When exceptions could be returned from another node, the exception
might be wrapped in a `RemoteTransportException`. In places where
we handled specific exceptions using `instanceof` we ought to unwrap
the cause first.
This commit attempts to fix this issue after searching code in the ML
plugin.
Backport of #47676
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
When an ML job runs the memory required can be
broken down into:
1. Memory required to load the executable code
2. Instrumented model memory
3. Other memory used by the job's main process or
ancilliary processes that is not instrumented
Previously we added a simple fixed overhead to
account for 1 and 3. This was 100MB for anomaly
detection jobs (large because of the completely
uninstrumented categorization function and
normalize process), and 20MB for data frame
analytics jobs.
However, this was an oversimplification because
the executable code only needs to be loaded once
per machine. Also the 100MB overhead for anomaly
detection jobs was probably too high in most cases
because categorization and normalization don't use
_that_ much memory.
This PR therefore changes the calculation of memory
requirements as follows:
1. A per-node overhead of 30MB for _only_ the first
job of any type to be run on a given node - this
is to account for loading the executable code
2. The established model memory (if applicable) or
model memory limit of the job
3. A per-job overhead of 10MB for anomaly detection
jobs and 5MB for data frame analytics jobs, to
account for the uninstrumented memory usage
This change will enable more jobs to be run on the
same node. It will be particularly beneficial when
there are a large number of small jobs. It will
have less of an effect when there are a small number
of large jobs.
While it seemed like the PUT data frame analytics action did not
have to be a master node action as the config is stored in an index
rather than the cluster state, there are other subtle nuances which
make it worthwhile to convert it. In particular, it helps maintain
order of execution for put actions which are anyhow user driven and
are expected to have low volume.
This commit converts `TransportPutDataFrameAnalyticsAction` from
a handled transport action to a master node action.
Note this means that the action might fail in a mixed cluster
but as the API is still experimental and not widely used there will
be few moments more suitable to make this change than now.
Due to #47003 many clusters will have built up a
large backlog of expired results. On upgrading to
a version where that bug is fixed users could find
that the first ML daily maintenance task deletes
a very large amount of documents.
This change introduces throttling to the
delete-by-query that the ML daily maintenance uses
to delete expired results to limit it to deleting an
average 200 documents per second. (There is no
throttling for state/forecast documents as these
are expected to be lower volume.)
Additionally a rough time limit of 8 hours is applied
to the whole delete expired data action. (This is only
rough as it won't stop part way through a single
operation - it only checks the timeout between
operations.)
Relates #47103
This commit restores the model state if available in data
frame analytics jobs.
In addition, this changes the start API so that a stopped job
can be restarted. As we now store the progress in the state index
when the task is stopped, we can use it to determine what state
the job was in when it got stopped.
Note that in order to be able to distinguish between a job
that runs for the first time and another that is restarting,
we ensure reindexing progress is reported to be at least 1
for a running task.
* [ML][Inference] adding .ml-inference* index and storage (#47267)
* [ML][Inference] adding .ml-inference* index and storage
* Addressing PR comments
* Allowing null definition, adding validation tests for model config
* fixing line length
* adjusting for backport
A refactoring in 6.6 meant that the ML daily
maintenance actions have not been run at all
since then. This change installs the local
master listener that schedules the ML daily
maintenance, and also defends against some
subtle race conditions that could occur in the
future if a node flipped very quickly between
master and non-master.
Fixes#47003
Backport of #45794 to 7.x. Convert most `awaitBusy` calls to
`assertBusy`, and use asserts where possible. Follows on from #28548 by
@liketic.
There were a small number of places where it didn't make sense to me to
call `assertBusy`, so I kept the existing calls but renamed the method to
`waitUntil`. This was partly to better reflect its usage, and partly so
that anyone trying to add a new call to awaitBusy wouldn't be able to find
it.
I also didn't change the usage in `TransportStopRollupAction` as the
comments state that the local awaitBusy method is a temporary
copy-and-paste.
Other changes:
* Rework `waitForDocs` to scale its timeout. Instead of calling
`assertBusy` in a loop, work out a reasonable overall timeout and await
just once.
