Adds the ability to reread and decrypt the local node keystore.
Commonly, the contents of the keystore, backing the `SecureSettings`,
are not retrievable except during node initialization. This changes that
by adding a new API which broadcasts a password to every node. The
password is used to decrypt the local keystore and use it to populate
a `Settings` object that is passes to all the plugins implementing the
`ReloadablePlugin` interface. The plugin is then responsible to do
whatever "reload" means in his case. When the `reload`handler returns,
the keystore is closed and its contents are no longer retrievable.
Password is never stored persistently on any node.
Plugins that have been moded in this commit are: `repository-azure`,
`repository-s3`, `repository-gcs` and `discovery-ec2`.
Many fixtures have similar code for writing the pid & ports files or
for handling HTTP requests. This commit adds an AbstractHttpFixture
class in the test framework that can be extended for specific testing purposes.
In #19749 an extra check was added before writing each blob to ensure that we would not be
overriding an existing blob. Due to S3's weak consistency model, this check was best effort. To
make matters worse, however, this resulted in a HEAD request to be done before every PUT, in
particular also when PUTTING a new object. The approach taken in #19749 worsened our
consistency guarantees for follow-up snapshot actions, as it made it less likely for new files that
had been written to be available for reads.
This commit therefore removes this extra check. Due to the weak consistency model, this check
was a best effort thing anyway, and there's currently no way to prevent accidental overrides on S3.
This commit moves the repository-s3 fixture test added in #29296 in a
new `repository-s3/qa/amazon-s3` project. This new project allows the
REST integration tests to be executed using the real S3 service when
all the required environment variables are provided. When no env var
is provided, then the tests are executed using the fixture added
in #29296.
The REST tests located at the `repository-s3`plugin project now only
verify that the plugin is correctly loaded.
The REST tests have been adapted to allow a bucket name and a base
path to be specified as env vars. This way it is possible to run the tests
with different base paths (could be anything, like a CI job name or a
branch name) without multiplicating buckets.
Related to #29349
This commit adds the S3BlobStoreRepositoryTests class that extends the
base testing class for S3. It also removes some usage of socket servers
that emulate socket connections in unit tests. It was added to trigger
security exceptions, but this won't be needed anymore since #29296
is merged.
Today when you input a byte size setting that is out of bounds for the
setting, you get an error message that indicates the maximum value of
the setting. The problem is that because we use ByteSize#toString, we
end up with a representation of the value that does not really tell you
what the bound is. For example, if the bound is 2^31 - 1 bytes, the
output would be 1.9gb which does not really tell you want the limit as
there are many byte size values that we format to the same 1.9gb with
ByteSize#toString. We have a method ByteSize#getStringRep that uses the
input units to the value as the output units for the string
representation, so we end up with no loss if we use this to report the
bound. This commit does this.
This commit adds a new fixture that emulates a S3 service in order to
improve the existing integration tests. This is very similar to what has
been made for Google Cloud Storage in #28788, and such tests would
have helped a lot to catch bugs like #22534.
The AmazonS3Fixture is brittle and only implements the very necessary
stuff for the S3 repository to work, but at least it works and can be
adapted for specific tests needs.
* Fixes ByteSizeValue to serialise correctly
This fix makes a few fixes to ByteSizeValue to make it possible to perform round-trip serialisation:
* Changes wire serialisation to use Zlong methods instead of VLong methods. This is needed because the value `-1` is accepted but previously if `-1` is supplied it cannot be serialised using the wire protocol.
* Limits the supplied size to be no more than Long.MAX_VALUE when converted to bytes. Previously values greater than Long.MAX_VALUE bytes were accepted but would be silently interpreted as Long.MAX_VALUE bytes rather than erroring so the user had no idea the value was not being used the way they had intended. I consider this a bug and so fine to include this bug fix in a minor version but I am open to other points of view.
* Adds a `getStringRep()` method that can be used when serialising the value to JSON. This will print the bytes value if the size is positive, `”0”` if the size is `0` and `”-1”` if the size is `-1`.
* Adds logic to detect fractional values when parsing from a String and emits a deprecation warning in this case.
* Modifies hashCode and equals methods to work with long values rather than doubles so they don’t run into precision problems when dealing with large values. Previous to this change the equals method would not detect small differences in the values (e.g. 1-1000 bytes ranges) if the actual values where very large (e.g. PBs). This was due to the values being in the order of 10^18 but doubles only maintaining a precision of ~10^15.
Closes#27568
* Fix bytes settings default value to not use fractional values
* Fixes test
* Addresses review comments
* Modifies parsing to preserve unit
This should be bwc since in the case that the input is fractional it reverts back to the old method of parsing it to the bytes value.
* Addresses more review comments
* Fixes tests
* Temporarily changes version check to 7.0.0
This will be changed to 6.2 when the fix has been backported
This pull request changes the S3BlobContainer.blobExists() method implementation
to make it use the AmazonS3.doesObjectExist() method instead of
AmazonS3.getObjectMetadata(). The AmazonS3 implementation takes care of
catching any thrown AmazonS3Exception and compares its response code with 404,
returning false (object does not exist) or lets the exception be propagated.
The AWS SDK has a transitive dependency on Jackson Databind. While the
AWS SDK was recently upgraded, the Jackson Databind dependency was not
pulled along with it to the version that the AWS SDK depends on. This
commit upgrades the dependencies for discovery-ec2 and repository-s3
plugins to match versions on the AWS SDK transitive dependencies.
Relates #27361
Now the blob size information is available before writing anything,
the repository implementation can know upfront what will be the
more suitable API to upload the blob to S3.
This commit removes the DefaultS3OutputStream and S3OutputStream
classes and moves the implementation of the upload logic directly in the
S3BlobContainer.
related #26993closes#26969
With Gradle 4.1 and newer JDK versions, we can finally invoke Gradle directly using a JDK9 JAVA_HOME without requiring a JDK8 to "bootstrap" the build. As the thirdPartyAudit task runs within the JVM that Gradle runs in, it needs to be adapted now to be JDK9 aware.
