If delimiter or replacement parameter are an empty string, the error is not clear enough to indicate how to fix it.
With this change, the user knows these parameter must be a non empty string.
This is related to #24927. There was a small possibility that a test
was attempting to compress a stream with zero bytes. This was causing
a failure.
This test now requires at least one byte.
This is a follow-up to #23941. Currently there are a number of
complexities related to compression. The raw DeflaterOutputStream must
be closed prior to sending bytes to ensure that EOS bytes are written.
But the underlying ReleasableBytesStreamOutput cannot be closed until
the bytes are sent to ensure that the bytes are not reused.
Right now we have three different stream references hanging around in
TCPTransport to handle this complexity. This commit introduces
CompressibleBytesOutputStream to be one stream implemenation that will
behave properly with or without compression enabled.
This metric is not used in the ES codebase at all. It's also not as likely to be
used since it relies on a periodic "tick", which we don't currently use.
The took time computed for search requests does not take in account the expand search phase.
This change delays the computation to after the expand phase finishes.
Relates #24900
This makes profiling classes acquire a timer up-front that can be then reused
across all calls, in order to save bound checks for methods that are called in
tight loops.
ScriptContexts currently understand a FactoryType that can produce
instances of the script InstanceType. However, for search scripts, this
does not work as we have the concept of LeafSearchScript that is created
per lucene segment. This commit effectively renames the existing
SearchScript class into SearchScript.LeafFactory, which is a new,
optional, class that can be defined within a ScriptContext.
LeafSearchScript is effectively renamed back into SearchScript. This
change allows the model of stateless factory -> stateful factory ->
script instance to continue, but in a generic way that any script
context may take advantage of.
relates #20426
In previous work, we refactored the delay mechanism in index shard
operation permits to allow for async delaying of acquisition. This
refactoring made explicit when permit acquisition is disabled whereas
previously we were relying on an implicit condition, namely that all
permits were acquired by the thread trying to delay acquisition. When
using the implicit mechanism, we tried to acquire a permit and if this
failed, we returned a null releasable as an indication that our
operation should be queued. Yet, now we know when we are delayed and we
should not even try to acquire a permit. If we try to acquire a permit
and one is not available, we know that we are not delayed, and so
acquisition should be successful. If it is not successful, something is
deeply wrong. This commit takes advantage of this refactoring to
simplify the internal implementation.
Relates #24971
When a primary is promoted, it could have gaps in its history due to
concurrency and in-flight operations when it was serving as a
replica. This commit fills the gaps in the history of the promoted shard
after all operations from the previous term have drained, and future
operations are blocked. This commit does not handle replicating the
no-ops that fill the gaps to any remaining replicas, that is the
responsibility of the primary/replica sync that we are laying the ground
work for.
Relates #24945
`terms` aggregations at the root level use the `global_ordinals` execution hint by default.
When all sub-aggregators can be run in `breadth_first` mode the collected buckets for these sub-aggs are dense (remapped after the initial pruning).
But if a sub-aggregator is not deferrable and needs to collect all buckets before pruning we don't remap global ords and the aggregator needs to deal with sparse buckets.
Most (if not all) aggregators expect dense buckets and uses this information to allocate memories.
This change forces the remap of the global ordinals but only when there is at least one sub-aggregator that cannot be deferred.
Relates #24788
This commit introduces a clean transition from the old primary term to
the new primary term when a replica is promoted primary. To accomplish
this, we delay all operations before incrementing the primary term. The
delay is guaranteed to be in place before we increment the term, and
then all operations that are delayed are executed after the delay is
removed which asynchronously happens on another thread. This thread does
not progress until in-flight operations that were executing are
completed, and after these operations drain, the delayed operations
re-acquire permits and are executed.
Relates #24925
Within two lines of each other appears "fallthrough" and "fall through",
both typed by the same person who should have been paying better
attention and only one of these is correct and the inconsistency is
bothersome. This commit fixes the errant one.
Drops `TokenizerFactory#name`, replacing it with
`CustomAnalyzer#getTokenizerName` which is much better targeted at
its single use case inside the analysis API.
Drops a test that I would have had to refactor which is duplicated by
`AnalysisModuleTests`.
To keep this change from blowing up in size I've left two mostly
mechanical changes to be done in followups:
1. `TokenizerFactory` can now be entirely dropped and replaced with
`Supplier<Tokenizer>`.
2. `AbstractTokenizerFactory`'s ctor still takes a `String` parameter
where the name once was.
If the bucket already exists, due to non-overlapping series or missing data, the
MovAvg creates a merged bucket with the existing aggs + the new prediction. This
fixes a small bug where the doc_count was not being set correctly.