* Some tests failed after switching to `assertBusy` and had to be fixed.
* Correct the expect templates in AbstractUpgradeTestCase. The ES
Security team confirmed that they don't use templates any more, so
remove this from the expected templates. Also rewrite how the setup
code checks for templates, in order to give more information.
* Remove an expected ML template from XPackRestTestConstants The ML team
advised that the ML tests shouldn't be waiting for any
`.ml-notifications*` templates, since such checks should happen in the
production code instead.
* Also rework the template checking code in `XPackRestTestHelper` to give
more helpful failure messages.
* Fix issue in `DataFrameSurvivesUpgradeIT` when upgrading from < 7.4
When the ML native multi-node tests use _cat/indices/_all
and the request goes to a non-master node, _all is
translated to a list of concrete indices by the authz layer
on the coordinating node before the request is forwarded
to the master node. Then it is possible for the master
node to return an index_not_found_exception if one of
the concrete indices that was expanded on the
coordinating node has been deleted in the meantime.
(#47159 has been opened to track the underlying problem.)
It has been observed that the index that gets deleted when
the problem affects the ML native multi-node tests is
always the ML notifications index. The tests that fail are
only interested in the presence or absense of ML results
indices. Therefore the workaround is to only _cat indices
that match the ML results index pattern.
Fixes#45652
* [ML][Inference] Feature pre-processing objects and functions (#46777)
To support inference on pre-trained machine learning models, some basic feature encoding will be necessary. I am using a named object serialization approach so new encodings/pre-processing steps could be added in the future.
This PR lays down the ground work for 3 basic encodings:
* HotOne
* Target Mean
* Frequency
More feature encodings or pre-processings could be added in the future:
* Handling missing columns
* Standardization
* Label encoding
* etc....
* fixing compilation for namedxcontent tests
When using auto-generated IDs + the ingest drop processor (which looks to be used by filebeat
as well) + coordinating nodes that do not have the ingest processor functionality, this can lead
to a NullPointerException.
The issue is that markCurrentItemAsDropped() is creating an UpdateResponse with no id when
the request contains auto-generated IDs. The response serialization is lenient for our
REST/XContent format (i.e. we will send "id" : null) but the internal transport format (used for
communication between nodes) assumes for this field to be non-null, which means that it can't
be serialized between nodes. Bulk requests with ingest functionality are processed on the
coordinating node if the node has the ingest capability, and only otherwise sent to a different
node. This means that, in order to reproduce this, one needs two nodes, with the coordinating
node not having the ingest functionality.
Closes#46678
This commit reuses the same state processor that is used for autodetect
to parse state output from data frame analytics jobs. We then index the
state document into the state index.
Backport of #46804
It is possible for a running analytics job that its config is removed
from the '.ml-config' index (perhaps the user deleted the entire index,
etc.). In that case the task remains without a matching config. I have
raised #46781 to discuss how to deal with this issue.
This commit focuses on `MlMemoryTracker` and changes it so that when
we get the configs for the running tasks we leniently ignore missing ones.
This at least means memory tracking will keep working for other jobs
if one or more are missing.
In addition, this commit makes the cleanup code for native analytics
tests more robust by explicitly stopping all jobs and force-stopping
if an error occurs. This helps so that a single failing test does
not cause other tests fail due to pending tasks.
Backport of #46789
When the stop API is called while the task is running there is
a chance the task gets marked completed twice. This may cause
undesired side effects, like indexing the progress document a second
time after the stop API has returned (the cause for #46705).
This commit adds a check that the task has not been completed before
proceeding to mark it so. In addition, when we update the task's state
we could get some warnings that the task was missing if the stop API
has been called in the meantime. We now check the errors are
`ResourceNotFoundException` and ignore them if so.
Closes#46705
Backports #46721
This is fixing a bug where if an analytics job is started before any
anomaly detection job is opened, we create an index after the state
write alias.
Instead, we should create the state index and alias before starting
an analytics job and this commit makes sure this is the case.
