Adds support for `?slices=N` to reindex which automatically
parallelizes the process using parallel scrolls on `_uid`. Performance
testing sees a 3x performance improvement for simple docs
on decent hardware, maybe 30% performance improvement
for more complex docs. Still compelling, especially because
clusters should be able to get closer to the 3x than the 30%
number.
Closes#20624
Today when writing an unbounded queue_size in the cat thread pool API,
we write null. This commit modifies this so that the output is -1 so
that the output is always present, and always a numeric value.
Relates #21342
Exist requests are supposed to never throw an exception, but rather return true or false depending on whether some resource exists or not. Indices exists does that for indices and accepts wildcard expressions too. The way the api works internally is by resolving indices and catching IndexNotFoundException: if an exception is thrown the index does not exist hence it returns false, otherwise it returns true. That works ok only if ignore_unavailable and allow_no_indices indices options are both set to false, meaning that they are strict and any missing index or wildcard expressions that resolves to no indices will lead to an exception that can be thrown and cause false to be returned.
Unfortunately the indices options have been configurable up until now for this request, meaning that one can set ignore_unavailable or allow_no_indices to true and have the indices exist request return true for indices that really don't exist, which makes very little sense in the context of this api.
This commit removes the indicesOptions setter from the IndicesExistsRequest and makes settable only expandWildcardsOpen and expandWildcardsClosed, hence a subset of the available indices options. This way we can guarantee more consistent behaviour of the indices exists api. We can then remove the ignore_unavailable and allow_no_indices option from indices exists api spec
This commit fixes an issue with the cat thread pool API spec. Namely,
the name of the variable for the thread pool patterns parameter was
misnamed in the spec.
Relates #21332
Today we validate the target index name late and therefore don't fail for instance
if the target index already exists and `dry_run=true` was specified. This change
validates the index name before we early terminate if dry_run is set.
Closes#21149
With #21099 we removed support for the ignored allow_no_indices parameter in indices upgrade API. Truth is that ignore_unavailable and expand_wildcards were also ignored, in indices upgrade as well as upgrade status API. Those parameters are though supported internally and settable through java API, hence they should be all supported on the REST layer too.
`FilterAggregationBuilder` today misses to rewrite queries which causes failures
if a query that uses a client for instance to lookup terms since it must be rewritten first.
This change also ensures that if a client is used from the rewrite context we mark the query as
non-cacheable.
Closes#21301
Since we now validate all consumed request parameter, users can't specify
`_cat/nodes?full_id=true|false` anymore since this parameter is consumed late.
This commit adds a test for this parameter and consumes it before request is processed.
Closes#21266
today the `_shrink` tests do relocate all shards to a single node in
the cluster. Yet, that is not always possible since the only node we can
safely identify in the cluster is the master and if the master is a BWC
node in such a cluster we won't be able to relocate shards that have a
primary on the newer version nodes since allocation deciders forbid this.
This change restricts allocation for that index when the index is created
to restrict allocation to the master that guarantees that all primaries
are on the same node which is sufficient for the `_shrink` API to run.
Lucene 6.2 introduces the new `Analyzer.normalize` API, which allows to apply
only character-level normalization such as lowercasing or accent folding, which
is exactly what is needed to process queries that operate on partial terms such
as `prefix`, `wildcard` or `fuzzy` queries. As a consequence, the
`lowercase_expanded_terms` option is not necessary anymore. Furthermore, the
`locale` option was only needed in order to know how to perform the lowercasing,
so this one can be removed as well.
Closes#9978
This fixes our cluster formation task to run REST tests against a mixed version cluster.
Yet, due to some limitations in our test framework `indices.rollover` tests are currently
disabled for the BWC case since they select the current master as the merge node which
happens to be a BWC node and we can't relocate all shards to it since the primaries are on
a higher version node. This will be fixed in a followup.
Closes#21142
Note: This has been cherry-picked from 5.0 and fixes several rest tests
as well as a BWC break in `OsStats.java`
When indices stats are requested via the node stats API, there is a
level parameter to request stats at the index, node, or shards
level. This parameter was not whitelisted when URL parsing was made
strict. This commit whitelists this parameter.
Additionally, there was some leniency in the parsing of this parameter
that has been removed.
Relates #21024
The create request now requires that an ID be present.
Currently the clients hard code a create method, but
we should just add a create REST spec so this method
can be autogenerated.
