This commit back ports three commits related to enabling the simple
connection strategy.
Allow simple connection strategy to be configured (#49066)
Currently the simple connection strategy only exists in the code. It
cannot be configured. This commit moves in the direction of allowing it
to be configured. It introduces settings for the addresses and socket
count. Additionally it introduces new settings for the sniff strategy
so that the more generic number of connections and seed node settings
can be deprecated.
The simple settings are not yet registered as the registration is
dependent on follow-up work to validate the settings.
Ensure at least 1 seed configured in remote test (#49389)
This fixes#49384. Currently when we select a random subset of seed
nodes from a list, it is possible for 0 seeds to be selected. This test
depends on at least 1 seed being selected.
Add the simple strategy to cluster settings (#49414)
This is related to #49067. This commit adds the simple connection
strategy settings and strategy mode setting to the cluster settings
registry. With these changes, the simple connection mode can be used.
Additionally, it adds validation to ensure that settings cannot be
misconfigured.
The new CompensatedSum is a nice DRY refactor, but had the unanticipated
side effect of creating a lot of object allocation in the aggregation hot collection
loop: one object per visited document, per aggregator. In some places it
created two per-doc-per-agg (weighted avg, geo centroids, etc) since there
were multiple compensations being maintained.
This PR moves the object creation out of the hot loop so that it is now
created once per segment, and resets the internal state each time through
the loop
* Adds a title abbreviation
* Relocates the older name deprecation warning
* Updates the description and adds a Lucene link
* Adds a note to explain payloads and how to store them
* Adds analyze and custom analyzer snippets
* Adds a 'Return stored payloads' example
The categorization job wizard in the ML UI will use this
information when showing the effect of the chosen categorization
analyzer on a sample of input.
Before this change excluding an unsupported field resulted in
an error message that explained the excluded field could not be
detected as if it doesn't exist. This error message is confusing.
This commit commit changes this so that there is no error in this
scenario. When excluding a field that does exist but has been
automatically been excluded from the analysis there is no harm
(unlike excluding a missing field which could be a typo).
Backport of #49535
With this commit we add a clarifying note in the contribution guidelines
that our examples show the usage on Unix and also explain how to invoke
the Gradle wrapper script on Windows.
Closes#49521
This test must check for state `SUCCESS` as well. `SUCESS` in
`SnapshotsInProgress` means "all data nodes finished snapshotting sucessfully but master must still finalize the snapshot in the repo".
`SUCESS` does not mean that the snapshot is actually fully finished in this object.
You can easily reporduce the scenario in #49303 that has an in-progress snapshot in `SUCCESS` state
by waiting 20s before running the busy assert loop on the snapshot status so that all steps but the blocked
finalization can finish.
Closes#49303
A few enhancements to `SnapshotResiliencyTests`:
1. Test running requests from random nodes in more spots to enhance coverage (this is particularly motivated by #49060 where the additional number of cluster state updates makes it more interesting to fully cover all kinds of network failures)
2. Fix issue with restarting only master node in one test (doing so breaks the test at an incredibly low frequency, that becomes not so low in #49060 with the additional cluster state updates between request and response)
3. Improved cluster formation checks (now properly checks the term as well when forming cluster) + makes sure all nodes are connected to all other nodes (previously the data nodes would at times not be connected to other data nodes, which was shaken out now by adding the `client()` method
4. Make sure the cluster left behind by the test makes sense by running the repo cleanup action on it (this also increases coverage of the repository cleanup action obviously and adds the basis of making it part of more resiliency tests)
This commit ensures that even for requests that are known to be empty body
we at least attempt to read one bytes from the request body input stream.
This is done to work around the behavior in `sun.net.httpserver.ServerImpl.Dispatcher#handleEvent`
that will close a TCP/HTTP connection that does not have the `eof` flag (see `sun.net.httpserver.LeftOverInputStream#isEOF`)
set on its input stream. As far as I can tell the only way to set this flag is to do a read when there's no more bytes buffered.
This fixes the numerous connection closing issues because the `ServerImpl` stops closing connections that it thinks
weren't fully drained.
Also, I removed a now redundant drain loop in the Azure handler as well as removed the connection closing in the error handler's
drain action (this shouldn't have an effect but makes things more predictable/easier to reason about IMO).
I would suggest merging this and closing related issue after verifying that this fixes things on CI.
The way to locally reproduce the issues we're seeing in tests is to make the retry timings more aggressive in e.g. the azure tests
and move them to single digit values. This makes the retries happen quickly enough that they run into the async connecting closing
of allegedly non-eof connections by `ServerImpl` and produces the exact kinds of failures we're seeing currently.
Relates #49401, #49429
If some replica is performing a file-based recovery, then the check
assertNoSnapshottedIndexCommit would fail. We should increase the
timeout for this check so that we can wait until all recoveries done
or aborted.
Closes#49403
This commit introduces a workaround for an issue related to our recent
notarization of distributions starting with the 6.8.5 release. An
unintended side effect of notarization was that the file entries of the
release tar all have a `./` prefix in the path. This causes a number of
issues, not least of which is that our Gradle extract tasks end up
copying an empty fileset to the destination directory. The workaround
here is imply to remove the leading `./` path segment from each file
when performing the extraction. For more details see this issue:
https://github.com/elastic/elasticsearch/issues/49417
This commit replaces the _estimate_memory_usage API with
a new API, the _explain API.
