* Fix Snapshot Shard Status Request Deduplication
The request deduplication didn't actually work for these requests
since they had no `equals` and `hashCode` so the deduplicator wouldn't
actually recognize equal requests.
Replaces the "funny"
`Function<String, ConstructingObjectParser<T, Void>>` with a much
simpler `ConstructingObjectParser<T, String>`. This makes pretty much
all of our object parsers static.
* Fix Snapshot Repository Corruption in Downgrade Scenarios (#50692)
This PR introduces test infrastructure for downgrading a cluster while interacting with a given repository.
It fixes the fact that repository metadata in the new format could be written while there's still older snapshots in the repository that require the old-format metadata to be restorable.
A very large number of recursive calls can cause a stack overflow
exception. This commit forks the recursive calls for non-async
processors. Once forked, each thread will handle at most 10
recursive calls to help keep the stack size and thread count
down to a reasonable size.
Adds support for the `offset` parameter to the `date_histogram` source
of composite aggs. The `offset` parameter is supported by the normal
`date_histogram` aggregation and is useful for folks that need to
measure things from, say, 6am one day to 6am the next day.
This is implemented by creating a new `Rounding` that knows how to
handle offsets and delegates to other rounding implementations. That
implementation doesn't fully implement the `Rounding` contract, namely
`nextRoundingValue`. That method isn't used by composite aggs so I can't
be sure that any implementation that I add will be correct. I propose to
leave it throwing `UnsupportedOperationException` until I need it.
Closes#48757
Previously, the following situation would throw an error:
* A search contains a `collapse` on a particular field.
* The search spans multiple indices, and in one index the field is mapped as a
concrete field, but in another it is a field alias.
The error occurs when we attempt to merge `CollapseTopFieldDocs` across shards.
When merging, we validate that the name of the collapse field is the same across
shards. But the name has already been resolved to the concrete field name, so it
will be different on shards where the field was mapped as an alias vs. shards
where it was a concrete field.
This PR updates the collapse field name in `CollapseTopFieldDocs` to the
original requested field, so that it will always be consistent across shards.
Note that in #32648, we already made a fix around collapsing on field aliases.
However, we didn't test this specific scenario where the field was mapped as an
alias in only one of the indices being searched.
Currently, if an updateable synonym filter is included in a multiplexer filter,
it is not reloaded via the _reload_search_analyzers because the multiplexer
itself doesn't pass on the analysis mode of the filters it contains, so its not
recognized as "updateable" in itself. Instead we can check and merge the
AnalysisMode settings of all filters in the multiplexer and use the resulting
mode (e.g. search-time only) for the multiplexer itself, thus making any synonym
filters contained in it reloadable. This, of course, will also make the
analyzers using the multiplexer be usable at search-time only.
Closes#50554
strict_date_optional_time changes to have optional minute part.
It already allowed optional second and fraction of second part.
This allows parsing 2018-01-01T00+01 , 2018-01-01T00:00+01 , 2018-01-01T00:00:00+01 , 2018-01-01T00:00:00.000+01
It won't allow parsing a timezone without an hour part as this is not allowed by iso8601 spec
closes#49351
ElasticsearchException.guessRootCauses would return wrapper exception if
inner exception was not an ElasticsearchException. Fixed to never return
wrapper exceptions.
At least following APIs change root_cause.0.type as a result:
_update with bad script
_index with bad pipeline
Relates #50417
This PR adds per-field metadata that can be set in the mappings and is later
returned by the field capabilities API. This metadata is completely opaque to
Elasticsearch but may be used by tools that index data in Elasticsearch to
communicate metadata about fields with tools that then search this data. A
typical example that has been requested in the past is the ability to attach
a unit to a numeric field.
In order to not bloat the cluster state, Elasticsearch requires that this
metadata be small:
- keys can't be longer than 20 chars,
- values can only be numbers or strings of no more than 50 chars - no inner
arrays or objects,
- the metadata can't have more than 5 keys in total.
Given that metadata is opaque to Elasticsearch, field capabilities don't try to
do anything smart when merging metadata about multiple indices, the union of
all field metadatas is returned.
Here is how the meta might look like in mappings:
```json
{
"properties": {
"latency": {
"type": "long",
"meta": {
"unit": "ms"
}
}
}
}
```
And then in the field capabilities response:
```json
{
"latency": {
"long": {
"searchable": true,
"aggreggatable": true,
"meta": {
"unit": [ "ms" ]
}
}
}
}
```
When there are no conflicts, values are arrays of size 1, but when there are
conflicts, Elasticsearch includes all unique values in this array, without
giving ways to know which index has which metadata value:
```json
{
"latency": {
"long": {
"searchable": true,
"aggreggatable": true,
"meta": {
"unit": [ "ms", "ns" ]
}
}
}
}
```
Closes#33267
Introduce a new static setting, `gateway.auto_import_dangling_indices`, which prevents dangling indices from being automatically imported. Part of #48366.
