MappedFieldType is a combination of two concerns:
* an extension of lucene's FieldType, defining how a field should be indexed
* a set of query factory methods, defining how a field should be searched
We want to break these two concerns apart. This commit is a first step to doing this, breaking
the inheritance relationship between MappedFieldType and FieldType. MappedFieldType
instead has a series of boolean flags defining whether or not the field is searchable or
aggregatable, and FieldMapper has a separate FieldType passed to its constructor defining
how indexing should be done.
Relates to #56814
This commit adds an optional field, `description`, to all ingest processors
so that users can explain the purpose of the specific processor instance.
Closes#56000.
Ensures that InternalClusterInfoService's internally cached stats are refreshed whenever the
shard size or disk usage function (to mock out disk usage) are overridden.
Closes#57888
Fix broken numeric shard generations when reading them from the wire
or physically from the physical repository.
This should be the cheapest way to clean up broken shard generations
in a BwC and safe-to-backport manner for now. We can potentially
further optimize this by also not doing the checks on the generations
based on the versions we see in the `RepositoryData` but I don't think
it matters much since we will read `RepositoryData` from cache in almost
all cases.
Closes#57798
Before to determine if a field is meta-field, a static method of MapperService
isMetadataField was used. This method was using an outdated static list
of meta-fields.
This PR instead changes this method to the instance method that
is also aware of meta-fields in all registered plugins.
Related #38373, #41656Closes#24422
Improve efficiency of background indexer by allowing to add
an assertion for failures while they are produced to prevent
queuing them up.
Also, add non-blocking stop to the background indexer so that when
stopping multiple indexers we don't needlessly continue indexing
on some indexers while stopping another one.
Closes#57766
The test failed when it was running with 4 replicas and 3 indexing
threads. The recovering replicas can prevent the global checkpoint from
advancing. This commit increases the timeout to 60 seconds for this
suite and the check for no inflight requests.
Closes#57204
Almost every outbound message is serialized to buffers of 16k pagesize.
We were serializing these messages off the IO loop (and retaining the concrete message
instance as well) and would then enqueue it on the IO loop to be dealt with as soon as the
channel is ready.
1. This would cause buffers to be held onto for longer than necessary, causing less reuse on average.
2. If a channel was slow for some reason, not only would concrete message instances queue up for it, but also 16k of buffers would be reserved for each message until it would be written+flushed physically.
With this change, the serialization happens on the event loop which effectively limits the number of buffers that `N` IO-threads will ever use so long as messages are small and channels writable.
Also, this change dereferences the reference to the concrete outbound message as soon as it has been serialized to save some more on GC.
This reduces the GC time for a default PMC run by about 50% in experiments (3 nodes, 2G heap each, loopback ... obvious caveat is that GC isn't that heavy in the first place with recent changes but still a measurable gain).
I also expect it to be helpful for master node stability by causing less of a spike if master is e.g. hit by a large number of requests that are processed batched (e.g. shard snapshot status updates) and responded to in a short time frame all at once.
Obviously, the downside to this change is that it introduces more latency on the IO loop for the serialization. But since we read all of these messages on the IO loop as well I don't see it as much of a qualitative change really and the more predictable buffer use seems much more valuable relatively.
As the datastream information is stored in the `ClusterState.Metadata` we exposed
the `Metadata` to the `AsyncWaitStep#evaluateCondition` method in order for
the steps to be able to identify when a managed index is part of a DataStream.
If a managed index is part of a DataStream the rollover target is the DataStream
name and the highest generation index is the write index (ie. the rolled index).
(cherry picked from commit 6b410dfb78f3676fce1b7401f1628c1ca6fbd45a)
Signed-off-by: Andrei Dan <andrei.dan@elastic.co>
At some point, we changed the supported-type test to also catch
assertion errors. This has the side effect of also catching the
`fail()` call inside the try-catch, which silently smothered some
failures.
This modifies the test to throw at the end of the try-catch
block to prevent from accidentally catching itself.
