With https://github.com/elastic/beats/pull/7075 Beats introduces state reporting for X-Pack Monitoring. The data sent up to Elasticsearch ends up stored in the following format.
```
"beats_state": {
"timestamp": "2018-07-05T07:21:03.581Z",
"state": {
"module": {
"count": 1,
"names": [
"http"
]
}
},
"beat": {
"uuid": "594039b5-6353-4d78-9bad-778ecc0fe83f",
"type": "metricbeat",
"version": "7.0.0-alpha1",
"name": "ruflin",
"host": "ruflin"
}
}
```
This PR adds the new fields to the template.
This is the first x-pack API we're adding to the high level REST client
so there is a lot to talk about here!
= Open source
The *client* for these APIs is open source. We're taking the previously
Elastic licensed files used for the `Request` and `Response` objects and
relicensing them under the Apache 2 license.
The implementation of these features is staying under the Elastic
license. This lines up with how the rest of the Elasticsearch language
clients work.
= Location of the new files
We're moving all of the `Request` and `Response` objects that we're
relicensing to the `x-pack/protocol` directory. We're adding a copy of
the Apache 2 license to the root fo the `x-pack/protocol` directory to
line up with the language in the root `LICENSE.txt` file. All files in
this directory will have the Apache 2 license header as well. We don't
want there to be any confusion. Even though the files are under the
`x-pack` directory, they are Apache 2 licensed.
We chose this particular directory layout because it keeps the X-Pack
stuff together and easier to think about.
= Location of the API in the REST client
We've been following the layout of the rest-api-spec files for other
APIs and we plan to do this for the X-Pack APIs with one exception:
we're dropping the `xpack` from the name of most of the APIs. So
`xpack.graph.explore` will become `graph().explore()` and
`xpack.license.get` will become `license().get()`.
`xpack.info` and `xpack.usage` are special here though because they
don't belong to any proper category. For now I'm just calling
`xpack.info` `xPackInfo()` and intend to call usage `xPackUsage` though
I'm not convinced that this is the final name for them. But it does get
us started.
= Jars, jars everywhere!
This change makes the `xpack:protocol` project a `compile` scoped
dependency of the `x-pack:plugin:core` and `client:rest-high-level`
projects. I intend to keep it a compile scoped dependency of
`x-pack:plugin:core` but I intend to bundle the contents of the protocol
jar into the `client:rest-high-level` jar in a follow up. This change
has grown large enough at this point.
In that followup I'll address javadoc issues as well.
= Breaking-Java
This breaks that transport client by a few classes around. We've
traditionally been ok with doing this to the transport client.
For historical reasons SQL restricts GROUP BY to only one field.
This commit removes the restriction and improves the test suite with
multi group by tests.
Close#31793
Register SQL as an xpackModule
Specify group for SQL QA to disambiguate projects (otherwise due to an
old Gradle bug (https://github.com/gradle/gradle/issues/847) any
subprojects under SQL QA will not be able to refer to SQL xpackModule
Co-authored-by: Alpar Torok <torokalpar@gmail.com>
If a get alias api call requests a specific alias pattern then
indices not having any matching aliases should not be included in the response.
This is a second attempt to fix this (first attempt was #28294).
The reason that the first attempt was reverted is because when xpack
security is enabled then index expression (like * or _all) are resolved
prior to when a request is processed in the get aliases transport action,
then `MetaData#findAliases` can't know whether requested all where
requested since it was already expanded in concrete alias names. This
change replaces aliases(...) replaceAliases(...) method on AliasesRequests
class and leave the aliases(...) method on subclasses. So there is a distinction
between when xpack security replaces aliases and a user setting aliases via
the transport or high level http client.
Closes#27763
Removes support for storing scripts without the usual json around the
script. So You can no longer do:
```
POST _scripts/<templatename>
{
"query": {
"match": {
"title": "{{query_string}}"
}
}
}
```
and must instead do:
```
POST _scripts/<templatename>
{
"script": {
"lang": "mustache",
"source": {
"query": {
"match": {
"title": "{{query_string}}"
}
}
}
}
}
```
This improves error reporting when you attempt to store a script but don't
quite get the syntax right. Before, there was a good chance that we'd
think of it as a "raw" template and just store it. Now we won't do that.
Nice.
It seems that java 11 tightened some validations with regard to
time formats. The random instance creator was setting an odd
time format to the data description which is invalid when run
with java 11. This commit changes it to a valid format.
Job persistent tasks with stale allocation IDs used to always be
considered as OPENING jobs in the ML job node allocation decision.
However, FAILED jobs are not relocated to other nodes, which leads
to them blocking up the nodes they failed on after node restarts.
FAILED jobs should not restrict how many other jobs can open on a
node, regardless of whether they are stale or not.
Closes#31794
Job updates or changes to calendars or filters may
result into updating the job process if it has been
running. To preserve the order of updates, process
updates are queued through the UpdateJobProcessNotifier
which is only running on the master node. All actions
performing such updates must run on the master node.
However, the CRUD actions for calendars and filters
are not master node actions. They have been submitting
the updates to the UpdateJobProcessNotifier even though
it might have not been running (given the action was
run on a non-master node). When that happens, the update
never reaches the process.
This commit fixes this problem by ensuring the notifier
runs on all nodes and by ensuring the process update action
gets the resources again before updating the process
(instead of having those resources passed in the request).
This ensures that even if the order of the updates
gets messed up, the latest update will read the latest
state of those resource and the process will get back
in sync.
This leaves us with 2 types of updates:
1. updates to the job config should happen on the master
node. This is because we cannot refetch the entire job
and update it. We need to know the parts that have been changed.
2. updates to resources the job uses. Those can be handled
on non-master nodes but they should be re-fetched by the
update process action.
Closes#31803
* Upgrade bouncycastle
Required to fix
`bcprov-jdk15on-1.55.jar; invalid manifest format `
on jdk 11
* Downgrade bouncycastle to avoid invalid manifest
* Add checksum for new jars
* Update tika permissions for jdk 11
* Mute test failing on jdk 11
* Add JDK11 to CI
* Thread#stop(Throwable) was removed
http://mail.openjdk.java.net/pipermail/core-libs-dev/2018-June/053536.html
* Disable failing tests #31456
* Temprorarily disable doc tests
To see if there are other failures on JDK11
* Only blacklist specific doc tests
* Disable only failing tests in ingest attachment plugin
* Mute failing HDFS tests #31498
* Mute failing lang-painless tests #31500
* Fix backwards compatability builds
Fix JAVA version to 10 for ES 6.3
* Add 6.x to bwx -> java10
* Prefix out and err from buildBwcVersion for readability
```
> Task :distribution:bwc:next-bugfix-snapshot:buildBwcVersion
[bwc] :buildSrc:compileJava
[bwc] WARNING: An illegal reflective access operation has occurred
[bwc] WARNING: Illegal reflective access by org.codehaus.groovy.reflection.CachedClass (file:/home/alpar/.gradle/wrapper/dists/gradle-4.5-all/cg9lyzfg3iwv6fa00os9gcgj4/gradle-4.5/lib/groovy-all-2.4.12.jar) to method java.lang.Object.finalize()
[bwc] WARNING: Please consider reporting this to the maintainers of org.codehaus.groovy.reflection.CachedClass
[bwc] WARNING: Use --illegal-access=warn to enable warnings of further illegal reflective access operations
[bwc] WARNING: All illegal access operations will be denied in a future release
[bwc] :buildSrc:compileGroovy
[bwc] :buildSrc:writeVersionProperties
[bwc] :buildSrc:processResources
[bwc] :buildSrc:classes
[bwc] :buildSrc:jar
```
* Also set RUNTIME_JAVA_HOME for bwcBuild
So that we can make sure it's not too new for the build to understand.