The API consolidates information that is useful before
creating a data frame analytics job.
It includes:
- memory estimation
- field selection explanation
Memory estimation is moved here from what was previously
calculated in the _estimate_memory_usage API.
Field selection is a new feature that explains to the user
whether each available field was selected to be included or
not in the analysis. In the case it was not included, it also
explains the reason why.
Backport of #49455
The NodeTests class contains tests that check behavior when shutting
down a node. This involves starting a node, performing some operation,
stopping the node, and then awaiting the close of the node. Part of
closing a node is the termination of the node's ThreadPool. ThreadPool
termination semantics can be deceiving. The ThreadPool#terminate method
takes a timeout value and the first oddity is that the terminate method
can take two times the timeout value before returning. Internally this
method acts on the ExecutorService instances that are held by the
ThreadPool. First, an orderly shutdown is attempted and pending tasks
are allowed to execute while waiting for the timeout value. If any of
the ExecutorService instances have not terminated, a call is made to
attempt to stop all active tasks (usually using interrupts) and then
waits for up to the timeout value a second time for the termination of
the ExecutorService instances. This means that if use a large value
when waiting for a node to close, we may not attempt to interrupt any
threads that are in a blocking call before the test times out.
In order to avoid causing these tests to time out, this change reduces
the timeout passed to Node#awaitClose to 10 seconds from 1 day. This
will allow blocked threads to be interrupted before the test suite
fails due to the timeout.
Closes#44256Closes#42350Closes#44435
This commit enhances the required pipeline functionality by changing it
so that default/request pipelines can also be executed, but the required
pipeline is always executed last. This gives users the flexibility to
execute their own indexing pipelines, but also ensure that any required
pipelines are also executed. Since such pipelines are executed last, we
change the name of required pipelines to final pipelines.
The test task is configured to use the runtime java version, but there
are issues with the version of groovy used by gradle pre 6.0. In order
to workaround this, we use the Gradle JDK to execute the build-tools
tests.
Closes#49404Closes#49253
Add extra checks to prevent ConstantFolding rule to try to fold
the CASE/IIF functions early before the SimplifyCase rule gets applied.
Fixes: #49387
(cherry picked from commit f35c9725350e35985d8dd3001870084e1784a5ca)
The default merge cumulator used in netty transport leads to additional
GC pressure and memory copying when a message that exceeds the chunk
size is handled. This is especially a problem on G1 GC, since we get
many "humongous" allocations and that can in theory cause real memory
circuit breaker to break unnecessarily.
Just realized we were missing some annotations here which was somewhat
confusing since other methods/parameters have the `Nullable` annotation
wherever a `null` can be passed.
Reformats the edge n-gram and n-gram token filter docs. Changes include:
* Adds title abbreviations
* Updates the descriptions and adds Lucene links
* Reformats parameter definitions
* Adds analyze and custom analyzer snippets
* Adds notes explaining differences between the edge n-gram and n-gram
filters
Additional changes:
* Switches titles to use "n-gram" throughout.
* Fixes a typo in the edge n-gram tokenizer docs
* Adds an explicit anchor for the `index.max_ngram_diff` setting
Backport of #47208.
Closes#46900. When running ES with `--quiet`, if ES then exits abnormally, a
user has to go hunting in the logs for the error. Instead, never close
System.err, and print more information to it if ES encounters a fatal error
e.g. config validation, or some fatal runtime exception. This is useful when
running under e.g. systemd, since the error will go into the journal.
Note that stderr is still closed in daemon (`-d`) mode.
This change automatically pre-sort search shards on search requests that use a primary sort based on the value of a field. When possible, the can_match phase will extract the min/max (depending on the provided sort order) values of each shard and use it to pre-sort the shards prior to running the subsequent phases. This feature can be useful to ensure that shards that contain recent data are executed first so that intermediate merge have more chance to contain contiguous data (think of date_histogram for instance) but it could also be used in a follow up to early terminate sorted top-hits queries that don't require the total hit count. The latter could significantly speed up the retrieval of the most/least
recent documents from time-based indices.
Relates #49091
This commit adds a deprecation warning when starting
a node where either of the server contexts
(xpack.security.transport.ssl and xpack.security.http.ssl)
meet either of these conditions:
1. The server lacks a certificate/key pair (i.e. neither
ssl.keystore.path not ssl.certificate are configured)
2. The server has some ssl configuration, but ssl.enabled is not
specified. This new validation does not care whether ssl.enabled is
true or false (though other validation might), it simply makes it
an error to configure server SSL without being explicit about
whether to enable that configuration.
Backport of: #45892
Fixing a few small issues found in this code:
1. We weren't reading the request headers but the response headers when checking for blob existence in the mocked single upload path
2. Error code can never be `null` removed the dead code that resulted
3. In the logging wrapper we weren't checking for `Throwable` so any failing assertions in the http mock would not show up since they
run on a thread managed by the mock http server