The main improvement here is that the total expected
count of training rows in the test is calculated as the
sum of the training fraction times the cardinality of each
class (instead of the training fraction times the total doc count).
Also relaxes slightly the error bound on the uniformity test from 0.12
to 0.13.
Closes#54122
Backport of #58180
We don't allow converting a data stream's writeable index into a searchable
snapshot. We are currently preventing swapping a data stream's write index
with the restored index.
This adds another step that will not proceed with the searchable snapshot action
until the managed index is not the write index of a data stream anymore.
(cherry picked from commit ccd618ead7cf7f5a74b9fb34524d00024de1479a)
Signed-off-by: Andrei Dan <andrei.dan@elastic.co>
MappedFieldType is a combination of two concerns:
* an extension of lucene's FieldType, defining how a field should be indexed
* a set of query factory methods, defining how a field should be searched
We want to break these two concerns apart. This commit is a first step to doing this, breaking
the inheritance relationship between MappedFieldType and FieldType. MappedFieldType
instead has a series of boolean flags defining whether or not the field is searchable or
aggregatable, and FieldMapper has a separate FieldType passed to its constructor defining
how indexing should be done.
Relates to #56814
The leases issued by CCR keep one extra operation around on the leader shards. This is not
harmful to the leader cluster, but means that there's potentially one delete that can't be
cleaned up.
Today a mounted searchable snapshot defaults to having the same replica
configuration as the index that was snapshotted. This commit changes this
behaviour so that we default to zero replicas on these indices, but allow the
user to override this in the mount request.
Relates #50999
This commit adds an optional field, `description`, to all ingest processors
so that users can explain the purpose of the specific processor instance.
Closes#56000.
This template was added for 7.0 for what I am guessing is a BWC issue related to deprecation
warnings. It unfortunately seems to cause failures because templates for these tests are not cleared
after the test (because these are upgrade tests).
Resolves#56363
This need some reorg of BinaryDV field data classes to allow specialisation of scripted doc values.
Moved common logic to a new abstract base class and added a new subclass to return string-based representations to scripts.
Closes#58044
Allows the kibana user to collect data telemetry in a background
task by giving the kibana_system built-in role the view_index_metadata
and monitoring privileges over all indices (*).
Without this fix, users who try to use Metricbeat for Stack Monitoring today
see the following error repeatedly in their Metricbeat log. Due to this error
Metricbeat is unwilling to proceed further and, thus, no Stack Monitoring
data is indexed into the Elasticsearch cluster.
Co-authored-by: Albert Zaharovits <albert.zaharovits@elastic.co>
* Remove usage of deprecated testCompile configuration
* Replace testCompile usage by testImplementation
* Make testImplementation non transitive by default (as we did for testCompile)
* Update CONTRIBUTING about using testImplementation for test dependencies
* Fail on testCompile configuration usage
Previously we excluded requiring licenses for dependencies with the
group name org.elasticsearch under the assumption that these use the
top-level Elasticsearch license. This is not always correct, for
example, for the org.elasticsearch:jna dependency as this is merely a
wrapper around the upstream JNA project, and that is the license that we
should be including. A recent change modified this check from using the
group name to checking only if the dependency is a project
dependency. This exposed the use of JNA in SQL CLI to this check, but
the license for it was not added. This commit addresses this by adding
the license.
Relates #58015
This has `EnsembleInferenceModel` not parse feature_names from the XContent.
Instead, it will rely on `rewriteFeatureIndices` to be called ahead time.
Consequently, protections are made for a fail fast path if `rewriteFeatureIndices` has not been called before `infer`.
We were previously configuring BWC testing tasks by matching on task
name prefix. This naive approach breaks down when you have versions like
1.0.1 and 1.0.10 since they both share a common prefix. This commit
makes the pattern matching more specific so we won't inadvertently
spin up the wrong cluster version.