In security we currently monitor a set of files for changes:
- config/role_mapping.yml (or alternative configured path)
- config/roles.yml
- config/users
- config/users_roles
This commit prevents unnecessary reloading when the file change actually doesn't change the internal structure.
Backport of: #50207
Co-authored-by: Anton Shuvaev <anton.shuvaev91@gmail.com>
We *very* commonly have object with ctors like:
```
public Foo(String name)
```
And then declare a bunch of setters on the object. Every aggregation
works like this, for example. This change teaches `ObjectParser` how to
build these aggregations all on its own, without any help. This'll make
it much cleaner to parse aggs, and, probably, a bunch of other things.
It'll let us remove lots of wrapping. I've used this new power for the
`avg` aggregation just to prove that it works outside of a unit test.
If an auto-refresh happens, then version_map_memory is reset to 0. By
default, the auto-refresh occurs for every second in the first 30
seconds until search becomes idle.
Closes#50362
In 7.x an internal API used for validating remote cluster does not throw, see #50420 for the
details. This change implements a workaround for remote cluster validation, only for 7.x branches.
fixes#50420
A failure of a recovering shard can race with a new allocation of the shard, and cause the new
allocation to be failed as well. This can result in a shard being marked as initializing in the cluster
state, but not exist on the node anymore.
Closes#50508
This change removes a no longer used method, `fromByte`, in
IndicesOptions. This method was necessary for backwards compatibility
with versions prior to 6.4.0 and was used when talking to those
versions. However, the minimum wire compatibility version has changed
and we no longer use this code.
Backport of #50665
This replaces the hand written xcontent parsers for significance
heristics with `ObjectParser` and parsing named xcontent.
As a happy accident, this was the last user of `ParseFieldRegistry` so
this PR entirely removes that class.
Closes#25519
Currently, we use delayed address resolution in the proxy strategy tests
to allow tests to connect to different addresses. Unfortunately, this
has the potential to introduce races as the address is resolved each
connection attempt. The number of connection attempts can vary based on
when connections are opening and closing. This commit modifies the test
be allowing them to specifically control which address is used.
Related to #50618
This test code fixes a serialization test bug:
https://gradle-enterprise.elastic.co/s/7x2ct6yywkw3o
Rarely stats for the same processor are generated and
the production code then sums up these stats. However
the test code wasn't summing up in that case,
which caused inconsistencies between the actual and expected results.
Closes#50507
Previously, as long as a deleted version value was kept as a tombstone,
another index or delete operation against the same id would leak that
the doc had existed (through seq_no info) or would allow the operation
if the client forged the seq_no. Fixed to disregard info on deleted docs
when doing seq_no based optimistic concurrency check.
Today the `InternalClusterInfoService` collects information on the sizes of
shards of open indices, but does not consider closed indices. This means that
shards of closed indices are treated as having zero size when they are being
allocated. This commit fixes this, obtaining the sizes of all shards.
Relates #33888
* Adds JavaDoc to `AbstractWireTestCase` and
`AbstractWireSerializingTestCase` so it is more obvious you should prefer
the latter if you have a choice
* Moves the `instanceReader` method out of `AbstractWireTestCase` becaue
it is no longer used.
* Marks a bunch of methods final so it is more obvious which classes are
for what.
* Cleans up the side effects of the above.
We have about 800 `ObjectParsers` in Elasticsearch, about 700 of which
are final. This is *probably* the right way to declare them because in
practice we never mutate them after they are built. And we certainly
don't change the static reference. Anyway, this adds `final` to these
parsers.
I found the non-final parsers with this:
```
diff \
<(find . -type f -name '*.java' -exec grep -iHe 'static.*PARSER\s*=' {} \+ | sort) \
<(find . -type f -name '*.java' -exec grep -iHe 'static.*final.*PARSER\s*=' {} \+ | sort) \
2>&1 | grep '^<'
```
A geo box with a top value of Double.NEGATIVE_INFINITY will yield an empty
xContent which translates to a null `geoBoundingBox`. This commit marks the
field as `Nullable` and guards against null when retrieving the `topLeft`
and `bottomRight` fields.
Fixes https://github.com/elastic/elasticsearch/issues/50505
(cherry picked from commit 051718f9b1e1ca957229b01e80d7b79d7e727e14)
Signed-off-by: Andrei Dan <andrei.dan@elastic.co>
This marks a couple of constants in the `DecayFunctionBuilder` as final.
They are written in CONSTANT_CASE and used as constants but not final
which is a little confusing and might lead to sneaky bugs.
FutureUtils.get() would unwrap ElasticsearchWrapperExceptions. This
is trappy, since nearly all usages of FutureUtils.get() expected only to
not have to deal with checked exceptions.
In particular, StepListener builds upon ListenableFuture which uses
FutureUtils.get to be informed about the exception passed to onFailure.
This had the bad consequence of masking away any exception that was an
ElasticsearchWrapperException like RemoteTransportException.
Specifically for recovery, this made CircuitBreakerExceptions happening
on the target node look like they originated from the source node.
The only usage that expected that behaviour was AdapterActionFuture.
The unwrap behaviour has been moved to that class.
