This commit enables CLI commands to be closeable and installs a runtime
shutdown hook to ensure that if the JVM shuts down (as opposed to
aborting) the close method is called.
It is not enough to wrap uses of commands in main methods in
try-with-resources blocks as these will not run if, say, the virtual
machine is terminated in response to SIGINT, or system shutdown event.
Relates #22126
Today we rely on the version that the API user passes in together with the DiscoveryNode. This commit introduces a low level handshake where nodes exchange their version to be used with the transport protocol that is executed every time a connection to a node is established. This, on the one hand allows to change the wire protocol based on the version we are talking to even without a full cluster restart. Today we would need to carry on a BWC layer across major versions but with a handshake we can rely on the fact that the latest version of the previous minor executes a handshake and uses the latest protocol version across all communication with the N+1 version nodes.
This change is yet fully backwards compatible, a followup PR will remove the BWC in 6.0 once this has been back-ported to the 5.x branch
Starts to centralize creation of the `XContentParser` in
`protected final` methods on `ESTestCase`. The idea is to enable
adding `NamedXContentRegistry` relatively easily by giving tests
a single place they can override to define the
`NamedXContentRegistry`. Since `NamedXContentRegistry` doesn't
exist yet neither does the override point.
This doesn't attempt to migrate all the tests to calling the
new methods to build the parsers. I wanted to make this so we
could review the concept and then I'll merge a followup to
migrate the tests.
Plugins also have the need to provide better OOTB experience by configuring
defaults unless the plugin is used in _production_ mode. This change exposes
the bootstrap check infrastructure as part of the plugin API to allow plugins
to specify / install their own bootstrap checks if necessary.
Our query DSL supports empty queries (`{}`), which have a different meaning depending on the query that holds it, either ignored, match_all or match_none. We deprecated the support for empty queries in 5.0, where we log a deprecation warning wherever they are used.
The way we supported it once we moved query parsing to the coordinating node was having an Optional<QueryBuilder> return type in all of our parse methods (called fromXContent). See #17624. The central place for this was QueryParseContext#parseInnerQueryBuilder. We can now remove all the optional return types and simply throw an exception whenever an empty query is found.
This change allows specifying alias/wildcard expression in indices_boost.
And added another format for specifying indices_boost. It accepts array of index name and boost pair.
If an index is included in multiple aliases/wildcard expressions, the first match will be used.
With new format, old format is marked as deprecated.
Closes#4756
Today we connect and publish the nodes connection before we execute a
handshake with the node we connect to. In the case of connecting to a node
that won't pass the handshake this connection is already `published` and other
code paths can use it. This commit detaches the connection and the publish of the
connection such that `TransportService` can do a handshake before actually connect
and publish the connection.
* Remove 2.0 prerelease version constants
This is a start to addressing #21887. This removes:
* pre 2.0 snapshot format support
* automatic units addition to cluster settings
* bwc check for delete by query in pre 2.0 indexes
If you write a yaml test with a `warnings` section in a `do` block
that doesn't also have a corresponding `skip` section for `warnings`
then client test runners that don't support `warnings` will fail.
This causes the elasticsearch build to fail so we catch these errors
earlier.
Related to #21811
This commit enhances the allocator decision result objects (namely,
AllocateUnassignedDecision, MoveDecision, and RebalanceDecision)
to enable them to be used directly by the cluster allocation explain API. In
particular, this commit does the following:
- Adds serialization and toXContent methods to the response objects,
which will form the explain API responses.
- Moves the calculation of the final explanation to the response
object itself, removing it from the responsibility of the allocators.
- Adds shard store information to the NodeAllocationResult, so that
store information is available for each node, when explaining a
shard allocation by the PrimaryShardAllocator or the ReplicaShardAllocator.
- Removes RebalanceDecision in favor of using MoveDecision for both
moving and rebalancing shards.
- Removes NodeRebalanceResult in favor of using NodeAllocationResult.
- Changes the notion of weight ranking to be relative to the current node,
instead of an absolute weight that doesn't convey any added value to the
API user and can be confusing.
- Introduces a new enum AllocationDecision to convey the decision type,
which enables conveying unassigned, moving, and rebalancing scenarios
with more detail as opposed to just Decision.Type and AllocationStatus.
We had tests for the regular factories, but not for the pre-built ones, that
ship by default without requiring users to define them in the analysis settings.
Since the removal of local discovery of #https://github.com/elastic/elasticsearch/pull/20960 we rely on minimum master nodes to be set in our test cluster. The settings is automatically managed by the cluster (by default) but current management doesn't work with concurrent single node async starting. On the other hand, with `MockZenPing` and the `discovery.initial_state_timeout` set to `0s` node starting and joining is very fast making async starting an unneeded complexity. Test that still need async starting could, in theory, still do so themselves via background threads.
Note that this change also removes the usage of `INITIAL_STATE_TIMEOUT_SETTINGS` as the starting of nodes is done concurrently (but building them is sequential)
Changes the default socket and connection timeouts for the rest
client from 10 seconds to the more generous 30 seconds.
