluation specification in RankEvalSpec. This is not ideal
since e.g. the indices are not rendered to xContent and so cannot be parsed
back. Instead we should keep them in RankEvalRequest.
The rejected execution handler API says that rejectedExecution(Runnable,
ThreadPoolExecutor) throws a RejectedExecutionException if the task must
be rejected due to capacity on the executor. We do throw something that
smells like a RejectedExecutionException (it is named
EsRejectedExecutionException) yet we violate the API because
EsRejectedExecutionException is not a RejectedExecutionException. This
has caused problems before where we try to catch RejectedExecution when
invoking rejectedExecution but this causes EsRejectedExecutionException
to go uncaught. This commit addresses this by modifying
EsRejectedExecutionException to extend
RejectedExecutionException.
Additionally:
* Included the existing update by query java api docs in java-api docs.
(for some reason it was never included, it needed some tweaking and
then it was good to go)
* moved delete-by-query / update-by-query code samples to java file so
that we can verify that these samples at least compile.
Closes#24203
* Decouple XContentBuilder from BytesReference
This commit removes all mentions of `BytesReference` from `XContentBuilder`.
This is needed so that we can completely decouple the XContent code and move it
into its own dependency.
While this change appears large, it is due to two main changes, moving
`.bytes()` and `.string()` out of XContentBuilder itself into static methods
`BytesReference.bytes` and `Strings.toString` respectively. The rest of the
change is code reacting to these changes (the majority of it in tests).
Relates to #28504
As we have factored Elasticsearch into smaller libraries, we have ended
up in a situation that some of the dependencies of Elasticsearch are not
available to code that depends on these smaller libraries but not server
Elasticsearch. This is a good thing, this was one of the goals of
separating Elasticsearch into smaller libraries, to shed some of the
dependencies from other components of the system. However, this now
means that simple utility methods from Lucene that we rely on are no
longer available everywhere. This commit copies IOUtils (with some small
formatting changes for our codebase) into the fold so that other
components of the system can rely on these methods where they no longer
depend on Lucene.
Before the `matchAllDocs` was ignored and this could lead to percolator queries not matching when
the inner query was a match_all query and min_score was specified.
Before when `verified` was not taken into account if the function_score query wrapped an unverified query this could
lead to matching percolator queries that shouldn't match at all.
This allows us to remove another dependency in the decoupling of the XContent
code. Rather than move this class over or decouple it, it can simply be removed.
Relates tangentially to #28504