Today we don't parse alias filters on the coordinating node, we only forward
the alias patters to executing node and resolve it late. This has several problems
like requests that go through filtered aliases are never cached if they use date math,
since the parsing happens very late in the process even without rewriting. It also used
to be processed on every shard while we can only do it once per index on the coordinating node.
Another nice side-effect is that we are never prone to cluster-state updates that change an alias,
all nodes will execute the exact same alias filter since they are process based on the same
cluster state.
* Adding built-in sorting capability to _cat apis.
Closes#16975
* addressing pr comments
* changing value types back to original implementation and fixing cosmetic issues
* Changing compareTo, hashCode of value types to a better implementation
* Changed value compareTos to use Double.compare instead of if statements + fixed some failed unit tests
Today when parsing a request, Elasticsearch silently ignores incorrect
(including parameters with typos) or unused parameters. This is bad as
it leads to requests having unintended behavior (e.g., if a user hits
the _analyze API and misspell the "tokenizer" then Elasticsearch will
just use the standard analyzer, completely against intentions).
This commit removes lenient URL parameter parsing. The strategy is
simple: when a request is handled and a parameter is touched, we mark it
as such. Before the request is actually executed, we check to ensure
that all parameters have been consumed. If there are remaining
parameters yet to be consumed, we fail the request with a list of the
unconsumed parameters. An exception has to be made for parameters that
format the response (as opposed to controlling the request); for this
case, handlers are able to provide a list of parameters that should be
excluded from tripping the unconsumed parameters check because those
parameters will be used in formatting the response.
Additionally, some inconsistencies between the parameters in the code
and in the docs are corrected.
Relates #20722
* master: (1199 commits)
[DOCS] Remove non-valid link to mapping migration document
Revert "Default `include_in_all` for numeric-like types to false"
test: add a test with ipv6 address
docs: clearify that both ip4 and ip6 addresses are supported
Include complex settings in settings requests
Add production warning for pre-release builds
Clean up confusing error message on unhandled endpoint
[TEST] Increase logging level in testDelayShards()
change health from string to enum (#20661)
Provide error message when plugin id is missing
Document that sliced scroll works for reindex
Make reindex-from-remote ignore unknown fields
Remove NoopGatewayAllocator in favor of a more realistic mock (#20637)
Remove Marvel character reference from guide
Fix documentation for setting Java I/O temp dir
Update client benchmarks to log4j2
Changes the API of GatewayAllocator#applyStartedShards and (#20642)
Removes FailedRerouteAllocation and StartedRerouteAllocation
IndexRoutingTable.initializeEmpty shouldn't override supplied primary RecoverySource (#20638)
Smoke tester: Adjust to latest changes (#20611)
...
This commit changes the default behavior of `_flush` to block if other flushes are ongoing.
This also removes the use of `FlushNotAllowedException` and instead simply return immediately
by skipping the flush. Users should be aware if they set this option that the flush might or might
not flush everything to disk ie. no transactional behavior of some sort.
Closes#20569
Adds a cat api endpoint: /_cat/templates and its more specific version, /_cat/templates/{name}.
It looks something like:
$ curl "localhost:9200/_cat/templates?v"
name template order version
sushi_california_roll *avocado* 1 1
pizza_hawaiian *pineapples* 1
pizza_pepperoni *pepperoni* 1
The specified version (only allows * globs) looks like:
$ curl "localhost:9200/_cat/templates/pizza*"
name template order version
pizza_hawaiian *pineapples* 1
pizza_pepperoni *pepperoni* 1
Partially specified columns:
$ curl "localhost:9200/_cat/templates/pizza*?v=true&h=name,template"
name template
pizza_hawaiian *pineapples*
pizza_pepperoni *pepperoni*
The help text:
$ curl "localhost:9200/_cat/templates/pizza*?help"
name | n | template name
template | t | template pattern string
order | o | template application order number
version | v | version
Closes#20467
We can now run templates using `explain` and/or `profile` parameters.
Which is interesting when you have defined a complicated profile but want to debug it in an easier way than running the full query again.
You can use `explain` parameter when running a template:
```js
GET /_search/template
{
"file": "my_template",
"params": {
"status": [ "pending", "published" ]
},
"explain": true
}
```
You can use `profile` parameter when running a template:
```js
GET /_search/template
{
"file": "my_template",
"params": {
"status": [ "pending", "published" ]
},
"profile": true
}
```
The command-line arguments for Elasticsearch must now be specified using
-E. This commit fixes the usage of command-line arguments in the REST
API spec README.