Defaults reindex-from-remote to those timeouts and make the
timeouts configurable like so:
```
POST _reindex
{
"source": {
"remote": {
"host": "http://otherhost:9200",
"socket_timeout": "1m",
"connect_timeout": "10s"
},
"index": "source",
"query": {
"match": {
"test": "data"
}
}
},
"dest": {
"index": "dest"
}
}
```
Closes#21707
We don't use the test infra nor do we run the tests. They might all be
entirely out of date. We also have a different BWC test infra in-place.
This change removes all of the legacy infra.
Today we can easily join a cluster that holds an index we don't support since
we currently allow rolling upgrades from 5.x to 6.x. Along the same lines we don't check if we can support an index based on the nodes in the cluster when we open, restore or metadata-upgrade and index. This commit adds
additional safety that fails cluster state validation, open, restore and /or upgrade if there is an open index with an incompatible index version created in the cluster.
Realtes to #21670
Timeouts are global today across all connections this commit allows to specify
a connection timeout per node such that depending on the context connections can
be established with different timeouts.
Relates to #19719
Currently we have these logs for integration tests only.
This adds the following log at the start:
```
logger.info("[{}]: before test", getTestName());
```
and this is logged at the end, but before any clean up done in sub classes
```
logger.info("[{}]: after test", getTestName());
```
For the record, I also had to remove the geo-hash cell and geo-distance range
queries to make the code compile. These queries already throw an exception in
all cases with 5.x indices, so that does not hurt any more.
I also had to rename all 2.x bwc indices from `index-${version}` to
`unsupported-${version}` to make `OldIndexBackwardCompatibilityIT`
happy.
Lucene 6.2 added index and query support for numeric ranges. This commit adds a new RangeFieldMapper for indexing numeric (int, long, float, double) and date ranges and creating appropriate range and term queries. The design is similar to NumericFieldMapper in that it uses a RangeType enumerator for implementing the logic specific to each type. The following range types are supported by this field mapper: int_range, float_range, long_range, double_range, date_range.
Lucene does not provide a DocValue field specific to RangeField types so the RangeFieldMapper implements a CustomRangeDocValuesField for handling doc value support.
When executing a Range query over a Range field, the RangeQueryBuilder has been enhanced to accept a new relation parameter for defining the type of query as one of: WITHIN, CONTAINS, INTERSECTS. This provides support for finding all ranges that are related to a specific range in a desired way. As with other spatial queries, DISJOINT can be achieved as a MUST_NOT of an INTERSECTS query.
The Transport#connectToNodeLight concepts is confusing and not very flexible.
neither really testable on a unittest level. This commit cleans up the code used
to connect to nodes and simplifies transport implementations to share more code.
This also allows to connect to nodes with custom profiles if needed, for instance
future improvements can be added to connect to/from nodes that are non-data nodes without
dedicated bulks and recovery connections.
In the past we ran yaml tests against an internal cluster, which would get restarted after each test failure, hence the client objects needed to eventually be refreshed before each test. That is why we had the initClient method to re-initialize the YamlTestClient in the execution context. We ended up though re-initializing the client unconditionally, which is not needed.
Also, ESRestTestCase recreates the RestClient against the external cluster before each test, which is not needed given that nothing changes in the external cluster.
This commit removes the initClient method from the yaml tests execution context. The YamlTestClient can be eagerly created before the first yaml test runs and then re-used in subsequent tests. Also api calls to check for nodes versions etc. are moved out of YamlTestClient to ESClientYamlSuiteTestCase. Also the RestClient is now initialized in ESRestTestCase before the first test runs, and kept around afterwards as a static member.
Basically each subclass of EsRestTestCase will have its own RestClient instance, but the client will be shared across the different tests within the same class. The yaml test suite is just a special suite, composed of 600+ tests that are loaded from files, which will share the same client instance.
This change should speed tests up as well, as we don't recreate the RestClient before each single test, and we don't call _cat/nodes either before each single test.
TransportAddress used to be customizable per transport but this has been removed
a while ago. Therefore we can remove all usage of this method as well.
Relates to #20695
The disruption type LongGCDisruption simulates GCs on a node by suspending all the threads of that node. If the suspended threads are in a code section with shared JVM locks, however, it can prevent the other nodes from doing their thing. The class LongGCDisruption has a list of class names for which we know that this can occur. Whenever a test using the GC disruption type fails in mysterious ways, it becomes a long guessing game to find the offending class. This commit adds code to LongGCDisruption to automatically detect these situations, fail the test early and report the offending class and all relevant context.
Today when handling unreleased versions for backwards compatilibity
support, we scatted version constants across the code base and add some
asserts to support removing these constants when the version in question
is actually released. This commit improves this situation, enabling us
to just add a single unreleased version constant that can be renamed
when the version is actually released. This should make maintenance of
these versions simpler.
Relates #21760
* Scripting: Remove groovy scripting language
Groovy was deprecated in 5.0. This change removes it, along with the
legacy default language infrastructure in scripting.
The `error_trace` parameter turns on the `stack_trace` field
in errors which returns stack traces.
Removes documentation for `camelCase` because it hasn't worked
in a while....