Today we log changes to index settings like this:
updating [index.setting.blah] from [A] to [B]
The identity of the index whose settings were updated is conspicuously absent
from this message. This commit addresses this by adding the index name to these
messages.
Fixes#49818.
This intervals source will return terms that are similar to an input term, up to
an edit distance defined by fuzziness, similar to FuzzyQuery.
Closes#49595
The cat nodes API performs a `ClusterStateAction` then a `NodesInfoAction`.
Today it accepts the `?local` parameter and passes this to the
`ClusterStateAction` but this parameter has no effect on the `NodesInfoAction`.
This is surprising, because `GET _cat/nodes?local` looks like it might be a
completely local call but in fact it still depends on every node in the
cluster.
This commit deprecates the `?local` parameter on this API so that it can be
removed in 8.0.
Relates #50088
testCancelRecoveryDuringPhase1 uses a mock of IndexShard, which can't
create retention leases. We need to stub method createRetentionLease.
Relates #50351Closes#50424
The additional change to the original PR (#49657), is that `org.elasticsearch.client.cluster.RemoteConnectionInfo` now parses the initial_connect_timeout field as a string instead of a TimeValue instance.
The reason that this is needed is because that the initial_connect_timeout field in the remote connection api is serialized for human consumption, but not for parsing purposes.
Therefore the HLRC can't parse it correctly (which caused test failures in CI, but not in the PR CI
:( ). The way this field is serialized needs to be changed in the remote connection api, but that is a breaking change. We should wait making this change until rest api versioning is introduced.
Co-Authored-By: j-bean <anton.shuvaev91@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: j-bean <anton.shuvaev91@gmail.com>
Today, the replica allocator uses peer recovery retention leases to
select the best-matched copies when allocating replicas of indices with
soft-deletes. We can employ this mechanism for indices without
soft-deletes because the retaining sequence number of a PRRL is the
persisted global checkpoint (plus one) of that copy. If the primary and
replica have the same retaining sequence number, then we should be able
to perform a noop recovery. The reason is that we must be retaining
translog up to the local checkpoint of the safe commit, which is at most
the global checkpoint of either copy). The only limitation is that we
might not cancel ongoing file-based recoveries with PRRLs for noop
recoveries. We can't make the translog retention policy comply with
PRRLs. We also have this problem with soft-deletes if a PRRL is about to
expire.
Relates #45136
Relates #46959
Both geo_bounding_box query and geo_bounds aggregation have
a very similar definition of a "bounding box". A lot of this
logic (serialization, xcontent-parsing, etc) can be centralized
instead of having separated efforts to do the same things
This commit makes the TransportRolloverAction more resilient, by having it execute
only one cluster state update that creates the new (rollover index), rolls over
the alias from the source to the target index and set the RolloverInfo on the
source index. Before these 3 steps were represented as 3 chained cluster state
updates, which would've seen the user manually intervene if, say, the alias
rollover cluster state update (second in the chain) failed but the creation of
the rollover index (first in the chain) update succeeded
* Rename innerExecute to applyAliasActions
(cherry picked from commit 1ba4339a0c73ef3354b8c8b44b628fc55f1dbc78)
Signed-off-by: Andrei Dan <andrei.dan@elastic.co>
Co-authored-by: Daniel Huang <danielhuang@tencent.com>
This is a spinoff of #48130 that generalizes the proposal to allow early termination with the composite aggregation when leading sources match a prefix or the entire index sort specification.
In such case the composite aggregation can use the index sort natural order to early terminate the collection when it reaches a composite key that is greater than the bottom of the queue.
The optimization is also applicable when a query other than match_all is provided. However the optimization is deactivated for sources that match the index sort in the following cases:
* Multi-valued source, in such case early termination is not possible.
* missing_bucket is set to true
Follow-up to #48974 that ensures that replicas are only auto-expanded according to allocation
filtering rules once all nodes are upgraded to a version that supports this. Helps with
orchestrating cluster upgrades.
refactors source and dest validation, adds support for CCS, makes resolve work like reindex/search, allow aliased dest index with a single write index.
fixes#49988fixes#49851
relates #43201
The built-in task index mapping has a version field in its metadata, so that
the TaskResultsService can check to see if it needs to update mappings when
a new task result is stored. #48393 updated this version in TaskResultsService
but omitted to change the version in the mapping itself, so a mapping update
is applied every time a new task result is stored.
This commit updates the mapping version so that it corresponds to the version
in TaskResultsService.
Follow-up to #48974 that ensures that replicas are only auto-expanded according to allocation
filtering rules once all nodes are upgraded to a version that supports this. Helps with
orchestrating cluster upgrades.
* Update remote cluster stats to support simple mode (#49961)
Remote cluster stats API currently only returns useful information if
the strategy in use is the SNIFF mode. This PR modifies the API to
provide relevant information if the user is in the SIMPLE mode. This
information is the configured addresses, max socket connections, and
open socket connections.
