We have a couple of yaml tests that index documents under a 'test' type, while they could omit it. We do want to still test that specifying the type is still allowed in 7.x but we already have specific tests for that, and other tests should use the endpoint that don't require specifying a type.
Previously we didn't retain the requested fields when performing a shallow copy
of the search source. This meant that when a search was rewritten, we could drop
the requested fields and fail to return them in the response.
* Some progress on failing runtime fields tests (bring #61098 to 7.x)
This breaks apart the a test for the `terms` aggregation into one that
work for runtime fields and one that doesn't.
Breaks up an integration test into one that runtime fields can run and
one that runtime fields have to skip. This is because runtime fields
don't have global ords and we assert things *about* global ords in the
test we have to skip.
Allows nanosecond resolution in search_after (#60328)
This fixes `search_after` to properly parse string formatted dates that
have nanosecond resolution.
Closes#52424
Adds a full list of supported aggregations to the node info API. This list
will be used in transform tests and telemetry mapping tests that will be added
as follow-up PRs.
Fixes#59774
This feature adds a new `fields` parameter to the search request, which
consults both the document `_source` and the mappings to fetch fields in a
consistent way. The PR merges the `field-retrieval` feature branch.
Addresses #49028 and #55363.
Transport connections between nodes remain in place until one or other
node shuts down or the connection is disrupted by a flaky network.
Today it is very difficult to demonstrate that transient failures and
cluster instability are caused by the network even though this is often
the case. In particular, transport connections open and close without
logging anything, even at `DEBUG` level, making it very hard to quantify
the scale of the problem or to correlate the networking problems with
external events.
This commit adds the missing `DEBUG`-level logging when transport
connections open and close, and also tracks the total number of
transport connections a node has opened as a measure of the stability of
the underlying network.
In #54716 I removed pipeline aggregators from the aggregation result
tree and caused us to read them from the request. This saves a bunch of
round trip bytes, which is neat. But there was a bug in the backwards
compatibility logic. You see, we still have to give the pipeline
aggregations to nodes older than 7.8 over the wire because that is how
they know what pipelines to run. They have the pipelines in the request
but they don't read them. They use the ones in the response tree.
Anyway, we had a bug where we were never sending pipelines defined two
levels down. So while you are upgrading the pipeline wouldn't run.
Sometimes. If the data node of the "first" result was post-7.8 and the
coordinating node was pre-7.8.
This fixes the bug.
This PR removes the expand_wildcards and forbid_closed_indices parameters from the Data
Streams Stats REST endpoint. These options are required for broadcast requests, but are not
needed for anything in terms of resolving data streams. Instead, we just set a default set of
IndicesOptions on the transport request.
* Adding new `require_alias` option to indexing requests (#58917)
This commit adds the `require_alias` flag to requests that create new documents.
This flag, when `true` prevents the request from automatically creating an index. Instead, the destination of the request MUST be an alias.
When the flag is not set, or `false`, the behavior defaults to the `action.auto_create_index` settings.
This is useful when an alias is required instead of a concrete index.
closes https://github.com/elastic/elasticsearch/issues/55267
Adds a hard_bounds parameter to explicitly limit the buckets that a histogram
can generate. This is especially useful in case of open ended ranges that can
produce a very large number of buckets.
This API reports on statistics important for data streams, including the number of data
streams, the number of backing indices for those streams, the disk usage for each data
stream, and the maximum timestamp for each data stream
Currently we combine coordinating and primary bytes into a single bucket
for indexing pressure stats. This makes sense for rejection logic.
However, for metrics it would be useful to separate them.
This makes the data_stream timestamp field specification optional when
defining a composable template.
When there isn't one specified it will default to `@timestamp`.
(cherry picked from commit 5609353c5d164e15a636c22019c9c17fa98aac30)
Signed-off-by: Andrei Dan <andrei.dan@elastic.co>
This adds a low precendece mapping for the `@timestamp` field with
type `date`.
This will aid with the bootstrapping of data streams as a timestamp
mapping can be omitted when nanos precision is not needed.
(cherry picked from commit 4e72f43d62edfe52a934367ce9809b5efbcdb531)
Signed-off-by: Andrei Dan <andrei.dan@elastic.co>
We have recently added internal metrics to monitor the amount of
indexing occurring on a node. These metrics introduce back pressure to
indexing when memory utilization is too high. This commit exposes these
stats through the node stats API.
Backport of #59293 to 7.x branch.
* Create new data-stream xpack module.
* Move TimestampFieldMapper to the new module,
this results in storing a composable index template
with data stream definition only to work with default
distribution. This way data streams can only be used
with default distribution, since a data stream can
currently only be created if a matching composable index
template exists with a data stream definition.