This type of result will store stats about how well categorization
is performing. When per-partition categorization is in use, separate
documents will be written for every partition so that it is possible
to see if categorization is working well for some partitions but not
others.
This PR is a minimal implementation to allow the C++ side changes to
be made. More Java side changes related to per-partition
categorization will be in followup PRs. However, even in the long
term I do not see a major benefit in introducing dedicated APIs for
querying categorizer stats. Like forecast request stats the
categorizer stats can be read directly from the job's results alias.
Backport of #57978
Adds support for reading in `model_size_info` objects.
These objects contain numeric values indicating the model definition size and complexity.
Additionally, these objects are not stored or serialized to any other node. They are to be used for calculating and storing model metadata. They are much smaller on heap than the true model definition and should help prevent the analytics process from using too much memory.
Co-authored-by: Elastic Machine <elasticmachine@users.noreply.github.com>
Now that annotations are part of the anomaly detection job results
the annotations index should be refreshed on flushing and closing
the job so that flush and close continue to fulfil their contracts
that immediately after returning all results the job generated up
to that point are searchable.
ModelLoadingService only caches models if they are referenced by an
ingest pipeline. For models used in search we want to always cache the
models and rely on TTL to evict them. Additionally when an ingest
pipeline is deleted the model it references should not be evicted if
it is used in search.
Search after is a better choice for the delete expired data iterators
where processing takes a long time as unlike scroll a context does not
have to be kept alive. Also changes the delete expired data endpoint to
404 if the job is unknown
Since we change the memory estimates for data frame analytics jobs from worst case to a realistic case, the strict less-than assertion in the test does not hold anymore. I replaced it with a less-or-equal-than assertion.
Backport or #57882
Adds assertions to Netty to make sure that its threads are not polluted by thread contexts (and
also that thread contexts are not leaked). Moves the ClusterApplierService to use the system
context (same as we do for MasterService), which allows to remove a hack from
TemplateUgradeService and makes it clearer that applying CS updates is fully executing under
system context.
When Joni, the regex engine that powers grok emits a warning it
does so by default to System.err. System.err logs are all bucketed
together in the server log at WARN level. When Joni emits a warning,
it can be extremely verbose, logging a message for each execution
again that pattern. For ingest node that means for every document
that is run that through Grok. Fortunately, Joni provides a call
back hook to push these warnings to a custom location.
This commit implements Joni's callback hook to push the Joni warning
to the Elasticsearch server logger (logger.org.elasticsearch.ingest.common.GrokProcessor)
at debug level. Generally these warning indicate a possible issue with
the regular expression and upon creation of the Grok processor will
do a "test run" of the expression and log the result (if any) at WARN
level. This WARN level log should only occur on pipeline creation which
is a much lower frequency then every document.
Additionally, the documentation is updated with instructions for how
to set the logger to debug level.
Allow a field inside the data to be used as a tie breaker for events
that have the same timestamp.
The field is optional by default.
If used, the tie-breaker always requires a non-null value since it is
used inside `search_after` which requires a non-null value.
Fix#56824
(cherry picked from commit e5719ecb474b32730d93afdbb6834a32b0b2df8b)
The shrink action creates a shrunken index with the target number of shards.
This makes the shrink action data stream aware. If the ILM managed index is
part of a data stream the shrink action will make sure to swap the original
managed index with the shrunken one as part of the data stream's backing
indices and then delete the original index.
(cherry picked from commit 99aeed6acf4ae7cbdd97a3bcfe54c5d37ab7a574)
Signed-off-by: Andrei Dan <andrei.dan@elastic.co>
This deprecates `Rounding#round` and `Rounding#nextRoundingValue` in
favor of calling
```
Rounding.Prepared prepared = rounding.prepare(min, max);
...
prepared.round(val)
```
because it is always going to be faster to prepare once. There
are going to be some cases where we won't know what to prepare *for*
and in those cases you can call `prepareForUnknown` and stil be faster
than calling the deprecated method over and over and over again.