* Send hostname in SNI header in simple remote mode (#50247)
Currently an intermediate proxy must route conncctions to the
appropriate remote cluster when using simple mode. This commit offers
a additional mechanism for the proxy to route the connections by
including the hostname in the TLS SNI header.
* Rename the remote connection mode simple to proxy (#50291)
This commit renames the simple connection mode to the proxy connection
mode for remote cluster connections. In order to do this, the mode specific
settings which we namespaced by their mode (ex: sniff.seed and
proxy.addresses) have been reverted.
* Modify proxy mode to support a single address (#50391)
Currently, the remote proxy connection mode uses a list setting for the
proxy address. This commit modifies this so that the setting is
proxy_address and only supports a single remote proxy address.
Avoid backwards incompatible changes for 8.x and 7.6 by removing type
restriction on compile and Factory. Factories may optionally implement
ScriptFactory. If so, then they can indicate determinism and thus
cacheability.
**Backport**
Relates: #49466
We randomly generate intervals sources to test serialization and query generation
in IntervalQueryBuilderTests. However, rarely we can generate a query that has
too many nested disjunctions, resulting in query rewrites running afoul of the maximum
boolean clause limit.
This commit reduces the maximum depth of the randomly generated intervals source
to make running into this limit much more unlikely.
* Extract IndexCreationTask execute into applyCreateIndexRequest
This is the first step in preparation for separating the index creation into a few
steps that only deal with the cluster state mutation and removing the IndexCreationTask
altogether.
* Split applyCreateIndexRequest
This breaks down the logic in applyCreateIndexRequest into multiple
steps that will hopefully make the service more readable and unit testable.
The service creation process now goes through a few well defined steps,
namely find the templates that possibly match the new index, parse the
requested and template matching mappings, process the index and template
matching settings, validate the wait for active shards request and
create the `IndexService`, update the mappings in the `MapperService` (which
is grouped together with creating the sort order for validation purposes),
validate the requested and templated matching aliases and finally update
the `ClusterState` to reflect the requested changes.
This also removes the `IndexCreationTask` as it was a shallow
indirection and migrates the tests from `IndexCreationTaskTests` to
`MetaDataCreateIndexServiceTests` (making them "real" unit tests
operating on the `ClusterState` rather than mocks).
* Add more unit tests.
* Add IT to verify we cleanup in case of failure
(cherry picked from commit 57e6269f750471f05a1a79539ca45361b9e3c2b5)
Signed-off-by: Andrei Dan <andrei.dan@elastic.co>
# Conflicts:
# server/src/main/java/org/elasticsearch/cluster/metadata/MetaDataCreateIndexService.java
# server/src/test/java/org/elasticsearch/action/admin/indices/create/CreateIndexIT.java
# server/src/test/java/org/elasticsearch/cluster/metadata/IndexCreationTaskTests.java
Cache results from queries that use scripts if they use only
deterministic API calls. Nondeterministic API calls are marked in the
whitelist with the `@nondeterministic` annotation. Examples are
`Math.random()` and `new Date()`.
Refs: #49466
Loading shard state information during shard allocation sometimes runs into a situation where a
data node does not know yet how to look up the shard on disk if custom data paths are used.
The current implementation loads the index metadata from disk to determine what the custom
data path looks like. This PR removes this dependency, simplifying the lookup.
Relates #48701
Backport #50244 to 7.x branch.
If a processor executes asynchronously and the ingest simulate api simulates with
multiple documents then the order of the documents in the response may not match
the order of the documents in the request.
Alexander Reelsen discovered this issue with the enrich processor with the following reproduction:
```
PUT cities/_doc/munich
{"zip":"80331","city":"Munich"}
PUT cities/_doc/berlin
{"zip":"10965","city":"Berlin"}
PUT /_enrich/policy/zip-policy
{
"match": {
"indices": "cities",
"match_field": "zip",
"enrich_fields": [ "city" ]
}
}
POST /_enrich/policy/zip-policy/_execute
GET _cat/indices/.enrich-*
POST /_ingest/pipeline/_simulate
{
"pipeline": {
"processors" : [
{
"enrich" : {
"policy_name": "zip-policy",
"field" : "zip",
"target_field": "city",
"max_matches": "1"
}
}
]
},
"docs": [
{ "_id": "first", "_source" : { "zip" : "80331" } } ,
{ "_id": "second", "_source" : { "zip" : "50667" } }
]
}
```
* fixed test compile error
We can simply filter out shard generation updates for indices
that were removed from the cluster state concurrently to fix
index deletes during partial snapshots as that completely removes
any reference to those shards from the snapshot.
Follow up to #50202Closes#50200
Follow up to #49729
This change removes falling back to listing out the repository contents to find the latest `index-N` in write-mounted blob store repositories.
This saves 2-3 list operations on each snapshot create and delete operation. Also it makes all the snapshot status APIs cheaper (and faster) by saving one list operation there as well in many cases.
This removes the resiliency to concurrent modifications of the repository as a result and puts a repository in a `corrupted` state in case loading `RepositoryData` failed from the assumed generation.