Catching the AssertionError is convenient because there are other locations
that do throw an assertion in tests (due to hitting an assertion
before the exception is thrown) so I think we should keep it around.
Also includes a variety of fixes to other tests which were failing
but being silently smothered.
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.
* Add new circuitbreaker plugin and refactor CircuitBreakerService (#55695)
This commit lays the ground work for plugins supplying their own circuit breakers.
It adds a new interface: `CircuitBreakerPlugin`.
This interface provides methods for providing custom child CircuitBreaker objects. There are also facilities for allowing dynamic settings for the custom breakers.
With the refactor, circuit breakers are no longer replaced on setting changes. Instead, the two mutable settings themselves are `volatile`. Plugins that want to use their custom circuit breaker should keep a reference of their constructed breaker.
If an upgraded node is restarted multiple times without flushing a new
index commit, then we will wrongly exclude all commits from the starting
commits. This bug is reproducible with these minimal steps: (1) create
an empty index on 6.1.4 with translog retention disabled, (2) upgrade
the cluster to 7.7.0, (3) restart the upgraded the cluster. The problem
is that with the new translog policy can trim translog without having a
new index commit, while the existing commit still refers to the previous
translog generation.
Closes#57091
When we had multiple mapping types, an update to a field in one type had to be
propagated to the same field in all other types. This was done using the
Mapper.updateFieldType() method, called at the end of a merge. However, now
that we only have a single type per index, this method is unnecessary and can
be removed.
Relates to #41059
Backport of #56986
Closes#57168 by using `AggregatorTestCase#newIndexSearcher` in the
`AggregatorTestCase#testCase`. Without that global ordinals will
*sometimes* fail to work.
When slicing a releasable bytes reference we would create a new counter
every time and pass the original reference chain to the new slice on every
slice invocation. This would lead to extremely deep reference chains and
needlessly uses a dedicated counter for every slice when all the slices
eventually just refer to the same underlying bytes and `Releasable`.
This commit tracks the ref count wrapper with its releasable in a separate
object that can be passed around on every slicing, making the slices' tree
as flat as the original releasable bytes reference.
Also, we were needlessly creating a redundant releasable bytes reference from
a releasable bytes-stream-output that we never actually used for releasing (all code
that uses it just releases the stream itself instead).
Merging logic is currently split between FieldMapper, with its merge() method, and
MappedFieldType, which checks for merging compatibility. The compatibility checks
are called from a third class, MappingMergeValidator. This makes it difficult to reason
about what is or is not compatible in updates, and even what is in fact updateable - we
have a number of tests that check compatibility on changes in mapping configuration
that are not in fact possible.
This commit refactors the compatibility logic so that it all sits on FieldMapper, and
makes it called at merge time. It adds a new FieldMapperTestCase base class that
FieldMapper tests can extend, and moves the compatibility testing machinery from
FieldTypeTestCase to here.
Relates to #56814
Elasticsearch requires that a HttpRequest abstraction be implemented
by http modules before server processing. This abstraction controls when
underlying resources are released. This commit moves this abstraction to
be created immediately after content aggregation. This change will
enable follow-up work including moving Cors logic into the server
package and tracking bytes as they are aggregated from the network
level.
Add tracking for regular and multipart uploads.
Regular uploads are categorized as PUT.
Multi part uploads are categorized as POST.
The number of documents created for the test #testRequestStats
have been increased so all upload methods are exercised.
Backport of #56826
Add tracking for multipart and resumable uploads for GoogleCloudStorage.
For resumable uploads only the last request is taken into account for
billing, so that's the only request that's tracked.
Backport of #56821
Backporting #56585 to 7.x branch.
Adds tracking for the API calls performed by the GoogleCloudStorage
underlying SDK. It hooks an HttpResponseInterceptor to the SDK
transport layer and does http request filtering based on the URI
paths that we are interested to track. Unfortunately we cannot hook
a wrapper into the ServiceRPC interface since we're using different
levels of abstraction to implement retries during reads
(GoogleCloudStorageRetryingInputStream).