Documents the internal parameters used to render stack traces as
internal only.
Closes#21708
Today there is no way to get notified if a node is disconnected. Client code
must poll the TransportClient constantly to detect that a node is not connected
anymore in order to react and add new nodes or notify altering etc. For instance
if a hostname gets resolved to an IP but that host is disconnected clients want
to reconnect by resolving the hostname again which is a common situation in cloud
environments.
Closes#21424
Today we eagerly resolve unicast hosts. This means that if DNS changes,
we will never find the host at the new address. Moreover, a single host
failng to resolve causes startup to abort. This commit introduces lazy
resolution of unicast hosts. If a DNS entry changes, there is an
opportunity for the host to be discovered. Note that under the Java
security manager, there is a default positive cache of infinity for
resolved hosts; this means that if a user does want to operate in an
environment where DNS can change, they must adjust
networkaddress.cache.ttl in their security policy. And if a host fails
to resolve, we warn log the hostname but continue pinging other
configured hosts.
When doing DNS resolutions for unicast hostnames, we wait until the DNS
lookups timeout. This appears to be forty-five seconds on modern JVMs,
and it is not configurable. If we do these serially, the cluster can be
blocked during ping for a lengthy period of time. This commit introduces
doing the DNS lookups in parallel, and adds a user-configurable timeout
for these lookups.
Relates #21630
* Add support for merging custom meta data in tribe node
Currently, when any underlying cluster has custom metadata
(via plugin), tribe node does not store custom meta data in its
cluster state. This is because the tribe node has no idea how to
select the appropriate custom metadata from one or many custom
metadata (corresponding to the number of underlying clusters).
This change adds an interface that custom metadata implementations
can extend to add support for merging mulitple custom metadata of
the same type for storing in the tribe state.
Relates to #20544
Supersedes #20791
* Simplify updating tribe state
* Add tests for merging multiple custom metadata types in tribe node
* cleanup merging custom md logic in tribe service
* master: (22 commits)
Add proper toString() method to UpdateTask (#21582)
Fix `InternalEngine#isThrottled` to not always return `false`. (#21592)
add `ignore_missing` option to SplitProcessor (#20982)
fix trace_match behavior for when there is only one grok pattern (#21413)
Remove dead code from GetResponse.java
Fixes date range query using epoch with timezone (#21542)
Do not cache term queries. (#21566)
Updated dynamic mapper section
Docs: Clarify date_histogram bucket sizes for DST time zones
Handle release of 5.0.1
Fix skip reason for stats API parameters test
Reduce skip version for stats API parameter tests
Strict level parsing for indices stats
Remove cluster update task when task times out (#21578)
[DOCS] Mention "all-fields" mode doesn't search across nested documents
InternalTestCluster: when restarting a node we should validate the cluster is formed via the node we just restarted
Fixed bad asciidoc in boolean mapping docs
Fixed bad asciidoc ID in node stats
Be strict when parsing values searching for booleans (#21555)
Fix time zone rounding edge case for DST overlaps
...
There have been reports that the query cache did not manage to speed up search
requests when the query includes a large number of different sub queries since
a single request may manage to exhaust the whole history (256 queries) while
the query cache only starts caching queries once they appear multiple times in
the history (#16031). On the other hand, increasing the size of the query cache
is a bit controversial (#20116) so this pull request proposes a different
approach that consists of never caching term queries, and not adding them to the
history of queries either. The reasoning is that these queries should be fast
anyway, regardless of caching, so taking them out of the equation should not
cause any slow down. On the other hand, the fact that they are not added to the
cache history anymore means that other queries have greater chances of being
cached.
#20960 removed `LocalDiscovery` and we now use `ZenDiscovery` in all our tests. To keep cluster forming fast, we are using a `MockZenPing` implementation which uses static maps to return instant results making master election fast. Currently, we don't set `minimum_master_nodes` causing the occasional split brain when starting multiple nodes concurrently and their pinging is so fast that it misses the fact that one of the node has elected it self master. To solve this, `InternalTestCluster` is modified to behave like a true cluster and manage and set `minimum_master_nodes` correctly with every change to the number of nodes.
Tests that want to manage the settings themselves can opt out using a new `autoMinMasterNodes` parameter to the `ClusterScope` annotation.
Having `min_master_nodes` set means the started node may need to wait for other nodes to be started as well. To combat this, we set `discovery.initial_state_timeout` to `0` and wait for the cluster to form once all node have been started. Also, because a node may wait and ping while other nodes are started, `MockZenPing` is adapted to wait rather than busy-ping.
This changes adds a test discovery (which internally uses the existing
mock zenping by default). Having the mock the test framework selects be a discovery
greatly simplifies discovery setup (no more weird callback to a Node
method).