G1GC will use humongous allocations when an allocation exceeds half the
chosen region size, which is minimum 1MB. By reducing the recovery
buffer size by 16 bytes we ensure that the recovery buffer is never
allocated as a humongous allocation.
Today we do not consider trimAboveSeqNo when calculating the translog
generation of an index commit. If there is no new indexing after the
primary promotion, then we won't be able to clean up the translog.
Backport of #49612.
The current Docker entrypoint script picks up environment variables and
translates them into -E command line arguments. However, since any tool
executes via `docker exec` doesn't run the entrypoint, it results in
a poorer user experience.
Therefore, refactor the env var handling so that the -E options are
generated in `elasticsearch-env`. These have to be appended to any
existing command arguments, since some CLI tools have subcommands and
-E arguments must come after the subcommand.
Also extract the support for `_FILE` env vars into a separate script, so
that it can be called from more than once place (the behaviour is
idempotent).
Finally, add noop -E handling to CronEvalTool for parity, and support
`-E` in MultiCommand before subcommands.
With #45689 making it so that index metadata is written
after all shards have been snapshotted we can't delete indices
that are part of the upcoming snapshot finalization any longer
and it is not sufficient to check if all shards of an index have been
snapshotted before deciding that it is safe to delete it.
This change forbids deleting any index that is in the process of being
snapshot to avoid issues during snapshot finalization.
Relates #50200 (doesn't fully fix yet because we're not fixing the `partial=true`
snapshot case here
* Remove BlobContainer Tests against Mocks
Removing all these weird mocks as asked for by #30424.
All these tests are now part of real repository ITs and otherwise left unchanged if they had
independent tests that didn't call the `createBlobStore` method previously.
The HDFS tests also get added coverage as a side-effect because they did not have an implementation
of the abstract repository ITs.
Closes#30424
Lucene 8.4 added support for "CONTAINS", therefore in this commit those
changes are integrated in Elasticsearch. This commit contains as well a
bug fix when querying with a geometry collection with "DISJOINT" relation.
Since 7.4, we switch from translog to Lucene as the source of history
for peer recoveries. However, we reduce the likelihood of
operation-based recoveries when performing a full cluster restart from
pre-7.4 because existing copies do not have PPRL.
To remedy this issue, we fallback using translog in peer recoveries if
the recovering replica does not have a peer recovery retention lease,
and the replication group hasn't fully migrated to PRRL.
Relates #45136
Today we do not use retention leases in peer recovery for closed indices
because we can't sync retention leases on closed indices. This change
allows that ability and adjusts peer recovery to use retention leases
for all indices with soft-deletes enabled.
Relates #45136
Co-authored-by: David Turner <david.turner@elastic.co>
A recent change around date parsing (#46675) made it stricter, so we should now also
catch DateTimeExceptions in DateFieldMapper and ignore those when the
`ignore_malformed` option is set.
Closes#50081
When decoupling the pipeline reduction from regular agg reduction,
MultiBucket aggs were modified to reduce their bucket's pipeline
aggs first before reducing the sibling aggs. This modification
was missed on SingleBucket aggs, meaning any SingleBucket would
fail to reduce any pipeline sub-aggs
* Remove Unused Single Delete in BlobStoreRepository
There are no more production uses of the non-bulk delete or the delete that throws
on missing so this commit removes both these methods.
Only the bulk delete logic remains. Where the bulk delete was derived from single deletes,
the single delete code was inlined into the bulk delete method.
Where single delete was used in tests it was replaced by bulk deleting.
* Better Logging GCS Blobstore Mock
Two things:
1. We should just throw a descriptive assertion error and figure out why we're not reading a multi-part instead of
returning a `400` and failing the tests that way here since we can't reproduce these 400s locally.
2. We were missing logging the exception on a cleanup delete failure that coincides with the `400` issue in tests.
Relates #49429
This commit ensures deseriable a GetResult from StreamInput does not
leave metaFields and documentFields null. This could cause an NPE in
situations where upsert response for a document that did not exist is
passed back to a node that forwarded the upsert request.
closes#48215
Currently we do not know the size of the transport header (map of
request response headers, features array, and action name). This means
that we must read the entire transport message to dependably act on the
headers. This commit adds an int indicating the size of the transport
headers. With this addition we can act upon the headers prior to reading
the entire message.
Adjusts the subclasses of `TransportMasterNodeAction` to use their own loggers
instead of the one for the base class.
Relates #50056.
Partial backport of #46431 to 7.x.
Removes a reference to shadow replicas from the cat shards API docs
and a comment in cluster/routing/UnassignedInfo.java.
Shadow replicas were removed with #23906.
* Improve Snapshot Finalization Ex. Handling
Like in #49989 we can get into a situation where the setting of
the repository generation (during snapshot finalization) in the cluster
state fails due to master failing over.
In this case we should not try to execute the next cluster state update
that will remove the snapshot from the cluster state.
Closes#49989
The elasticsearch-node tools allow manipulating the on-disk cluster state. The tool is currently
unaware of plugins and will therefore drop custom metadata from the cluster state once the
state is written out again (as it skips over the custom metadata that it can't read). This commit
preserves unknown customs when editing on-disk metadata through the elasticsearch-node
command-line tools.
