The "Conditionals with the Pipeline Processor" incorrectly documents
how to create a pipeline of pipelines with a failure condition. The
example as-is will always execute the fail processor. The change here
updates the documentation to correct guard the fail processor with an
if condition.
* Add Snapshot Lifecycle Retention documentation
This commits adds API and general purpose documentation for SLM
retention.
Relates to #43663
* Fix docs tests
* Update default now that #47604 has been merged
* Update docs/reference/ilm/apis/slm-api.asciidoc
Co-Authored-By: Gordon Brown <gordon.brown@elastic.co>
* Update docs/reference/ilm/apis/slm-api.asciidoc
Co-Authored-By: Gordon Brown <gordon.brown@elastic.co>
* Update docs with feedback
Setting `cluster.routing.allocation.disk.include_relocations` to `false` is a
bad idea since it will lead to the kinds of overshoot that were otherwise fixed
in #46079. This commit deprecates this setting so it can be removed in the next
major release.
The example use of a scoring script was incorrectly using a filter
script query, which has no scoring, and thus no _score variable
avialable. This commit converts the example doc to using the newer
script_score query.
Adds the following parameters to `outlier_detection`:
- `compute_feature_influence` (boolean): whether to compute or not
feature influence scores
- `outlier_fraction` (double): the proportion of the data set assumed
to be outlying prior to running outlier detection
- `standardization_enabled` (boolean): whether to apply standardization
to the feature values
Backport of #47600
This commit adds support to retrieve all API keys if the authenticated
user is authorized to do so.
This removes the restriction of specifying one of the
parameters (like id, name, username and/or realm name)
when the `owner` is set to `false`.
Closes#46887
While function scores using scripts do allow explanations, they are only
creatable with an expert plugin. This commit improves the situation for
the newer script score query by adding the ability to set the
explanation from the script itself.
To set the explanation, a user would check for `explanation != null` to
indicate an explanation is needed, and then call
`explanation.set("some description")`.
The warning section above the example tells that index name has to end with the digits but the example itself uses index name without digits which is confusing.
* Add API to execute SLM retention on-demand (#47405)
This is a backport of #47405
This commit adds the `/_slm/_execute_retention` API endpoint. This
endpoint kicks off SLM retention and then returns immediately.
This in particular allows us to run retention without scheduling it
(for entirely manual invocation) or perform a one-off cleanup.
This commit also includes HLRC for the new API, and fixes an issue
in SLMSnapshotBlockingIntegTests where retention invoked prior to the
test completing could resurrect an index the internal test cluster
cleanup had already deleted.
Resolves#46508
Relates to #43663
* [DOCS] Adds examples to the PUT dfa and the evaluate dfa APIs.
* [DOCS] Removes extra lines from examples.
* Update docs/reference/ml/df-analytics/apis/evaluate-dfanalytics.asciidoc
Co-Authored-By: Lisa Cawley <lcawley@elastic.co>
* Update docs/reference/ml/df-analytics/apis/put-dfanalytics.asciidoc
Co-Authored-By: Lisa Cawley <lcawley@elastic.co>
* [DOCS] Explains examples.
We do mention that rolling back an upgrade requires a restore from a snapshot,
but it's hidden at the bottom of the "preparing to upgrade" instructions on a
different page from the actual upgrade instructions. This commit duplicates the
preparatory instructions onto the pages containing the actual upgrade
instructions and rewords the point about rollbacks a bit.
DATE_PART(<datetime unit>, <date/datetime>) is a function that allows
the user to extract the specified unit from a date/datetime field
similar to the EXTRACT (<datetime unit> FROM <date/datetime>) but
with different names and aliases for the units and it also provides more
options like `DATE_PART('tzoffset', datetimeField)`.
Implemented following the SQL server's spec: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/sql/t-sql/functions/datepart-transact-sql?view=sql-server-2017
with the difference that the <datetime unit> argument is either a
literal single quoted string or gets a value from a table field, whereas
in SQL server keywords are used (unquoted identifiers) and it's not
possible to use a value coming for a table column.
Closes: #46372
(cherry picked from commit ead743d3579eb753fd314d4a58fae205e465d72e)
Currently the policy config is placed directly in the json object
of the toplevel `policies` array field. For example:
```
{
"policies": [
{
"match": {
"name" : "my-policy",
"indices" : ["users"],
"match_field" : "email",
"enrich_fields" : [
"first_name",
"last_name",
"city",
"zip",
"state"
]
}
}
]
}
```
This change adds a `config` field in each policy json object:
```
{
"policies": [
{
"config": {
"match": {
"name" : "my-policy",
"indices" : ["users"],
"match_field" : "email",
"enrich_fields" : [
"first_name",
"last_name",
"city",
"zip",
"state"
]
}
}
}
]
}
```
This allows us in the future to add other information about policies
in the get policy api response.
The UI will consume this API to build an overview of all policies.
The UI may in the future include additional information about a policy
and the plan is to include that in the get policy api, so that this
information can be gathered in a single api call.
An example of the information that is likely to be added is:
* Last policy execution time
* The status of a policy (executing, executed, unexecuted)
* Information about the last failure if exists
To be on the safe side in terms of use cases also add the alias
DATETRUNC to the DATE_TRUNC function.
Follows: #46473
(cherry picked from commit 9ac223cb1fc66486f86e218fa785a32b61e9bacc)
Enables support for Cartesian geometries shape type. We still need to
decide how to handle the distance function since it is currently using
the haversine distance formula and returns results in meters, which
doesn't make any sense for Cartesian geometries.
Closes#46412
Relates to #43644
This commit adds support for POST requests to the SLM `_execute` API,
because POST is a more appropriate HTTP verb for this action as it is
not idempotent. The docs are also changed to favor POST over PUT,
although PUT is not removed or officially deprecated.
* ILM: parse origination date from index name (#46755)
Introduce the `index.lifecycle.parse_origination_date` setting that
indicates if the origination date should be parsed from the index name.
If set to true an index which doesn't match the expected format (namely
`indexName-{dateFormat}-optional_digits` will fail before being created.
The origination date will be parsed when initialising a lifecycle for an
index and it will be set as the `index.lifecycle.origination_date` for
that index.
A user set value for `index.lifecycle.origination_date` will always
override a possible parsable date from the index name.
(cherry picked from commit c363d27f0210733dad0c307d54fa224a92ddb569)
Signed-off-by: Andrei Dan <andrei.dan@elastic.co>
* Drop usage of Map.of to be java 8 compliant
Using arrays of objects with embedded IDs is preferred for new APIs over
using entity IDs as JSON keys. This commit changes the SLM stats API to
use the preferred format.
Although they do not support eager_global_ordinals, ip fields use global
ordinals for certain aggregations like 'terms'.
This commit also corrects a reference to the sampler aggregation.
Previously, queries on the _index field were not able to specify index aliases.
This was a regression in functionality compared to the 'indices' query that was
deprecated and removed in 6.0.
Now queries on _index can specify an alias, which is resolved to the concrete
index names when we check whether an index matches. To match a remote shard
target, the pattern needs to be of the form 'cluster:index' to match the
fully-qualified index name. Index aliases can be specified in the following query
types: term, terms, prefix, and wildcard.