* Align bouncycastle dependency
* fix painles array tets
closes#31500
* Update jar checksums
* Keep 8/10 runtime/compile untill consensus builds on 11
* Only skip failing tests if running on Java 11
* Failures are dependent of compile java version not runtime
* Condition doc test exceptions on compiler java version as well
* Disable hdfs tests based on runtime java
* Set runtime java to minimum supported for bwc
* PR review
* Add comment with ticket for forbidden apis
The ack watch action has a check for currently executed watches, to make
sure that currently running watches cannot be acknowledged. This check
only checked on the coordinating node for watches being executed, but should
have checked the whole cluster using a WatcherStatsRequest, which is
being switched to in this commit.
As SecureSetting is extended from Setting, you can easily accidentally
use `SecureSetting.simpleString()` to read a secure setting instead of
`SecureSetting.secureString()`. This commit changes this behaviour in
some watcher notification services.
There is at most one model size stats document per bucket, but
during lookback a job can churn through many buckets very quickly.
This can lead to many cluster state updates if established model
memory needs to be updated for a given model size stats document.
This change rate limits established model memory updates to one
per job per 5 seconds. This is done by scheduling the updates 5
seconds in the future, but replacing the value to be written if
another model size stats document is received during the waiting
period. Updating the values in arrears like this means that the
last value received will be the one associated with the job in the
long term, whereas alternative approaches such as not updating the
value if a new value was close to the old value would not.
Today TransportService is tightly coupled with Transport since it
requires an instance of TransportService in order to receive responses
and send requests. This is mainly due to the Request and Response handlers
being maintained in TransportService but also because of the lack of a proper
callback interface.
This change moves request handler registry and response handler registration into
Transport and adds all necessary methods to `TransportConnectionListener` in order
to remove the `TransportService` dependency from `Transport`
Transport now accepts one or more `TransportConnectionListener` instances that are
executed sequentially in a blocking fashion.
Add hard limit to the number of items
a filter may have. This serves to protect
from excessive overhead due to the filters
taking too much memory or lookups becoming
too expensive.
This change adds stats about forecasts, to the jobstats api as well as xpack/_usage. The following
information is collected:
_xpack/ml/anomaly_detectors/{jobid|_all}/_stats:
- total number of forecasts
- memory statistics (mean/min/max)
- runtime statistics
- record statistics
- counts by status
_xpack/usage
- collected by job status as well as overall (_all):
- total number of forecasts
- number of jobs that have at least 1 forecast
- memory, runtime, record statistics
- counts by status
Fixes#31395
Previously the call to register a listener for settings updates was in
each individual service, rather than in the notification service
itself. This change ensures that each child of the notification service
gets registered with the settings update consumer.
Significantly improve the example snippets in the documentation.
The examples are part of the test suite and checked nightly.
To help readability, the existing dataset was extended (test_emp renamed
to emp plus library).
Improve output of JDBC tests to be consistent with the CLI
Add lenient flag to JDBC asserts to allow type widening (a long is
equivalent to a integer as long as the value is the same).
* Default resolveFromHash to Hasher.NOOP
This changes the default behavior when resolving the hashing
algorithm from unrecognised hash strings, which was introduced in
#31234
A hash string that doesn't start with an algorithm identifier can
either be a malformed/corrupted hash or a plaintext password when
Hasher.NOOP is used(against warnings).
Do not make assumptions about which of the two is true for such
strings and default to Hasher.NOOP. Hash verification will subsequently
fail for malformed hashes.
Finally, do not log the potentially malformed hash as this can very
well be a plaintext password.
Resolves#31697
Reverts 58cf95a06f
The xcontent parameters were not passed to the xcontent serialization
of the chain input for each chain. This could lead to wrongly stored
watches, which did not contain passwords but only their redacted counterparts, when an input inside of a chain input contained a password.
Proper cleanup of the docs snippet tests depends on detecting what is being tested (ML, Watcher, etc) this is deduced from the file path and so we must account for Windows and Unix path separators
testIncorrectPasswordHashingAlgorithm is based on the assumption
that the algorithm selected for the change password request is
different than the one selected for the NativeUsersStore.
pbkdf2_10000 is the same as pbkdf2 since 10000 is the default cost
factor for pbkdf2 and thus should not be used as an option for the
passwordHashingSettings.
Also make sure that the same algorithm is used for settings and
change password requests in other tests for consistency, even if
we expect to not reach the code where the algorithm is checked for
now.
Resolves#31696
Reverts 1c4f480794
Some proxies require all requests to have paths starting with / since
there are no relative paths at the HTTP connection level. Elasticsearch
assumes paths are absolute. In order to run rest tests against a cluster
behind such a proxy, set the system property
tests.rest.client_path_prefix to /.
* remove explicit wrapper task
It's created by Gradle and triggers a deprecation warning
Simplify configuration
* Upgrade shadow plugin to get rid of Gradle deprecation
* Move compile configuration to base plugin
Solves Gradle deprecation warning from earlier Gradle versions
* Enable stable publishing in the Gradle build
* Replace usage of deprecated property
* bump Gradle version in build compare
It is useful to have a processor similar to
logstash-filter-fingerprint
in Elasticsearch. A processor that leverages a variety of hashing algorithms
to create cryptographically-secure one-way hashes of values in documents.
This processor introduces a pbkdf2hmac hashing scheme to fields in documents
for indexing
Support multiple system store types
When falling back to using the system keystore and - most usually -
truststore, do not assume that it will be a JKS store, but deduct
its type from {@code KeyStore#getDefaultKeyStoreType}. This allows
the use of any store type the Security Provider supports by setting
the keystore.type java security property.
As part of the changes in #31234,the password verification logic
determines the algorithm used for hashing the password from the
format of the stored password hash itself. Thus, it is generally
possible to validate a password even if it's associated stored hash
was not created with the same algorithm than the one currently set
in the settings.
At the same time, we introduced a check for incoming client change
password requests to make sure that the request's password is hashed
with the same algorithm that is configured to be used in the node
settings.