This merges the code for the `significant_terms` agg into the package
for the code for the `terms` agg. They are *super* entangled already,
this mostly just admits that to ourselves.
Precondition for the terms work in #56487
In a race condition, a search context could remain enlisted in
SearchService when an index is deleted, potentially causing the index
folder to not be cleaned up (for either lengthy searches or scrolls with
timeouts > 30 minutes or if the scroll is kept active).
Two spots that allow for some optimization:
* We are often creating a composite reference of just a single item in
the transport layer => special cased via static constructor to make sure we never do that
* Also removed the pointless case of an empty composite bytes ref
* `ByteBufferReference` is practically always created from a heap buffer these days so there
is no point of dealing with all the bounds checks and extra references to sliced buffers from that
and we can just use the underlying array directly
Right now all implementations of the `terms` agg allocate a new
`Aggregator` per bucket. This uses a bunch of memory. Exactly how much
isn't clear but each `Aggregator` ends up making its own objects to read
doc values which have non-trivial buffers. And it forces all of it
sub-aggregations to do the same. We allocate a new `Aggregator` per
bucket for two reasons:
1. We didn't have an appropriate data structure to track the
sub-ordinals of each parent bucket.
2. You can only make a single call to `runDeferredCollections(long...)`
per `Aggregator` which was the only way to delay collection of
sub-aggregations.
This change switches the method that builds aggregation results from
building them one at a time to building all of the results for the
entire aggregator at the same time.
It also adds a fairly simplistic data structure to track the sub-ordinals
for `long`-keyed buckets.
It uses both of those to power numeric `terms` aggregations and removes
the per-bucket allocation of their `Aggregator`. This fairly
substantially reduces memory consumption of numeric `terms` aggregations
that are not the "top level", especially when those aggregations contain
many sub-aggregations. It also is a pretty big speed up, especially when
the aggregation is under a non-selective aggregation like
the `date_histogram`.
I picked numeric `terms` aggregations because those have the simplest
implementation. At least, I could kind of fit it in my head. And I
haven't fully understood the "bytes"-based terms aggregations, but I
imagine I'll be able to make similar optimizations to them in follow up
changes.
Backport of: #56413
Allow cluster health api to resolve data streams and
automatically remove data streams after each test in
test cases extending from `ESIntegTestCase`
Relates to #53100
`FieldMapper#parseCreateField` accepts the parse context, plus a list of fields
as an output parameter. These fields are immediately added to the document
through `ParseContext#doc()`.
This commit simplifies the signature by removing the list of fields, and having
the mappers add the fields directly to `ParseContext#doc()`. I think this is
nicer for implementors, because previously fields could be added either through
the list, or the context (through `add`, `addWithKey`, etc.)
A FilterBlobContainer class was introduced in #55952 and it delegates
its behavior to a given BlobContainer while allowing to override
only necessary methods.
This commit replaces the existing BlobContainerWrapper class from
the test framework with the new FilterBlobContainer from core.
Backport of #56034.
Move includeDataStream flag from an IndicesOptions to IndexNameExpressionResolver.Context
as a dedicated field that callers to IndexNameExpressionResolver can set.
Also alter indices stats api to support data streams.
The rollover api uses this api and otherwise rolling over data stream does no longer work.
Relates to #53100
Using optimistic locking, add the ability to run a repository state
update task with a consistent view of the current repository data.
Allows for a follow-up to remove the snapshot INIT state.
* Allow Deleting Multiple Snapshots at Once (#55474)
Adds deleting multiple snapshots in one go without significantly changing the mechanics of snapshot deletes otherwise.
This change does not yet allow mixing snapshot delete and abort. Abort is still only allowed for a single snapshot delete by exact name.
In order to iterate through remote connections, the remote connection
manager maintains a local cache of connected nodes. Unfortunately this
is difficult in relationship with testing as it is inherently racy in
comparison to the parent connection manager map of connections.