* Renamed `_timestamp` meta field mapper
to `_data_stream_timestamp` meta field mapper.
* Add logic to put composable index template api
to fail if `_data_stream_timestamp` meta field mapper
isn't registered. So that a more understandable
error is returned when attempting to store a template
with data stream definition via the oss distribution.
In a follow up the data stream transport and
rest actions can be moved to the xpack data-stream module.
Backport of #59076 to 7.x branch.
The commit makes the following changes:
* The timestamp field of a data stream definition in a composable
index template can only be set to '@timestamp'.
* Removed custom data stream timestamp field validation and reuse the validation from `TimestampFieldMapper` and
instead only check that the _timestamp field mapping has been defined on a backing index of a data stream.
* Moved code that injects _timestamp meta field mapping from `MetadataCreateIndexService#applyCreateIndexRequestWithV2Template58956(...)` method
to `MetadataIndexTemplateService#collectMappings(...)` method.
* Fixed a bug (#58956) that cases timestamp field validation to be performed
for each template and instead of the final mappings that is created.
* only apply _timestamp meta field if index is created as part of a data stream or data stream rollover,
this fixes a docs test, where a regular index creation matches (logs-*) with a template with a data stream definition.
Relates to #58642
Relates to #53100Closes#58956Closes#58583
* GET data stream API returns additional information (#59128)
This adds the data stream's index template, the configured ILM policy
(if any) and the health status of the data stream to the GET _data_stream
response.
Restoring a data stream from a snapshot could install a data stream that
doesn't match any composable templates. This also makes the `template`
field in the `GET _data_stream` response optional.
(cherry picked from commit 0d9c98a82353b088c782b6a04c44844e66137054)
Signed-off-by: Andrei Dan <andrei.dan@elastic.co>
This request:
```
POST /_search
{
"aggs": {
"a": {
"adjacency_matrix": {
"filters": {
"1": {
"terms": { "t": { "index": "lookup", "id": "1", "path": "t" } }
}
}
}
}
}
}
```
Would fail with a 500 error and a message like:
```
{
"error": {
"root_cause": [
{
"type": "illegal_state_exception",
"reason":"async actions are left after rewrite"
}
]
}
}
```
This fixes that by moving the query rewrite phase from a synchronous
call on the data nodes into the standard aggregation rewrite phase which
can properly handle the asynchronous actions.
This commit creates a new Gradle plugin to provide a separate task name
and source set for running YAML based REST tests. The only project
converted to use the new plugin in this PR is distribution/archives/integ-test-zip.
For which the testing has been moved to :rest-api-spec since it makes the most
sense and it avoids a small but awkward change to the distribution plugin.
The remaining cases in modules, plugins, and x-pack will be handled in followups.
This plugin is distinctly different from the plugin introduced in #55896 since
the YAML REST tests are intended to be black box tests over HTTP. As such they
should not (by default) have access to the classpath for that which they are testing.
The YAML based REST tests will be moved to separate source sets (yamlRestTest).
The which source is the target for the test resources is dependent on if this
new plugin is applied. If it is not applied, it will default to the test source
set.
Further, this introduces a breaking change for plugin developers that
use the YAML testing framework. They will now need to either use the new source set
and matching task, or configure the rest resources to use the old "test" source set that
matches the old integTest task. (The former should be preferred).
As part of this change (which is also breaking for plugin developers) the
rest resources plugin has been removed from the build plugin and now requires
either explicit application or application via the new YAML REST test plugin.
Plugin developers should be able to fix the breaking changes to the YAML tests
by adding apply plugin: 'elasticsearch.yaml-rest-test' and moving the YAML tests
under a yamlRestTest folder (instead of test)
Backport of #58582 to 7.x branch.
This commit adds a new metadata field mapper that validates,
that a document has exactly a single timestamp value in the data stream timestamp field and
that the timestamp field mapping only has `type`, `meta` or `format` attributes configured.
Other attributes can affect the guarantee that an index with this meta field mapper has a
useable timestamp field.
The MetadataCreateIndexService inserts a data stream timestamp field mapper whenever
a new backing index of a data stream is created.
Relates to #53100
The read-only-allow-delete block is not really under the user's control
since Elasticsearch adds/removes it automatically. This commit removes
support for it from the new API for adding blocks to indices that was
introduced in #58094.
Backport of #58231 to 7.x branch.
Change update index setting and put mapping api
to execute on all backing indices if data stream is targeted.
