The `scorerSupplier` API allows to give a hint to queries in order to let them
know that they will be consumed in a random-access fashion. We should use this
for aggregations, function_score and matched queries.
When we open a translog, we rely on the `translog.ckp` file to tell us what the maximum generation file should be and on the information stored in the last lucene commit to know the first file we need to recover. This requires coordination and is currently subject to a race condition: if a node dies after a lucene commit is made but before we remove the translog generations that were unneeded by it, the next time we open the translog we will ignore those files and never delete them (I have added tests for this).
This PR changes the approach to have the translog store both of those numbers in the `translog.ckp`. This means it's more self contained and easier to control.
This change also decouples the translog recovery logic from the specific commit we're opening. This prepares the ground to fully utilize the deletion policy introduced in #24950 and store more translog data that's needed for Lucene, keep multiple lucene commits around and be free to recover from any of them.
For the response parsing we want to be lenient when it comes to parsing
new xContent fields. In order to ensure this in our testing, this change
adds a utility method to XContentTestUtils that takes xContent bytes
representation as input and recursively a random field on each object
level.
Sometimes we also want to exclude a whole subtree from this treatment
(e.g. skipping "_source"), other times an element (e.g. "fields", "highlight"
in SearchHit) can have arbitraryly named objects. Those cases can be
specified as exceptions.
This commit removes wrapper methods on QueryShardContext used to compile
scripts. Instead, the script service is made accessible in the context,
and calls to compile can be made directly. This will ease transition to
each of those location becoming their own context, since they would no
longer be able to expect the same script class type.
Splits TranslogRecoveryPerformer into three parts:
- the translog operation to engine operation converter
- the operation perfomer (that indexes the operation into the engine)
- the translog statistics (for which there is already RecoveryState.Translog)
This makes it possible for peer recovery to use the same IndexShard interface as bulk shard requests (i.e. Engine operations instead of Translog operations). It also pushes the "fail on bad mapping" logic outside of IndexShard. Future pull requests could unify the BulkShard and peer recovery path even more.
The unified highlighter rewrites MultiPhrasePrefixQuery to SpanNearQuer even when there is a single term in the phrase.
Though SpanNearQuery throws an exception when the number of clauses is less than 2.
This change returns a simple PrefixQuery when there is a single term and builds the SpanNearQuery otherwise.
Relates #25088
The PR takes a different approach to solve #24806 than currently implemented via #25052. The `refreshMetric` that IndexShard maintains is updated using the refresh listeners infrastructure in lucene. This means that we truly count all refreshes that lucene makes and not have to worry about each individual caller (like `IndexShard@refresh` and `Engine#get()`)
parent/child: Allow updating mapping without specifying `_parent` field on each update.
Prior to this change when a mapping has a `_parent` field then any update (also updates that didn't modify the `_parent` field) to the mapping involved specifying the `_parent` field again. With this change specifying the `_parent` field on each mapping update is no longer required.
Closes#23381
We have a callback interface that is not needed because it is
effectively the same as java.util.function.Consumer. This commit removes
it.
Relates #25089
We use a callback in recovery land during primary relocation to ensure
the relocation target is on at least the same version as the relocation
source. This callback is typed as a Callback<Long> which is an
unnecessary custom type (we can use Consumer<T> or the appropriate
primitive callbacks). Here, we can use LongConsumer.
Relates #25081
Previously the HEAD and GET aliases endpoints were misaigned in
behavior. The HEAD verb would 404 if any aliases are missing while the
GET verb would not if any aliases existed. When HEAD was aligned with
GET, this broke the previous usage of HEAD to serve as an existence
check for aliases. It is the behavior of GET that is problematic here
though, if any alias is missing the request should 404. This commit
addresses this by modifying the behavior of GET to behave in this
way. This fixes the behavior for HEAD to also 404 when aliases are
missing.
Relates #25043
This change moves the parent_id query to the parent-join module and handles the case when only the parent-join field can be declared on an index (index with single type on).
If single type is off it uses the legacy parent join field mapper and switch to the new one otherwise (default in 6).
Relates #20257
This commit fixes the group methdos of Settings to properly include
grouped secure settings. Previously the secure settings were included
but without the group prefix being removed.
closes#25069
The index parameter in the update-aliases, put-alias, and delete-alias APIs no longer accepts alias names. Instead, it accepts only index names (or wildcards which will expand to matching indices).
Closes#23960
This commit fixes a bug in retrieving a sub Settings object for a given
prefix with secure settings. Before this commit the returned Settings
would be filtered by the prefix, but the found setting names would not
have the prefix removed.
This is the first step towards adaptive replica selection (#24915). This PR
tracks the execution time, also known as the "service time" of a task in the
threadpool. The `QueueResizingEsThreadPoolExecutor` then stores a moving average
of these task times which can be retrieved from the executor.
Currently there is no functionality using the EWMA yet (other than tests), this
is only a bite-sized building block so that it's easier to review.
[1]: EWMA = Exponentially Weighted Moving Average
hold (resizing can result in a smaller size than the current size, while
the assert attempted to verify the new size is always greater than the
current).
REST handlers that require a body will throw an an ElasticsearchParseException "request body required".
REST handlers that require a body OR source param will throw an ElasticsearchParseException "request body or source param required".
Replaced asserts in BulkRequest parsing code with a more descriptive IllegalArgumentException if the line contains an empty object.
Updated bulk REST test to verify an empty action line is rejected properly.
Updated BulkRequestTests with randomized testing for an empty action line.
Used try-with-resouces for XContentParser in AbstractBulkByQueryRestHandler.
