This changes the trace level logging to warn, and adds the needed number to the message as well.
My fear is that it may get noisy, but this is an issue that you want to be noisy.
When preparing the final settings in the environment, we unconditionally
set path.data even if path.data was not explicitly set. This confounds
detection for whether or not path.data was explicitly set, and this is
trappy. This commit adds logic to only set path.data in the final
settings if path.data was explicitly set, and provides a test case that
fails without this logic.
Relates #24132
Today when a flush is performed, the translog is committed and if there
are no outstanding views, only the current translog generation is
preserved. Yet for the purpose of sequence numbers, we need stronger
guarantees than this. This commit migrates the preservation of translog
generations to keep the minimum generation that would be needed to
recover after the local checkpoint.
Relates #24015
In Elasticsearch 5.3.0 a bug was introduced in the merging of default
settings when the target setting existed as an array. When this bug
concerns path.data and default.path.data, we ended up in a situation
where the paths specified in both settings would be used to write index
data. Since our packaging sets default.path.data, users that configure
multiple data paths via an array and use the packaging are subject to
having shards land in paths in default.path.data when that is very
likely not what they intended.
This commit is an attempt to rectify this situation. If path.data and
default.path.data are configured, we check for the presence of indices
there. If we find any, we log messages explaining the situation and fail
the node.
Relates #24099
The cat APIs and rest tables would obtain a stream from the RestChannel, which happened to be a
ReleasableBytesStreamOutput. These APIs used the stream to write content to, closed the stream,
and then tried to send a response. After #23941 was merged, closing the stream meant that the bytes
were released for use elsewhere. This caused occasional corruption of the response when the bytes
were used prior to the response being sent.
This commit changes these two usages to wrap the stream obtained from the channel in a flush on
close stream so that the bytes are still reserved until the message is sent.
Empty IDs are rejected during indexing, so we should not randomly
produce them during tests. This commit modifies the simple versioning
tests to no longer produce empty IDs.
When indexing a document via the bulk API where IDs can be explicitly
specified, we currently accept an empty ID. This is problematic because
such a document can not be obtained via the get API. Instead, we should
rejected these requets as accepting them could be a dangerous form of
leniency. Additionally, we already have a way of specifying
auto-generated IDs and that is to not explicitly specify an ID so we do
not need a second way. This commit rejects the individual requests where
ID is specified but empty.
Relates #24118
Internal indexing requests in Elasticsearch may be processed out of order and repeatedly. This is important during recovery and due to concurrency in replicating requests between primary and replicas. As such, a replica/recovering shard needs to be able to identify that an incoming request contains information that is old and thus need not be processed. The current logic is based on external version. This is sadly not sufficient. This PR moves the logic to rely on sequences numbers and primary terms which give the semantics we need.
Relates to #10708
When building headers for a REST response, we de-duplicate the warning
headers based on the actual warning value. The current implementation of
this uses a capturing regular expression that is prone to excessive
backtracking. In cases a request involves a large number of warnings,
this extraction can be a severe performance penalty. An example where
this can arise is a bulk indexing request that utilizes a deprecated
feature (e.g., using deprecated forms of boolean values). This commit is
an attempt to address this performance regression. We already know the
format of the warning header, so we do not need to use a regular
expression to parse it but rather can parse it by hand to extract the
warning value. This gains back the vast majority of the performance lost
due to the usage of a deprecated feature. There is still a performance
loss due to logging the deprecation message but we do not address that
concern in this commit.
Relates #24114
This commit makes closing a ReleasableBytesStreamOutput release the underlying BigArray so
that we can use try-with-resources with these streams and avoid leaking memory by not returning
the BigArray. As part of this change, the ReleasableBytesStreamOutput adds protection to only
release the BigArray once.
In order to make some of the changes cleaner, the ReleasableBytesStream interface has been
removed. The BytesStream interface is changed to a abstract class so that we can use it as a
useable return type for a new method, Streams#flushOnCloseStream. This new method wraps a
given stream and overrides the close method so that the stream is simply flushed and not closed.
This behavior is used in the TcpTransport when compression is used with a
ReleasableBytesStreamOutput as we need to close the compressed stream to ensure all of the data
is written from this stream. Closing the compressed stream will try to close the underlying stream
but we only want to flush so that all of the written bytes are available.
Additionally, an error message method added in the BytesRestResponse did not use a builder
provided by the channel and instead created its own JSON builder. This changes that method to use
the channel builder and in turn the bytes stream output that is managed by the channel.