This commit also changes the `JavaCompile` tasks to only fork if necessary (i.e. when Gradle's JVM and JAVA_HOME's JVM differ).
Moved SocketAccess.doPrivileged up the stack to DefaultS3OutputStream in repository-S3 plugin to avoid SecurityException by Streams.copy(). A plugin is only allowed to use its own jars when performing privileged operations. The S3 client might open a new Socket on close(). #25192
This commit renames all rest test files to use the .yml extension
instead of .yaml. This way the extension used within all of
elasticsearch for yaml is consistent.
Specifying s3 access and secret keys inside repository settings are not
secure. However, until there is a way to dynamically update secure
settings, this is the only way to dynamically add repositories with
credentials that are not known at node startup time. This commit adds
back `access_key` and `secret_key` s3 repository settings, but protects
it with a required system property `allow_insecure_settings`.
Most of these settings should always be pulled from the repository
settings. A couple were leftover that should be moved to client
settings. The path style access setting should be removed altogether.
This commit adds deprecations for all of these existing settings, as
well as adding new client specific settings for max retries and
throttling.
relates #24143
This change simplifies how the rest test runner finds test files and
removes all leniency. Previously multiple prefixes and suffixes would
be tried, and tests could exist inside or outside of the classpath,
although outside of the classpath never quite worked. Now only classpath
tests are supported, and only one resource prefix is supported,
`/rest-api-spec/tests`.
closes#20240
The S3 repostiory has many levels of settings it looks at to create a
repository, and these settings were read at repository creation time.
This meant secure settings like access and secret keys had to be
available after node construction. This change makes setting loading for
every except repository level settings eager, so that secure settings
can be stashed, and the keystore can once again be closed after
bootstrapping the node is complete.
This commit removes passing the repository metadata object through to
s3 client creation. It is not needed, and in fact in tests was confusing
because you could create the metadata but have it contain different
settings than were passed in as repository settings.
This commit removes the "legacy" feature of secure settings, which setup
a parallel setting that was a fallback in the insecure
elasticsearch.yml. This was previously used to allow the new secure
setting name to be that of the old setting name, but is now not in use
due to other refactorings. It is much cleaner to just have all secure
settings use new setting names. If in the future we want to reuse the
previous setting name, once support for the insecure settings have been
removed, we can then rename the secure setting. This also adds a test
for the behavior.
Currently, both the Amazon S3 client provides a retry mechanism, and the
S3 blob store also attempts retries for failed read/write requests.
Both retry mechanisms are controlled by the
`repositories.s3.max_retries` setting. However, the S3 blob store retry
mechanism is unnecessary because the Amazon S3 client provided by the
Amazon SDK already handles retries (with exponential backoff) based on
the provided max retry configuration setting (defaults to 3) as long as
the request is retryable. Hence, this commit removes the unneeded retry
logic in the S3 blob store and the S3OutputStream.
Closes#22845
This commit puts all the classes in the repository-s3 plugin into a
single package. In addition to simplifying the plugin, it will make it
easier to test as things that should be package private will not be
difficult to use inside tests alone.
This commit renames the random ASCII helper methods in ESTestCase. This
is because this method ultimately uses the random ASCII methods from
randomized runner, but these methods actually only produce random
strings generated from [a-zA-Z].
Relates #23886
This commit adds a convenience method for simultaneously asserting
settings deprecations and other warnings and fixes some tests where
setting deprecations and general warnings were present.
The warning header used by Elasticsearch for delivering deprecation
warnings has a specific format (RFC 7234, section 5.5). The format
specifies that the warning header should be of the form
warn-code warn-agent warn-text [warn-date]
Here, the warn-code is a three-digit code which communicates various
meanings. The warn-agent is a string used to identify the source of the
warning (either a host:port combination, or some other identifier). The
warn-text is quoted string which conveys the semantic meaning of the
warning. The warn-date is an optional quoted date that can be in a few
different formats.
This commit corrects the warning header within Elasticsearch to follow
this specification. We use the warn-code 299 which means a
"miscellaneous persistent warning." For the warn-agent, we use the
version of Elasticsearch that produced the warning. The warn-text is
unchanged from what we deliver today, but is wrapped in quotes as
specified (this is important as a problem that exists today is that
multiple warnings can not be split by comma to obtain the individual
warnings as the warnings might themselves contain commas). For the
warn-date, we use the RFC 1123 format.
Relates #23275
This is fallout from #23297. That commit wrapped
`InstanceProfileCredentialsProvider` to ensure that the `getCredentials`
and `refresh` methods had privileged access. However, it looks like
there was a test ensuring that `buildCredentials` returned the correct
clazz type. This commit adjusts that test to check that the correct
wrapper is returned.
This commit fixes an issue that was missed in #22534.
`AWSCredentialsProvider.getCredentials()` appears to potentially open a
socket connect. This operation needed to be wrapped in `doPrivileged()`.
This should fix issue #23271.
We have a bunch of interfaces that have only a single implementation
for 6 years now. These interfaces are pretty useless from a SW development
perspective and only add unnecessary abstractions. They also require
lots of casting in many places where we expect that there is only one
concrete implementation. This change removes the interfaces, makes
all of the classes final and removes the duplicate `foo` `getFoo` accessors
in favor of `getFoo` from these classes.
Secure settings from the elasticsearch keystore were not yet validated.
This changed improves support in Settings so that secure settings more
seamlessly blend in with normal settings, allowing the existing settings
validation to work. Note that the setting names are still not validated
(yet) when using the elasticsearc-keystore tool.
This is related to #22116. Core no longer needs `SocketPermission`
`connect`.
This permission is relegated to these modules/plugins:
- transport-netty4 module
- reindex module
- repository-url module
- discovery-azure-classic plugin
- discovery-ec2 plugin
- discovery-gce plugin
- repository-azure plugin
- repository-gcs plugin
- repository-hdfs plugin
- repository-s3 plugin
And for tests:
- mocksocket jar
- rest client
- httpcore-nio jar
- httpasyncclient jar
This commit upgrades the checkstyle configuration from version 5.9 to
version 7.5, the latest version as of today. The main enhancement
obtained via this upgrade is better detection of redundant modifiers.