This commit improves the relationship by only returning a cached
connection if it is still registered with the parent. If the connection
is not open, we will go to the slow path of allocating a iterator
directly from the parent.
There are no real users of `DeterministicTaskQueue#getExecutorService()` so we
can remove those public methods and expose the `ExecutorService` only through
the corresponding `ThreadPool`.
By forking off the `SAME` pool tasks and executing them in random order,
we are actually creating unrealisticc scenarios and missing the actual order
of operations (whatever task that puts the task on the `SAME` queue will always
run before the `SAME` queued task will be executed currently).
Also, added caching for the executors. It doesn't matter much, but saves some objects
and makes debugging a little easier because executor object ids make more sense.
Backports #55826 to 7.x
Modified AggregatorTestCase.searchAndReduce() method so that it returns an empty aggregation result when no documents have been inserted.
Also refactored several aggregation tests so they do not re-implement method AggregatorTestCase.testCase()
Fixes#55824
Currently a failed peer recovery action will fail an recovery. This
includes when the recovery fails due to potentially short lived
transient issues such as rejected exceptions or circuit breaking
errors.
This commit adds the concept of a retryable action. A retryable action
will be retryed in face of certain errors. The action will be retried
after an exponentially increasing backoff period. After defined time,
the action will timeout.
This commit only implements retries for responses that indicate the
target node has NOT executed the action.
Currently there is a clear mechanism to stub sending a request through
the transport. However, this is limited to testing exceptions on the
sender side. This commit reworks our transport related testing
infrastructure to allow stubbing request handling on the receiving side.
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)
After #53562, the `geo_shape` field mapper is registered within
a module. This opens the door for introducing a new `geo_shape`
field mapper into the Spatial Plugin that has doc-values support.
This is very much an extension of server's GeoShapeFieldMapper,
but with the addition of the doc values implementation.
This change folds the removal of the in-progress snapshot entry
into setting the safe repository generation. Outside of removing
an unnecessary cluster state update, this also has the advantage
of removing a somewhat inconsistent cluster state where the safe
repository generation points at `RepositoryData` that contains a
finished snapshot while it is still in-progress in the cluster
state, making it easier to reason about the state machine of
upcoming concurrent snapshot operations.
To read from GCS repositories we're currently using Google SDK's official BlobReadChannel,
which issues a new request every 2MB (default chunk size for BlobReadChannel) using range
requests, and fully downloads the chunk before exposing it to the returned InputStream. This
means that the SDK issues an awfully high number of requests to download large blobs.
Increasing the chunk size is not an option, as that will mean that an awfully high amount of
heap memory will be consumed by the download process.
The Google SDK does not provide the right abstractions for a streaming download. This PR
uses the lower-level primitives of the SDK to implement a streaming download, similar to what
S3's SDK does.
Also closes#55505
If more than 100 shard-follow tasks are trying to connect to the remote
cluster, then some of them will abort with "connect listener queue is
full". This is because we retry on ESRejectedExecutionException, but not
on RejectedExecutionException.
We don't really need `LinkedHashSet` here. We can assume that all the
entries are unique and just use a list and use the list utilities to
create the cheapest possible version of the list.
Also, this fixes a bug in `addSnapshot` which would mutate the existing
linked hash set on the current instance (fortunately this never caused a real world bug)
and brings the collection in line with the java docs on its getter that claim immutability.
Adds ranged read support for GCS repositories in order to enable searchable snapshot support
for GCS.
As part of this PR, I've extracted some of the test infrastructure to make sure that
GoogleCloudStorageBlobContainerRetriesTests and S3BlobContainerRetriesTests are covering
similar test (as I saw those diverging in what they cover)
In #55298 we saw a failure of `CoordinationStateTests#testSafety` in which a
single master-eligible node is bootstrapped, then rebooted as a
master-ineligible node (losing its persistent state) and then rebooted as a
master-eligible node and bootstrapped again.