Relates #53100
Today the disk-based shard allocator accounts for incoming shards by
subtracting the estimated size of the incoming shard from the free space on the
node. This is an overly conservative estimate if the incoming shard has almost
finished its recovery since in that case it is already consuming most of the
disk space it needs.
This change adds to the shard stats a measure of how much larger each store is
expected to grow, computed from the ongoing recovery, and uses this to account
for the disk usage of incoming shards more accurately.
Backport of #58029 to 7.x
* Picky picky
* Missing type
This PR implements recursive mapping merging for composable index templates.
When creating an index, we perform the following:
* Add each component template mapping in order, merging each one in after the
last.
* Merge in the index template mappings (if present).
* Merge in the mappings on the index request itself (if present).
Some principles:
* All 'structural' changes are disallowed (but everything else is fine). An
object mapper can never be changed between `type: object` and `type: nested`. A
field mapper can never be changed to an object mapper, and vice versa.
* Generally, each section is merged recursively. This includes `object`
mappings, as well as root options like `dynamic_templates` and `meta`. Once we
reach 'leaf components' like field definitions, they always overwrite an
existing one instead of being merged.
Relates to #53101.
Adds an API for putting an index block in place, which also ensures for write blocks that, once successfully returning to
the user, all shards of the index are properly accounting for the block, for example that all in-flight writes to an index have
been completed after adding the write block.
This API allows coordinating more complex workflows, where it is crucial that an index is no longer receiving writes after
the API completes, useful for example when marking an index as read-only during an upgrade in order to reindex its
documents.
Implements a new histogram aggregation called `variable_width_histogram` which
dynamically determines bucket intervals based on document groupings. These
groups are determined by running a one-pass clustering algorithm on each shard
and then reducing each shard's clusters using an agglomerative
clustering algorithm.
This PR addresses #9572.
The shard-level clustering is done in one pass to minimize memory overhead. The
algorithm was lightly inspired by
[this paper](https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/abstract/document/1198387). It fetches
a small number of documents to sample the data and determine initial clusters.
Subsequent documents are then placed into one of these clusters, or a new one
if they are an outlier. This algorithm is described in more details in the
aggregation's docs.
At reduce time, a
[hierarchical agglomerative clustering](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hierarchical_clustering)
algorithm inspired by [this paper](https://arxiv.org/abs/1802.00304)
continually merges the closest buckets from all shards (based on their
centroids) until the target number of buckets is reached.
The final values produced by this aggregation are approximate. Each bucket's
min value is used as its key in the histogram. Furthermore, buckets are merged
based on their centroids and not their bounds. So it is possible that adjacent
buckets will overlap after reduction. Because each bucket's key is its min,
this overlap is not shown in the final histogram. However, when such overlap
occurs, we set the key of the bucket with the larger centroid to the midpoint
between its minimum and the smaller bucket’s maximum:
`min[large] = (min[large] + max[small]) / 2`. This heuristic is expected to
increases the accuracy of the clustering.
Nodes are unable to share centroids during the shard-level clustering phase. In
the future, resolving https://github.com/elastic/elasticsearch/issues/50863
would let us solve this issue.
It doesn’t make sense for this aggregation to support the `min_doc_count`
parameter, since clusters are determined dynamically. The `order` parameter is
not supported here to keep this large PR from becoming too complex.
Co-authored-by: James Dorfman <jamesdorfman@users.noreply.github.com>
Follow-up to 35aecf4c9aa. Somehow I missed the fact that there's an ILM
API named `retry`, which is a keyword in Ruby. I've removed it from the
keywords list.
If an API name (or components of a name) overlaps with a reserved word in
the programming language for an ES client, then it's possible that the code
that is generated from the API will not compile. This PR adds validation to
check for such overlaps.
Backporting #58096 to 7.x branch.
Relates to #53100
* use mapping source direcly instead of using mapper service to extract the relevant mapping details
* moved assertion to TimestampField class and added helper method for tests
* Improved logic that inserts timestamp field mapping into an mapping.
If the timestamp field path consisted out of object fields and
if the final mapping did not contain the parent field then an error
occurred, because the prior logic assumed that the object field existed.
This change allows to use an `index_filter` in the
field capabilities API. Indices are filtered from
the response if the provided query rewrites to `match_none`
on every shard:
````
GET metrics-*
{
"index_filter": {
"bool": {
"must": [
"range": {
"@timestamp": {
"gt": "2019"
}
}
}
}
}
````
The filtering is done on a best-effort basis, it uses the can match phase
to rewrite queries to `match_none` instead of fully executing the request.
The first shard that can match the filter is used to create the field
capabilities response for the entire index.
Closes#56195
The dangling_indices.import API name could cause issues in the client
libs because import is a reserved word in many languages. Rename the
API to avoid this, and rename the other APIs for consistency.