Backport of #46602
After starting the analytics job and checking its state
the state can be any of "started", "reindexing" or
"analyzing" depending on how quickly the work is done.
Investigating the test failure reported in #45518 it appears that
the datafeed task was not found during a tast state update. There
are only two places where such an update is performed: when we set
the state to `started` and when we set it to `stopping`. We handle
`ResourceNotFoundException` in the latter but not in the former.
Thus the test reveals a rare race condition where the datafeed gets
requested to stop before we managed to update its state to `started`.
I could not reproduce this scenario but it would be my best guess.
This commit catches `ResourceNotFoundException` while updating the
state to `started` and lets the task terminate smoothly.
Closes#45518
Backport of #46495
ML users who upgrade from versions prior to 7.4 to 7.4 or later
will have ML results indices that do not have mappings for the
total_search_time_ms field. Therefore, when searching these
indices we must tolerate this field not having a mapping.
Fixes#46437
This refactors `DataFrameAnalyticsTask` into its own class.
The task has quite a lot of functionality now and I believe it would
make code more readable to have it live as its own class rather than
an inner class of the start action class.
Backport of #46402
* [ML] waiting for ml indices before waiting task assignment testFullClusterRestart
* waiting for a stable cluster after fullrestart
* removing unused imports
The test seems to have been failing due to a race condition between
stopping the task and refreshing the destination index. In particular,
we were going forward with refreshing the destination index even
though the task stopped in the meantime. This was fixed in
request.
Closes#43960
Backport of #46271
Though we allow CCS within datafeeds, users could prevent nodes from accessing remote clusters. This can cause mysterious errors and difficult to troubleshoot.
This commit adds a check to verify that `cluster.remote.connect` is enabled on the current node when a datafeed is configured with a remote index pattern.
* [ML] Regression dependent variable must be numeric
This adds a validation that the dependent variable of a regression
analysis must be numeric.
* Address review comments and fix some problems
In addition to addressing the review comments, this
commit fixes a few issues I found during testing.
In particular:
- if there were mappings for required fields but they were
not included we were not reporting the error
- if explicitly included fields had unsupported types we were
not reporting the error
Unfortunately, I couldn't get those fixed without refactoring
the code in `ExtractedFieldsDetector`.
This commit adds support for `boolean` fields in data frame
analytics (and currently both outlier detection and regression).
The analytics process expects `boolean` fields to be encoded as
integers with 0 or 1 value.
Adds a parameter `training_percent` to regression. The default
value is `100`. When the parameter is set to a value less than `100`,
from the rows that can be used for training (ie. those that have a
value for the dependent variable) we randomly choose whether to actually
use for training. This enables splitting the data into a training set and
the rest, usually called testing, validation or holdout set, which allows
for validating the model on data that have not been used for training.
Technically, the analytics process considers as training the data that
have a value for the dependent variable. Thus, when we decide a training
row is not going to be used for training, we simply clear the row's
dependent variable.
The native process requires that there be a non-zero number of rows to analyze. If the flag --rows 0 is passed to the executable, it throws and does not start.
When building the configuration for the process we should not start the native process if there are no rows.
Adding some logging to indicate what is occurring.
Previously, the stats API reports a progress percentage
for DF analytics tasks that are running and are in the
`reindexing` or `analyzing` state.
This means that when the task is `stopped` there is no progress
reported. Thus, one cannot distinguish between a task that never
run to one that completed.
In addition, there are blind spots in the progress reporting.
In particular, we do not account for when data is loaded into the
process. We also do not account for when results are written.
This commit addresses the above issues. It changes progress
to being a list of objects, each one describing the phase
and its progress as a percentage. We currently have 4 phases:
reindexing, loading_data, analyzing, writing_results.
When the task stops, progress is persisted as a document in the
state index. The stats API now reports progress from in-memory
if the task is running, or returns the persisted document
(if there is one).
* [ML] Adding data frame analytics stats to _usage API (#45820)
* [ML] Adding data frame analytics stats to _usage API
* making the size of analytics stats 10k
* adjusting backport