In the spirit of randomizing the algorithms used, the
{@code SecurityClient} used in the {@code NativeRealmIntegTests} and
{@code ReservedRealmIntegTests} would send all requests dealing with
user passwords by randomly selecting a hashing algorithm each time.
This meant that some change password requests were using a different
password hashing algorithm than the one used for the node and the
request would fail.
This commit changes this behavior in the two aforementioned Integ
tests to use the same password hashing algorithm for the node and the
clients, no matter what the request is.
Resolves#31670
Make password hashing algorithm/cost configurable for the
stored passwords of users for the realms that this applies
(native, reserved). Replaces predefined choice of bcrypt with
cost factor 10.
This also introduces PBKDF2 with configurable cost
(number of iterations) as an algorithm option for password hashing
both for storing passwords and for the user cache.
Password hash validation algorithm selection takes into
consideration the stored hash prefix and only a specific number
of algorithnm and cost factor options for brypt and pbkdf2 are
whitelisted and can be selected in the relevant setting.
The TaskManager and TaskAwareRequest could return null when registering
a task according to their javadocs, but no implementations ever actually
did that. This commit removes that wording from the javadocs and ensures
null is no longer allowed.
* Remove deprecation warnings to prepare for Gradle 5
Gradle replaced `project.sourceSets.main.output.classesDir` of type
`File` with `project.sourceSets.main.output.classesDirs` of type
`FileCollection`
(see [SourceSetOutput](https://github.com/gradle/gradle/blob/master/subprojects/plugins/src/main/java/org/gradle/api/tasks/SourceSetOutput.java))
Build output is now stored on a per language folder.
There are a few places where we use that, here's these and how it's
fixed:
- Randomized Test execution
- look in all test folders ( pass the multi dir configuration to the
ant runner )
- DRY the task configuration by introducing `basedOn` for
`RandomizedTestingTask` DSL
- Extend the naming convention test to support passing in multiple
directories
- Fix the standalon test plugin, the dires were not passed trough,
checked with a debuger and the statement had no affect due to a
missing `=`.
Closes#30354
* Only check Java tests, PR feedback
- Name checker was ran for Groovy tests that don't adhere to the same
convections causing the check to fail
- implement PR feedback
* Replace `add` with `addAll`
This worked because the list is passed to `project.files` that does the
right thing.
* Revert "Only check Java tests, PR feedback"
This reverts commit 9bd9389875d8b88aadb50df57a45cd0d2b073241.
* Remove `basedOn` helper
* Bring some changes back
Previus revert accidentally reverted too much
* Fix negation
* add back public
* revert name check changes
* Revert "revert name check changes"
This reverts commit a2800c0b363168339ea65e2a79ec8256e5883e6d.
* Pass all dirs to name check
Only run on Java for build-tools, this is safe because it's a self test.
It needs more work before we could pass in the Groovy classes as well as
these inherit from `GroovyTestCase`
* remove self tests from name check
The self complicates the task setup and disable real checks on
build-tools.
With this change there are no more self tests, and the build-tools tests
adhere to the conventions.
The self test will be replaced by gradle test kit, thus the addition of
the Gradle plugin builder plugin.
* First test to run a Gradle build
* Add tests that replace the name check self test
* Clean up integ test base class
* Always run tests
* Align with test naming conventions
* Make integ. test case inherit from unit test case
The check requires this
* Remove `import static org.junit.Assert.*`
* Move to Gradle 4.8 RC1
* Use latest version of plugin
The current does not work with Gradle 4.8 RC1
* Switch to Gradle GA
* Add and configure build compare plugin
* add work-around for https://github.com/gradle/gradle/issues/5692
* work around https://github.com/gradle/gradle/issues/5696
* Make use of Gradle build compare with reference project
* Make the manifest more compare friendly
* Clear the manifest in compare friendly mode
* Remove animalsniffer from buildscript classpath
* Fix javadoc errors
* Fix doc issues
* reference Gradle issues in comments
* Conditionally configure build compare
* Fix some more doclint issues
* fix typo in build script
* Add sanity check to make sure the test task was replaced
Relates to #31324. It seems like Gradle has an inconsistent behavior and
the taks is not always replaced.
* Include number of non conforming tasks in the exception.
* No longer replace test task, create implicit instead
Closes#31324. The issue has full context in comments.
With this change the `test` task becomes nothing more than an alias for `utest`.
Some of the stand alone tests that had a `test` task now have `integTest`, and a
few of them that used to have `integTest` to run multiple tests now only
have `check`.
This will also help separarate unit/micro tests from integration tests.
* Revert "No longer replace test task, create implicit instead"
This reverts commit f1ebaf7d93e4a0a19e751109bf620477dc35023c.
* Fix replacement of the test task
Based on information from gradle/gradle#5730 replace the task taking
into account the task providres.
Closes#31324.
* Only apply build comapare plugin if needed
* Make sure test runs before integTest
* Fix doclint aftter merge
* PR review comments
* Switch to Gradle 4.8.1 and remove workaround
* PR review comments
* Consolidate task ordering
Merges the `query-builder-bwc` qa project into the
`full-cluster-restart` qa project, saving a cluster starts on every
build and *many* cluster starts on `./gradlew bwcTests`.
The removed code snippet was never executed, as the version was never set and
thus always -1, after parsing the watch. With the changes done in
c9d77d20fd this logic would not have
worked correctly anyway.
* remove left-over comment
* make sure of the property for plugins
* skip installing modules if these exist in the distribution
* Log the distrbution being ran
* Don't allow running with integ-tests-zip passed externally
* top level x-pack/qa can't run with oss distro
* Add support for matching objects in lists
Makes it possible to have a key that points to a list and assert that a
certain object is present in the list. All keys have to be present and
values have to match. The objects in the source list may have additional
fields.
example:
```
match: { 'nodes.$master.plugins': { name: ingest-attachment } }
```
* Update plugin and module tests to work with other distributions
Some of the tests expected that the integration tests will always be ran
with the `integ-test-zip` distribution so that there will be no other
plugins loaded.
With this change, we check for the presence of the plugin without
assuming exclusivity.
* Allow modules to run on other distros as well
To match the behavior of tets.distributions
* Add and use a new `contains` assertion
Replaces the previus changes that caused `match` to do a partial match.
* Implement PR review comments
This creates a YAML test "features" that indices if the cluster being
tested has xpack installed (`xpack`) or if it does *not* have xpack
installed (`no_xpack`). It uses those features to centralize skipping
a few tests that fail if xpack is installed.
The plan is to use this in a followup to skip docs tests that require
xpack when xpack is not installed. We *plan* to use the declaration
of required license level on the docs page to generate the required
`skip`.
Closes#30933.
This pull request adds a full cluster restart test for a Rollup job.
The test creates and starts a Rollup job on the cluster and checks
that the job already exists and is correctly started on the upgraded
cluster.