Ultimately, this is important because it doesn't look like there is an
easy way to cache `Rounding.Prepared` or any of its precursors like
`LocalTimeOffset.Lookup`. Instead, we can just build it at most once per
request.
Relates to #56124
Adds assertions to Netty to make sure that its threads are not polluted by thread contexts (and
also that thread contexts are not leaked). Moves the ClusterApplierService to use the system
context (same as we do for MasterService), which allows to remove a hack from
TemplateUgradeService and makes it clearer that applying CS updates is fully executing under
system context.
* Convert to date/datetime the result of numeric aggregations (min, max)
in Painless scripts
(cherry picked from commit f1de99e2a6fbf3806c4f2b6b809738aa8faa2d75)
This adds new plugin level circuit breaker for the ML plugin.
`model_inference` is the circuit breaker qualified name.
Right now it simply adds to the breaker when the model is loaded (and possibly breaking) and removing from the breaker when the model is unloaded.
Fix broken numeric shard generations when reading them from the wire
or physically from the physical repository.
This should be the cheapest way to clean up broken shard generations
in a BwC and safe-to-backport manner for now. We can potentially
further optimize this by also not doing the checks on the generations
based on the versions we see in the `RepositoryData` but I don't think
it matters much since we will read `RepositoryData` from cache in almost
all cases.
Closes#57798
Before to determine if a field is meta-field, a static method of MapperService
isMetadataField was used. This method was using an outdated static list
of meta-fields.
This PR instead changes this method to the instance method that
is also aware of meta-fields in all registered plugins.
Related #38373, #41656Closes#24422
We want to validate the DataStreams on creation to make sure the future backing
indices would not clash with existing indices in the system (so we can
always rollover the data stream).
This changes the validation logic to allow for a DataStream to be created
with a backing index that has a prefix (eg. `shrink-foo-000001`) even if the
former backing index (`foo-000001`) exists in the system.
The new validation logic will look for potential index conflicts with indices
in the system that have the counter in the name greater than the data stream's
generation.
This ensures that the `DataStream`'s future rollovers are safe because for a
`DataStream` `foo` of generation 4, we will look for standalone indices in the
form of `foo-%06d` with the counter greater than 4 (ie. validation will fail if
`foo-000006` exists in the system), but will also allow replacing a
backing index with an index named by prefixing the backing index it replaces.
(cherry picked from commit 695b242d69f0dc017e732b63737625adb01fe595)
Signed-off-by: Andrei Dan <andrei.dan@elastic.co>
Deleting expired data can take a long time leading to timeouts if there
are many jobs. Often the problem is due to a few large jobs which
prevent the regular maintenance of the remaining jobs. This change adds
a job_id parameter to the delete expired data endpoint to help clean up
those problematic jobs.
This makes it easier to debug where such tasks come from in case they are returned from the get tasks API.
Also renamed the last occurrence of waitForCompletion to waitForCompletionTimeout in get async search request.
This PR adds the initial Java side changes to enable
use of the per-partition categorization functionality
added in elastic/ml-cpp#1293.
There will be a followup change to complete the work,
as there cannot be any end-to-end integration tests
until elastic/ml-cpp#1293 is merged, and also
elastic/ml-cpp#1293 does not implement some of the
more peripheral functionality, like stop_on_warn and
per-partition stats documents.
The changes so far cover REST APIs, results object
formats, HLRC and docs.
Backport of #57683
This is a major refactor of the underlying inference logic.
The main refactor is now we are separating the model configuration and
the inference interfaces.
This has the following benefits:
- we can store extra things with the model that are not
necessary for inference (i.e. treenode split information gain)
- we can optimize inference separate from model serialization and storage.
- The user is oblivious to the optimizations (other than seeing the benefits).
A major part of this commit is removing all inference related methods from the
trained model configurations (ensemble, tree, etc.) and moving them to a new class.
