Removes all our logger wrappers except the wrapper for log4j1.2. If you
depend on Elasticsearch's jar in your application you'll need to declare
log4j 1.2 and/or some bridge to your favorite logger.
We did this to simplify our builds and code. No more commons-logging like
log implementation sniffing. No more optional dependency hacks in gradle.
We might one day want to use j.u.l instead of log4j. If we do want that
we can recover its wrapper by studying this commit. We didn't go directly
to j.u.l in this commit because that is a bigger change. Our logging
configuration is based on log4j1.2 and people are used to it. So it'd
be a much more fraught breaking change to do that conversion.
Both modules and integ-test-zip have integration tests (the latter being
the base rest tests). We can currently get odd behavior where
integ-test-zip's integ test does not shutdown its cluster before running
mdoule integ tests (and it then tries to shutdown all those clusters at
once after modules integ tests have run).
The underlying issue can be attributed to a bug in gradle with how cross project
mustRunAfter work with finalizers. This change works around this bug by
setting up mustRunAfter on the shutdown task itself.
We currently use the full suite of packaged rest tests for each
distribution. We also used to run rest tests within core integ tests,
but this stopped working when we split out the test-framework, since the
test files are in there.
This change simplifies the code to run packaged rest tests just once,
for the integ-test-zip, and removes the unused rest tests from
test-framework. Distributions rest tests now check that all modules
were loaded.
This change attempts to simplify the gradle tasks for precommit. One
major part of that is using a "less groovy style", as well as being more
consistent about how tasks are created and where they are configured. It
also allows the things creating the tasks to set up inter task
dependencies, instead of assuming them (ie decoupling from tasks
eleswhere in the build).
Currently we use the "gradle project attachment plugin" to support
building elasticsearch as part of another project. However, this plugin
has a number of issues, a large part of which is requiring consistent
use of the projectsPrefix.
This change removes projectsPrefix, and adds support for a special
extra-plugins directory in the root of elasticsearch. Any projects
checked out within this directory will be automatically added to
elasticsearch.
We recently got a run command with gradle, but it is sometimes useful to
run ES with a specific plugin. This is a start, by making each esplugin
have a run command which installs the plugin and runs elasticsearch in
the foreground.
run.sh and run.bat were calling out to the old maven build system.
This is no longer in place, so we've created new gradle tasks to
start an elasticsearch node from the current codebase.
fixed#14423