Today settings can declare dependencies on another setting. This
declaration is implemented so that if the declared setting is not set
when the declaring setting is, settings validation fails. Yet, in some
cases we want not only that the setting is set, but that it also has a
specific value. For example, with the monitoring exporter settings, if
xpack.monitoring.exporters.my_exporter.host is set, we not only want
that xpack.monitoring.exporters.my_exporter.type is set, but that it is
also set to local. This commit extends the settings infrastructure so
that this declaration is possible. The use of this in the monitoring
exporter settings will be implemented in a follow-up.
* Cleanup Old index-N Blobs in Repository Cleanup
Repository cleanup didn't deal with old index-N, this change adds
cleaning up all old index-N found in the repository.
Step on the road to #49060.
This commit adds the logic to keep track of a repository's generation
across repository operations. See changes to package level Javadoc for the concrete changes in the distributed state machine.
It updates the write side of new repository generations to be fully consistent via the cluster state. With this change, no `index-N` will be overwritten for the same repository ever. So eventual consistency issues around conflicting updates to the same `index-N` are not a possibility any longer.
With this change the read side will still use listing of repository contents instead of relying solely on the cluster state contents.
The logic for that will be introduced in #49060. This retains the ability to externally delete the contents of a repository and continue using it afterwards for the time being. In #49060 the use of listing to determine the repository generation will be removed in all cases (except for full-cluster restart) as the last step in this effort.
The fake translog corruption in the test sometimes generates invalid translog files where some
assertions do not hold (e.g. minSeqNo <= maxSeqNo or minTranslogGen <= translogGen)
Closes#49909
Makes sure that CCR also properly works with _source disabled.
Changes one exception in LuceneChangesSnapshot as the case of missing _recovery_source
because of a missing lease was not properly properly bubbled up to CCR (testIndexFallBehind
was failing).
If we have a nested `AbstractRunnable` inside of `TimedRunnable`
it's executed twice on `run` (once when its own `run` method is invoked and once when
the `onAfter` in the `TimedRunnable` is executed).
Simply removing the `onAfter` override in `TimedRunnable` makes sure that the `onAfter`
is only called once by the `run` on the nested `AbstractRunnable` itself.
Same was done for `onFailure` as it was double-triggering as well on exceptions in the inner `onFailure`.
In order to cache script results in the query shard cache, we need to
check if scripts are deterministic. This change adds a default method
to the script factories, `isResultDeterministic() -> false` which is
used by the `QueryShardContext`.
Script results were never cached and that does not change here. Future
changes will implement this method based on whether the results of the
scripts are deterministic or not and therefore cacheable.
Refs: #49466
**Backport**
Our docs specifically mention that CBOR is supported when ingesting attachments. However this is not tested anywhere.
This adds a test, that uses specifically CBOR format in its IndexRequest and another one that behaves like CBOR in the ingest attachment unit tests.
Historically only two things happened in the final reduction:
empty buckets were filled, and pipeline aggs were reduced (since it
was the final reduction, this was safe). Usage of the final reduction
is growing however. Auto-date-histo might need to perform
many reductions on final-reduce to merge down buckets, CCS
may need to side-step the final reduction if sending to a
different cluster, etc
Having pipelines generate their output in the final reduce was
convenient, but is becoming increasingly difficult to manage
as the rest of the agg framework advances.
This commit decouples pipeline aggs from the final reduction by
introducing a new "top level" reduce, which should be called
at the beginning of the reduce cycle (e.g. from the SearchPhaseController).
This will only reduce pipeline aggs on the final reduce after
the non-pipeline agg tree has been fully reduced.
By separating pipeline reduction into their own set of methods,
aggregations are free to use the final reduction for whatever
purpose without worrying about generating pipeline results
which are non-reducible
This is related to #49067. As part of this work a new sniff number of
node connections setting, a simple addresses setting, and a simple
number of sockets setting have been added. This commit ensures that
these settings are properly hooked up to support dynamic updates.
The list used by the search progress listener can be nullified
by another thread that reports a query result. This change replaces
the usage of this list with a new array that is synchronously modified.
Closes#49778
Adds `GET /_script_language` to support Kibana dynamic scripting
language selection.
Response contains whether `inline` and/or `stored` scripts are
enabled as determined by the `script.allowed_types` settings.
For each scripting language registered, such as `painless`,
`expression`, `mustache` or custom, available contexts for the language
are included as determined by the `script.allowed_contexts` setting.
Response format:
```
{
"types_allowed": [
"inline",
"stored"
],
"language_contexts": [
{
"language": "expression",
"contexts": [
"aggregation_selector",
"aggs"
...
]
},
{
"language": "painless",
"contexts": [
"aggregation_selector",
"aggs",
"aggs_combine",
...
]
}
...
]
}
```
Fixes: #49463
**Backport**
not adjust testCacheability(), which how fails occasionally when given a random
interval source containing a script. This commit overrides testCacheability() to
explicitly sources with and without script filters.