This new class satisfies a new interface that is ONLY for inference.
The optimizations applied currently are:
- feature maps are flattened once
- feature extraction only happens once at the highest level
(improves inference + feature importance through put)
- Only storing what we need for inference + feature importance on heap
#47711 and #47246 helped to validate that monitoring settings are
rejected at time of setting the monitoring settings. Else an invalid
monitoring setting can find it's way into the cluster state and result
in an exception thrown [1] on the cluster state application (there by
causing significant issues). Some additional monitoring settings have
been identified that can result in invalid cluster state that also
result in exceptions thrown on cluster state application.
All settings require a type of either http or local to be
applicable. When a setting is changed, the exporters are automatically
updated with the new settings. However, if the old or new settings lack
of a type setting an exception will be thrown (since exporters are
always of type 'http' or 'local'). Arguably we shouldn't blindly create
and destroy new exporters on each monitoring setting update, but the
lifecycle of the exporters is abit out the scope this PR is trying to
address.
This commit introduces a similar methodology to check for validity as
#47711 and #47246 but this time for ALL (including non-http) settings.
Monitoring settings are not useful unless there an exporter with a type
defined. The type is used as dependent setting, such that it must
exist to set the value. This ensures that when any monitoring settings
changes that they can only get added to cluster state if the type
exists. If the type exists (and the other validations pass) then the
exporters will get re-built and the cluster state remains valid.
Tests have been included to ensure that all dynamic monitoring settings
have the type as dependent settings.
[1]
org.elasticsearch.common.settings.SettingsException: missing exporter type for [found-user-defined] exporter
at org.elasticsearch.xpack.monitoring.exporter.Exporters.initExporters(Exporters.java:126) ~[?:?]
When we force delete a DF analytics job, we currently first force
stop it and then we proceed with deleting the job config.
This may result in logging errors if the job config is deleted
before it is retrieved while the job is starting.
Instead of force stopping the job, it would make more sense to
try to stop the job gracefully first. So we now try that out first.
If normal stop fails, then we resort to force stopping the job to
ensure we can go through with the delete.
In addition, this commit introduces `timeout` for the delete action
and makes use of it in the child requests.
Backport of #57680
rewrite config on update if either version is outdated, credentials change,
the update changes the config or deprecated settings are found. Deprecated
settings get migrated to the new format. The upgrade can be easily extended to
do any necessary re-writes.
fixes#56499
backport #57648
For a rolling/mixed cluster upgrade (add new version to existing cluster
then shutdown old instances), the watches that ship by default
with monitoring may not get properly updated to the new version.
Monitoring watches can only get published if the internal state is
marked as dirty. If a node is not master, will also get marked as
clean (e.g. not dirty).
For a mixed cluster upgrade, it is possible for the new node to be
added, not as master, the internal state gets marked as clean so
that no more attempts can be made to publish the watches. This
happens on all new nodes. Once the old nodes are de-commissioned
one of the new version nodes in the cluster gets promoted to master.
However, that new master node (with out intervention like restarting
the node or removing/adding exporters) will never attempt to re-publish
since the internal state was already marked as clean.
This commit adds a cluster state listener to mark the resource dirty
when a node is promoted to master. This will allow the new resource
to be published without any intervention.
In #55592 and #55416, we deprecated the settings for enabling and disabling
basic license features and turned those settings into no-ops. Since doing so,
we've had feedback that this change may not give users enough time to cleanly
switch from non-ILM index management tools to ILM. If two index managers
operate simultaneously, results could be strange and difficult to
reconstruct. We don't know of any cases where SLM will cause a problem, but we
are restoring that setting as well, to be on the safe side.
This PR is not a strict commit reversion. First, we are keeping the new
xpack.watcher.use_ilm_index_management setting, introduced when
xpack.ilm.enabled was made a no-op, so that users can begin migrating to using
it. Second, the SLM setting was modified in the same commit as a group of other
settings, so I have taken just the changes relating to SLM.