This happens because this test loses too much of the persistent state; in fact
once bootstrapped the node would not allow itself to be bootstrapped again.
This commit adjusts the test logic to reflect this.
Closes#55298
Some aggregations, such as the Terms* family, will use an alternate
class to represent unmapped shard results (while the rest of the aggs
use the same object but with some form of "empty" or "nullish" values
to represent unmapped).
This was problematic with AbstractWireSerializingTestCase because it
expects the instanceReader to always match the original class. Instead,
we need to use the NamedWriteable version so that the registry
can be consulted for the proper deserialization reader.
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>
Today the voting config exclusions API accepts node filters and resolves them
to a collection of node IDs against the current cluster membership.
This is problematic since we may want to exclude nodes that are not currently
members of the cluster. For instance:
- if attempting to remove a flaky node from the cluster you cannot reliably
exclude it from the voting configuration since it may not reliably be a
member of the cluster
- if `cluster.auto_shrink_voting_configuration: false` then naively shrinking
the cluster will remove some nodes but will leaving their node IDs in the
voting configuration. The only way to clean up the voting configuration is to
grow the cluster back to its original size (potentially replacing some of the
voting configuration) and then use the exclusions API.
This commit adds an alternative API that accepts node names and node IDs but
not node filters in general, and deprecates the current node-filters-based API.
Relates #47990.
Backport of #50836 to 7.x.
Co-authored-by: zacharymorn <zacharymorn@gmail.com>
I've noticed that a lot of our tests are using deprecated static methods
from the Hamcrest matchers. While this is not a big deal in any
objective sense, it seems like a small good thing to reduce compilation
warnings and be ready for a new release of the matcher library if we
need to upgrade. I've also switched a few other methods in tests that
have drop-in replacements.
Currently forbidden apis accounts for 800+ tasks in the build. These
tasks are aggressively created by the plugin. In forbidden apis 3.0, we
will get task avoidance
(https://github.com/policeman-tools/forbidden-apis/pull/162), but we
need to ourselves use the same task avoidance mechanisms to not trigger
these task creations. This commit does that for our foribdden apis
usages, in preparation for upgrading to 3.0 when it is released.
We can be a little more efficient when aborting a snapshot. Since we know the new repository
data after finalizing the aborted snapshot when can pass it down to the snapshot completion listeners.
This way, we don't have to fork off to the snapshot threadpool to get the repository data when the listener completes and can directly submit the delete task with high priority straight from the cluster state thread.
Provides basic repository-level stats that will allow us to get some insight into how many
requests are actually being made by the underlying SDK. Currently only tracks GET and LIST
calls for S3 repositories. Most of the code is unfortunately boiler plate to add a new endpoint
that will help us better understand some of the low-level dynamics of searchable snapshots.
This is a first cut at giving NodeInfo the ability to carry a flexible
list of heterogeneous info responses. The trick is to be able to
serialize and deserialize an arbitrary list of blocks of information. It
is convenient to be able to deserialize into usable Java objects so that
we can aggregate nodes stats for the cluster stats endpoint.
In order to provide a little bit of clarity about which objects can and
can't be used as info blocks, I've introduced a new interface called
"ReportingService."
I have removed the hard-coded getters (e.g., getOs()) in favor of a
flexible method that can return heterogeneous kinds of info blocks
(e.g., getInfo(OsInfo.class)). Taking a class as an argument removes the
need to cast in the client code.
We added a fancy method to provide random realistic test data to the
reduction tests in #54910. This uses that to remove some of the more
esoteric machinations in the agg tests. This will marginally increase
the coverage of the serialiation tests and, more importantly, remove
some mysterious value generation code that only really made sense for
random reduction tests but was used all over the place. It doesn't, on
the other hand, make the tests shorter. Just *hopefully* more clear.
I only cleaned up a few tests this way. If we like this it'd probably be
worth grabbing others.
Instead delete the data streams manually, until client yaml test runners
have been updated to also delete all data streams after each yaml test.