This test allows to test that the persistent task state is correctly
parsed from the cluster state after the upgrade, as the status field
has been renamed to state in #31031.
The test undercovers a ClassCastException that can be thrown in
the RollupIndexer when the timestamp as a very low value that fits
into an integer. When it's the case, the value is parsed back as an
Integer instead of Long object and (long) position.get(rollupFieldName)
fails.
If no version is specified when putting a watch, the index API should be
used instead of the update API, so that the whole watch gets overwritten
instead of being merged with the existing one.
Merging only happens when a version is specified, so that credentials can be omitted, which is important for the watcher UI.
TransportAction currently contains 2 doExecute methods, one which takes
a the task, and one that does not. The latter is what some subclasses
implement, while the first one just calls the latter, dropping the given
task. This commit combines these methods, in favor of just always
assuming a task is present.
TransportAction currently contains 2 doExecute methods, one which takes
a the task, and one that does not. The latter is what some subclasses
implement, while the first one just calls the latter, dropping the given
task. This commit combines these methods, in favor of just always
assuming a task is present.
We have made node selectors configurable per request, but all
of other language clients don't allow for that.
A good reason not to do so, is that having a different node selector
per request breaks round-robin. This commit makes NodeSelector
configurable only at client initialization. It also improves the docs
on this matter, important given that a single node selector can still
affect round-robin.
TransportRequestHandler currently contains 2 messageReceived methods,
one which takes a Task, and one that does not. The first just delegates
to the second. This commit changes all existing implementors of
TransportRequestHandler to implement the version which takes Task, thus
allowing the class to be a functional interface, and eliminating the
need to throw exceptions when a task needs to be ensured.
This adds an api to allow updating a filter:
POST _xpack/ml/filters/{filter_id}/_update
The request body may have:
- description: setting a new description
- add_items: a list of the items to add
- remove_items: a list of the items to remove
This commit also changes the PUT filter api to
error when the filter_id is already used. As
now there is an api for updating filters, the
put api should only be used to create new ones.
Also, updating a filter results into a notification
message auditing the change for every job that is
using that filter.
In #29639 we added a `format` option to doc-value fields and deprecated usage
of doc-value fields without a format so that we could migrate doc-value fields
to use the format that comes with the mappings by default. However I missed to
fix the machine-learning datafeed extractor.
PkiRealm caches successful authentications and provides ways to
invalidate the cache. But in some scenario's the cache was not being
invalidated on role mapping change.
PkiRealm does not inform role mapper to be notified for cache
refresh on role mapping updates.
The logic in `TransportClearRealmCacheAction#nodeOperation`
which gets invoked for refreshing cache on realms, considers null or
empty realm names in the request as clear cache on all realms. When
LDAP realm is not present then it clears cache for all realms so it
works fine, but when LDAP realm is configured then role mapper
sends a request with LDAP realm names and so the cache is cleared
only for those realms.
This commit resolves the issue by registering PkiRealm with role
mapper for cache refresh. PkiRealm implements CachingRealm and as it
does not extend CachingUsernamePasswordRealm, have modified the
interface method `refreshRealmOnChange` to accept CachingRealm.
According to RFC 7617, the Basic authentication scheme name
should not be case sensitive.
Case insensitive comparisons are also applicable for the bearer
tokens where Bearer authentication scheme is used as per
RFC 6750 and RFC 7235
Some Http clients may send authentication scheme names in
different case types for eg. Basic, basic, BASIC, BEARER etc.,
so the lack of case-insensitive check is an issue when these
clients try to authenticate with elasticsearch.
This commit adds case-insensitive checks for Basic and Bearer
authentication schemes.
Closes#31486
Most transport actions don't need the node ThreadPool. This commit
removes the ThreadPool as a super constructor parameter for
TransportAction. The actions that do need the thread pool then have a
member added to keep it from their own constructor.
- POST _xpack/index_lifecycle/_stop
- issues a request to be placed into STOPPED mode (maintenance mode).
This is not immediate, since we must first verify that
it is safe to go from STOPPING -> STOPPED.
- POST _xpack/index_lifecycle/_start
- issues a request to be placed back into RUNNING mode (immediately)
- GET _xpack/index_lifecycle/_status
- get back the current mode our lifecycle management is in
- update task was hardened to support uninstalled metadata
- if no metadata is installed, the start/stop actions will install metadata
and proceed to try and change it (default start mode is RUNNING)
- rename MAINTENANCE -> STOPPED, MAINTENANCE_REQUESTED -> STOPPING, NORMAL -> RUNNING
follow-up to #31164.
Indices that are rolled over preserve their origin index.lifecycle.date
as the time the index was created. Although this is also fine, it would
make more sense to start the timer for moving to the warm phase from the
time it was rolled over so that we capture the time elapsed from the
latest data, as opposed to when the index was created.
This commit adds an extra step within the RolloverAction that
extracts the index.creation_date of the newly created index from the RolloverStep
and sets that as the index.lifecycle.date of the rolled-over index that is
waiting for its next phase.
Historically in TcpTransport server channels were represented by the
same channel interface as socket channels. This was necessary as
TcpTransport was parameterized by the channel type. This commit
introduces TcpServerChannel and HttpServerChannel classes. Additionally,
it adds the implementations for the various transports. This allows
server channels to have unique functionality and not implement the
methods they do not support (such as send and getRemoteAddress).
Additionally, with the introduction of HttpServerChannel this commit
extracts some of the storing and closing channel work to the abstract
http server transport.
The QueryCachingPolicy#ALWAYS_CACHE was deprecated in Lucene-7.4 and
will be removed in Lucene-8.0. This change replaces it with QueryCachingPolicy.
This also makes INDEX_QUERY_CACHE_EVERYTHING_SETTING visible in testing only.
Most transport actions don't need to resolve index names. This commit
removes the index name resolver as a super constructor parameter for
TransportAction. The actions that do need the resolver then have a
member added to keep the resolver from their own constructor.
The changes made to disable security for trial licenses unless security
is explicitly enabled caused issues when a 6.3 node attempts to join a
cluster that already has a production license installed. The new node
starts off with a trial license and `xpack.security.enabled` is not
set for the node, which causes the security code to skip attaching the
user to the request. The existing cluster has security enabled and the
lack of a user attached to the requests causes the request to be
rejected.
This commit changes the security code to check if the state has been
recovered yet when making the decision on whether or not to attach a
user. If the state has not yet been recovered, the code will attach
the user to the request in case security is enabled on the cluster
being joined.
Closes#31332
This is a general cleanup of channels and exception handling in http.
This commit introduces a CloseableChannel that is a superclass of
TcpChannel and HttpChannel. This allows us to unify the closing logic
between tcp and http transports. Additionally, the normal http channels
are extracted to the abstract server transport.
Finally, this commit (mostly) unifies the exception handling between nio
and netty4 http server transports.