The only repository we can be sure is safe to clean is `fs` so we clean
any snapshots in those repositories after each test. Other repositories
like url and azure tend to throw exceptions rather than let us fetch
their contents during the REST test. So we clean what we can....
Closes#18159
The refresh description should indicate that the affected shards are
refreshed as opposed to the entire index.
This was raised as a discrepancy on
discuss (https://discuss.elastic.co/t/refresh-parameter-of-index-api/59008/2)
on the .NET client that originates from code generated from the rest api
spec. The description has been updated in master but should be updated
for the 2.4.0 release.
We put the rest api spec into a jar for upload to maven, so that we can
use within external rest tests. This change adds making a pom for maven
(as well as producing sources and javadoc jars, even though they will be
empty, because maven central requires them).
This change replaces the fields parameter with stored_fields when it makes sense.
This is dictated by the renaming we made in #18943 for the search API.
The following list of endpoint has been changed to use `stored_fields` instead of `fields`:
* get
* mget
* explain
The documentation and the rest API spec has been updated to cope with the changes for the following APIs:
* delete_by_query
* get
* mget
* explain
The `fields` parameter has been deprecated for the following APIs (it is replaced by _source filtering):
* update: the fields are extracted from the _source directly.
* bulk: the fields parameter is used but fields are extracted from the source directly so it is allowed to have non-stored fields.
Some APIs still have the `fields` parameter for various reasons:
* cat.fielddata: the fields paramaters relates to the fielddata fields that should be printed.
* indices.clear_cache: used to indicate which fielddata fields should be cleared.
* indices.get_field_mapping: used to filter fields in the mapping.
* indices.stats: get stats on fields (stored or not stored).
* termvectors: fields are retrieved from the stored fields if possible and extracted from the _source otherwise.
* mtermvectors:
* nodes.stats: the fields parameter is used to concatenate completion_fields and fielddata_fields so it's not related to stored_fields at all.
Fixes#20155
This commit adds a health status parameter to the cat indices API for
filtering on indices that match the specified status (green|yellow|red).
Relates #20393
Add docs to template support for _msearch
Relates to #10885
Relates to #15674
* Reference those docs from the rest api spec for _msearch/template support.
memory are much less than the total memory, the percentage
returned could be 0%. The yaml tests check that the free/used
percentage are valid values by asserting `is_true`, but it
turns out that `is_true` returns false if the value is
assigned but it is 0 or even the string "0". This commit
changes the assertion in the yaml test to ensure the value
is greater than or equal to 0 instead.
This was an error-prone version type that allowed overriding previous
version semantics. It could cause primaries and replicas to be out of
sync however, so it has been removed.
Resolves#19769
This adds a version field to Templates, which is itself is unused by Elasticsearch, but exists for users to better manage their own templates. Like description, it's optional.
This was an error-prone version type that allowed overriding previous
version semantics. It could cause primaries and replicas to be out of
sync however, so it has been removed.
Resolves#19769
Currently it does not because our parsers do not support big integers/decimals
(on purpose) but we do not have to ask our parser for the number type, we can
just ask the jackson parser for a number representation of the value with the
right type.
Note that I did not add similar tests for big decimals because Jackson seems to
never return big decimals, even for decimal values that are out of the range of
values that can be represented by doubles.
Closes#11508
The mem section was buggy in cluster stats and removed. It is now added back with the same structure as in node stats, containing total memory, available memory, used memory and percentages. All the values are the sum of all the nodes across the cluster (or at least the ones that we were able to get the values from).
If elasticsearch controls the ID values as well as the documents
version we can optimize the code that adds / appends the documents
to the index. Essentially we an skip the version lookup for all
documents unless the same document is delivered more than once.
On the lucene level we can simply call IndexWriter#addDocument instead
of #updateDocument but on the Engine level we need to ensure that we deoptimize
the case once we see the same document more than once.
This is done as follows:
1. Mark every request with a timestamp. This is done once on the first node that
receives a request and is fixed for this request. This can be even the
machine local time (see why later). The important part is that retry
requests will have the same value as the original one.
2. In the engine we make sure we keep the highest seen time stamp of "retry" requests.
This is updated while the retry request has its doc id lock. Call this `maxUnsafeAutoIdTimestamp`
3. When the engine runs an "optimized" request comes, it compares it's timestamp with the
current `maxUnsafeAutoIdTimestamp` (but doesn't update it). If the the request
timestamp is higher it is safe to execute it as optimized (no retry request with the same
timestamp has been run before). If not we fall back to "non-optimzed" mode and run the request as a retry one
and update the `maxUnsafeAutoIdTimestamp` unless it's been updated already to a higher value
Relates to #19813
* Params improvements to Cluster Health API wait for shards
Previously, the cluster health API used a strictly numeric value
for `wait_for_active_shards`. However, with the introduction of
ActiveShardCount and the removal of write consistency level for
replication operations, `wait_for_active_shards` is used for
write operations to represent values for ActiveShardCount. This
commit moves the cluster health API's usage of `wait_for_active_shards`
to be consistent with its usage in the write operation APIs.
