When running in GCE platform, an instance has access to:
http://metadata.google.internal/computeMetadata/v1/instance/network-interfaces/0/ip
Which gives back the private IP address, for example `10.240.0.2`.
http://metadata.google.internal/computeMetadata/v1/instance/network-interfaces/0/externalIp
Gives back the public Ip address, for example `130.211.108.21`.
As we have for `ec2`, we can support new network host settings:
* `_gce:privateIp:X_`: The private IP address of the machine for a given network interface.
* `_gce:hostname_`: The hostname of the machine.
* `_gce_`: Same as `_gce:privateIp:0_` (recommended).
Closes#13605.
Closes#13590.
BTW resolveIfPossible now throws IOException so code is also updated for ec2 discovery and
some basic tests have been added.
With 2.0, we now bind to `localhost` by default instead of binding to the network card and use its IP address.
When the discovery plugin gets from AWS API the list of nodes that should form the cluster, this list is pinged then. But as each node is bound to `localhost`, ping does not get an answer and the node elects itself as the master node.
`network.host` must be set.
Closes#13589.
Before this commit he tests always run bin/plugin as root which is somewhat
unrealistic and causes trouble (log files owned by root instead of
elasticsearch). After this commit `bin/plugin` runs as root when elasticsearch
is installed via the repository and as elasticsearch otherwise which is much
more realistic.
This also adds extra timeout to starting elasticsearch which is required
when all the plugins are installed. And it fixes up a problem with logging
elasticsearch's log if elasticsearch doesn't start which came up multiple
time while debugging this problem.
Also adds docs recommending running `bin/plugin` as the user that owns the
Elasticsearch files or root if installed with the packages.
Closes#13557
Until now we had a cloud-azure plugin which is providing 3 distinct features:
* discovery on Azure
* snapshot/restore on Aure
* SMB store
This commit splits the plugin by feature so people can use either one or the other or both features.
Doc is updated accordingly.
With 2.0, we now bind to `localhost` by default instead of binding to the network card and use its IP address.
When the discovery plugin gets from Azure API the list of nodes that should form the cluster, this list is pinged then. But as each node is bound to `localhost`, ping does not get an answer and the node elects itself as the master node.
Closes#13591
Until now we had a cloud-aws plugin which is providing 2 disctinct features:
* discovery on EC2
* snapshot/restore on S3
This commit splits the plugin by feature so people can use either one or the other or both features.
Doc is updated accordingly.
The setting `plugin.types` is currently used to load plugins from the
classpath. This is necessary in tests, as well as the transport client.
This change removes the setting, and replaces it with the ability to
directly add plugins when building a transport client, as well as
infrastructure in the integration tests to specify which plugin classes
should be loaded on each node.
Multicast has known issues (see #12999 and #12993). This change moves
multicast into a plugin, and deprecates it in the docs. It also allows
for plugging in multiple zen ping implementations.
closes#13019
At the moment, when installing from an url, a user provides the plugin name on
the command line like:
* bin/plugin install [plugin-name] --url [url]
This can lead to problems when picking an already existing name from another
plugin, and can potentially overwrite plugins already installed with that name.
This, this PR introduces a mandatory `name` property to the plugin descriptor
file which replaces the name formerly provided by the user.
With the addition of the `name` property to the plugin descriptor file, the user
does not need to specify the plugin name any longer when installing from a file
or url. Because of this, all arguments to `plugin install` command are now
either treated as a symbolic name, a URL or a file without the need to specify
this with an explicit option.
The new syntax for `plugin install` is now:
bin/plugin install [name or url]
* downloads official plugin
bin/plugin install analysis-kuromoji
* downloads github plugin
bin/plugin install lmenezes/elasticsearch-kopf
* install from URL or file
bin/plugin install http://link.to/foo.zip
bin/plugin install file:/path/to/foo.zip
If the argument does not parse to a valid URL, it is assumed to be a name and the
download location is resolved like before. Regardless of the source location of
the plugin, it is extracted to a temporary directory and the `name` property from
the descriptor file is used to determine the final install location.
Relates to #12715
This move the `murmur3` field to the `mapper-murmur3` plugin and fixes its
defaults so that values will not be indexed by default, as the only purpose
of this field is to speed up `cardinality` aggregations on high-cardinality
string fields, which only requires doc values.
I also removed the `rehash` option from the `cardinality` aggregation as it
doesn't bring much value (rehashing is cheap) and allowed to remove the
coupling between the `cardinality` aggregation and the `murmur3` field.
Close#12874
* Centralised plugin docs in docs/plugins/
* Moved integrations into same docs
* Moved community clients into the clients section of the docs
* Removed docs/community
Closes#11734Closes#11724Closes#11636Closes#11635Closes#11632Closes#11630Closes#12046Closes#12438Closes#12579
The release and smoke test python scripts used to install
plugins in the old fashion.
Also the BATS testing suite installed/removed plugins in that
way. Here the marvel tests have been removed, as marvel currently
does not work with the master branch.
In addition documentation has been updated as well, where it was
still missing.