This commit exposes the secure settings in Settings.Builder, so that
the current secure settings can be retrieved and added to when creating
settings for tests. This is necessary since secure settings can only be
added once to a builder, so chains of methods using settings builders
must reuse the already set mock secure settings.
When the jarhell check fails due to a duplicate jar on the classpath,
the exception message includes the full classpath but not the duplicated
jar. For a long classpath, this can make it difficult to find the jar
that is duplicated. This commit changes the exception message to include
the duplicated jar.
Relates #24953
This removes the parsing of things like `GET /idx/_aliases,_mappings`, instead,
a user must choose between retriving all index metadata with `GET /idx`, or only
a specific form such as `GET /idx/_settings`.
Relates to (and is a prerequisite of) #24437
This commit creates TemplateScript and associated classes so that
templates no longer need a special ScriptService.compileTemplate method.
The execute() method is equivalent to the old run() method.
relates #20426
Previously, when allocating bytes for a BigArray, the array was created
(or attempted to be created) and only then would the array be checked
for the amount of RAM used to see if the circuit breaker should trip.
This is problematic because for very large arrays, if creating or
resizing the array, it is possible to attempt to create/resize and get
an OOM error before the circuit breaker trips, because the allocation
happens before checking with the circuit breaker.
This commit ensures that the circuit breaker is checked before all big
array allocations (note, this does not effect the array allocations that
are less than 16kb which use the [Type]ArrayWrapper classes found in
BigArrays.java). If such an allocation or resizing would cause the
circuit breaker to trip, then the breaker trips before attempting to
allocate and potentially running into an OOM error from the JVM.
Closes#24790
In #24605, logic was implemented to ensure that completed snapshots were
properly removed from the cluster state upon a change in master nodes.
This commit removes redundant logic that also attempted to clean up
completed snapshots from the cluster state on master election, but only
covered a limited case that was remedied in #24605.
This commit also adds a test to ensure cleaning up of completed
snapshots at the right moment in time when a master election happens
before finalizing a snapshot, as well as adds a check to handle the case
where the old master and new master could attempt to finalize the
snapshot and write the same blob to the repository simultaneously.
This removes the `accumulateExceptions()` method (and its usage) from `TransportNodesAction` and `TransportTasksAction`, forcing both transport actions to always accumulate exceptions.
Without this change, some transport actions, like `TransportNodesStatsAction` would respond in very unexpected ways by returning no response due to some failure, but instead of returning an
error the response would simply be empty: no response and no error.
This results in a very trappy response structure where users can check for an error, then attempt to blindly use the response when no error is returned.
This commit reduces the number of buckets that are generated for multi
bucket aggregations in AggregationsTests and SearchResponseTests.
The number of buckets are now limited to a maximum of 3 but before some
aggregations could generate up to 10 buckets.
We can hit an already closed exception when filling the gaps after
blocking operations when updating the primary term on a promoted replica
shard. We should catch this and suppress it as it is an expected outcome
instead of letting it bubble up which leads to trying to fail the shard
which throws yet another already closed exception.
Relates #25021
Some response classes in the java api expose both `getTook()` which returns a `TimeValue` and `getTookInMillis` which returns a `long` value. `getTook()` is enough as one can do `getTook().millis()` to obtain the same result as `getTookInMillis()`, which can be removed.
* Adds nodes usage API to monitor usages of actions
The nodes usage API has 2 main endpoints
/_nodes/usage and /_nodes/{nodeIds}/usage return the usage statistics
for all nodes and the specified node(s) respectively.
At the moment only one type of usage statistics is available, the REST
actions usage. This records the number of times each REST action class is
called and when the nodes usage api is called will return a map of rest
action class name to long representing the number of times each of the action
classes has been called.
Still to do:
* [x] Create usage service to store usage statistics
* [x] Record usage in REST layer
* [x] Add Transport Actions
* [x] Add REST Actions
* [x] Tests
* [x] Documentation
* Rafactors UsageService so counts are done by the handlers
* Fixing up docs tests
* Adds a name to all rest actions
* Addresses review comments
This commit adds a new bg_count field to the REST response of
SignificantTerms aggregations. Similarly to the bg_count that already
exists in significant terms buckets, this new bg_count field is set at
the aggregation level and is populated with the superset size value.
This commit adds an optional `context` url parameter to the put stored
script request. When a context is specified, the script is compiled
against that context before storing, as a validation the script will
work when used in that context.
Today there is a lot of code duplication and different handling of errors
in the two different scroll modes. Yet, it's not clear if we keep both of
them but this simplification will help to further refactor this code to also
add cross cluster search capabilities.
This refactoring also fixes bugs when shards failed due to the node dropped out of the cluster in between scroll requests and failures during the fetch phase of the scroll. Both places where simply ignoring the failure and logging to debug. This can cause issues like #16555
This commit provides the TransportRequest that caused the retrieval of a search context to the
SearchOperationListener#validateSearchContext method so that implementers have access to the
request.
By default, the remove plugin CLI command preserves configuration
files. This is so that if a user is upgrading the plugin (which is done
by first removing the old version and then installing the new version)
they do not lose their configuration file. Yet, there are circumstances
where preserving the configuration file is not desired. This commit adds
a purge option to the remove plugin CLI command.
Relates #24981
Currently, the decisions regarding which translog generation files to delete are hard coded in the interaction between the `InternalEngine` and the `Translog` classes. This PR extracts it to a dedicated class called `TranslogDeletionPolicy`, for two main reasons:
1) Simplicity - the code is easier to read and understand (no more two phase commit on the translog, the Engine can just commit and the translog will respond)
2) Preparing for future plans to extend the logic we need - i.e., retain multiple lucene commit and also introduce a size based retention logic, allowing people to always keep a certain amount of translog files around. The latter is useful to increase the chance of an ops based recovery.