This commit also changes `wait_for_relocating_shards` from a
numeric value to a simple boolean value `wait_for_no_relocating_shards`
to set whether the cluster health operation should wait for
all relocating shards to complete relocation.
* Addresses code review comments
* Don't be lenient if `wait_for_relocating_shards` is set
While removing an index isn't actually an alias action, if we add
an alias action that deletes an index then we can delete and index
and add an alias with the same name as the index atomically, in
the same cluster state update.
Closes#20064
This commit adds the support for exclusion filter to the response filtering (filter_path) feature. It changes the XContentBuilder APIs so that it now accepts two types of filters: inclusive and exclusive. Filters are no more String arrays but sets of String instead.
Adds an explicit recoverySource field to ShardRouting that characterizes the type of recovery to perform:
- fresh empty shard copy
- existing local shard copy
- recover from peer (primary)
- recover from snapshot
- recover from other local shards on same node (shrink index action)
This makes GET operations more consistent with `_search` operations which expect
`(stored_)fields` to work on stored fields and source filtering to work on the
`_source` field. This is now possible thanks to the fact that GET operations
do not read from the translog anymore (#20102) and also allows to get rid of
`FieldMapper#isGenerated`.
The `_termvectors` API (and thus more_like_this too) was relying on the fact
that GET operations would extract fields from either stored fields or the source
so the logic to do this that used to exist in `ShardGetService` has been moved
to `TermVectorsService`. It would be nice that term vectors do not rely on this,
but this does not seem to be a low hanging fruit.
The network types in use on a cluster can be useful information to have,
so this commit adds aggregate metrics for the network types in use in a
cluster to the cluster stats.
Relates #20144
This change adds a special field named _none_ that allows to disable the retrieval of the stored fields in a search request or in a TopHitsAggregation.
To completely disable stored fields retrieval (including disabling metadata fields retrieval such as _id or _type) use _none_ like this:
````
POST _search
{
"stored_fields": "_none_"
}
````
Today we do a lot of accounting inside the engine to maintain locations
of documents inside the transaction log. This is only needed to ensure
we can return the documents source from the engine if it hasn't been refreshed.
Aside of the added complexity to be able to read from the currently writing translog,
maintainance of pointers into the translog this also caused inconsistencies like different values
of the `_ttl` field if it was read from the tlog or not. TermVectors are totally different if
the document is fetched from the tranlog since copy fields are ignored etc.
This chance will simply call `refresh` if the documents latest version is not in the index. This
streamlines the semantics of the `_get` API and allows for more optimizations inside the engine
and on the transaction log. Note: `_refresh` is only called iff the requested document is not refreshed
yet but has recently been updated or added.
#Relates to #19787
Adds ignoreUnavailable to the snapshot status API to be consistent
with the get snapshots API which has a similar parameter. If
ignoreUnavailable is set to true, then the snapshot status request
will ignore any snapshots that were not found in the repository,
instead of throwing a SnapshotMissingException.
Closes#18522
Currently both `PUT` and `POST` can be used to create indices. This commit
removes support for `POST index_name` so that we can use it to index documents
with auto-generated ids once types are removed.
Relates #15613
that have analyzer aliases in their analysis settings will still work, but
any attempts to create an alias for analyzers in newly created indices
will result in an IllegalArgumentException.
As a result, the setting `index.analysis.analyzer.{analyzerName}.alias` is
no longer supported.
Closes#18244
The payload option was introduced with the new completion
suggester implementation in v5, as a stop gap solution
to return additional metadata with suggestions.
Now we can return associated documents with suggestions
(#19536) through fetch phase using stored field (_source).
The additional fetch phase ensures that we only fetch
the _source for the global top-N suggestions instead of
fetching _source of top results for each shard.
Adds `warnings` syntax to the yaml test that allows you to expect
a `Warning` header that looks like:
```
- do:
warnings:
- '[index] is deprecated'
- quotes are not required because yaml
- but this argument is always a list, never a single string
- no matter how many warnings you expect
get:
index: test
type: test
id: 1
```
These are accessible from the docs with:
```
// TEST[warning:some warning]
```
This should help to force you to update the docs if you deprecate
something. You *must* add the warnings marker to the docs or the build
will fail. While you are there you *should* update the docs to add
deprecation warnings visible in the rendered results.
