Now that we are on gradle 3.3, we can take advantage of a fix that was
made in 2.14 which properly handles disabling transitive dependencies in
pom generation. As it was currently, we actually ended up generated two
exclusions sections in the generated pom. This is yet another example of
why we need validation on the pom files with our generation here, but I
leave that for another day because I still don't know a good way to do
it.
This moves `updateReplicaRequest` to `createPrimaryResponse` and separates the
translog updating to be a separate function so that the function purpose is more
easily understood (and testable).
It also separates the logic for `MappingUpdatePerformer` into two functions,
`updateMappingsIfNeeded` and `verifyMappings` so they don't do too much in a
single function. This allows finer-grained error testing for when a mapping
fails to parse or be applied.
Finally, it separates parsing and version validation for
`executeIndexRequestOnReplica` into a separate
method (`prepareIndexOperationOnReplica`) and adds a test for it.
Relates to #23359
This commit adds a build listener to the integ test runner which will
print out an excerpt of the logs from the integ test cluster if the test
run fails. There are future improvements that can be made (for example,
to dump excerpts from dependent clusters like in tribe node tests), but
this is a start, and would help with simple rest tests failures that we
currently don't know what actually happened on the node.
This will allow us to get rid of deprecation warnings that appear when
using 3.3, and also get rid of extra logic for 2.13 required because of
the progress logger.
Search took time uses an absolute clock to measure elapsed time, and
then tries to deal with the complexities of using an absolute clock for
this purpose. Instead, we should use a high-precision monotonic relative
clock that is designed exactly for measuring elapsed time. This commit
modifies the search infrastructure to use a relative clock for measuring
took time, but still provides an absolute clock for the components of
search that require a real clock (e.g., index name expression
resolution, etc.).
Relates #23662
This commit creates a keystore and adds settings to it during the
cluster formation for integration tests. Users can define a
`keyStoreSetting` in build files for settings that need to be placed in
the keystore.
This commit moves the checkstyle rule of max line length from 140
characters to 100 characters. We whitelist all existing violations and
will address them in follow-ups.
Relates #23623
In Gradle 3.4, the buildSrc plugin seems to be packaged into a jar before it is accessed by the rest of the build and the signatures file for the third-party audit task cannot be accessed as
getClass().getResource('/forbidden/third-party-audit.txt') then points to a file entry in a JAR, which cannot be loaded directly as a File object. This commit changes the third-party audit task to pass the content of the signatures file as a String instead.
While trying to improve the failure output in #23547, the stderr was
also captured from jrunscript. This was under the assumption that stderr
is only written to in case of an error. However, with java 9, when
JAVA_TOOL_OPTIONS are set, they are output to stderr. And our CI sets
JAVA_TOOL_OPTIONS for some reason. This commit fixes the jrunscript call
to use a separate buffer for stderr.
A previous change to the multi-search request execution to avoid stack
overflows regressed on limiting the number of concurrent search requests
from a batched multi-search request. In particular, the replacement of
the tail-recursive call with a loop could asynchronously fire off all of
the remaining search requests in the batch while max concurrent search
requests are already executing. This commit attempts to address this
issue by taking a more careful approach to the initial problem of
recurisve calls. The cause of the initial problem was due to possibility
of individual requests completing on the same thread as invoked the
search action execution. This can happen, for example, in cases when an
individual request does not resolve to any shards. To address this
problem, when an individual request completes we check if it completed
on the same thread as fired off the request. In this case, we loop and
otherwise safely recurse. Sadly, there was a unit test to check that the
maximum number of concurrent search requests was not exceeded, but that
test was broken while modifying the test to reproduce a case that led to
the possibility of stack overflow. As such, we randomize whether or not
search actions execute on the same thread as the thread that invoked the
action.
Relates #23538
This commit improves the output when jrunscript fails to include the
full output of the command. It also makes the quoting that is needed for
windows only happen on windows (which worked on java 8, but for some
reason does not work with java 9)
This commit upgrades to the newest version of randomized runner. There
is a new additional check that allows ensuring the working directory
for each child jvm is empty. By default, this check will fail the test
run. However, for elasticsearch, we default to wipe the directory. For
example, if you previously told the runner to not wipe the directory, in
order to investigate a failure, the wipe option will delete this data
upon re-running the test.
While the esplugin extension already had an input for the base notice
file of the plugin, the NoticeTask did not actually know how to use
that, and always used the base notice file from Elasticsearch.
This commit adds an `ignoreSha` configuration to the `dependencyLicense`
task, which allows to not check for a sha for a given dependency jar.
This is useful for locally built jars, which will constantly change.
Adds a common base class for testing subclasses of
`InternalSingleBucketAggregation`. They are so similar they
call into question the utility of having all of these classes.
We maybe could just use `InternalSingleBucketAggregation` in
all those cases.... But for now, let's test the classes!
Relates to #22278
This commit changes the build hash to be the string "Unknown" when for
some reason this build hash is not available. This aligns the value with
the value we use when the hash is not available from the jar
manifest. This situation can occur when running tests from a worktree
which is not currently handled correctly by JGit, the upstream
dependency that is used to acquire the hash. This causes problems when
running tests locally because the warning header pattern expects a hash
or the string "Unknown". While the warning header pattern be changed to
allow "N/A" as well, it seemed more sensible to align the value here
with the value when the hash is not available from the jar manifest.