Note, this commit differs from 6bfecdf921 in that it updates
ReleasableBytesStreamOutput to handle the case of the BigArray decreasing in size, which changes
the reference to the BigArray. When the reference is changed, the releasable needs to be updated
otherwise there could be a leak of bytes and corruption of data in unrelated streams.
This reverts commit afd45c1432, which reverted #23572.
There are test failures that suggest that the import of dangling indices is happening too early, before the dangling indices are ready to be consumed.
This commit adds an ensureGreen() at the end of cluster initialization to make sure that no cluster state updates are happening while the dangling
indices are prepared on-disk.
TaskInfo is stored as a part of TaskResult and therefore can be read by nodes with an older version. If we add any additional information to TaskInfo (for #23250, for example), nodes with an older version should be able to ignore it, otherwise they will not be able to read TaskResults stored by newer nodes.
This commit collapses the SyncBulkRequestHandler and
AsyncBulkRequestHandler into a single BulkRequestHandler. The new
handler executes a bulk request and awaits for the completion if the
BulkProcessor was configured with a concurrentRequests setting of 0.
Otherwise the execution happens asynchronously.
As part of this change the Retry class has been refactored.
withSyncBackoff and withAsyncBackoff have been replaced with two
versions of withBackoff. One method takes a listener that will be
called on completion. The other method returns a future that will been
complete on request completion.
Today Elasticsearch allows default settings to be used only if the
actual setting is not set. These settings are trappy, and the complexity
invites bugs. This commit removes support for default settings with the
exception of default.path.data, default.path.conf, and default.path.logs
which are maintainted to support packaging. A follow-up will remove
support for these as well.
Relates #24093
In Elasticsearch 5.3.0 a bug was introduced in the merging of default
settings when the target setting existed as an array. This arose due to
the fact that when a target setting is an array, the setting key is
broken into key.0, key.1, ..., key.n, one for each element of the
array. When settings are replaced by default.key, we are looking for the
target key but not the target key.0. This leads to key, and key.0, ...,
key.n being present in the constructed settings object. This commit
addresses two issues here. The first is that we fix the merging of the
keys so that when we try to merge default.key, we also check for the
presence of the flattened keys. The second is that when we try to get a
setting value as an array from a settings object, we check whether or
not the backing map contains the top-level key as well as the flattened
keys. This latter check would have caught the first bug. For kicks, we
add some tests.
Relates #24074
This new version of jna is rebuilt from the official release of jna, but
with native libs linked against older glibc in order to support all
platforms elasticsearch supports.
closes#23640
The "category" in context suggester could be String, Number or Boolean. However with the changes in version 5 this is failing and only accepting String. This will have problem for existing users of Elasticsearch if they choose to migrate to higher version; as their existing Mapping and query will fail as mentioned in a bug #22358
This PR fixes the above mentioned issue and allows user to migrate seamlessly.
Closes#22358
This change makes the build info initialization only try to load a jar
manifest if it is the elasticsearch jar. Anything else (eg a repackaged
ES for use of transport client in an uber jar) will contain "Unknown"
for the build info as it does for tests currently.
fixes#21955
It can easily happen that we touch a logger before logging is configured
due to chains of static intializers and other such scenarios. This
commit adds detection for this mechanism that will fail startup if we
touch a logger before logging is configured. This is a bug that will
cause builds to fail.
Relates #24076
This is required in master now that #24071 is in or else we fail during BWC testing because the 5.x branch contains 5.5 but the build thinks it should contain 5.4.
Currently we can run into test errors by accidently using e.g. a "simple"
analyzer on a numeric field which might lead to number parsing errors. While
these errors are correct, we should avoid these combinations in our regular
tests.
The S3 repostiory has many levels of settings it looks at to create a
repository, and these settings were read at repository creation time.
This meant secure settings like access and secret keys had to be
available after node construction. This change makes setting loading for
every except repository level settings eager, so that secure settings
can be stashed, and the keystore can once again be closed after
bootstrapping the node is complete.
Today Elasticsearch and other CLI tools that rely on environment aware
command leniently accept duplicate settings with the last one
winning. This commit removes this leniency.
Relates #24053
This is related to #23893. This commit allows users to use wilcards for
cluster names when executing a cross cluster search.
So instead of defining every cluster such as:
GET one:*,two:*,three:*/_search
A user could just search:
GET *:*/_search
As ":" characters are currently allowed in index names, if the text
up to the first ":" does not match a defined cluster name, the entire
string is treated as an index name.