Relates to #24327
Today if the primary throws an exception while handling the replica
response (e.g., because it is already closed while updating the local
checkpoint for the replica), or because of a bug that causes an
exception to be thrown in the replica operation listener, this exception
is caught by the underlying transport handler plumbing and is translated
into a response handler failure transport exception that is passed to
the onFailure method of the replica operation listener. This causes the
primary to turn around and fail the replica which is a disastrous and
incorrect outcome as there's nothing wrong with the replica, it is the
primary that is broken and deserves a paddlin'. This commit handles this
situation by failing the primary.
Relates #24926
This commit adds a second refresh to the concurrent relocation
test. This is necessary as the first refresh might have brought back a
local checkpoint for a shard that a newly relocated primary became aware
of but did not yet receive a local checkpoint for that shard. When that
local checkpoint arrives on the new primary, the global checkpoint could
advance again and so we need a second replication action to push that
global checkpoint back out to the replica. This is indeed a hack, and it
will eventually be removed.
Closes#24599
The `IndexDeletionPolicy` is currently instantiated by `IndexShard` and is then passed through to the engine as a parameter. That's a shame as it is really just an implementation detail and the engine already has a method to acquire a commit.
This is preparing for a follow up PR that will we connect the index deletion policy with a new translog deletion policy.
Relates to #10708
The order in which double values are added in Java can give different results,
so in testing the sum and sumOfSquares we need to allow some delta for testing
equality. The difference can be larger for large sum values, so we should
account for this by making the delta in the assertion depend on the values
magnitude.
Closes#24931
ClearScrollResponse can print out its content into an XContentBuilder as it implements ToXContentObject. This PR add a fromXContent method to it so that we are able to recreate the response object when parsing the response back. This will be used in the high level REST client.
ClearScrollRequest can be created from a request body, but it doesn't support the opposite, meaning printing out its content to an XContentBuilder. This is useful to the high level REST client and allows for better testing of what we parse.
Moved parsing method from RestClearScrollAction to ClearScrollRequest so that fromXContent and toXContent sit close to each other. Added unit tests to verify that body parameters override query_string parameters when both present (there is already a yaml test for this but unit test is even better)
SearchScrollRequest can be created from a request body, but it doesn't support the opposite, meaning printing out its content to an XContentBuilder. This is useful to the high level REST client and allows for better testing of what we parse.
Moved parsing method from RestSearchScrollAction to SearchScrollRequest so that fromXContent and toXContent sit close to each other. Added unit tests to verify that body parameters override query_string parameters when both present (there is already a yaml test for this but unit test is even better)
When proportioning the shared RAM bytes across the shards of the query
cache, there's a computation that shares these bytes according to the
relative size of the shard cache to the total size of all the shard
caches. This computation had a bug where integer division was performed
instead which leads to this computation often being zero. This commit
fixes this bug by casting the numerator to a double before doing the
division so that double division is performed.
Relates #24856
The Lucene version constants for 5.4.1 and 5.5.0 are wrong, they are
listed as 6.5.0 instead of 6.5.1. This commit fixes these issues, and
adds a test to ensure that this does not happen again.
Relates #24923
This commit fixes a double decrement bug on the current query
counter. The double decrement arises in a situation when the fetch phase
is inlined for a query that is only touching one shard. After the query
phase succeeds we decrement the current query counter. If the fetch
phase ultimately fails, an exception is thrown and we decrement the
current query counter again in the catch block. We also add assertions
that all current stats counters remain non-negative at all
times.
Relates #24922
Removes the need for the `_UNRELEASED` suffix on versions by detecting if a version should be unreleased or not based on the versions around it. This should make it simpler to automate the task of adding a new version label.
In #23093 we made a change so that total bytes for a filesystem would not be a
negative value when the total bytes were > Long.MAX_VALUE.
This fixes#24453 which had a related issue where `available` and `free` bytes
could also be so large that they were negative. These will now return
`Long.MAX_VALUE` for the bytes if the JDK returns a negative value.
These tests spin up two nodes of an older version of Elasticsearch,
create some stuff, shut down the nodes, start the current version,
and verify that the created stuff works.
You can run `gradle qa:full-cluster-restart:check` to run these
tests against the head of the previous branch of Elasticsearch
(5.x for master, 5.4 for 5.x, etc) or you can run
`gradle qa:full-cluster-restart:bwcTest` to run this test against
all "index compatible" versions, one after the other. For master
this is every released version in the 5.x.y version *and* the tip
of the 5.x branch.