Relates #22960
This change removes the ability to set region for s3 repositories.
Endpoint should be used instead if a custom s3 location needs to be
used.
closes#22758
* S3 repository: Add named configurations
This change implements named configurations for s3 repository as
proposed in #22520. The access/secret key secure settings which were
added in #22479 are reverted, and the only secure settings are those
with the new named configs. All other previously used settings for the
connection are deprecated.
closes#22520
This commit replaces specialized functional interfaces in various
plugins with generic options. Instead of creating `StorageRunnable`
interfaces in every plugin we can just use `Runnable` or `CheckedRunnable`.
This commit adds a SpecialPermission constant and uses that constant
opposed to introducing new instances everywhere.
Additionally, this commit introduces a single static method to check that
the current code has permission. This avoids all the duplicated access
blocks that exist currently.
* S3 repository: Deprecate specifying credentials through env vars and sys props
This is a follow up to #22479, where storing credentials secure way was
added.
This is related to #22116. Certain plugins (discovery-azure-classic,
discovery-ec2, discovery-gce, repository-azure, repository-gcs, and
repository-s3) open socket connections. As SocketPermissions are
transitioned out of core, these plugins will require connect
permission. This pull request wraps operations that require these
permissions in doPrivileged blocks.
* Settings: Make s3 repository sensitive settings use secure settings
This change converts repository-s3 to use the new secure settings. In
order to support the multiple ways we allow aws creds to be configured,
it also moves the main methods for the keystore wrapper into a
SecureSettings interface, in order to allow settings prefixing to work.
* Remove a checked exception, replacing it with `ParsingException`.
* Remove all Parser classes for the yaml sections, replacing them with static methods.
* Remove `ClientYamlTestFragmentParser`. Isn't used any more.
* Remove `ClientYamlTestSuiteParseContext`, replacing it with some static utility methods.
I did not rewrite the parsers using `ObjectParser` because I don't think it is worth it right now.
We are currenlty checking that no deprecation warnings are emitted in our query tests. That can be moved to ESTestCase (disabled in ESIntegTestCase) as it allows us to easily catch where our tests use deprecated features and assert on the expected warnings.
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.
Currently the default S3 buffer size is 100MB, which can be a lot for small
heaps. This pull request updates the default to be 100MB for heaps that are
greater than 2GB and 5% of the heap size otherwise.
This commit fixes an issue with the configuration for the AwsSdkMetrics
logger; the issue is that the logging configuration had used underscores
instead of periods for the settings key (the perils of lenient settings
parsing).
Relates #20313
In 2.x, the S3 repository accepted a `/` (forward slash) to start
the repositories.s3.base_path, and it used a different string splitting
method that removed the forward slash from the base path, so there
were no issues.
In 5.x, we removed this custom string splitting method in favor of
the JDK's string splitting method, which preserved the leading `/`.
The AWS SDK does not like the leading `/` in the key path after the
bucket name, and so it could not find any objects in the S3 repository.
This commit fixes the issue by removing the leading `/` if it exists
and adding a deprecation notice that leading `/` will not be supported
in the future in S3 repository's base_path.
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.
Because of security permissions that we do not grant to the AWS SDK (for
use in discovery-ec2 and repository-s3 plugins), certain calls in the
AWS SDK will lead to security exceptions that are logged at the warning
level. These warnings are noise and we should suppress them. This commit
adds plugin log configurations for discovery-ec2 and repository-s3 to
ship with default Log4j 2 configurations that suppress these log
warnings.
Relates #20313
This commit modifies the call sites that allocate a parameterized
message to use a supplier so that allocations are avoided unless the log
level is fine enough to emit the corresponding log message.
conform with the requirements of the writeBlob method by
throwing a FileAlreadyExistsException if attempting to write
to a blob that already exists. This change means implementations
of BlobContainer should never overwrite blobs - to overwrite a
blob, it must first be deleted and then can be written again.
Closes#15579
While I was working on #18703, I discovered a bad behavior when people don't provide AWS key/secret as part as their `elasticsearch.yml` but rely on SysProps or env. variables...
In [`InternalAwsS3Service#getClient(...)`](d4366f8493/plugins/repository-s3/src/main/java/org/elasticsearch/cloud/aws/InternalAwsS3Service.java (L76-L141)), we have:
```java
Tuple<String, String> clientDescriptor = new Tuple<>(endpoint, account);
AmazonS3Client client = clients.get(clientDescriptor);
```
But if people don't provide credentials, `account` is `null`.
Even if it actually could work, I think that we should use the `AWSCredentialsProvider` we create later on and extract from it the `account` (AWS KEY actually) and then use it as the second value of the tuple.
Closes#19557.
This makes it obvious that these tests are for running the client yaml
suites. Now that there are other ways of running tests using the REST
client against a running cluster we can't go on calling the shared
client yaml tests "REST tests". They are rest tests, but they aren't
**the** rest tests.
This adds a header that looks like `Location: /test/test/1` to the
response for the index/create/update API. The requirement for the header
comes from https://www.w3.org/Protocols/rfc2616/rfc2616-sec10.htmlhttps://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7231#section-7.1.2 claims that relative
URIs are OK. So we use an absolute path which should resolve to the
appropriate location.
Closes#19079
This makes large changes to our rest test infrastructure, allowing us
to write junit tests that test a running cluster via the rest client.
It does this by splitting ESRestTestCase into two classes:
* ESRestTestCase is the superclass of all tests that use the rest client
to interact with a running cluster.
* ESClientYamlSuiteTestCase is the superclass of all tests that use the
rest client to run the yaml tests. These tests are shared across all
official clients, thus the `ClientYamlSuite` part of the name.
Follow up for #18662 and #18690.
* For consistency, we rename method parameters and use `key` and `secret` instead of `account` and `key`.