Relates #23421
This change adds a new test task, platformTest, which runs `gradle test
integTest` within a vagrant host. This will allow us to still test on
all the supported platforms, but be able to standardize on the tools
provided in the host system, for example, with a modern version of git
that can allow #22946.
In order to have sufficient memory and cpu to run the tests, the
vagrantfile has been updated to use 8GB and 4 cpus by default. This can
be customized with the `VAGRANT_MEMORY` and `VAGRANT_CPUS` environment
variables. Also, to save time to show this can work, it currently uses
the same Vagrantfile the packaging tests do. There are a lot of cleanups
we can do to how the gradle-vagrant tasks work, including generating
Vagrantfile altogether, but I think this is fine for now as the same
machines that would run platformTest run packagingTest, and they are
relatively beefy machines, so the higher memory and cpu for them, with
either task, should not be an issue.
This commit fixes the reproduce line output when the vagrant packagingTest
fails. Before only the `gradle packagingTest` would be output, but the
seed and list of versions was swallowed by groovy with an ancillary
failure (due to the `+` being on the wrong line for a string
continuation). With the new reproduce line, it is now output next to
the task right after failure, contains the actual task (specific to the
box that fails), and contains the seed. It also no longer contains the
upgrade versions list, as the seed is used to determine which of those
to use, and the same file would be read when testing a failure on a
particular git commit. Finally, this also ties bats test setup directly
to packagingTest, instead of to the vagrant up command.
When a rest integ test has multiple nodes, each node is supposed to not
start configuring itself until the first node has been started, so that
the unicast host information can be written. However, this was never
explicitly setup to occur, and we were just very lucky with the current
gradle version and stability of the code always produced a task graph
that had node0 starting first. With the recent refactorings to integ
tests, the order has changed. This commit fixes the ordering by adding
an explicit dependency between the first node and the other nodes.
This commit moves the LICENSE.txt and NOTICE.txt files for each plugin
to be alongside the other plugin files, inside the elasticsearch subdir.
This ensures those files are installed alongside the plugin.
Gradle's finalizedBy on tasks only ensures one task runs after another,
but not immediately after. This is problematic for our integration tests
since it allows multiple project's integ test clusters to be
simultaneously. While this has not been a problem thus far (gradle 2.13
happened to keep the finalizedBy tasks close enough that no clusters
were running in parallel), with gradle 3.3 the task graph generation has
changed, and numerous clusters may be running simultaneously, causing
memory pressure, and thus generally slower tests, or even failure if the
system has a limited amount of memory (eg in a vagrant host).
This commit reworks how integ tests are configured. It adds an
`integTestCluster` extension to gradle which is equivalent to the current
`integTest.cluster` and moves the rest test runner task to
`integTestRunner`. The `integTest` task is then just a dummy task,
which depends on the cluster runner task, as well as the cluster stop
task. This means running `integTest` in one project will both run the
rest tests, and shut down the cluster, before running `integTest` in
another project.
In #23253 we added an the ability to incrementally reduce search results.
This change exposes the parameter to control the batch since and therefore
the memory consumption of a large search request.
This commit enforces the requirement of Content-Type for the REST layer and removes the deprecated methods in transport
requests and their usages.
While doing this, it turns out that there are many places where *Entity classes are used from the apache http client
libraries and many of these usages did not specify the content type. The methods that do not specify a content type
explicitly have been added to forbidden apis to prevent more of these from entering our code base.
Relates #19388
These images have been rebuilt to be preloaded with java 8 installed.
This change re-enables the systems. It also removes some redundancy in
the rpm checks I found while testing the new images, and fixes a
potential issue with generated resources in plugins where a stale dir
can cause junk to get into the distribution.
This commit adds the elasticsearch LICENSE.txt to all plugins that
released with elasticsearch, as well as a generated NOTICE.txt specific
to the dependencies of each plugin.
When configuring which repositories to pull from, we currently add
mavenLocal() when the `repos.mavenLocal` flag is set. However, this is
only done in normal projects, but not the special buildSrc project. This
change adds that support. Note that this was not possible before gradle
2.13, as there was a bug which prevented sys props from reaching the
buildSrc project (https://issues.gradle.org/browse/GRADLE-2475).
However, we already require 2.13+.
This is related to #22116. This commit adds calls that require
SocketPermission connect to forbidden APIs.
The following calls are now forbidden:
- java.net.URL#openStream()
- java.net.URLConnection#connect()
- java.net.URLConnection#getInputStream()
- java.net.Socket#connect(java.net.SocketAddress)
- java.net.Socket#connect(java.net.SocketAddress, int)
- java.nio.channels.SocketChannel#open(java.net.SocketAddress)
- java.nio.channels.SocketChannel#connect(java.net.SocketAddress)
Now that debian is disabled, we are seeing similar failures with fedora
not able to install java. This commit temporarily disables fedora until
it is once again stable.