All our actions that are invoked from rest actions have corresponding
transport actions. This adds the transport action for RestRemoteClusterInfoAction
for consistency.
Relates to #23969
When a primary relocation completes while there are ongoing replica recoveries, the recoveries for these replicas need to be restarted (as a new primary is in charge of replicating changes). Before this commit, the need for a recovery restart was detected by the data nodes that had the replicas, by checking on each cluster state update if the recovery process had completed before the recovery source changed. That code had a race, however, which could lead to a not-fully recovered shard exposing itself as started (see #23904).
This commit takes a different approach: When the primary relocation completes and the master updates the cluster state to move the primary shard from relocating to started, it will reinitialize all initializing replica shards, by giving them a fresh allocation id. Data nodes that have the replica shard will simply detect that the allocation id changed and restart the recovery process (instead of trying to determine the need to restart based on ongoing recoveries).
Note: Removal of the code in IndicesClusterStateService that checks whether the recovery source has changed will not be backported to the 5.x branch. This ensures backward compatibility for the situation where the master node is older and does not have the code changes that have been introduced in this PR.
Closes#23904
The `AsyncBulkByScrollActionTests` were brittle because they used the
current time. That was a mistake. This removes the current time from
the test, instead adding it to the parameters passed in to the
appropriate methods. This means that we take the current time slightly
earlier in all cases, but that shouldn't make a difference.
Closes#24005
Example failure:
https://elasticsearch-ci.elastic.co/job/elastic+elasticsearch+master+nfs/161/consoleFull
Some systems like GCE rely on a plaintext file containing credentials.
Rather than extract the information out of that credentials file and
store each peace individually in the keystore, it is cleaner to just
store the entire file.
This commit adds support to the keystore wrapper for secure file
settings. These are settings that contain an entire file that would
normally be stored on the local filesystem. Retrieving the file returns
an input stream to the file contents. This also adds a `add-file`
command to the keystore cli.
In order to support both strings and files as values for settings, the
metadata format of the keystore has also been updated (with backcompat)
to keep a map of setting name to type.
We are still carrying some legacy code that deals with lucene indices
that don't have checksums. Yet, we do not support these indices
for a while now, in fact since version 5.0 such an index is not supported
anymore. This commit removes all the special handling and leniency involved.
Now that we have incremental reduce functions for topN and aggregations
we can set the default for `action.search.shard_count.limit` to unlimited.
This still allows users to restrict these settings while by default we executed
across all shards matching the search requests index pattern.
The getProperty method is an internal method needed to run pipeline aggregations and retrieve info by path from the aggs tree. It is not needed in the MultiBucketsAggregation.Bucket interface, which is returned to users running aggregations from the transport client. The method is moved to the InternalMultiBucketAggregation class as that's where it belongs.
The `getProperty` method is an internal method needed to run pipeline aggregations and retrieve info by path from the aggs tree. It is not needed in the `Aggregations` interface, which is returned to users running aggregations from the transport client. Furthermore, the method is currenty unused by pipeline aggs too, as only InternalAggregation#getProperty is used. It can then be removed
We deprecated this method in the past because we thought it was a temporary thing that could go away over time. We radically trimmed down the usages of a context while parsing when we got rid of the ParseFieldMatcher, but the usages that are left are legit and we will hardly get rid of them. Also, working on aggs parsing we will need a context to carry around the aggregation name that gets parsed through XContentParser#namedObject .
After two nodes are being stopped and two more are joining the cluster, we first have to wait on the cluster to consist of the right nodes before
waiting on green status, otherwise we might get a green status for a cluster with dead nodes.
_field_stats has evolved quite a lot to become a multi purpose API capable of retrieving the field capabilities and the min/max value for a field.
In the mean time a more focused API called `_field_caps` has been added, this enpoint is a good replacement for _field_stats since he can
retrieve the field capabilities by just looking at the field mapping (no lookup in the index structures).
Also the recent improvement made to range queries makes the _field_stats API obsolete since this queries are now rewritten per shard based on the min/max found for the field.
This means that a range query that does not match any document in a shard can return quickly and can be cached efficiently.
For these reasons this change deprecates _field_stats. The deprecation should happen in 5.4 but we won't remove this API in 6.x yet which is why
this PR is made directly to 6.0.
The rest tests have also been adapted to not throw an error while this change is backported to 5.4.