* We add some tests to check that settings are correctly applied.
* Tests revealed that some checks are bad like for #18662.
Add test and fix issue for getting the right S3 endpoint
Test when Repository, Repositories or global settings are defined
But ignore testAWSCredentialsWithSystemProviders test
Add tests for AWS Client Configuration
Fix NPE when no region is set
We used to transform region="" to region=null but it's not needed anymore and would actually cause NPE from now.
Follow up for https://github.com/elastic/elasticsearch/pull/17784#discussion_r64575845
Today we are registering repository settings when `S3RepositoryPlugin` starts:
```java
settingsModule.registerSetting(S3Repository.Repository.KEY_SETTING);
settingsModule.registerSetting(S3Repository.Repository.SECRET_SETTING);
settingsModule.registerSetting(S3Repository.Repository.BUCKET_SETTING);
settingsModule.registerSetting(S3Repository.Repository.ENDPOINT_SETTING);
settingsModule.registerSetting(S3Repository.Repository.PROTOCOL_SETTING);
settingsModule.registerSetting(S3Repository.Repository.REGION_SETTING);
settingsModule.registerSetting(S3Repository.Repository.SERVER_SIDE_ENCRYPTION_SETTING);
settingsModule.registerSetting(S3Repository.Repository.BUFFER_SIZE_SETTING);
settingsModule.registerSetting(S3Repository.Repository.MAX_RETRIES_SETTING);
settingsModule.registerSetting(S3Repository.Repository.CHUNK_SIZE_SETTING);
settingsModule.registerSetting(S3Repository.Repository.COMPRESS_SETTING);
settingsModule.registerSetting(S3Repository.Repository.STORAGE_CLASS_SETTING);
settingsModule.registerSetting(S3Repository.Repository.CANNED_ACL_SETTING);
settingsModule.registerSetting(S3Repository.Repository.BASE_PATH_SETTING);
```
We don't need to register those settings as they are repository level settings and not node level settings.
Closes#18945.
Repository plugins currently use a lot of custom classes like
RepositoryName and RepositorySettings in order to use guice to construct
repository implementations. But repositories now only really need their
settings to be constructed. Anything else they need (eg a cloud client)
can be constructed within the plugin, instead of via guice.
This change makes repository plugins use the new pull model. It removes
guice from the construction of Repository objects (no more child
injectors) and also from all repository plugins.
The api for snapshot/restore was split up between two interfaces,
Repository and IndexShardRepository. There was also complex
initialization and injection between the two. However, there is always a
one to one relationship between the two.
This change moves the IndexShardRepository api into Repository, as well
as updates the API so as not to require any services to be injected for
sublcasses.
Today throughout the codebase, catch throwable is used with reckless
abandon. This is dangerous because the throwable could be a fatal
virtual machine error resulting from an internal error in the JVM, or an
out of memory error or a stack overflow error that leaves the virtual
machine in an unstable and unpredictable state. This commit removes
catch throwable from the codebase and removes the temptation to use it
by modifying listener APIs to receive instances of Exception instead of
the top-level Throwable.
Relates #19231
The only reason for LifecycleComponent taking a generic type was so that
it could return that type on its start and stop methods. However, this
chaining has no practical necessity. Instead, start and stop can be
void, and a whole bunch of confusing generics disappear.
Repository-S3 needs a special permission because of problems in AmazonS3Client: when no region is set on a AmazonS3Client instance, the AWS SDK loads all known partitions from a JSON file and uses a Jackson's ObjectMapper for that: this one, in version 2.5.3 with the default binding options, tries to suppress access checks of ctor/field/method and thus requires this special permission. AWS must be fixed to uses Jackson correctly and have the correct modifiers on binded classes.
This must be fixed in aws sdk (see https://github.com/aws/aws-sdk-java/issues/766) but in the meanwhile we have no choice.
closes#18539
Raise IOException on deleteBlob if the blob doesn't exist
This commit raises an IOException on BlobContainer#deleteBlob
if the blob does not exist, in conformance with the BlobContainer
interface contract. Each implementation of BlobContainer now
conforms to this contract (file system, S3, Azure, HDFS). This
commit also contains blob container tests for each of the
repository implementations.
Closes#18530
Today we have a push model for registering basically anything. All our extension points
are defined on modules which we pass in to plugins. This is harder to maintain and adds
unnecessary dependencies on the modules itself. This change moves towards a pull model
where the plugin offers a getter kind of method to get the extensions. This will also
help in the future if we need to pass dependencies to the extension points which can
easily be defined on the method as arguments if a pull model is used.
In 2.0 we added plugin descriptors which require defining a name and
description for the plugin. However, we still have name() and
description() which must be overriden from the Plugin class. This still
exists for classpath plugins. But classpath plugins are mainly for
tests, and even then, referring to classpath plugins with their class is
a better idea. This change removes name() and description(), replacing
the name for classpath plugins with the full class name.
* master: (911 commits)
[TEST] wait for yellow after setup doc tests (#18726)
Fix recovery throttling to properly handle relocating non-primary shards (#18701)
Fix merge stats rendering in RestIndicesAction (#18720)
[TEST] mute RandomAllocationDeciderTests.testRandomDecisions
Reworked docs for index-shrink API (#18705)
Improve painless compile-time exceptions
Adds UUIDs to snapshots
Add test rethrottle test case for delete-by-query
Do not start scheduled pings until transport start
Adressing review comments
Only filter intial recovery (post API) when shrinking an index (#18661)
Add tests to check that toQuery() doesn't return null
Removing handling of null lucene query where we catch this at parse time
Handle empty query bodies at parse time and remove EmptyQueryBuilder
Mute failing assertions in IndexWithShadowReplicasIT until fix
Remove allow running as root
Add upgrade-not-supported warning to alpha release notes
remove unrecognized javadoc tag from matrix aggregation module
set ValuesSourceConfig fields as private
Adding MultiValuesSource support classes and documentation to matrix stats agg module
...