Today when a node starts, we create dynamic socket permissions based on
the configured HTTP ports and transport ports. If no ports are
configured, we use the default port ranges. When a tribe node starts, a
tribe node creates an internal node client for connecting to each remote
cluster. If neither an explicit HTTP port nor transport ports were
specified, the default port ranges are large enough for the tribe node
and its internal node clients. If an explicit HTTP port or transport
port was specified for the tribe node, then socket permissions for those
ports will be created, but not for the internal node clients. Whether
the internal node clients have explicit ports specified, or attempt to
bind within the default range, socket permissions for these will not
have been created and the internal node clients will hit a permissions
issue when attempting to bind. This commit addresses this issue by also
accounting for tribe nodes when creating the dynamic socket
permissions. Additionally, we add our first real integration test for
tribe nodes.
This commit enables real BWC testing against a 5.1 snapshot. All
REST tests plus rolling upgrade test now run against a mixed version
cross major version cluster.
* master:
Hack around cluster service and logging race
Do not prematurely shutdown Log4j
Support decimal constants with trailing [dD] in painless (#21412)
In painless suggest a long constant if int won't do (#21415)
Account for different paths for sysctl utilities
[TEST] testRebalancePossible() may not have an assigned node id
Tests: Disable merge in SearchCancellationTests
Tests: clean search scroll at the end of SearchCancellationIT
When a node closes, we shutdown logging as the last statement. This
statement must be last lest any subsequent attempts to log will blow up
by running into security permissions. Yet, in the case of a tribe node
this isn't enough. The first internal tribe node to close will shutdown
logging, and subsequent node closes will blow up with the aforementioned
problem. This commit migrate the Log4j shutdown to occur as part of the
shutdown hook that closes the node, after all nodes have
closed. Consequently, we can remove a hack in the test infrastructure to
prevent Log4j shutdowns when internal test nodes close and instead just
register a single shutdown hook that runs when the test JVM exits.
Relates #21519
* master:
ShardActiveResponseHandler shouldn't hold to an entire cluster state
Ensures cleanup of temporary index-* generational blobs during snapshotting (#21469)
Remove (again) test uses of onModule (#21414)
[TEST] Add assertBusy when checking for pending operation counter after tests
Revert "Add trace logging when aquiring and releasing operation locks for replication requests"
Allows multiple patterns to be specified for index templates (#21009)
[TEST] fixes rebalance single shard check as it isn't guaranteed that a rebalance makes sense and the method only tests if rebalance is allowed
Document _reindex with random_score
* master: (516 commits)
Avoid angering Log4j in TransportNodesActionTests
Add trace logging when aquiring and releasing operation locks for replication requests
Fix handler name on message not fully read
Remove accidental import.
Improve log message in TransportNodesAction
Clean up of Script.
Update Joda Time to version 2.9.5 (#21468)
Remove unused ClusterService dependency from SearchPhaseController (#21421)
Remove max_local_storage_nodes from elasticsearch.yml (#21467)
Wait for all reindex subtasks before rethrottling
Correcting a typo-Maan to Man-in README.textile (#21466)
Fix InternalSearchHit#hasSource to return the proper boolean value (#21441)
Replace all index date-math examples with the URI encoded form
Fix typos (#21456)
Adapt ES_JVM_OPTIONS packaging test to ubuntu-1204
Add null check in InternalSearchHit#sourceRef to prevent NPE (#21431)
Add VirtualBox version check (#21370)
Export ES_JVM_OPTIONS for SysV init
Skip reindex rethrottle tests with workers
Make forbidden APIs be quieter about classpath warnings (#21443)
...
This change was reverted after it caused random test failures. This was
due to a copy/paste error in the original PR which caused the mock
version of ClusterInfoService to be used whenever the mock *ZenPing* was
used, and the real ClusterInfoService to be used when MockZenPing was
not used.
Currently, pending operations can complete after tests with disruption scheme
completes. This commit waits for the pending operation counter to complete
after the tests are run
* Allows for an array of index template patterns to be provided to an
index template, and rename the field from 'template' to 'index_pattern'.
Closes#20690
We currently often use ensureGreen or ensureYellow to check whether the cluster is in a good state again after shutting down a node. With the change in #21092, however, it can happen that if the node that is stopped is the master node, another node will become master and publish a cluster state where it is master but where the node that was stopped hasn't been removed yet from the cluster state. It will only publish a second state thereafter where the old master is removed. If the ensureGreen/ensureYellow is timed just right, it will get to execute before the second cluster state update removing the old master and the condition ensureGreen / ensureYellow might not hold at that point anymore.
At one point in the past when moving out the rest tests from core to
their own subproject, we had multiple test classes which evenly split up
the tests to run. However, we simplified this and went back to a single
test runner to have better reproduceability in tests. This change
removes the remnants of that multiplexing support.
Adds support for `?slices=N` to reindex which automatically
parallelizes the process using parallel scrolls on `_uid`. Performance
testing sees a 3x performance improvement for simple docs
on decent hardware, maybe 30% performance improvement
for more complex docs. Still compelling, especially because
clusters should be able to get closer to the 3x than the 30%
number.