Relates to #53100
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 commit moves the action name validation and circuit breaking into
the InboundAggregator. This work is valuable because it lays the
groundwork for incrementally circuit breaking as data is received.
This PR includes the follow behavioral change:
Handshakes contribute to circuit breaking, but cannot be broken. They
currently do not contribute nor are they broken.
Currently the TransportHandshaker has a specialized codepath for sending
a response. In other work, we are going to start having handshakes
contribute to circuit breaking (while not being breakable). This commit
moves in that direction by allowing the handshaker to responding using a
standard TcpTransportChannel similar to other requests.
This removes pipeline aggregators from the aggregation result tree
except for a single field used for backwards compatibility with pre-7.8
versions of Elasticsearch. That field isn't populated unless we are
serializing to pre-7.8 Elasticsearch. So, good news! We no longer build
pipeline aggregators on the data node. Most of the time.
This allows subclasses of `InternalAggregationTestCase` to make a `List`
of values to reduce so that it can make values that are realistic
*together*. The first use of this is with `InternalTTest` which uses it
to make results that don't cause their `sum` field to wrap. It'd likely
be useful for a ton of other aggs but just one for now.
`scripted_metric` did not work with cross cluster search because it
assumed that you'd never perform a partial reduction, serialize the
results, and then perform a final reduction. That
serialized-after-partial-reduction step was broken.
This is also required to support #54758.
This is a backport of #54803 for 7.x.
This pull request cherry picks the squashed commit from #54803 with the additional commits:
6f50c92 which adjusts master code to 7.x
a114549 to mute a failing ILM test (#54818)
48cbca1 and 50186b2 that cleans up and fixes the previous test
aae12bb that adds a missing feature flag (#54861)
6f330e3 that adds missing serialization bits (#54864)
bf72c02 that adjust the version in YAML tests
a51955f that adds some plumbing for the transport client used in integration tests
Co-authored-by: David Turner <david.turner@elastic.co>
Co-authored-by: Yannick Welsch <yannick@welsch.lu>
Co-authored-by: Lee Hinman <dakrone@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Andrei Dan <andrei.dan@elastic.co>
This should avoid REST failures caused by the inability to delete said
policy
Fix#54759
(cherry picked from commit 3ba5e02b713c03b1bdf14e0367a2bce68c35dd30)
We recently cleaned up the use of the word "metadata" across the
codebase. A few additional uses have trickled in, likely from
in-progress work. This commit cleans up these last few instances.
Relates #54519
Some field name constants were not updaten when we moved from "string" to "text"
and "keyword" fields. Renaming them makes it easier and faster to know which
field type is used in test subclassing this base test case.
Removes pipeline aggregations from the aggregation result tree as they
are no longer used. This stops us from building the pipeline aggregators
at all on data nodes except for backwards compatibility serialization.
This will save a tiny bit of space in the aggregation tree which is
lovely, but the biggest benefit is that it is a step towards simplifying
pipeline aggregators.
This only does about half of the work to remove the pipeline aggs from
the tree. Removing all of it would, well, double the size of the change
and make it harder to review.
This fixes pipeline aggregations used in cross cluster search from an older
version of Elasticsearch to a newer version of Elasticsearch. I broke
this in #53730 when I was too aggressive in shutting off serialization
of pipeline aggs. In particular, this comes up when the coordinating
node is pre-7.8.0 and the gateway node is on or after 7.8.0.