Related to #48366.
This builds an `auto_date_histogram` aggregator that natively aggregates
from many buckets and uses it when the `auto_date_histogram` used to use
`asMultiBucketAggregator` which should save a significant amount of
memory in those cases. In particular, this happens when
`auto_date_histogram` is a sub-aggregator of a multi-bucketing aggregator
like `terms` or `histogram` or `filters`. For the most part we preserve
the original implementation when `auto_date_histogram` only collects from
a single bucket.
It isn't possible to "just port the aggregator" without taking a pretty
significant performance hit because we used to rewrite all of the
buckets every time we switched to a coarser and coarser rounding
configuration. Without some major surgery to how to delay sub-aggs
we'd end up rewriting the delay list zillions of time if there are many
buckets.
The multi-bucket version of the aggregator has a "budget" of "wasted"
buckets and only rewrites all of the buckets when we exceed that budget.
Now that we don't rebucket every time we increase the rounding we can no
longer get an accurate count of the number of buckets! So instead the
aggregator uses an estimate of the number of buckets to trigger switching
to a coarser rounding. This estimate is likely to be *terrible* when
buckets are far apart compared to the rounding. So it also uses the
difference between the first and last bucket to trigger switching to a
coarser rounding. Which covers for the shortcomings of the bucket
estimation technique pretty well. It also causes the aggregator to emit
fewer buckets in cases where they'd be reduced together on the
coordinating node. This is wonderful! But probably fairly rare.
All of that does buy us some speed improvements when the aggregator is
a child of multi-bucket aggregator:
Without metrics or time zone: 25% faster
With metrics: 15% faster
With time zone: 22% faster
Relates to #56487
Backport of #50920. Part of #48366. Implement an API for listing,
importing and deleting dangling indices.
Co-authored-by: David Turner <david.turner@elastic.co>
Before #57042 the max_buckets test would consistently pass because the
request would consistently fail. In particular, the request would fail on
the data node. After #57042 it only fails on the coordinating node. When
the max_buckets test is run in a mixed version cluster it consistently
fails on *either* the data node or the coordinating node. Except when
the coordinating node is missing #43095. In that case if the one data
node has #57042 and one does not, *and* the one that doesn't gets the
request first, fails it as expected, and then the coordinating node
retries the request on the node with #57042. When that happens the
request fails mysteriously with "partial shard failures" as the error
message but not partial failures reported. This is *exactly* the bug
fixed in #43095.
This updates the test to be skipped in mixed version clusters without
#43095 because they *sometimes* fail the test spuriously. The request
fails in those cases, just like we expect, but with a mysterious error
message.
Closes#57657
We keep a static list of meta-fields: META_FIELDS_BEFORE_7_8
as it was before.
This is done to ensure the backwards compatability with pre 7.8 nodes.
Closes#57831
When you run a `significant_terms` aggregation on a field and it *is*
mapped but there aren't any values for it then the count of the
documents that match the query on that shard still have to be added to
the overall doc count. I broke that in #57361. This fixes that.
Closes#57402
Merges the remaining implementation of `significant_terms` into `terms`
so that we can more easilly make them work properly without
`asMultiBucketAggregator` which *should* save memory and speed them up.
Relates #56487
When the `terms` agg runs against strings and uses global ordinals it
has an optimization when it collects segments that only ever have a
single value for the particular string. This is *very* common. But I
broke it in #57241. This fixes that optimization and adds `debug`
information that you can use to see how often we collect segments of
each type. And adds a test to make sure that I don't break the
optimization again.
We also had a specialiation for when there isn't a filter on the terms
to aggregate. I had removed that specialization in #57241 which resulted
in some slow down as well. This adds it back but in a more clear way.
And, hopefully, a way that is marginally faster when there *is* a
filter.
Closes#57407
This saves some memory when the `histogram` aggregation is not a top
level aggregation by dropping `asMultiBucketAggregator` in favor of
natively implementing multi-bucket storage in the aggregator. For the
most part this just uses the `LongKeyedBucketOrds` that we built the
first time we did this.
Backport of #56878 to 7.x branch.
With this change the following APIs will be able to resolve data streams:
get index, get mappings and ilm explain APIs.
Relates to #53100
Relates: elastic/elasticsearch#55014
This commit deprecates the local param in get_mapping.json.
This parameter is a no-op and field mappings are always retrieved locally.