Closes#20624
Today if you start Elasticsearch with the status logger configured to
the warn level, or use a transport client with the default status logger
level, you will see warn messages about deprecation loggers being
created with different message factories and that formatting might be
broken. This happens because the deprecation logger is constructed using
the message factory from its parent, an artifact leftover from the first
Log4j 2 implementation that used a custom message factory. When that
custom message factory was removed, this constructor invocation should
have been changed to not explicitly use the message factory from the
parent. This commit fixes this invocation. However, we also had some
status checking to all tests to ensure that there are no warn status log
messages that might indicate a configuration problem with Log4j 2. These
assertions blow up badly without the fix for the deprecation logger
construction, and also caught a misconfiguration in one of the logging
tests.
Relates #21339
This is a bit funky to do with junit because we need per test state
but we only want to log it per suite. So we use a static flag that
we test per test and reset before every suite.
Our test infrastructure checks after running each test that there are no more in-flight requests on the shard level. Whenever the check fails, we only know that there were in-flight requests but don't know what requests were causing this issue. This commit adds the replication tasks that are still active at that moment to the assertion error.
Plugins: Remove pluggability of ZenPing
ZenPing is the part of zen discovery which knows how to ping nodes.
There is only one alternative implementation, which is just for testing.
This change removes the ability to add custom zen pings, and instead
hooks in the MockZenPing for tests through an overridden method in
MockNode. This also folds in the ZenPingService (which was really just a
single method) into ZenDiscovery, and removes the idea of having
multiple ZenPing instances. Finally, this was the last usage of the
ExtensionPoint classes, so that is also removed here.
This adds checks for expected warning headers to the query builder test
infrastructure. Tests that are adding deprecation warnings to the response
headers need to check those, otherwise the abstract base class for the test
class will complain at teardown.
Checks on static test state are run by an @After method in ESTestCase. Suite-scoped tests in ESIntegTestCase only shut down in an @AfterClass method, which executes after the @After method in ESTestCase. The suite-scoped cluster can thus still execute actions that will violate the checks in @After without those being caught. A subsequent test executing within the same JVM will fail these checks however when @After gets called for that test.
This commit adds an explicit call to check the static test state after the suite-scoped cluster has been shut down.
Today these two are considered mutual exclusive but they are not in
practice. For instance a mixed version cluster might not return a
given warning depending on which node we talk to but on the other hand
some runners might not even support warnings at all so the test might be
skipped either by version or by feature.
The `IndexService#newQueryShardContext()` method creates a QueryShardContext on
shard `0`, with a `null` reader and that uses `System.currentTimeMillis()` to
resolve `now`. This may hide bugs, since the shard id is sometimes used for
query parsing (it is used to salt random score generation in `function_score`),
passing a `null` reader disables query rewriting and for some use-cases, it is
simply not ok to rely on the current timestamp (eg. percolation). So this pull
request removes this method and instead requires that all call sites provide
these parameters explicitly.
Before publishing a cluster state the master connects to the nodes that are added in the cluster state. When publishing fails, however, it does not disconnect from these nodes, leaving NodeConnectionsService out of sync with the currently applied cluster state.
The `_cat/nodes` API might not be available in all clusters for instance
if they have authorization enabled. This change falls back to the previously
used method of using the '/' endpoint to fetch the nodes version, this is best
effort and will emit a warning.
Lucene 6.3 is expected to be released in the next weeks so it'd be good to give
it some integration testing. I had to upgrade randomized-testing too so that
both Lucene and Elasticsearch are on the same version.
Today we only use a single node to send requests to when we run REST tests.
In some cases we have more than one node (ie. in the BWC case) where we should
send requests to all nodes in a round-robin fashion. This change passes all
available node endpoints to the rest test.
Additionally, this change adds the setting of `discovery.zen.minimum_master_nodes`
to the cluster formation forcing the nodes to wait for all other nodes until the cluster
is formed. This allows for a more realistic master election and allows all master eligable
nodes to become master while before always the first node in the cluster became the master.
This also adds logging to each test run to log the master nodes version and the minimum node
version in the cluster to help debugging BWC test failures.
This fixes our cluster formation task to run REST tests against a mixed version cluster.
Yet, due to some limitations in our test framework `indices.rollover` tests are currently
disabled for the BWC case since they select the current master as the merge node which
happens to be a BWC node and we can't relocate all shards to it since the primaries are on
a higher version node. This will be fixed in a followup.
Closes#21142
Note: This has been cherry-picked from 5.0 and fixes several rest tests
as well as a BWC break in `OsStats.java`
The network disruption type "network delay" continues delaying existing requests even after the disruption has been cleared. This commit ensures that the requests get to execute right after the delay rule is cleared.
This commit fixes responses to HEAD requests so that the value of the
Content-Length is correct per the HTTP spec. Namely, the value of this
header should be equal to the Content-Length if the request were not a
HEAD request.
This commit also fixes a memory leak on HEAD requests to the main action
that arose from the bytes on a builder not being released due to them
being dropped on the floor to ensure that the response to the main
action did not have a body.
Relates #21123
Currently test that check that equals() and hashCode() are working as expected
for classes implementing them are quiet similar. This change moves common
assertions in this method to a common utility class. In addition, another common
utility function in most of these test classes that creates copies of input
object by running them through a StreamOutput and reading them back in, is moved
to ESTestCase so it can be shared across all these classes.