Currently, when we open a new channel, we pass it an
InboundChannelBuffer. The channel buffer is preallocated a single 16kb
page. However, there is no guarantee that this channel will be read from
anytime soon. Instead, this commit does not preallocate that page. That
page will be allocated when we receive a read event.
Since #30966, Action no longer has anything but a call to the
GenericAction super constructor. This commit renames GenericAction
into Action, thus eliminating the Action class. Additionally, this
commit removes the Request generic parameter of the class, since
it was unused.
This commit makes it so that cluster state update tasks always run under the system context, only
restoring the original context when the listener that was provided with the task is called. A notable
exception is the clusterStatePublished(...) callback which will still run under system context,
because it's defined on the executor-level, and not the task level, and only called once for the
combined batch of tasks and can therefore not be uniquely identified with a task / thread context.
Relates #30603
This is related to #28898. This PR implements pooling of bytes arrays
when reading from the wire in the http server transport. In order to do
this, we must integrate with netty reference counting. That manner in
which this PR implements this is making Pages in InboundChannelBuffer
reference counted. When we accessing the underlying page to pass to
netty, we retain the page. When netty releases its bytebuf, it releases
the underlying pages we have passed to it.
This is related to #31325. There is currently information about the
get-trial-status api on the start-trial api documentation page. It also
has the incorrect route for that api. This commit removes that
information as the start-trial page properly links to a page providing
documenation about get-trial-status.
ILM was rendering exceptions using the exception helper that
basically ignores simply rendering non-elasticsearch exceptions when
no details are desired. This commit updates the method used to still be
a rather simple rendering of the exception. The rendering lacks
all the causes, but does a sufficient job in rendering the top-level
message for one of our most expected exceptions... IllegalArgumentException
This PR introduces a concept of a maintenance mode for the
lifecycle service. During maintenance mode, no policies are
executed.
To be placed into maintenance mode, users must first issue a
request to be placed in maintenance mode. Once the service
is assured that no policies are in actions that are not to be
interrupted (like ShrinkAction), the service will place itself
in maintenance mode.
APIs to-be introduced:
- POST _xpack/index_lifecycle/maintenance/_request
- issues a request to be placed into maintenenance mode.
This is not immediate, since we must first verify that
it is safe to go from REQUESTED -> IN maintenance mode.
- POST _xpack/index_lifecycle/maintenance/_stop
- issues a request to be taken out (this is immediate)
- GET _xpack/index_lifecycle/maintenance
- get back the current mode our lifecycle management is in
There is a problematic scenario with x-pack-cluster master-nodes
attempting to install custom metadata into the cluster-state and
broadcasting that to non-x-pack-enabled nodes. Since those nodes
are not aware of this custom metadata, their cluster-state recovery
will be broken. This change ensures that newly-elected x-pack master
nodes bootstrap IndexLifecycleMetadata upon the first request to
leverage its features. This means that PutLifecycleAction is
now responsible for installing the metadata. Since this X-Pack API
can only be called once all nodes in the cluster have x-pack enabled,
it is safe to assume that the cluster will appropriately handle the
cluster-state recovery with the new set of index-lifecycle metadata.
This pull request removes the relationship between the state
of persistent task (as stored in the cluster state) and the status
of the task (as reported by the Task APIs and used in various
places) that have been confusing for some time (#29608).
In order to do that, a new PersistentTaskState interface is added.
This interface represents the persisted state of a persistent task.
The methods used to update the state of persistent tasks are
renamed: updatePersistentStatus() becomes updatePersistentTaskState()
and now takes a PersistentTaskState as a parameter. The
Task.Status type as been changed to PersistentTaskState in all
places were it make sense (in persistent task customs in cluster
state and all other methods that deal with the state of an allocated
persistent task).
This is related to #28898. With the addition of the http nio transport,
we now have two different modules that provide http transports.
Currently most of the http logic lives at the module level. However,
some of this logic can live in server. In particular, some of the
setting of headers, cors, and pipelining. This commit begins this moving
in that direction by introducing lower level abstraction (HttpChannel,
HttpRequest, and HttpResonse) that is implemented by the modules. The
higher level rest request and rest channel work can live entirely in
server.
For 6.3 we renamed the `tar` and `zip` distributions to `oss-tar` and
`oss-zip`. Then we added new `tar` and `zip` distributions that contain
x-pack and are licensed under the Elastic License. Unfortunately we
accidentally generated POM files along side the new `tar` and `zip`
distributions that incorrectly claimed that they were Apache 2 licensed.
Oooops.
This fixes the license on the POMs generated for the `tar` and `zip`
distributions.
This adds a `description` to ML filters in order
to allow users to describe their filters in a human
readable form which is also editable (filter updates
to be added shortly).
Due to a runtime classpath clash, featureAware task was failing on JVMs
higher than 1.8 (since the ASM version from Painless was used instead
which does not recognized Java 9 or 10 bytecode) causing the task to
fail.
This commit excludes the ASM dependency (since it's not used by SQL
itself).
We currently have a specific REST action to retrieve all aliaes, which
uses internally the get index API. This doesn't seem to be required
anymore though as the existing RestGetAliaesAction could as well take
the requests with no indices and aliases specified.
This commit removes the RestGetAllAliasesAction in favour of using
RestGetAliasesAction also for requests that don't specify indices nor
aliases. Similar to #31129.
x-pack/sql depends on lang-painless which depends on ASM 5.1
FeatureAwareCheck needs ASM 6
This is a hack to strip ASM5 from the classpath for FeatureAwareCheck
This is related to #27260. Currently when we queue a write with a
channel we set OP_WRITE and wait until the next selection loop to flush
the write. However, if the channel does not have a pending write, it
is probably ready to flush. This PR implements an optimistic flush logic
that will attempt this flush.
- All rollup pages should be marked as experimental instead of just
the top page
- While the job config docs state which aggregations are allowed, adding
a section which specifically details this in one place is more convenient
for the user
- Add a clarification that the DeleteJob API does not delete the rollup
data, just the rollup job.
* Adds API to assign or change the policy for an index
This api will change `index.lifecycle.name` for all indexes in the
provided pattern as long as they are not currently in the shrink action.
Later changes will loosen this restriction so an index is only reject
if it is currently in the shrink action AND the diff between the old
and new policy includes changes to the shrink action.
Also later changes will detect if the current step is not present in
the new policy and move the index onto the next available step
* Changes name to SetPolicyForIndexAction
Also changes all related Classes and api endpoints
* fixes tests
The parser for the Metric config was directly instantiating
the config object, rather than using the builder. That means it was
bypassing the validation logic built into the builder, and would allow
users to create invalid metric configs (like using unsupported metrics).
The job would later blow up and abort due to bad configs, but this isn't
immediately obvious to the user since the PutJob API succeeded.