(cherry picked from commit 0b041cccd894f01d723fb2979f70c1cf279700a6)
When the `terms` enum operates on non-numeric data it can collect it via
global ordinals. It actually has two separate collection strategies for,
one "dense" and one "remapping". Each of *those* strategies has two
"iteration" strategies that it uses to build buckets, depending on
whether or not we need buckets with `0` docs in them. Previously this
was done with several `null` checks and never really explained. This
change replaces those checks with two `CollectionStrategy` classes which
have good stuff like documentation.
Backporting #56888 to 7.x branch.
Limit the creation of data streams only for namespaces that have a composable template with a data stream definition.
This way we ensure that mappings/settings have been specified and will be used at data stream creation and data stream rollover.
Also remove `timestamp_field` parameter from create data stream request and
let the create data stream api resolve the timestamp field
from the data stream definition snippet inside a composable template.
Relates to #53100
This saves memory when running numeric significant terms which are not
at the top level by merging its collection into numeric terms and relying
on the optimization that we made in #55873.
Fixes for the REST specification specific to 7.x
* remove ignore "cat.thread_pool.json" and add the "" as valid option. #55984 deprecated this field since it these params here have no effect on this specific API
* remove ignore "indices.put_mapping.json" by adding the required / in the path to pass validation.
Changes:
* Adds API reference docs for the delete snapshot repo API.
* Corrects an error in the delete snapshot repo API spec. Comma-separated
repository names are not supported.
* Relocates the existing delete snapshot repo API example docs.
When `date_histogram` is a sub-aggregator it used to allocate a bunch of
objects for every one of it's parent's buckets. This uses the data
structures that we built in #55873 rework the `date_histogram`
aggregator instead of all of the allocation.
Part of #56487
In KeystoreWrapper class we determine if the error to decrypt a
given keystore is caused by a wrong password based on the exception
that the SunJCE implementation of AES is
throwing(AEADBadTagException). Other implementations from other
Security Providers fail with a different exception and as such we
cannot differentiate between a corrupted file and a wrong password
in a foolproof way.
As in other tests such as in
KeyStoreWrapperTests#testDecryptKeyStoreWithWrongPassword
we handle this by matching both possible exception messages.
This is another part of the breakup of the massive BuildPlugin. This PR
moves the code for configuring publications to a separate plugin. Most
of the time these publications are jar files, but this also supports the
zip publication we have for integ tests.
This adds a few things to the `breakdown` of the profiler:
* `histogram` aggregations now contain `total_buckets` which is the
count of buckets that they collected. This could be useful when
debugging a histogram inside of another bucketing agg that is fairly
selective.
* All bucketing aggs that can delay their sub-aggregations will now add
a list of delayed sub-aggregations. This is useful because we
sometimes have fairly involved logic around which sub-aggregations get
delayed and this will save you from having to guess.
* Aggregtations wrapped in the `MultiBucketAggregatorWrapper` can't
accurately add anything to the breakdown. Instead they the wrapper
adds a marker entry `"multi_bucket_aggregator_wrapper": true` so we
can be quickly pick out such aggregations when debugging.
It also fixes a bug where `_count` breakdown entries were contributing
to the overall `time_in_nanos`. They didn't add a large amount of time
so it is unlikely that this caused a big problem, but I was there.
To support the arbitrary breakdown data this reworks the profiler so
that the `breakdown` can contain any data that is supported by
`StreamOutput#writeGenericValue(Object)` and
`XContentBuilder#value(Object)`.
This commit allows the JSON schema's documentation.url property to have a null value.
This can useful for cases where a feature is under development, and does not have
documentation published yet.
This commit also adds a documentation.url for two ml resources.
Backport: #55377
This commit adds the ability to auto create data streams using index templates v2.
Index templates (v2) now have a data_steam field that includes a timestamp field,
if provided and index name matches with that template then a data stream
(plus first backing index) is auto created.
Relates to #53100
This commit removes the `prefer_v2_templates` flag and setting. This was a brief setting that
allowed specifying whether V1 or V2 template should be used when an index is created. It has been
removed in favor of V2 templates always having priority.
Relates to #53101Resolves#56528
This is not a breaking change because this flag was never in a released version.
`auto_date_histogram` was returning the incorrect `interval` because
of a combination of two things:
1. When pipeline aggregations rewrote `auto_date_histogram` we reset the
interval to 1. Oops. Fixed that.
2. *Every* bucket aggregation was rewriting its buckets as though there
was a pipeline aggregation even if there aren't any. This is a bit
silly so we skip that too.