* changes `throttle_retries` to `use_throttle_retries`
* removes registering of all individual repository settings when the plugin starts. Not needed
* adds more comment about deprecated method in AWS SDK we need to implement though in a Delegate class within our tests
This change makes ES compile with java9 again, build 118.
* There are a handful of changes due to failure to determine types during compile.
* The attachment plugins which use tika needed to have tika upgraded in order to pickup fixes there for java 9.
* azure discovery and s3 repository indirectly depend on jaxb, which is no longer in the default modules. They now add a jaxb dependency externally, and make JarHell allow for this package.
I initially wrongly put this setting under `cloud.aws.s3.` prefix which does not make sense. It should be placed at the same place as `max_retries`.
Also applied @tlrx comments. We should set this even if max_retries is not set (when using default values).
Also added some documentation about this setting.
This commit fixes the inequality symbol used in a test assertion in
RepositoryS3SettingsTests#testInvalidChunkBufferSizeRepositorySettings. The
inequality symbol was previously backwards but fixed in commit
cad0608cdb but fixing the inequality
symbol here was missed in that commit.
Closes#18449
This commit removes the method Strings#splitStringToArray and replaces
the call sites with invocations to String#split. There are only two
explanations for the existence of this method. The first is that
String#split is slightly tricky in that it accepts a regular expression
rather than a character to split on. This means that if s is a string,
s.split(".") does not split on the character '.', but rather splits on
the regular expression '.' which splits on every character (of course,
this is easily fixed by invoking s.split("\\.") instead). The second
possible explanation is that (again) String#split accepts a regular
expression. This means that there could be a performance concern
compared to just splitting on a single character. However, it turns out
that String#split has a fast path for the case of splitting on a single
character and microbenchmarks show that String#split has 1.5x--2x the
throughput of Strings#splitStringToArray. There is a slight behavior
difference between Strings#splitStringToArray and String#split: namely,
the former would return an empty array in cases when the input string
was null or empty but String#split will just NPE at the call site on
null and return a one-element array containing the empty string when the
input string is empty. There was only one place relying on this behavior
and the call site has been modified accordingly.
When working on #18008 I found while reading the code that we don't filter anymore `repositories.s3.access_key` and `repositories.s3.secret_key`.
Also fixed a typo in REST test
Defaults to `true`.
If anyone is having trouble with this option, you could disable it with `cloud.aws.s3.throttle_retries: false` in `elasticsearch.yml` file.
* Moving from JSON.org to Jackson for request marshallers.
* The Java SDK now supports retry throttling to limit the rate of retries during periods of reduced availability. This throttling behavior can be enabled via ClientConfiguration or via the system property "-Dcom.amazonaws.sdk.enableThrottledRetry".
* Fixed String case conversion issues when running with non English locales.
* AWS SDK for Java introduces a new dynamic endpoint system that can compute endpoints for services in new regions.
* Introducing a new AWS region, ap-northeast-2.
* Added a new metric, HttpSocketReadTime, that records socket read latency. You can enable this metric by adding enableHttpSocketReadMetric to the system property com.amazonaws.sdk.enableDefaultMetrics. For more information, see [Enabling Metrics with the AWS SDK for Java](https://java.awsblog.com/post/Tx3C0RV4NRRBKTG/Enabling-Metrics-with-the-AWS-SDK-for-Java).
* New Client Execution timeout feature to set a limit spent across retries, backoffs, ummarshalling, etc. This new timeout can be specified at the client level or per request.
Also included in this release is the ability to specify the existing HTTP Request timeout per request rather than just per client.
* Added support for RequesterPays for all operations.
* Ignore the 'Connection' header when generating S3 responses.
* Allow users to generate an AmazonS3URI from a string without using URL encoding.
* Fixed issue that prevented creating buckets when using a client configured for the s3-external-1 endpoint.
* Amazon S3 bucket lifecycle configuration supports two new features: the removal of expired object delete markers and an action to abort incomplete multipart uploads.
* Allow TransferManagerConfiguration to accept integer values for multipart upload threshold.
* Copy the list of ETags before sorting https://github.com/aws/aws-sdk-java/pull/589.
* Option to disable chunked encoding https://github.com/aws/aws-sdk-java/pull/586.
* Adding retry on InternalErrors in CompleteMultipartUpload operation. https://github.com/aws/aws-sdk-java/issues/538
* Deprecated two APIs : AmazonS3#changeObjectStorageClass and AmazonS3#setObjectRedirectLocation.
* Added support for the aws-exec-read canned ACL. Owner gets FULL_CONTROL. Amazon EC2 gets READ access to GET an Amazon Machine Image (AMI) bundle from Amazon S3.
* Added support for referencing security groups in peered Virtual Private Clouds (VPCs). For more information see the service announcement at https://aws.amazon.com/about-aws/whats-new/2016/03/announcing-support-for-security-group-references-in-a-peered-vpc/ .
* Fixed a bug in AWS SDK for Java - Amazon EC2 module that returns NPE for dry run requests.
* Regenerated client with new implementation of code generator.
* This feature enables support for DNS resolution of public hostnames to private IP addresses when queried over ClassicLink. Additionally, you can now access private hosted zones associated with your VPC from a linked EC2-Classic instance. ClassicLink DNS support makes it easier for EC2-Classic instances to communicate with VPC resources using public DNS hostnames.
* You can now use Network Address Translation (NAT) Gateway, a highly available AWS managed service that makes it easy to connect to the Internet from instances within a private subnet in an AWS Virtual Private Cloud (VPC). Previously, you needed to launch a NAT instance to enable NAT for instances in a private subnet. Amazon VPC NAT Gateway is available in the US East (N. Virginia), US West (Oregon), US West (N. California), EU (Ireland), Asia Pacific (Tokyo), Asia Pacific (Singapore), and Asia Pacific (Sydney) regions. To learn more about Amazon VPC NAT, see [New - Managed NAT (Network Address Translation) Gateway for AWS](https://aws.amazon.com/blogs/aws/new-managed-nat-network-address-translation-gateway-for-aws/)
* A default read timeout is now applied when querying data from EC2 metadata service.