This change prevents a datafeed using cross cluster search from starting if the remote cluster
does not have x-pack installed and a sufficient license. The check is made only when starting a
datafeed.
Rules allow users to supply a detector with domain
knowledge that can improve the quality of the results.
The model detects statistically anomalous results but it
has no knowledge of the meaning of the values being modelled.
For example, a detector that performs a population analysis
over IP addresses could benefit from a list of IP addresses
that the user knows to be safe. Then anomalous results for
those IP addresses will not be created and will not affect
the quantiles either.
Another example would be a detector looking for anomalies
in the median value of CPU utilization. A user might want
to inform the detector that any results where the actual
value is less than 5 is not interesting.
This commit introduces a `custom_rules` field to the `Detector`.
A detector may have multiple rules which are combined with `or`.
A rule has 3 fields: `actions`, `scope` and `conditions`.
Actions is a list of what should happen when the rule applies.
The current options include `skip_result` and `skip_model_update`.
The default value for `actions` is the `skip_result` action.
Scope is optional and allows for applying filters on any of the
partition/over/by field. When not defined the rule applies to
all series. The `filter_id` needs to be specified to match the id
of the filter to be used. Optionally, the `filter_type` can be specified
as either `include` (default) or `exclude`. When set to `include`
the rule applies to entities that are in the filter. When set to
`exclude` the rule only applies to entities not in the filter.
There may be zero or more conditions. A condition requires `applies_to`,
`operator` and `value` to be specified. The `applies_to` value can be
either `actual`, `typical` or `diff_from_typical` and it specifies
the numerical value to which the condition applies. The `operator`
(`lt`, `lte`, `gt`, `gte`) and `value` complete the definition.
Conditions are combined with `and` and allow to specify numerical
conditions for when a rule applies.
A rule must either have a scope or one or more conditions. Finally,
a rule with scope and conditions applies when all of them apply.
TransportAction has many variants of execute. One of those variants
executes by returning a future, which is then often blocked on by
calling get(). This commit removes this variant of execute, instead
using a helper method for tests that want to block, or having tests
pass in a PlainActionFuture directly as a listener.
Co-authored-by: Simon Willnauer <simonw@apache.org>
This is in preparation of pushing the new
rules design in the `ml-cpp` side. These
tests will be switched on again after merging
in the new rules implementation.
* Support RequestedAuthnContext
This implements limited support for RequestedAuthnContext by :
- Allowing SP administrators to define a list of authnContextClassRef
to be included in the RequestedAuthnContext of a SAML Authn Request
- Veirifying that the authnContext in the incoming SAML Asertion's
AuthnStatement contains one of the requested authnContextClassRef
- Only EXACT comparison is supported as the semantics of validating
the incoming authnContextClassRef are deployment dependant and
require pre-established rules for MINIMUM, MAXIMUM and BETTER
Also adds necessary AuthnStatement validation as indicated by [1] and
[2]
[1] https://docs.oasis-open.org/security/saml/v2.0/saml-core-2.0-os.pdf
3.4.1.4, line 2250-2253
[2] https://kantarainitiative.github.io/SAMLprofiles/saml2int.html
[SDP-IDP10]
Trying to post a new watch without any body currently results in a
NullPointerException. This change fixes that by validating that
Post and Put requests always have a body.
Closes#30057
Allows users of the Low Level REST client to specify which hosts a
request should be run on. They implement the `NodeSelector` interface
or reuse a built in selector like `NOT_MASTER_ONLY` to chose which nodes
are valid. Using it looks like:
```
Request request = new Request("POST", "/foo/_search");
RequestOptions options = request.getOptions().toBuilder();
options.setNodeSelector(NodeSelector.NOT_MASTER_ONLY);
request.setOptions(options);
...
```
This introduces a new `Node` object which contains a `HttpHost` and the
metadata about the host. At this point that metadata is just `version`
and `roles` but I plan to add node attributes in a followup. The
canonical way to **get** this metadata is to use the `Sniffer` to pull
the information from the Elasticsearch cluster.
I've marked this as "breaking-java" because it breaks custom
implementations of `HostsSniffer` by renaming the interface to
`NodesSniffer` and by changing it from returning a `List<HttpHost>` to a
`List<Node>`. It *shouldn't* break anyone else though.
Because we expect to find it useful, this also implements `host_selector`
support to `do` statements in the yaml tests. Using it looks a little
like:
```
---
"example test":
- skip:
features: host_selector
- do:
host_selector:
version: " - 7.0.0" # same syntax as skip
apiname:
something: true
```
The `do` section parses the `version` string into a host selector that
uses the same version comparison logic as the `skip` section. When the
`do` section is executed it passed the off to the `RestClient`, using
the `ElasticsearchHostsSniffer` to sniff the required metadata.
The idea is to use this in mixed version tests to target a specific
version of Elasticsearch so we can be sure about the deprecation
logging though we don't currently have any examples that need it. We do,
however, have at least one open pull request that requires something
like this to properly test it.
Closes#21888
This commit upgrades us to Netty 4.1.25. This upgrade is more
challenging than past upgrades, all because of a new object cleaner
thread that they have added. This thread requires an additional security
permission (set context class loader, needed to avoid leaks in certain
scenarios). Additionally, there is not a clean way to shutdown this
thread which means that the thread can fail thread leak control during
tests. As such, we have to filter this thread from thread leak control.
The core REST tests with security currently use a hardcoded username and
password. This is not amenable to running these tests in scenarios where
the user controls the creation of the cluster and owns the credentials
for this cluster. This commit enables running the core REST tests with
security with a custom username and password.
The goal of this commit is to address unknown licenses when producing
the dependencies info report. We have two different checks that we run
on licenses. The first check is whether or not we have stashed a copy of
the license text for a dependency in the repository. The second is to
map every dependency to a license type (e.g., BSD 3-clause). The problem
here is that the way we were handling licenses in the second check
differs from how we handle licenses in the first check. The first check
works by finding a license file with the name of the artifact followed
by the text -LICENSE.txt. Yet in some cases we allow mapping an artifact
name to another name used to check for the license (e.g., we map
lucene-.* to lucene, and opensaml-.* to shibboleth. The second check
understood the first way of looking for a license file but not the
second way. So in this commit we teach the second check about the
mappings from artifact names to license names. We do this by copying the
configuration from the dependencyLicenses task to the dependenciesInfo
task and then reusing the code from the first check in the second
check. There were some other challenges here though. For example,
dependenciesInfo was checking too many dependencies. For now, we should
only be checking direct dependencies and leaving transitive dependencies
from another org.elasticsearch artifact to that artifact (we want to do
this differently in a follow-up). We also want to disable
dependenciesInfo for projects that we do not publish, users only care
about licenses they might be exposed to if they use our assembled
products. With all of the changes in this commit we have eliminated all
unknown licenses. A follow-up will enforce that when we add a new
dependency it does not get mapped to unknown, these will be forbidden in
the future. Therefore, with this change and earlier changes are left
having no unknown licenses and two custom licenses; custom here means it
does not map to an SPDX license type. Those two licenses are xz and
ldapsdk. A future change will not allow additional custom licenses
unless they are explicitly whitelisted. This ensures that if a new
dependency is added it is mapped to an SPDX license or mapped to custom
because it does not have an SPDX license.