Closes#20629
Today the request interceptor can't support async calls since the response
of the async call would execute on a different thread ie. a client or listener
thread. This means in-turn that the intercepted handler is not executed with the
thread it was supposed to run and therefor can, if it's executing blocking
operations, potentially deadlock an entire server.
* Move all zen discovery classes into o.e.discovery.zen
This collapses sub packages of zen into zen. These all had just a couple
classes each, and there is really no reason to have the subpackages.
* fix checkstyle
`LocalDiscovery` is a discovery implementation that uses static in memory maps to keep track of current live nodes. This is used extensively in our tests in order to speed up cluster formation (i.e., shortcut the 3 second ping period used by `ZenDiscovery` by default). This is sad as that mean that most of the test run using a different discovery semantics than what is used in production. Instead of replacing the entire discovery logic, we can use a similar approach to only shortcut the pinging components.
During a recent merge from master, we lost the bridge from IndicesClusterStateService to the GlobalCheckpointService of primary shards, notifying them of changes to the current set of active/initializing shards. This commits add the bridge back (with unit tests). It also simplifies the GlobalCheckpoint tracking to use a simpler model (which makes use the fact that the global check point sync is done periodically).
The old integration CheckpointIT test is moved to IndexLevelReplicationTests. I also added similar assertions to RelocationsIT, which surfaced a bug in the primary relocation logic and how it plays with global checkpoint updates. The test is currently await-fixed and will be fixed in a follow up issue.
This commit changes the current REST API parser to make it fail and throw an exception when a REST specification file contains a duplicated parameters, or path, or method, or path part.
This is important to allow any test to use RandomQueryBuilder#createQuery()
since some of the query builders that are used in this test test the length
of the types array and otherwise will thow NPE if the test is not a subclass
of AbstractQueryTestCase.
The cache relies on the equals() method so we just need to make sure script
queries can never be equals, even to themselves in the case that a weight
is used to produce a Scorer on the same segment multiple times.
Closes#20763
Today we throw an assertion error if we release an AbstractArray more than once.
Yet, it's recommended to implement close methods such that they can be invoked
more than once. Guaranteed single release calls are hard to implement and some
situations might not be tested causing for instance `CircuitBreaker` to operate on
corrupted memory stats.
UpdateHelper, MetaDataIndexUpgradeService, and some recovery
stuff.
Move ClusterSettings to nullable ctor parameter of TransportService
so it isn't forgotten.
This change proposes the removal of all non-tcp transport implementations. The
mock transport can be used by default to run tests instead of local transport that has
roughly the same performance compared to TCP or at least not noticeably slower.
This is a master only change, deprecation notice in 5.x will be committed as a
separate change.
Today SearchContext expose the current context as a thread local which makes any kind of sane interface design very very hard. This PR removes the thread local entirely and instead passes the relevant context anywhere needed. This simplifies state management dramatically and will allow for a much leaner SearchContext interface down the road.
LongGCDisruption suspends and resumes node threads but respects several
`unsafe` class name patterns where it's unsafe to suspend. For instance
log4j uses a global lock so we can't suspend a thread that is currently
calling into log4j. The same is true for the security manager, it's similar
to log4j a shared resource between the test and the node that is _suspended_.
This change adds `java.lang.SecrityManager` to the unsafe patterns.
This prevents test framework deadlocking if a nodes thread is supended
while it's calling into the security manager that uses synchronized maps etc.
today it's not possible to use date-math efficiently with the `_rollover`
API. This change adds support for date-math in the target index as well as
support for preserving the math logic when an existing index that was created with
a date math expression all subsequent indices are created with the same expression.
The logging listener tests started failing after
953a8a959b when the tests are run with
tests.es.logger.level set to any level other than debug. This is because
these tests were based around the assumption that the default logging
level was info, which was the case before that commit fixed setting the
default logging level via that system property. This commit fixes these
failing tests by adjusting this assumption to account for the fact that
the default logging level could be different.
Pipe in the `tests.es.logger.level` system property to the log4j config file used in tests. We still default to info. Also adapts the logger name to use the first letter of packages.
Pipe in the `tests.es.logger.level` system property to the log4j config file used in tests. We still default to info. Also adapts the logger name to use the first letter of packages.
* master: (1199 commits)
[DOCS] Remove non-valid link to mapping migration document
Revert "Default `include_in_all` for numeric-like types to false"
test: add a test with ipv6 address
docs: clearify that both ip4 and ip6 addresses are supported
Include complex settings in settings requests
Add production warning for pre-release builds
Clean up confusing error message on unhandled endpoint
[TEST] Increase logging level in testDelayShards()
change health from string to enum (#20661)
Provide error message when plugin id is missing
Document that sliced scroll works for reindex
Make reindex-from-remote ignore unknown fields
Remove NoopGatewayAllocator in favor of a more realistic mock (#20637)
Remove Marvel character reference from guide
Fix documentation for setting Java I/O temp dir
Update client benchmarks to log4j2
Changes the API of GatewayAllocator#applyStartedShards and (#20642)
Removes FailedRerouteAllocation and StartedRerouteAllocation
IndexRoutingTable.initializeEmpty shouldn't override supplied primary RecoverySource (#20638)
Smoke tester: Adjust to latest changes (#20611)
...