We have both `Settings.settingsBuilder` and `Settings.builder` that do exactly
the same thing, so we should keep only one. I kept `Settings.builder` since it
has my preference but also it is the one that we use in examples of the Java API.
This change moves placeholder replacement to a pkg private class for
settings. It also adds a null check when calling replacement, as
settings objects can still contain null values, because we only prohibit
nulls on file loading. Finally, this cleans up file and stream loading a
bit to not have unnecessary exception wrapping.
We can be better at checking `buffer_size` and `chunk_size` for S3 repositories.
For example, we know that:
* `buffer_size` should be more than `5mb`
* `chunk_size` should be no more than `5tb`
* `buffer_size` should be lower than `chunk_size`
Otherwise, setting `buffer_size` is useless.
For the record:
`chunk_size` is a Snapshot setting whatever the implementation is.
`buffer_size` is an S3 implementation setting.
Let say that you are snapshotting a 500mb file. If you set `chunk_size` to `200mb`, then Snapshot service will call S3 repository to snapshot 3 files with the following sizes:
* `200mb`
* `200mb`
* `100mb`
If you set `buffer_size` to `100mb` (AWS maximum size recommendation), the first file of `200mb` will be uploaded on S3 using the multipart feature in 2 chunks and the workflow is basically the following:
* create the multipart request and get back an `id` from AWS S3 platform
* upload part1: `100mb`
* upload part2: `100mb`
* "commit" the full upload using the `id`.
Closes#17244.
Instead of modifying methods each time we need to add a new behavior for settings, we can simply pass `SettingsProperty... properties` instead.
`SettingsProperty` could be defined then:
```
public enum SettingsProperty {
Filtered,
Dynamic,
ClusterScope,
NodeScope,
IndexScope
// HereGoesYours;
}
```
Then in setting code, it become much more flexible.
TODO: Note that we need to validate SettingsProperty which are added to a Setting as some of them might be mutually exclusive.
Now we have a nice Setting infra, we can define in Setting class if a setting should be filtered or not.
So when we register a setting, setting filtering would be automatically done.
Instead of writing:
```java
Setting<String> KEY_SETTING = Setting.simpleString("cloud.aws.access_key", false, Setting.Scope.CLUSTER);
settingsModule.registerSetting(AwsEc2Service.KEY_SETTING, false);
settingsModule.registerSettingsFilterIfMissing(AwsEc2Service.KEY_SETTING.getKey());
```
We could simply write:
```java
Setting<String> KEY_SETTING = Setting.simpleString("cloud.aws.access_key", false, Setting.Scope.CLUSTER, true);
settingsModule.registerSettingsFilterIfMissing(AwsEc2Service.KEY_SETTING.getKey());
```
It also removes `settingsModule.registerSettingsFilterIfMissing` method.
The plan would be to remove as well `settingsModule.registerSettingsFilter` method but it still used with wildcards. For example in Azure Repository plugin:
```java
module.registerSettingsFilter(AzureStorageService.Storage.PREFIX + "*.account");
module.registerSettingsFilter(AzureStorageService.Storage.PREFIX + "*.key");
```
Closes#16598.
This change rewrites the entire settings filtering mechanism to be immutable.
All filters must be registered up-front in the SettingsModule. Filters that are comma-sparated are
not allowed anymore and check on registration.
This commit also adds settings filtering to the default settings recently added to ensure we don't render
filtered settings.
# Please enter a commit message to explain why this merge is necessary,
# especially if it merges an updated upstream into a topic branch.
#
# Lines starting with '#' will be ignored, and an empty message aborts
# the commit.
The rest test framework, because it used to be tightly integrated with
ESIntegTestCase, currently expects the addresses for the test cluster to
be passed using the transport protocol port. However, it only uses this
to then find the http address.
This change makes ESRestTestCase extend from ESTestCase instead of
ESIntegTestCase, and changes the sysprop used to tests.rest.cluster,
which now takes the http address.
closes#15459
Site plugins used to be used for things like kibana and marvel, but
there is no longer a need since kibana (and marvel as a kibana plugin)
uses node.js. This change removes site plugins, as well as the flag for
jvm plugins. Now all plugins are jvm plugins.
This fixes the `lenient` parameter to be `missingClasses`. I will remove this boolean and we can handle them via the normal whitelist.
It also adds a check for sheisty classes (jar hell with the jdk).
This is inspired by the lucene "sheisty" classes check, but it has false positives. This check is more evil, it validates every class file against the extension classloader as a resource, to see if it exists there. If so: jar hell.
This jar hell is a problem for several reasons:
1. causes insanely-hard-to-debug problems (like bugs in forbidden-apis)
2. hides problems (like internal api access)
3. the code you think is executing, is not really executing
4. security permissions are not what you think they are
5. brings in unnecessary dependencies
6. its jar hell
The more difficult problems are stuff like jython, where these classes are simply 'uberjared' directly in, so you cant just fix them by removing a bogus dependency. And there is a legit reason for them to do that, they want to support java 1.4.
When using S3 or EC2, it was possible to use a proxy to access EC2 or S3 API but username and password were not possible to be set.
This commit adds support for this. Also, to make all that consistent, proxy settings for both plugins have been renamed:
* from `cloud.aws.proxy_host` to `cloud.aws.proxy.host`
* from `cloud.aws.ec2.proxy_host` to `cloud.aws.ec2.proxy.host`
* from `cloud.aws.s3.proxy_host` to `cloud.aws.s3.proxy.host`
* from `cloud.aws.proxy_port` to `cloud.aws.proxy.port`
* from `cloud.aws.ec2.proxy_port` to `cloud.aws.ec2.proxy.port`
* from `cloud.aws.s3.proxy_port` to `cloud.aws.s3.proxy.port`
New settings are `proxy.username` and `proxy.password`.