Closes#56116
Only run the tests verifyin the overlapping index templates when there is
no `global` index template (ie. when the default shards are not changed)
(cherry picked from commit e256becad7650018ed6687d6f4ddba5e255f6b29)
Signed-off-by: Andrei Dan <andrei.dan@elastic.co>
This removed the specification of `order` as it is not a parameter of the
v2 put template api (the priority is the equivalent of `order` and is
defined in the body) and add a bit of description for the `cause` parameter
(which is currently used as a cluster update task tracking)
(cherry picked from commit e3e9782b2059e28bc4a08be2232c1e5baecad3d6)
Signed-off-by: Andrei Dan <andrei.dan@elastic.co>
This adds a new api to simulate matching the given index name against the
index templates in the system.
The syntax for the new API takes the following form:
POST _index_template/_simulate_index/{index_name}
{
"index_patterns": ["logs-*"],
"priority": 15,
"template": {
"settings": {
"number_of_shards": 3
}
...
}
}
Where the body is optional, but we support the entire body used by the
PUT _index_template/{name} api. When the body is specified we'll simulate
matching the given index against a system that'd have the given index
template together with the index templates that exist in the system.
The response, in both cases, will return the matching template's resolved
settings, mappings and aliases, together with a special field that'll print any
overlapping templates and their corresponding index patterns.
(cherry picked from commit 1a5845edce1f445c58e094e9a3b6792e21e543b0)
Signed-off-by: Andrei Dan <andrei.dan@elastic.co>
This adds a validation to VSParserHelper to ensure that a field or
script or both are specified by the user. This is technically
required today already, but throws an exception much deeper
in the agg framework and has a very unintuitive error for the user
(as well as eating more resources instead of failing early)
A JSON schema was recently introduced for the REST API specification. #54252
This PR introduces a 3rd party validation tool to ensure that the
REST specification conforms to the schema.
The task is applied to the 3 projects that contain REST API specifications.
The plugin wires this task into the precommit commit task, and should be
considered as part of the public API for the build tools for any plugin
developer to contribute their plugin's specification.
An ignore parameter has been introduced for the task to allow specific
file to be ignored from the validation. The ignored files in this PR
will soon get issues logged and a link so they can be fixed.
Closes#54314
This commit adds a new querystring parameter on the following APIs:
- Index
- Update
- Bulk
- Create Index
- Rollover
These APIs now support a `?prefer_v2_templates=true|false` flag. This flag changes the preference
creation to use either V2 index templates or V1 templates. This flag defaults to `false` and will be
changed to `true` for 8.0+ in subsequent work.
Additionally, setting this flag internally sets the `index.prefer_v2_templates` index-level setting.
This setting is used so that actions that automatically create a new index (things like rollover
initiated by ILM) will inherit the preference from the original index. This setting is dynamic so
that a transition from v1 to v2 templates can occur for long-running indices grouped by an alias
performing periodic rollover.
This also adds support for sending this parameter to the High Level Rest Client.
Relates to #53101
Backport from: #54726
The INCLUDE_DATA_STREAMS indices option controls whether data streams can be resolved in an api for both concrete names and wildcard expressions. If data streams cannot be resolved then a 400 error is returned indicating that data streams cannot be used.
In this pr, the INCLUDE_DATA_STREAMS indices option is enabled in the following APIs: search, msearch, refresh, index (op_type create only) and bulk (index requests with op type create only). In a subsequent later change, we will determine which other APIs need to be able to resolve data streams and enable the INCLUDE_DATA_STREAMS indices option for these APIs.
Whether an api resolve all backing indices of a data stream or the latest index of a data stream (write index) depends on the IndexNameExpressionResolver.Context.isResolveToWriteIndex().
If isResolveToWriteIndex() returns true then data streams resolve to the latest index (for example: index api) and otherwise a data stream resolves to all backing indices of a data stream (for example: search api).
Relates to #53100
* Add ValuesSource Registry and associated logic (#54281)
* Remove ValuesSourceType argument to ValuesSourceAggregationBuilder (#48638)
* ValuesSourceRegistry Prototype (#48758)
* Remove generics from ValuesSource related classes (#49606)
* fix percentile aggregation tests (#50712)
* Basic thread safety for ValuesSourceRegistry (#50340)
* Remove target value type from ValuesSourceAggregationBuilder (#49943)
* Cleanup default values source type (#50992)
* CoreValuesSourceType no longer implements Writable (#51276)
* Remove genereics & hard coded ValuesSource references from Matrix Stats (#51131)
* Put values source types on fields (#51503)
* Remove VST Any (#51539)
* Rewire terms agg to use new VS registry (#51182)
Also adds some basic AggTestCases for untested code
paths (and boilerplate for future tests once the IT are
converted over)
* Wire Cardinality aggregation to work with the ValuesSourceRegistry (#51337)
* Wire Percentiles aggregator into new VS framework (#51639)
This required a bit of a refactor to percentiles itself. Before,
the Builder would switch on the chosen algo to generate an
algo-specific factory. This doesn't work (or at least, would be
difficult) in the new VS framework.