Many of our unit tests instantiate an `AllocationService`, which requires having a `GatewayAllocator`. Today almost all of our test use a class called `NoopGatewayAllocator` which does nothing, effectively leaving all shard assignments to the balanced allocator. This is sad as it means we test a system that behaves differently than our production logic in very basic things. For example, a started primary that is lost will be assigned to a node that didn't use to have it.
This PR removes `NoopGatewayAllocator` in favor of a new `TestGatewayAllocator` that inherits the standard `GatewayAllocator` and overrides shard information fetching to return information based on historical assignments the allocator has done. The only exception is `BalanceConfigurationTests` which does test only the balancer and I opted to not have it work around the `GatewayAllocator` being in it's way.
Changes the API of GatewayAllocator#applyStartedShards and
GatewayAllocator#applyFailedShards to take both a RoutingAllocation
and a list of shards to apply. This allows better mock allocators
to be created as being done in #20637.
Closes#20642
Removes the FailedRerouteAllocation class and StartedRerouteAllocation
class, as they were just wrappers for RerouteAllocation that stored
started and failed shards, but these started and failed shards can
be passed in directly to the methods that needed them, removing the
need for this wrapper class and extra level of indirection.
Closes#20626
Today we hold on to all possible tokenizers, tokenfilters etc. when we create
an index service on a node. This was mainly done to allow the `_analyze` API to
directly access all these primitive. We fixed this in #19827 and can now get rid of
the AnalysisService entirely and replace it with a simple map like class. This
ensures we don't create a gazillion long living objects that are entirely useless since
they are never used in most of the indices. Also those objects might consume a considerable
amount of memory since they might load stopwords or synonyms etc.
Closes#19828
This commit changes the default behavior of `_flush` to block if other flushes are ongoing.
This also removes the use of `FlushNotAllowedException` and instead simply return immediately
by skipping the flush. Users should be aware if they set this option that the flush might or might
not flush everything to disk ie. no transactional behavior of some sort.
Closes#20569
This commit removes `ByteSizeValue`'s methods that are duplicated (ex: `mbFrac()` and `getMbFrac()`) in order to only keep the `getN` form.
It also renames `mb()` -> `getMb()`, `kb()` -> `getKB()` in order to be more coherent with the `ByteSizeUnit` method names.
This PR introduces backward compatibility index tests to test the rolling upgrade process amongst Elasticsearch instances within the same major version. The test executes in three phases. In the first phase, we form a cluster of 2 ES instances on an old version. In the second phase, we keep one of the nodes from the old cluster, kill the other node, but preserve its data directory and start an instance of the current version of ES using the same data directory as the killed instance. In the third phase, we kill the other old version ES instance from the first phase and launch a new instance, using the same data directory as the killed instance. Therefore, during phase 3, we have fully migrated and have all current versions of ES running. In each phase, we run REST tests that index documents and search them, ensuring at each stage that the documents from the previous phase are still there.
Note that because we haven't released a GA yet of 5.0, the tests currently don't start an old version cluster in the first phase. Once GA is released, this will be changed to make the backward compatibility version 5.0, while the current version in the cluster will be 5.x.
This change removes all guice interaction from Transport, HttpServerTransport,
HttpServer and TransportService. All these classes as well as their subclasses
or extended version configured via plugins are now created by using plain old
bloody java constructors. YAY!
Currently all the reroute-like methods of `AllocationService` return a result object of type `RoutingAllocation.Result`. The result object contains the new `RoutingTable` and `MetaData` plus an indication whether those were changed. The caller is then responsible of updating a cluster state with these. These means that things can easily go wrong and one can take one of these but not the other causing inconsistencies. We already have a utility method on the `ClusterState` builder that does but no one forces you to do so. Also 99% of the callers do the same thing: i.e., check if the result was changed and if so update the very same cluster state that was passed to `AllocationService`. This PR folds this pattern into `AllocationService` and changes almost all it's methods to return a new cluster state (potentially the original one). This saves some 500 lines of code.
The one exception here is the reroute API which executes allocation commands and potentially returns an explanation as well (next to the routing table and metadata). That API now returns a `CommandsResult` object which encapsulate a cluster state and the explanation.
TransportService is such a central part of the core server, replacing
it's implementation is risky and can cause serious issues. This change removes the ability to
plug in TransportService but allows registering a TransportInterceptor that enables
plugins to intercept requests on both the sender and the receiver ends. This is a commonly used
and overwritten functionality but encapsulates the custom code in a contained manner.
During a networking partition, cluster states updates (like mapping changes or shard assignments)
are committed if a majority of the masters node received the update correctly. This means that the current master has access to enough nodes in the cluster to continue to operate correctly. When the network partition heals, the isolated nodes catch up with the current state and get the changes they couldn't receive before. However, if a second partition happens while the cluster
is still recovering from the previous one *and* the old master is put in the minority side, it may be that a new master is elected which did not yet catch up. If that happens, cluster state updates can be lost.