Today, when listing thread pools via the cat thread pool API, thread
pools are listed in a column-delimited format. This is unfriendly to
command-line tools, and inconsistent with other cat APIs. Instead,
thread pools should be listed in a row-delimited format.
Additionally, the cat thread pool API is limited to a fixed list of
thread pools that excludes certain built-in thread pools as well as all
custom thread pools. These thread pools should be available via the cat
thread pool API.
This commit improves the cat thread pool API by listing all thread pools
(built-in or custom), and by listing them in a row-delimited
format. Finally, for each node, the output thread pools are sorted by
thread pool name.
Relates #19721
* Rename operation to result and reworking responses
* Rename DocWriteResponse.Operation enum to DocWriteResponse.Result
These are just easier to interpret names.
Closes#19664
Before this commit when an index pattern is used to filter the cluster state, only indices metadata are populated and routing table is just empty. This commit aligns the behavior of the filtering of cluster state's routing table with the filtering of cluster state's metadata so that coherent data are returned for both routing table & metadata when index pattern is requested.
This adds an extra REST handler for "_ingest/pipeline" so that users do not need to supply "_ingest/pipeline/*" to get all of them.
- Also adds a teardown section to related REST-tests for ingest.
Performing the bulk request shown in #19267 now results in the following:
```
{"_index":"test","_type":"test","_id":"1","_version":1,"_operation":"create","forced_refresh":false,"_shards":{"total":2,"successful":1,"failed":0},"status":201}
{"_index":"test","_type":"test","_id":"1","_version":1,"_operation":"noop","forced_refresh":false,"_shards":{"total":2,"successful":1,"failed":0},"status":200}
```
When the request body is missing, all documents in the target index are counted.
As mentioned in #19422, the same should happen when the request body is an empty
json object. This is also the behaviour for the `_search` endpoint and the two
APIs should behave in the same way.
With #19140 we started persisting the node ID across node restarts. Now that we have a "stable" anchor, we can use it to generate a stable default node name and make it easier to track nodes over a restarts. Sadly, this means we will not have those random fun Marvel characters but we feel this is the right tradeoff.
On the implementation side, this requires a bit of juggling because we now need to read the node id from disk before we can log as the node node is part of each log message. The PR move the initialization of NodeEnvironment as high up in the starting sequence as possible, with only one logging message before it to indicate we are initializing. Things look now like this:
```
[2016-07-15 19:38:39,742][INFO ][node ] [_unset_] initializing ...
[2016-07-15 19:38:39,826][INFO ][node ] [aAmiW40] node name set to [aAmiW40] by default. set the [node.name] settings to change it
[2016-07-15 19:38:39,829][INFO ][env ] [aAmiW40] using [1] data paths, mounts [[ /(/dev/disk1)]], net usable_space [5.5gb], net total_space [232.6gb], spins? [unknown], types [hfs]
[2016-07-15 19:38:39,830][INFO ][env ] [aAmiW40] heap size [1.9gb], compressed ordinary object pointers [true]
[2016-07-15 19:38:39,837][INFO ][node ] [aAmiW40] version[5.0.0-alpha5-SNAPSHOT], pid[46048], build[473d3c0/2016-07-15T17:38:06.771Z], OS[Mac OS X/10.11.5/x86_64], JVM[Oracle Corporation/Java HotSpot(TM) 64-Bit Server VM/1.8.0_51/25.51-b03]
[2016-07-15 19:38:40,980][INFO ][plugins ] [aAmiW40] modules [percolator, lang-mustache, lang-painless, reindex, aggs-matrix-stats, lang-expression, ingest-common, lang-groovy, transport-netty], plugins []
[2016-07-15 19:38:43,218][INFO ][node ] [aAmiW40] initialized
```
Needless to say, settings `node.name` explicitly still works as before.
The commit also contains some clean ups to the relationship between Environment, Settings and Plugins. The previous code suggested the path related settings could be changed after the initial Environment was changed. This did not have any effect as the security manager already locked things down.
making the test wait until all urgent requests are completed before
finishing, so that tear down can properly delete the created index
and cleanup. Without this wait, it was possible that the test would
finish and cleanup the deleted indices would happen before the
index creation even processed, causing the test to leave a created
index behind.