* Remove DocumentFieldMappers#simpleMatchToFullName, as it is duplicative of MapperService#simpleMatchToIndexNames.
* Rename MapperService#simpleMatchToIndexNames -> simpleMatchToFullName for consistency.
* Simplify EsIntegTestCase#assertConcreteMappingsOnAll to accept concrete fields instead of wildcard patterns.
Make SAML Response Destination check compliant
Only validate the Destination element of an incoming SAML Response
if Destination is present and the SAML Response is signed.
The standard [1] - 3.5.5.2 and [2] - 3.2.2 does mention that the
Destination element is optional and should only be verified when
the SAML Response is signed. Some Identity Provider implementations
are known to not set a Destination XML Attribute in their SAML
responses when those are not signed, so this change also aims to
enhance interoperability.
[1] https://docs.oasis-open.org/security/saml/v2.0/saml-bindings-2.0-os.pdf
[2] https://docs.oasis-open.org/security/saml/v2.0/saml-core-2.0-os.pdf
Use all running nodes as unicast seeds in the rolling restart tests to
avoid a race between pinging and the tests. Without this if the tests
are too fast then when a new node comes up and pings its single
configured seed node that node *might* not have a ping from the other
running node.
This is related to #27260 and #28898. This commit adds the transport-nio
plugin as a random option when running the http smoke tests. As part of
this PR, I identified an issue where cors support was not properly
enabled causing these tests to fail when using transport-nio. This
commit also fixes that issue.
This commit adjusts the indentation in the CLI scripts to give a clear
visual indication that the line being indented is a continuation of the
previous line.
SSLTrustRestrictionsTests updates the restrictions YML file during the test run to change the set of restrictions. This update was small, but it wasn't atomic.
If the yml file is reloaded while empty or invalid, then it causes all SSL certificates to be considered invalid (until it is reloaded again), which could break the sniffing/administrative client that runs underneath the tests.
A previous refactoring of the CLI scripts migrated all of the CLI tools
to shell to a common script, elasticsearch-cli. This approach is fine in
Bash where it is easy to tear arguments apart but it doesn't work so
well on Windows where quoting is insane. To avoid having to tear the
arguments apart to separate the first argument to elasticsearch-cli from
the remaining arguments, we instead choose a strategy where we can avoid
tearing the arguments apart. To do this, we will instead pass the main
class by an environment variable and then we can pass the arguments
straight through. This will let us avoid awful quoting issues on
Windows. This is the Windows side of that effort and the Bash side was
in a previous commit.
A previous refactoring of the CLI scripts migrated all of the CLI tools
to shell to a common script, elasticsearch-cli. This approach is fine in
Bash where it is easy to tear arguments apart but it doesn't work so
well on Windows where quoting is insane. To avoid having to tear the
arguments apart to separate the first argument to elasticsearch-cli from
the remaining arguments, we instead choose a strategy where we can avoid
tearing the arguments apart. To do this, we will instead pass the main
class by an environment variable and then we can pass the arguments
straight through. This will let us avoid awful quoting issues on
Windows. This is the non-Windows side of that effort and the Windows
side will be in a follow-up.
This is related to #27260. This commit combines the AcceptingSelector
and SocketSelector classes into a single NioSelector. This change
allows the same selector to handle both server and socket channels. This
is valuable as we do not necessarily want a dedicated thread running for
accepting channels.
With this change, this commit removes the configuration for dedicated
accepting selectors for the normal transport class. The accepting
workload for new node connections is likely low, meaning that there is
no need to dedicate a thread to this process.
I pushed a test that `assertBusy`s for a whole hour accidentally. I was
testing something and forgot to revert my local hack but caught it on
backport. This removes it.
This is much more realistic and can find more issues. This causes the
"mixed cluster" tests to be run twice so I had to fix the tests to work
in that case. In most cases I did as little as possible to get them
working but in a few cases I went a little beyond that to make them
easier for me to debug while getting them to work. My test changes:
1. Remove the "basic indexing" tests and replace them with a copy of the
tests used in the OSS. We have no way of sharing code between these two
projects so for now I copy.
2. Skip the a few tests in the "one third" upgraded scenario:
* creating a scroll to be reused when the cluster is fully upgraded
* creating some ml data to be used when the cluster is fully ugpraded
3. Drop many "assert yellow and that the cluster has two nodes"
assertions. These assertions duplicate those made by the wait condition
and they fail now that we have three nodes.
4. Switch many "assert green and that the cluster has two nodes" to 3
nodes. These assertions are unique from the wait condition and, while
I imagine they aren't required in all cases, now is not the time to
find that out. Thus, I made them work.
5. Rework the index audit trail test so it is more obvious that it is
the same test expecting different numbers based on the shape of the
cluster. The conditions for which number are expected are fairly
complex because the index audit trail is shut down until the template
for it is upgraded and the template is upgraded when a master node is
elected that has the new version of the software.
6. Add some more information to debug the index audit trail test because
it helped me figure out what was going on.
I also dropped the `waitCondition` from the `rolling-upgrade-basic`
tests because it wasn't needed.
Closes#25336
The native realm's usage stats were previously pulled from the cache,
which only contains the number of users that had authenticated in the
past 20 minutes. This commit changes this so that we pull the current
value from the security index by executing a search request. In order
to support this, the usage stats for realms is now asynchronous so that
we do not block while waiting on the search to complete.
The Index Audit trail allows the override of the template index
settings with settings specified on the conf file.
A bug will manifest when such conf file settings are specified
for templates that need to be upgraded. The bug is an endless
upgrade loop because the upgrade, although successful, is
not reckoned as such by the upgrade service.
move `finger_print`, `pattern` and `standard_html_strip` analyzers
to analysis-common module. (both AnalysisProvider and PreBuiltAnalyzerProvider)
Changed PreBuiltAnalyzerProviderFactory to extend from PreConfiguredAnalysisComponent and
changed to make sure that predefined analyzers are always instantiated with the current
ES version and if an instance is requested for a different version then delegate to PreBuiltCache.
This is similar to the behaviour that exists today in AnalysisRegistry.PreBuiltAnalysis and
PreBuiltAnalyzerProviderFactory. (#31095)
Relates to #23658
This commit adds a check that any class in X-Pack that is a feature
aware custom also implements the appropriate mix-in interface in
X-Pack. These interfaces provide a default implementation of
FeatureAware#getRequiredFeature that returns that x-pack is the required
feature. By implementing this interface, this gives a consistent way for
X-Pack feature aware customs to return the appopriate required feature
and this check enforces that all such feature aware customs return the
appropriate required feature.