This commit fixed 95% of this rare problem by adding the current cluster state version to `PingResponse` and use them when deciding which master to join (and thus casting the node's vote).
Note: this doesn't fully mitigate the problem as a cluster state update which is issued concurrently with a network partition can be lost if the partition prevents the commit message (part of the two phased commit of cluster state updates) from reaching any single node in the majority side *and* the partition does allow for the master to acknowledge the change. We are working on a more comprehensive fix but that requires considerate work and is targeted at 6.0.
The only repository we can be sure is safe to clean is `fs` so we clean
any snapshots in those repositories after each test. Other repositories
like url and azure tend to throw exceptions rather than let us fetch
their contents during the REST test. So we clean what we can....
Closes#18159
LongGCDisruption simulates a Long GC by suspending all threads belonging to a node. That's fine, unless those threads hold shared locks that can prevent other nodes from running. Concretely the logging infrastructure, which is shared between the nodes, can cause some deadlocks. LongGCDisruption has protection for this, but it needs to be updated to point at log4j2 classes, introduced in #20235
This commit also fixes improper handling of retry logic in LongGCDisruption and adds a protection against deadlocking the test code which activates the disruption (and uses logging too! :)).
On top of that we have some new, evil and nasty tests.
`TransportService#registerRequestHandler` allowed to register
handlers more than once and issues an annoying warn log message when
this happens. This change simple throws an exception to prevent regsitering
the same handler more than once. This commit also removes the ability
to remove request handlers.
Relates to #20468
After this change SearchModule doesn't subclass AbstractModule anymore and all wiring
happens in `Node.java`. As a side-effect several tests don't need a guice injector anymore.
This commit modifies the logger names within Elasticsearch to be the
fully-qualified class name as opposed removing the org.elasticsearch
prefix and dropping the class name. This change separates the root
logger from the Elasticsearch loggers (they were equated from the
removal of the org.elasticsearch prefix) and enables log levels to be
set at the class level (instead of the package level).
Relates #20457
Today we add a prefix when logging within Elasticsearch. This prefix
contains the node name, and index and shard-level components if
appropriate.
Due to some implementation details with Log4j 2 , this does not work for
integration tests; instead what we see is the node name for the last
node to startup. The implementation detail here is that Log4j 2 there is
only one logger for a name, message factory pair, and the key derived
from the message factory is the class name of the message factory. So,
when the last node starts up and starts setting prefixes on its message
factories, it will impact the loggers for the other nodes.
Additionally, the prefixes are lost when logging an exception. This is
due to another implementation detail in Log4j 2. Namely, since we log
exceptions using a parameterized message, Log4j 2 decides that that
means that we do not want to use the message factory that we have
provided (the prefix message factory) and so logs the exception without
the prefix.
This commit fixes both of these issues.
Relates #20429
This commit cuts over geo_point fields to use Lucene's new point-based LatLonPoint type for indexes created in 5.0. Indexes created prior to 5.0 continue to use their respective encoding type. Below is a description of the changes made to support the new encoding type:
* New indexes use a new LatLonPointFieldMapper which provides a parse method for the new type
* The new LatLonPoint parse method removes support for lat_lon and geohash parameters
* Backcompat testing for deprecated lat_lon and geohash parameters is added to all unit and integration tests
* LatLonPointFieldMapper provides DocValues support (enabled by default) which uses Lucene's new LatLonDocValuesField type
* New LatLonPoint field data classes are added for aggregation support (wraps LatLonPoint's Numeric Doc Values)
* MultiFields use the geohash as the string value instead of the lat,lon string making it easier to perform geo string queries on the geohash instead of a lat,lon comma delimited string.
Removed Features:
* With the removal of geohash indexing, GeoHashCellQuery support is removed for all new indexes (still supported on existing indexes)
* LatLonPoint does not support a Distance Range query because it is super inefficient. Instead, the geo_distance_range query should be accomplished using either the geo_distance aggregation, sorting by descending distance on a geo_distance query, or a boolean must not of the excluded distance (which is what the distance_range query did anyway).
TODO:
* fix/finish yaml changes for plugin and rest integration tests
* update documentation
This commit adds a -q/--quiet option to Elasticsearch so that it does not log anything in the console and closes stdout & stderr streams. This is useful for SystemD to avoid duplicate logs in both journalctl and /var/log/elasticsearch/elasticsearch.log while still allows the JVM to print error messages in stdout/stderr if needed.
closes#17220
In 5.x we allowed this with a deprecation warning. This removes the code
added for that deprecation, requiring the cluster name to not be in the
data path.
Resolves#20391
This change removes the guice dependency handling for SearchService and
several related classes like SearchTransportController and SearchPhaseController.
The latter two now have package private constructors and dependencies like FetchPhase
are now created by calling their constructors explicitly. This also cleans up several users
of the DefaultSearchContext and centralized it's creation inside SearchService.
Splits the PrimaryShardAllocator and ReplicaShardAllocator's decision
making for a shard from the implementation of that decision on the
routing table. This is a step toward making it easier to use the same
logic for the cluster allocation explain APIs.