I'd love to add more to these tests in the future but these
currently just cover the functionality of the `create_bwc_index.py`
script and start to cover the assertions in the
`OldIndexBackwardsCompatibilityIT` test.
This commit renames the concept of the "compiled type" to a "factory
type", along with all implementations of this class to be named Factory.
This brings it inline with the classes purpose.
This commit adds collection of all contexts to the parameters of
getScriptEngine. This will allow script engines like painless to
precache extra information about the contexts.
This test is failing sporadically and for now we mute it as we have a
failure with additional logging that should hopefully enable us to
assess the situation.
This is a simple refactoring to move the context definitions into the
type that they use. While we have multiple context names for the same
class at the moment, this will eventually become one ScriptContext per
instance type, so the pattern of a static member on the interface called
CONTEXT can be used. This commit also moves the consolidated list of
contexts provided by core ES into ScriptModule.
This change cleans up some missed TODOs for content type detection on the source of put mapping and
put index template requests. In 5.3.0 and newer versions, the source is always JSON so the content
type detection is not needed. The TODOs were missed after the change was backported to 5.3.
Relates #24798
This commit adds the ability to store and retrieve data that should be associated with a
ScrollContext. Additionally the ScrollContext was made final as we should only have a single
implementation of this concept.
This commit changes the compile method of ScriptEngine to be generic in
the same way it is on ScriptService. This moves the shim of handling the
two existing context classes into each script engine, so that each
engine can be worked on independently to convert to real handling of
contexts.
When developing the new ScriptContext, the compiled type was original
generic, so that the instance type was also necessary. However, since
CompiledType is all that is used by the compile method signature, we
actually don't need the instance type to be generic. This commit removes
the InstanceType, and finds the Class for it through reflection on the
CompiledType method.
This commit modifies the compile method of ScriptService to be context
aware. The ScriptContext is now a generic class which contains both the
instance type and compiled type for a script. Instance type may be
stateful (for example, pre loading field information for the index a
script will execute on, like in expressions), while the compiled type is
stateless and used to construct instance type instances. This change is
only a first step to cutover ScriptService to the new paradigm. It only
converts callers to the script service, and has a small shim to wrap
compilation from the script engines to support the current two fixed
instance types, SearchScript and ExecutableScript.
Since groovy was removed, we no longer have any ScriptEngines with
resources to release. We may want to keep the option open for a script
engine to close resources, but this would not be common. This commit
adds a default implementation to ScriptEngine for `close()` to reduce
the boiler plate that must be added for a ScriptEngine implementation.
This commit increases the logging level on the index and relocate
concurrently test to obtain some insight into the global checkpoint
moving backwards.
The current log tries make sure we waited some (but not too long). This is unpredictable and fails all the time. This commit removes all of it and just make sure that we throw the right exceptions after timing out.
Fixes#24369
* SignificantText aggregation - like significant_terms but doesn’t require fielddata=true, recommended used with `sampler` agg to limit expense of tokenizing docs and takes optional `filter_duplicate_text`:true setting to avoid stats skew from repeated sections of text in search results.
Closes#23674
With #24779 in place, we can now guaranteed that a single translog generation file will never have a sequence number conflict that needs to be resolved by looking at primary terms. These conflicts can a occur when a replica contains an operation which isn't part of the history of a newly promoted primary. That primary can then assign a different operation to the same slot and replicate it to the replica.
PS. Knowing that each generation file is conflict free will simplifying repairing these conflicts when we read from the translog.
PPS. This PR also fixes some bugs in the piping of primary terms in the bulk shard action. These bugs are a result of the legacy of IndexRequest/DeleteRequest being a ReplicationRequest. We need to change that as a follow up.
Relates to #10708
This commit cleans up tests which currently use custom script engine
implementations, converting them to use a MockScriptEngine with script
functions provided by the tests. It also creates a common set of metric
scripts which were copied across a couple metric agg tests.
A user reported uneven balancing of load on nodes handling search requests from Kibana which supplies a session ID in a routing preference. Each shardId was selecting the same node for a given session ID because one data node had all primaries and the other data node held all replicas after cluster startup.
This change counteracts the tendency to opt for the same node given the same user-supplied preference by incorporating shard ID in the hash of the preference key. This will help randomise node choices across shards.
Closes#24642
This commit adds comments to org.elasticsearch.Assertions that disables
IntelliJ from complaining about using assert with side-effects, and
using constant conditions there as the side-effect with a constant
condition is intentionally employed.
Today in the code base we have lots of ugly code blocks like:
boolean assertionsEnabled = false;
assert assertionsEnabled = true;
if (assertionsEnabled) {
// something
}
These are a nuisance. Instead, we can do this in exactly one place and
replace these blocks with
if (Assertions.ENABLED) {
// something
}
The cool thing here is that since this is a static final field, the JIT
can optimize away the check at runtime if assertions are disabled.