```yml
cloud:
aws:
protocol: https
proxy:
host: proxy1.company.com
port: 8083
username: myself
password: theBestPasswordEver!
```
You can also set different proxies for `ec2` and `s3`:
```yml
cloud:
aws:
s3:
proxy:
host: proxy1.company.com
port: 8083
username: myself1
password: theBestPasswordEver1!
ec2:
proxy:
host: proxy2.company.com
port: 8083
username: myself2
password: theBestPasswordEver2!
```
Note that `password` is filtered with `SettingsFilter`.
We also fix a potential issue in S3 repository. We were supposed to accept key/secret either set under `cloud.aws` or `cloud.aws.s3` but the actual code never implemented that.
It was:
```java
account = settings.get("cloud.aws.access_key");
key = settings.get("cloud.aws.secret_key");
```
We replaced that by:
```java
String account = settings.get(CLOUD_S3.KEY, settings.get(CLOUD_AWS.KEY));
String key = settings.get(CLOUD_S3.SECRET, settings.get(CLOUD_AWS.SECRET));
```
Also, we extract all settings for S3 in `AwsS3Service` as it's already the case for `AwsEc2Service` class.
Closes#15268.
* Forbid System.setProperties & co in forbidden APIs.
* Ban property write access at runtime with security manager.
Plugins that need to modify system properties will need to request permission in their plugin-security.policy
# Please enter a commit message to explain why this merge is necessary,
# especially if it merges an updated upstream into a topic branch.
#
# Lines starting with '#' will be ignored, and an empty message aborts
# the commit.
Transitive dependencies can be confusing and hard to deal with when
conflicts arise between them. This change removes transitive
dependencies from elasticsearch, and forces any dependency conflicts to
be resolved manually, instead of automatically by gradle.
closes#14627
`AbstractLegacyBlobContainer` was kept for historical reasons (see #13434).
We can migrate Azure and S3 repositories to use the new methods added in #13434 so we can remove `AbstractLegacyBlobContainer` class.
This change removes the leftover pom files. A couple files were left for
reference, namely in qa tests that have not yet been migrated (vagrant
and multinode). The deb and rpm assemblies also still exist for
reference when finishing their setup in gradle.
See #13930
There are three ways `@Test` was used. Way one:
```java
@Test
public void flubTheBlort() {
```
This way was always replaced with:
```java
public void testFlubTheBlort() {
```
Or, maybe with a better method name if I was feeling generous.
Way two:
```java
@Test(throws=IllegalArgumentException.class)
public void testFoo() {
methodThatThrows();
}
```
This way of using `@Test` is actually pretty OK, but to get the tools to ban
`@Test` entirely it can't be used. Instead:
```java
public void testFoo() {
try {
methodThatThrows();
fail("Expected IllegalArgumentException");
} catch (IllegalArgumentException e ) {
assertThat(e.getMessage(), containsString("something"));
}
}
```
This is longer but tests more than the old ways and is much more precise.
Compare:
```java
@Test(throws=IllegalArgumentException.class)
public void testFoo() {
some();
copy();
and();
pasted();
methodThatThrows();
code(); // <---- This was left here by mistake and is never called
}
```
to:
```java
@Test(throws=IllegalArgumentException.class)
public void testFoo() {
some();
copy();
and();
pasted();
try {
methodThatThrows();
fail("Expected IllegalArgumentException");
} catch (IllegalArgumentException e ) {
assertThat(e.getMessage(), containsString("something"));
}
}
```
The final use of test is:
```java
@Test(timeout=1000)
public void testFoo() {
methodThatWasSlow();
}
```
This is the most insidious use of `@Test` because its tempting but tragically
flawed. Its flaws are:
1. Hard and fast timeouts can look like they are asserting that something is
faster and even do an ok job of it when you compare the timings on the same
machine but as soon as you take them to another machine they start to be
invalid. On a slow VM both the new and old methods fail. On a super-fast
machine the slower and faster ways succeed.
2. Tests often contain slow `assert` calls so the performance of tests isn't
sure to predict the performance of non-test code.
3. These timeouts are rude to debuggers because the test just drops out from
under it after the timeout.
Confusingly, timeouts are useful in tests because it'd be rude for a broken
test to cause CI to abort the whole build after it hits a global timeout. But
those timeouts should be very very long "backstop" timeouts and aren't useful
assertions about speed.
For all its flaws `@Test(timeout=1000)` doesn't have a good replacement __in__
__tests__. Nightly benchmarks like http://benchmarks.elasticsearch.org/ are
useful here because they run on the same machine but they aren't quick to check
and it takes lots of time to figure out the regressions. Sometimes its useful
to compare dueling implementations but that requires keeping both
implementations around. All and all we don't have a satisfactory answer to the
question "what do you replace `@Test(timeout=1000)`" with. So we handle each
occurrence on a case by case basis.
For files with `@Test` this also:
1. Removes excess blank lines. They don't help anything.
2. Removes underscores from method names. Those would fail any code style
checks we ever care to run and don't add to readability. Since I did this manually
I didn't do it consistently.
3. Make sure all test method names start with `test`. Some used to end in `Test` or start
with `verify` or `check` and they were picked up using the annotation. Without the
annotation they always need to start with `test`.
4. Organizes imports using the rules we generate for Eclipse. For the most part
this just removes `*` imports which is a win all on its own. It was "required"
to quickly remove `@Test`.
5. Removes unneeded casts. This is just a setting I have enabled in Eclipse and
forgot to turn off before I did this work. It probably isn't hurting anything.
6. Removes trailing whitespace. Again, another Eclipse setting I forgot to turn
off that doesn't hurt anything. Hopefully.
7. Swaps some tests override superclass tests to make them empty with
`assumeTrue` so that the reasoning for the skips is logged in the test run and
it doesn't "look like" that thing is being tested when it isn't.
8. Adds an oxford comma to an error message.
The total test count doesn't change. I know. I counted.