Fixes#49821
By default, AbstractQueryTestCase only changes name and boost in its mutateInstance
method, used when checking equals and hashcode implementations. This commit adds
a mutateInstance method to InveralQueryBuilderTests that will check hashcode and
equality when the field or intervals source are changed.
By default the unified highlighter splits the input into passages using
a sentence break iterator. However we don't check if the field is tokenized
or not so `keyword` field also applies the break iterator even though they can
only match on the entire content. This means that by default we'll split the
content of a `keyword` field on sentence break if the requested number of fragments
is set to a value different than 0 (default to 5). This commit changes this behavior
to ignore the break iterator on non-tokenized fields (keyword) in order to always
highlight the entire values. The number of requested fragments control the number of
matched values are returned but the boundary_scanner_type is now ignored.
Note that this is the behavior in 6x but some refactoring of the Lucene's highlighter
exposed this bug in Elasticsearch 7x.
There is a possible NPE in IntervalFilter xcontent serialization when scripts are
used, and `equals` and `hashCode` are also incorrectly implemented for script
filters. This commit fixes both.
* Copying the request is not necessary here. We can simply release it once the response has been generated and a lot of `Unpooled` allocations that way
* Relates #32228
* I think the issue that preventet that PR that PR from being merged was solved by #39634 that moved the bulk index marker search to ByteBuf bulk access so the composite buffer shouldn't require many additional bounds checks (I'd argue the bounds checks we add, we save when copying the composite buffer)
* I couldn't neccessarily reproduce much of a speedup from this change, but I could reproduce a very measureable reduction in GC time with e.g. Rally's PMC (4g heap node and bulk requests of size 5k saw a reduction in young GC time by ~10% for me)
This commit fixes a number of issues with data replication:
- Local and global checkpoints are not updated after the new operations have been fsynced, but
might capture a state before the fsync. The reason why this probably went undetected for so
long is that AsyncIOProcessor is synchronous if you index one item at a time, and hence working
as intended unless you have a high enough level of concurrent indexing. As we rely in other
places on the assumption that we have an up-to-date local checkpoint in case of synchronous
translog durability, there's a risk for the local and global checkpoints not to be up-to-date after
replication completes, and that this won't be corrected by the periodic global checkpoint sync.
- AsyncIOProcessor also has another "bad" side effect here: if you index one bulk at a time, the
bulk is always first fsynced on the primary before being sent to the replica. Further, if one thread
is tasked by AsyncIOProcessor to drain the processing queue and fsync, other threads can
easily pile more bulk requests on top of that thread. Things are not very fair here, and the thread
might continue doing a lot more fsyncs before returning (as the other threads pile more and
more on top), which blocks it from returning as a replication request (e.g. if this thread is on the
primary, it blocks the replication requests to the replicas from going out, and delaying
checkpoint advancement).
This commit fixes all these issues, and also simplifies the code that coordinates all the after
write actions.
Some unit test checking locale sensitive functionality require the
-Djava.locale.providers=SPI,COMPAT flag to be set. When running tests though
gradle we pass this already to the BuildPlugin, but running from the IDE this
might need to be set manually. Adding a note explaining this to the
CONTRIBUTING.md doc and leaving a note in the test comment of
SearchQueryIT.testRangeQueryWithLocaleMapping which is a test we know
that suffers from this issue.
Reindex sort never gave a guarantee about the order of documents being
indexed into the destination, though it could give a sense of locality
of source data.
It prevents us from doing resilient reindex and other optimizations and
it has therefore been deprecated.
Related to #47567
Some queries return bulk scorers that can be significantly faster than
iterating naively over the scorer. By giving script_score a BulkScorer
that would delegate to the wrapped query, we could make it faster in some cases.
Closes#40837
This rewrites long sort as a `DistanceFeatureQuery`, which can
efficiently skip non-competitive blocks and segments of documents.
Depending on the dataset, the speedups can be 2 - 10 times.
The optimization can be disabled with setting the system property
`es.search.rewrite_sort` to `false`.
Optimization is skipped when an index has 50% or more data with
the same value.
Optimization is done through:
1. Rewriting sort as `DistanceFeatureQuery` which can
efficiently skip non-competitive blocks and segments of documents.
2. Sorting segments according to the primary numeric sort field(#44021)
This allows to skip non-competitive segments.
3. Using collector manager.
When we optimize sort, we sort segments by their min/max value.
As a collector expects to have segments in order,
we can not use a single collector for sorted segments.
We use collectorManager, where for every segment a dedicated collector
will be created.
4. Using Lucene's shared TopFieldCollector manager
This collector manager is able to exchange minimum competitive
score between collectors, which allows us to efficiently skip
the whole segments that don't contain competitive scores.
5. When index is force merged to a single segment, #48533 interleaving
old and new segments allows for this optimization as well,
as blocks with non-competitive docs can be skipped.
Backport for #48804
Co-authored-by: Jim Ferenczi <jim.ferenczi@elastic.co>
Reindex sort never gave a guarantee about the order of documents being
indexed into the destination, though it could give a sense of locality
of source data.