We should not allow the user to configure index patterns that also match
the index which stores the rollup index.
For example, it is quite natural for a user to specify `metricbeat-*`
as the index pattern, and then store the rollups in `metricbeat-rolled`.
This will start throwing errors as soon as the rollup index is created
because the indexer will try to search it.
Note: this does not prevent the user from matching against existing
rollup indices. That should be prevented by the field-level validation
during job creation.
ObjectParser should throw XContentParseExceptions, not IAE. A dedicated parsing
exception can includes the place where the error occurred.
Closes#30605
This snapshot includes:
- LUCENE-8341: Record soft deletes in SegmentCommitInfo which will resolve#30851
- LUCENE-8335: Enforce soft-deletes field up-front
Extends ActionRequestValidationException with a rollup-specific version
to make it easier to handle mapping validation issues on the client
side.
The type will now be `rollup_action_request_validation_exception`
instead of `action_request_validation_exception`
The majority of Responses inheriting from AcknowledgeResponse implement
the readFrom and writeTo serialization method in the same way. Moving this
as a default into AcknowledgeResponse and letting the few exceptions that
need a slightly different implementation handle this themselves saves a lot
of duplication.
With #31020 we introduced the ability for transport clients to indicate what features they support
in order to make sure we don't serialize object to them they don't support. This PR adapts the
serialization logic of persistent tasks to be aware of those features and not serialize tasks that
aren't supported.
Also, a version check is added for the future where we may add new tasks implementations and
need to be able to indicate they shouldn't be serialized both to nodes and clients.
As the implementation relies on the interface of `PersistentTaskParams`, these are no longer
optional. That's acceptable as all current implementation have them and we plan to make
`PersistentTaskParams` more central in the future.
Relates to #30731
If you invoke elasticsearch-plugin (or any other CLI script on Windows)
with a path that has a percent-encoded space (or any other
percent-encoded character) because the CLI scripts now shell into a
common shell script (elasticsearch-cli) the percent-encoded space ends
up being interpreted as a parameter. For example passing install --batch
file:/c:/encoded%20%space/analysis-icu-7.0.0.zip to elasticsearch-plugin
leads to the %20 being interpreted as %2 followed by a zero. Here, the
%2 is interpreted as the second parameter (--batch) and the
InstallPluginCommand class ends up seeing
file:/c/encoded--batch0space/analysis-icu-7.0.0.zip as the path which
will not exist. This commit addresses this by escaping the %* that is
used to pass the parameters to the common CLI script so that the common
script sees the correct parameters without the %2 being substituted.
* Adds an explain API endpoint
This endpoint can be used to explain the current lifecycle state of an
index
x-pack/plugin/core/src/main/java/org/elasticsearch/xpack/core/indexlifec
ycle/action/ExplainLifecycleAction.java
x-pack/plugin/core/src/main/java/org/elasticsearch/xpack/core/indexlifec
ycle/action/IndexExplainResponse.java
x-pack/plugin/index-lifecycle/src/main/java/org/elasticsearch/xpack/inde
xlifecycle/action/TransportExplainLifecycleAction.java
x-pack/plugin/src/test/resources/rest-api-spec/test/index_lifecycle/20_m
ove_to_step.yml
x-pack/plugin/core/src/main/java/org/elasticsearch/xpack/core/XPackClien
tPlugin.java
x-pack/plugin/core/src/main/java/org/elasticsearch/xpack/core/indexlifec
ycle/action/ExplainLifecycleAction.java
x-pack/plugin/core/src/main/java/org/elasticsearch/xpack/core/indexlifec
ycle/action/IndexExplainResponse.java
x-pack/plugin/core/src/test/java/org/elasticsearch/xpack/core/indexlifec
ycle/RandomStepInfo.java
x-pack/plugin/core/src/test/java/org/elasticsearch/xpack/core/indexlifec
ycle/action/ExplainLifecycleRequestTests.java
x-pack/plugin/core/src/test/java/org/elasticsearch/xpack/core/indexlifec
ycle/action/ExplainLifecycleResponseTests.java
x-pack/plugin/core/src/test/java/org/elasticsearch/xpack/core/indexlifec
ycle/action/IndexExplainResponseTests.java
x-pack/plugin/index-lifecycle/src/main/java/org/elasticsearch/xpack/inde
xlifecycle/IndexLifecycle.java
x-pack/plugin/index-lifecycle/src/main/java/org/elasticsearch/xpack/inde
xlifecycle/action/RestExplainLifecycleAction.java
x-pack/plugin/index-lifecycle/src/main/java/org/elasticsearch/xpack/inde
xlifecycle/action/TransportExplainLifecycleAction.java
x-pack/plugin/index-lifecycle/src/test/java/org/elasticsearch/xpack/inde
xlifecycle/ExecuteStepsUpdateTaskTests.java
x-pack/plugin/index-lifecycle/src/test/java/org/elasticsearch/xpack/inde
xlifecycle/IndexLifecycleRunnerTests.java
x-pack/plugin/src/test/resources/rest-api-spec/api/xpack.index_lifecycle
.explain_lifecycle.json
x-pack/plugin/src/test/resources/rest-api-spec/test/index_lifecycle/20_m
ove_to_step.yml
x-pack/plugin/src/test/resources/rest-api-spec/test/index_lifecycle/30_e
xplain_lifecycle.yml
* Adds tests for explain API
* Addresses Review comments and fixes REST tests
* Removes RequestBuilder from ExplainLifecycleAction
This commit introduces the ability for a client to communicate to the
server features that it can support and for these features to be used in
influencing the decisions that the server makes when communicating with
the client. To this end we carry the features from the client to the
underlying stream as we carry the version of the client today. This
enables us to enhance the logic where we make protocol decisions on the
basis of the version on the stream to also make protocol decisions on
the basis of the features on the stream. With such functionality, the
client can communicate to the server if it is a transport client, or if
it has, for example, X-Pack installed. This enables us to support
rolling upgrades from the OSS distribution to the default distribution
without breaking client connectivity as we can now elect to serialize
customs in the cluster state depending on whether or not the client
reports to us using the feature capabilities that it can under these
customs. This means that we would avoid sending a client pieces of the
cluster state that it can not understand. However, we want to take care
and always send the full cluster state during node-to-node communication
as otherwise we would end up with different understanding of what is in
the cluster state across nodes depending on which features they reported
to have. This is why when deciding whether or not to write out a custom
we always send the custom if the client is not a transport client and
otherwise do not send the custom if the client is transport client that
does not report to have the feature required by the custom.
Co-authored-by: Yannick Welsch <yannick@welsch.lu>
Otherwise we could end up with persistent tasks metadata in the cluster that some of the nodes
might not understand in case where the cluster is during rolling upgrade from the default 6.2 to the
default 6.3 distribution.
Follow-up to #30743