This refactor consolidates both factories together and introduces
a PercentilesConfig object to act as a standardized way to pass
algo-specific parameters through the factory. This object
is then used when deciding which kind of aggregator to create
Note: CoreValuesSourceType.HISTOGRAM still lives in core, and will
be moved in a subsequent PR.
* Remove generics and target value type from MultiVSAB (#51647)
* fix checkstyle after merge (#52008)
* Plumb ValuesSourceRegistry through to QuerySearchContext (#51710)
* Convert RareTerms to new VS registry (#52166)
* Wire up Value Count (#52225)
* Wire up Max & Min aggregations (#52219)
* ValuesSource refactoring: Wire up Sum aggregation (#52571)
* ValuesSource refactoring: Wire up SigTerms aggregation (#52590)
* Soft immutability for VSConfig (#52729)
* Unmute testSupportedFieldTypes, fix Percentiles/Ranks/Terms tests (#52734)
Also fixes Percentiles which was incorrectly specified to only accept
numeric, but in fact also accepts Boolean and Date (because those are
numeric on master - thanks `testSupportedFieldTypes` for catching it!)
* VS refactoring: Wire up stats aggregation (#52891)
* ValuesSource refactoring: Wire up string_stats aggregation (#52875)
* VS refactoring: Wire up median (MAD) aggregation (#52945)
* fix valuesourcetype issue with constant_keyword field (#53041)x-pack/plugin/rollup/src/main/java/org/elasticsearch/xpack/rollup/job/RollupIndexer.java
this commit implements `getValuesSourceType` for
the ConstantKeyword field type.
master was merged into feature/extensible-values-source
introducing a new field type that was not implementing
`getValuesSourceType`.
* ValuesSource refactoring: Wire up Avg aggregation (#52752)
* Wire PercentileRanks aggregator into new VS framework (#51693)
* Add a VSConfig resolver for aggregations not using the registry (#53038)
* Vs refactor wire up ranges and date ranges (#52918)
* Wire up geo_bounds aggregation to ValuesSourceRegistry (#53034)
This commit updates the geo_bounds aggregation to depend
on registering itself in the ValuesSourceRegistry
relates #42949.
* VS refactoring: convert Boxplot to new registry (#53132)
* Wire-up geotile_grid and geohash_grid to ValuesSourceRegistry (#53037)
This commit updates the geo*_grid aggregations to depend
on registering itself in the ValuesSourceRegistry
relates to the values-source refactoring meta issue #42949.
* Wire-up geo_centroid agg to ValuesSourceRegistry (#53040)
This commit updates the geo_centroid aggregation to depend
on registering itself in the ValuesSourceRegistry.
relates to the values-source refactoring meta issue #42949.
* Fix type tests for Missing aggregation (#53501)
* ValuesSource Refactor: move histo VSType into XPack module (#53298)
- Introduces a new API (`getBareAggregatorRegistrar()`) which allows plugins to register aggregations against existing agg definitions defined in Core.
- This moves the histogram VSType over to XPack where it belongs. `getHistogramValues()` still remains as a Core concept
- Moves the histo-specific bits over to xpack (e.g. the actual aggregator logic). This requires extra boilerplate since we need to create a new "Analytics" Percentile/Rank aggregators to deal with the histo field. Doubly-so since percentiles/ranks are extra boiler-plate'y... should be much lighter for other aggs
* Wire up DateHistogram to the ValuesSourceRegistry (#53484)
* Vs refactor parser cleanup (#53198)
Co-authored-by: Zachary Tong <polyfractal@elastic.co>
Co-authored-by: Zachary Tong <zach@elastic.co>
Co-authored-by: Christos Soulios <1561376+csoulios@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Tal Levy <JubBoy333@gmail.com>
* First batch of easy fixes
* Remove List.of from ValuesSourceRegistry
Note that we intend to have a follow up PR dealing with the mutability
of the registry, so I didn't even try to address that here.
* More compiler fixes
* More compiler fixes
* More compiler fixes
* Precommit is happy and so am I
* Add new Core VSTs to tests
* Disabled supported type test on SigTerms until we can backport it's fix
* fix checkstyle
* Fix test failure from semantic merge issue
* Fix some metaData->metadata replacements that got lost
* Fix list of supported types for MinAggregator
* Fix list of supported types for Avg
* remove unused import
Co-authored-by: Zachary Tong <polyfractal@elastic.co>
Co-authored-by: Zachary Tong <zach@elastic.co>
Co-authored-by: Christos Soulios <1561376+csoulios@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Tal Levy <JubBoy333@gmail.com>
Modify the value of nowInMillis in queryShardContext to current timestamp, because the
value will be used lately when validating the filtered alias which uses now in a date_nanos
range query.