Relates #24834
This commit moves the handling of nested and parent/child inner hits to specialized classes that can be defined outside of ES core.
InnerHitBuilderContext is now used by the parent query (nested or hasChild, ...) to build the sub context from the InnerHitBuilder definition.
BWC is also ensured so that nodes in previous versions can still send/receive inner hits to/from this version.
Relates #20257
After releasing 5.3.2, the 5.3.3 version constant was created. However,
this causes issues for the rolling upgrade tests, which expect to have
all older versions artifacts published and no point releases created off
of the older versions (older meaning more than one version behind the
current version). This commit removes the 5.3.3 version constant,
assuming we will not need it anywhere.
As we work towards contexts implying the return type of compilation, we
first need ScriptContext to not be an enum. This commit removes the
Standard enum and Plugin subclass of ScriptContext.
This commit fixes the RangeFieldMapper and RangeQueryBuilder to pass the correct relation to the RangeQuery when performing a range query over range fields.
Currently a `delete document` request against a non-existing index actually **creates** this index.
With this change the `delete document` no longer creates the previously non-existing index and throws an `index_not_found` exception instead.
However as discussed in https://github.com/elastic/elasticsearch/pull/15451#issuecomment-165772026, if an external version is explicitly used, the current behavior is preserved and the index is still created and the document is marked for deletion.
Fixes#15425
This commit is a simple cleanup to remove an unnecessary extra method on
ScriptService which was only used in 3 places. There is now only one
search method.
ScriptEngine implementations have an overridable method to indicate they
are safe to use as inline scripts. Since groovy was removed fro 6.0,
there are no longer any implementations which used the default false
value. Furthermore, the value was not actually read anywhere. This
commit removes the method. The ScriptEngineRegistry was also no longer
necessary as it only was used to build a map from language to engine.
This commit removes a convenience method from index shard that is used
at exactly one call site. This method is used to callback a listener
when an operation is on too old of a primary term. Since it is only used
at one call site, we simply inline the method.
Today a replica learns of a new primary term via a cluster state update
and there is not a clean transition between the older primary term and
the newer primary term. This commit modifies this situation so that:
- a replica shard learns of a new primary term via replication
operations executed under the mandate of the new primary
- when a replica shard learns of a new primary term, it blocks
operations on older terms from reaching the engine, with a clear
transition point between the operations on the older term and the
operations on the newer term
This work paves the way for a primary/replica sync on primary
promotion. Future work will also ensure a clean transition point on a
promoted primary, and prepare a replica shard for a sync with the
promoted primary.
Relates #24779
Allows plugins to register pre-configured tokenizers. Much
of the decisions are the same as those in #24223, #24572,
and #24223. This only migrates the lowercase tokenizer but
I figure that is a good start because it proves out the features.
This change removes the field data specialization needed for the parent field and replaces it with
a simple DocValuesIndexFieldData. The underlying global ordinals are retrieved via a new function called
IndexOrdinalsFieldData#getOrdinalMap.
The children aggregation is also modified to use a simple WithOrdinals value source rather than the deleted WithOrdinals.Parent.
Relates #20257
Today when we get a metadata snapshot from the index shard we ensure
that if there is no engine started on the shard that we lock the index
writer before we go and fetch the store metadata. Yet, if we concurrently
recover that shard, recovery finalization might fail since it can't acquire
the IW lock on the directory. This is mainly due to the wrong order of aquiring
the IW lock and the metadata lock. Fetching store metadata without a started engine
should block on the metadata lock in Store.java but since IndexShard locks the writer
first we get into a failed recovery dance especially in test. In production
this is less of an issue since we rarely get into this siutation if at all.
Closes#24481
The method should rather advance one token and only then require a START_OBJECT as the current token. This allows to parse given a parser that's at the beginning of the response, where the initial/current token is null.
Now the Java High Level Rest Client has tests to parse all aggregations,
this test is not needed anymore. We have better tests like
AggregationsTests and sub classes of InternalAggregationTestCase.
Related to #23965
This commit moves some functionality from PublishClusterStateAction to ZenDiscovery, which allows each class to focus on it's core competencies:
- PendingStatesQueue is now solely managed by ZenDiscovery (no shared access by both PublishClusterStateAction and ZenDiscovery)
- Validation logic is handled exclusively by ZenDiscovery
This commit is a simple refactoring of the update shard logic for
primaries. Namely, there was some duplicated code here that was annoying
to have to read twice so it is now collapsed with this commit.