It prevents us from doing resilient reindex and other optimizations and
it has therefore been deprecated.
Related to #47567
This stems from a time where index requests were directly forwarded to
TransportReplicationAction. Nowadays they are wrapped in a BulkShardRequest, and this logic is
obsolete.
In contrast to prior PR (#49647), this PR also fixes (see b3697cc) a situation where the previous
index expression logic had an interesting side effect. For bulk requests (which had resolveIndex
= false), the reroute phase was waiting for the index to appear in case where it was not present,
and for all other replication requests (resolveIndex = true) it would right away throw an
IndexNotFoundException while resolving the name and exit. With #49647, every replication
request was now waiting for the index to appear, which was problematic when the given index
had just been deleted (e.g. deleting a follower index while it's still receiving requests from the
leader, where these requests would now wait up to a minute for the index to appear). This PR
now adds b3697cc on top of that prior PR to make sure to reestablish some of the prior behavior
where the reroute phase waits for the bulk request for the index to appear. That logic was in
place to ensure that when an index was created and not all nodes had learned about it yet, that
the bulk would not fail somewhere in the reroute phase. This is now only restricted to the
situation where the current node has an older cluster state than the one that coordinated the
bulk request (which checks that the index is present). This also means that when an index is
deleted, we will no longer unnecessarily wait up to the timeout for the index o appear, and
instead fail the request.
Closes#20279
* Make BlobStoreRepository Aware of ClusterState (#49639)
This is a preliminary to #49060.
It does not introduce any substantial behavior change to how the blob store repository
operates. What it does is to add all the infrastructure changes around passing the cluster service to the blob store, associated test changes and a best effort approach to tracking the latest repository generation on all nodes from cluster state updates. This brings a slight improvement to the consistency
by which non-master nodes (or master directly after a failover) will be able to determine the latest repository generation. It does not however do any tricky checks for the situation after a repository operation
(create, delete or cleanup) that could theoretically be used to get even greater accuracy to keep this change simple.
This change does not in any way alter the behavior of the blobstore repository other than adding a better "guess" for the value of the latest repo generation and is mainly intended to isolate the actual logical change to how the
repository operates in #49060
This commit adds a function in NodeClient that allows to track the progress
of a search request locally. Progress is tracked through a SearchProgressListener
that exposes query and fetch responses as well as partial and final reduces.
This new method can be used by modules/plugins inside a node in order to track the
progress of a local search request.
Relates #49091
This stems from a time where index requests were directly forwarded to
TransportReplicationAction. Nowadays they are wrapped in a BulkShardRequest, and this logic is
obsolete.
Closes#20279
This change adds a dynamic cluster setting named `indices.id_field_data.enabled`.
When set to `false` any attempt to load the fielddata for the `_id` field will fail
with an exception. The default value in this change is set to `false` in order to prevent
fielddata usage on this field for future versions but it will be set to `true` when backporting
to 7x. When the setting is set to true (manually or by default in 7x) the loading will also issue
a deprecation warning since we want to disallow fielddata entirely when https://github.com/elastic/elasticsearch/issues/26472
is implemented.
Closes#43599
JavaDateFormatter should keep the pattern with the prefixed 8 as it will be used for serialisation. The stripped pattern should be used for the enclosed formatters.
closes#48698
Fixes a bug where a scripted upsert that causes a dynamic mapping update is retried (because
mapping update is still in-flight), and the request is mutated multiple times.
Closes#48670
Backport of #49076
In case an exception occurs inside a pipeline processor,
the pipeline stack is kept around as header in the exception.
Then in the on_failure processor the id of the pipeline the
exception occurred is made accessible via the `on_failure_pipeline`
ingest metadata.
Closes#44920
Preliminary to shorten the diff of #49060. In #49060
we execute cluster state updates during the writing of a new
index gen and thus it must be an async API.
All the implementations of `EsBlobStoreTestCase` use the exact same
bootstrap code that is also used by their implementation of
`EsBlobStoreContainerTestCase`.
This means all tests might as well live under `EsBlobStoreContainerTestCase`
saving a lot of code duplication. Also, there was no HDFS implementation for
`EsBlobStoreTestCase` which is now automatically resolved by moving the tests over
since there is a HDFS implementation for the container tests.
The annotated text mapper has a field type that currently extends StringFieldType,
which means that all the positional-related query factory methods need to be copied
over from TextFieldType. In addition, MappedFieldType.intervals() hasn't been
overridden, so you can't use intervals queries with annotated text - a major drawback,
since one of the purposes of annotated text is to be able to run positional queries against
annotations.
This commit changes the annotated text field type to extend TextFieldType instead,
adding tests to ensure that position queries work correctly.
Closes#49289
Same as #49518 pretty much but for GCS.
Fixing a few more spots where input stream can get closed
without being fully drained and adding assertions to make sure
it's always drained.
Moved the no-close stream wrapper to production code utilities since
there's a number of spots in production code where it's also useful
(will reuse it there in a follow-up).