With this change, when a task is canceled, the task manager will cancel
not only its direct child tasks but all also its descendant tasks.
Closes#50990
The secure_settings_password was never taken into consideration in
the ReloadSecureSettings API. This commit fixes that and adds
necessary REST layer testing. Doing so, it also:
- Allows TestClusters to have a password protected keystore
so that it can be set for tests.
- Adds a parameter to the run task so that elastisearch can
be run with a password protected keystore from source.
The usage of local parameter for GetFieldMappingRequest has been removed from the underlying transport action since v2.0.
This PR deprecates the parameter from rest layer. It will be removed in next major version.
* HLRC support for Index Templates V2 (#54838)
* HLRC support for Index Templates V2
This change adds High Level Rest Client support for Index Templates V2.
Relates to #53101
* fixed compilation error
Co-authored-by: Elastic Machine <elasticmachine@users.noreply.github.com>
These tests do CRUD for component templates, however, for 7.7 some changes weren't backported in the
`_doc` wrapping/unwrapping done for the APIs, this can cause test failures.
This bumps the minimum version for these tests to 7.8, which is okay because component templates are
hidden behind a flag and have no compatibility guarantees for 7.7.
Relates to #53101
We occasionally add a global template for our YAML tests, and this can cause warnings for these
template tests. This commit adds these warnings so they don't cause test failures.
Resolves#54822
Co-authored-by: Elastic Machine <elasticmachine@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Elastic Machine <elasticmachine@users.noreply.github.com>
This commit introduces a new `geo` module that is intended
to be contain all the geo-spatial-specific features in server.
As a first step, the responsibility of registering the geo_shape
field mapper is moved to this module.
Co-authored-by: Nicholas Knize <nknize@gmail.com>
This replaces the last bit of validation that pipeline aggregations
performed on the data nodes with explicit checks in a few
`PipelineAggregationBuilders`. We were *already* catching these
validation errors for pipeline aggregations that require that their
parent be squentially ordered. This just adds validation for pipelines
that require *any* parent like `bucket_selector` and `bucket_sort`.
There were some failures on 7.x of field collapse tests,
where total hits count was less then expected.
This adds an additional test to check total hits count
before field collapse queries to understand if the problem
is with field collapsing or with simply that writes have
not been finished yet
Relates to #52416
Today when canceling a task we broadcast ban/unban requests to all nodes
in the cluster. This strategy does not scale well for hierarchical
cancellation. With this change, we will track outstanding child requests
and broadcast the cancellation to only nodes that have outstanding child
tasks. This change also prevents a parent task from sending child
requests once it got canceled.
Relates #50990
Supersedes #51157
Co-authored-by: Igor Motov <igor@motovs.org>
Co-authored-by: Yannick Welsch <yannick@welsch.lu>
* Use V2 index templates during index creation
This commit changes our index creation code to use (and favor!) V2 index templates during index
creation. The creation precedence goes like so, in order of precedence:
- Existing source `IndexMetadata` - for example, when recovering from a peer or a shrink/split/clone
where index templates should not be applied
- A matching V2 index template, if one is found
- When a V2 template is found, all component templates (in the `composed_of` field) are applied
in the order that they appear, with the index template having the 2nd highest precedence (the
create index request always has the top priority when it comes to index settings)
- All matching V1 templates (the old style)
This also adds index template validation when `PUT`-ing a new v2 index template (because this was
required) and ensures that all index and component templates specify *no* top-level mapping type (it
is automatically added when the template is added to the cluster state).
This does not yet implement fine-grained component template merging of mappings, where we favor
merging only a single field's configuration, that will be done in subsequent work.
This also keeps the existing hidden index behavior present for v1 templates, where a hidden index
will match v2 index templates unless they are global (`*`) templates.
Relates to #53101
- Consolidates HDR/TDigest factories into a single factory
- Consolidates most HDR/TDigest builder into an abstract builder
- Deprecates method(), compression(), numSigFig() in favor of a new
unified PercentileConfig object
- Disallows setting algo options that don't apply to current algo
The unified config method carries both the method and algo-specific
setting. This provides a mechanism to reject settings that apply
to the wrong algorithm. For BWC the old methods are retained
but marked as deprecated, and can be removed in future versions.
Co-authored-by: Mark Tozzi <mark.tozzi@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Mark Tozzi <mark.tozzi@gmail.com>