```bash
git checkout master && mvn clean && mvn install | tee with_test
git no_test_annotation master && mvn clean && mvn install | tee not_test
grep 'Tests summary' with_test > with_test_summary
grep 'Tests summary' not_test > not_test_summary
diff with_test_summary not_test_summary
```
These differ somewhat because some tests are skipped based on the random seed.
The total shouldn't differ. But it does!
```
1c1
< [INFO] Tests summary: 564 suites (1 ignored), 3171 tests, 31 ignored (31 assumptions)
---
> [INFO] Tests summary: 564 suites (1 ignored), 3167 tests, 17 ignored (17 assumptions)
```
These are the core unit tests. So we dig further:
```bash
cat with_test | perl -pe 's/\n// if /^Suite/;s/.*\n// if /IGNOR/;s/.*\n// if /Assumption #/;s/.*\n// if /HEARTBEAT/;s/Completed .+?,//' | grep Suite > with_test_suites
cat not_test | perl -pe 's/\n// if /^Suite/;s/.*\n// if /IGNOR/;s/.*\n// if /Assumption #/;s/.*\n// if /HEARTBEAT/;s/Completed .+?,//' | grep Suite > not_test_suites
diff <(sort with_test_suites) <(sort not_test_suites)
```
The four tests with lower test numbers are all extend `AbstractQueryTestCase`
and all have a method that looks like this:
```java
@Override
public void testToQuery() throws IOException {
assumeTrue("test runs only when at least a type is registered", getCurrentTypes().length > 0);
super.testToQuery();
}
```
It looks like this method was being double counted on master and isn't anymore.
Closes#14028
* Add ability for plugins to declare additional permissions with a custom plugin-security.policy file and corresponding AccessController logic. See the plugin author's guide for more information.
* Add warning messages to users for extra plugin permissions in bin/plugin.
* When bin/plugin is run interactively (stdin is a controlling terminal and -b/--batch not supplied), require user confirmation.
* Improve unit test and IDE support for plugins with additional permissions by exposing plugin's metadata as a maven test resource.
Closes#14108
Squashed commit of the following:
commit cf8ace65a7397aaccd356bf55f95d6fbb8bb571c
Author: Robert Muir <rmuir@apache.org>
Date: Wed Oct 14 13:36:05 2015 -0400
fix new unit test from master merge
commit 9be3c5aa38f2d9ae50f3d54924a30ad9cddeeb65
Merge: 2f168b8 7368231
Author: Robert Muir <rmuir@apache.org>
Date: Wed Oct 14 12:58:31 2015 -0400
Merge branch 'master' into off_my_back
commit 2f168b8038e32672f01ad0279fb5db77ba902ae8
Author: Robert Muir <rmuir@apache.org>
Date: Wed Oct 14 12:56:04 2015 -0400
improve plugin author documentation
commit 6e6c2bfda68a418d92733ac22a58eec35508b2d0
Author: Robert Muir <rmuir@apache.org>
Date: Wed Oct 14 12:52:14 2015 -0400
move security confirmation after 'plugin already installed' check, to prevent user from answering unnecessary questions.
commit 08233a2972554afef2a6a7521990283102e20d92
Author: Robert Muir <rmuir@apache.org>
Date: Wed Oct 14 05:36:42 2015 -0400
Add documentation and pluginmanager support
commit 05dad86c51488ba43ccbd749f0164f3fbd3aee62
Author: Robert Muir <rmuir@apache.org>
Date: Wed Oct 14 02:22:24 2015 -0400
Decentralize plugin permissions (modulo docs and pluginmanager work)
Closes#13854
Squashed commit of the following:
commit 42c1166efc55adda0d13fed77de583c0973e44b3
Author: Robert Muir <rmuir@apache.org>
Date: Tue Sep 29 11:59:43 2015 -0400
Add paranoia
Groovy holds on to a classloader, so check it before compilation too.
I have not reviewed yet what Rhino is doing, but just be safe.
commit b58668a81428e964dd5ffa712872c0a34897fc91
Author: Robert Muir <rmuir@apache.org>
Date: Tue Sep 29 11:46:06 2015 -0400
Add SpecialPermission to guard exceptions to security policy.
In some cases (e.g. buggy cloud libraries, scripting engines), we must
grant dangerous permissions to contained cases. Those AccessController blocks
are dangerous, since they truncate the stack, and can allow privilege escalation.
This PR adds a simple permission to check before each one, so that unprivileged code
like groovy scripts, can't do anything they shouldn't be allowed to do otherwise.
We moved a lot of repositories into elasticsearch, but in their new
location they retained their LICENSE.txt and NOTICE.txt files. These are
all the same, and having the license and notice and the root of the
repository should be sufficient.
Plugin tests require having rest-api tests, and currently copy that spec
from a directory in the root of the plugin source into the test
resources. This change moves the rest-api-spec dir into test resources
so it is like any other test resources. It also removes unnecessary
configuration for resources from the shared plugin pom.
When running a RestIT test from the IDE, you actually start an internal node which does not automatically load the plugin you would like to test.
We need to add:
```java
@Override
protected Collection<Class<? extends Plugin>> nodePlugins() {
return pluginList(PLUGIN_HERE.class);
}
```
Everything works fine when running from maven because each test basically:
* installs elasticsearch
* installs one plugin
* starts elasticsearch with this plugin loaded
* runs the test
Note that this PR only fixes the fact we run an internal cluster with the expected plugin.
Cloud tests will still fail when run from the IDE because is such a case you actually start an internal node with many mock plugins.
And REST test suite for cloud plugins basically checks if the plugin is running by checking the output of NodesInfo API.
And we check:
```yml
- match: { nodes.$master.plugins.0.name: cloud-azure }
- match: { nodes.$master.plugins.0.jvm: true }
```
But in that case, this condition is certainly false as we started also `mock-transport-service`, `mock-index-store`, `mock-engine-factory`, `node-mocks`, `asserting-local-transport`, `mock-search-service`.
Closes#13479
Instead of asking blob store to create output for posting blob content, this change provides that content of the blob to the blob store for writing. This will significantly simplify the interface for S3 and Azure plugins.