The fix is another step down the line to remove pipeline aggregators
from the aggregation tree. Sort of. It create a new
`List<PipelineAggregator>` member in `InternalAggregation` *but* it is
only used for bwc serialization and it is fed by the mechanism
established in #53730 to read the pipelines from the
Adds tests for supported ValuesSourceTypes, unmapped fields, scripting,
and the missing param. The tests for unmapped fields and scripting are
migrated from the StatsIT integration test
* Refactor nodes stats request builders to match requests (#54363)
* Remove hard-coded setters from NodesInfoRequestBuilder
* Remove hard-coded setters from NodesStatsRequest
* Use static imports to reduce clutter
* Remove uses of old info APIs
Use the same ES cluster as both an SP and an IDP and perform
IDP initiated and SP initiated SSO. The REST client plays the role
of both the Cloud UI and Kibana in these flows
Backport of #54215
* fix compilation issues
We previously checked for a 405 response, but on 7.x BWC tests may be hitting versions that don't
support the 405 response (returning 400 or 500), so be more lenient in those cases.
Relates to #54513
This is a follow up to a previous commit that renamed MetaData to
Metadata in all of the places. In that commit in master, we renamed
META_DATA to METADATA, but lost this on the backport. This commit
addresses that.
This is a simple naming change PR, to fix the fact that "metadata" is a
single English word, and for too long we have not followed general
naming conventions for it. We are also not consistent about it, for
example, METADATA instead of META_DATA if we were trying to be
consistent with MetaData (although METADATA is correct when considered
in the context of "metadata"). This was a simple find and replace across
the code base, only taking a few minutes to fix this naming issue
forever.
* Comprehensively test supported/unsupported field type:agg combinations (#52493)
This adds a test to AggregatorTestCase that allows us to programmatically
verify that an aggregator supports or does not support a particular
field type. It fetches the list of registered field type parsers,
creates a MappedFieldType from the parser and then attempts to run
a basic agg against the field.
A supplied list of supported VSTypes are then compared against the
output (success or exception) and suceeds or fails the test accordingly.
Co-Authored-By: Mark Tozzi <mark.tozzi@gmail.com>
* Skip fields that are not aggregatable
* Use newIndexSearcher() to avoid incompatible readers (#52723)
Lucene's `newSearcher()` can generate readers like ParallelCompositeReader
which we can't use. We need to instead use our helper `newIndexSearcher`
* Add warnings/errors when V2 templates would match same indices… (#54367)
* Add warnings/errors when V2 templates would match same indices as V1
With the introduction of V2 index templates, we want to warn users that templates they put in place
might not take precedence (because v2 templates are going to "win"). This adds this validation at
`PUT` time for both V1 and V2 templates with the following rules:
** When creating or updating a V2 template
- If the v2 template would match indices for an existing v1 template or templates, provide a
warning (through the deprecation logging so it shows up to the client) as well as logging the
warning
The v2 warning looks like:
```
index template [my-v2-template] has index patterns [foo-*] matching patterns from existing older
templates [old-v1-template,match-all-template] with patterns (old-v1-template =>
[foo*],match-all-template => [*]); this template [my-v2-template] will take
precedence during new index creation
```
** When creating a V1 template
- If the v1 template is for index patterns of `"*"` and a v2 template exists, warn that the v2
template may take precedence
- If the v1 template is for index patterns other than all indices, and a v2 template exists that
would match, throw an error preventing creation of the v1 template
** When updating a V1 template (without changing its existing `index_patterns`!)
- If the v1 template is for index patterns that would match an existing v2 template, warn that the
v2 template may take precedence.
The v1 warning looks like:
```
template [my-v1-template] has index patterns [*] matching patterns from existing index templates
[existing-v2-template] with patterns (existing-v2-template => [foo*]); this template [my-v1-template] may be ignored in favor of an index template at index creation time
```
And the v1 error looks like:
```
template [my-v1-template] has index patterns [foo*] matching patterns from existing index templates
[existing-v2-template] with patterns (existing-v2-template => [f*]), use index templates (/_index_template) instead
```
Relates to #53101
* Remove v2 index and component templates when cleaning up tests
* Finish half-finished comment sentence
* Guard template removal and ignore for earlier versions of ES
Co-authored-by: Elastic Machine <elasticmachine@users.noreply.github.com>
* Also ignore 500 errors when clearing index template v2 templates
Co-authored-by: Elastic Machine <elasticmachine@users.noreply.github.com>