* Remove duplicate ssl setup in sql/qa projects
* Fix enforcement of task instances
* Use static data for cert generation
* Move ssl testing logic into a plugin
* Document test cert creation
This PR replaces the marker interface with the method
FieldMapper#parsesArrayValue. I find this cleaner and it will help with the
fields retrieval work (#55363).
The refactor also ensures that only field mappers can declare they parse array
values. Previously other types like ObjectMapper could implement the marker
interface and be passed array values, which doesn't make sense.
Add `TRIM` function which combines the functionality of both
`LTRIM` and `RTRIM` by stripping both leading and trailing
whitespaces.
Refers to #41195
(cherry picked from commit 6c86c919e12f0c4cb5e39d129aa65ab3e274268f)
We test expected TLS failures by catching SSLException, but other
security providers ( i.e. BCFIPS ) might throw a different one. In
this case, BCFIPS throws org.bouncycastle.tls.TlsFatalAlert
Almost every outbound message is serialized to buffers of 16k pagesize.
We were serializing these messages off the IO loop (and retaining the concrete message
instance as well) and would then enqueue it on the IO loop to be dealt with as soon as the
channel is ready.
1. This would cause buffers to be held onto for longer than necessary, causing less reuse on average.
2. If a channel was slow for some reason, not only would concrete message instances queue up for it, but also 16k of buffers would be reserved for each message until it would be written+flushed physically.
With this change, the serialization happens on the event loop which effectively limits the number of buffers that `N` IO-threads will ever use so long as messages are small and channels writable.
Also, this change dereferences the reference to the concrete outbound message as soon as it has been serialized to save some more on GC.
This reduces the GC time for a default PMC run by about 50% in experiments (3 nodes, 2G heap each, loopback ... obvious caveat is that GC isn't that heavy in the first place with recent changes but still a measurable gain).
I also expect it to be helpful for master node stability by causing less of a spike if master is e.g. hit by a large number of requests that are processed batched (e.g. shard snapshot status updates) and responded to in a short time frame all at once.
Obviously, the downside to this change is that it introduces more latency on the IO loop for the serialization. But since we read all of these messages on the IO loop as well I don't see it as much of a qualitative change really and the more predictable buffer use seems much more valuable relatively.
* Move classes from build scripts to buildSrc
- move Run task
- move duplicate SanEvaluator
* Remove :run workaround
* Some little cleanup on build scripts on the way
As the datastream information is stored in the `ClusterState.Metadata` we exposed
the `Metadata` to the `AsyncWaitStep#evaluateCondition` method in order for
the steps to be able to identify when a managed index is part of a DataStream.
If a managed index is part of a DataStream the rollover target is the DataStream
name and the highest generation index is the write index (ie. the rolled index).
(cherry picked from commit 6b410dfb78f3676fce1b7401f1628c1ca6fbd45a)
Signed-off-by: Andrei Dan <andrei.dan@elastic.co>
Some BI tools (i.e. Tableau) would try to cast strings where the time
part is separated from the date part with a whitespace instead of `T`.
Adjust type conversion used by CAST to support this.
(cherry picked from commit 0e18321e7ad9f779c42855efbf93f171b9128a5e)
Add basic support for `TOP X` as a synonym to LIMIT X which is used
by [MS-SQL server](https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/sql/t-sql/queries/top-transact-sql?view=sql-server-ver15),
e.g.:
```
SELECT TOP 5 a, b, c FROM test
```
TOP in SQL server also supports the `PERCENTAGE` and `WITH TIES`
keywords which this implementation doesn't.
Don't allow usage of both TOP and LIMIT in the same query.
Refers to #41195
(cherry picked from commit 2f5ab81b9ad884434d1faa60f4391f966ede73e8)
At some point, we changed the supported-type test to also catch
assertion errors. This has the side effect of also catching the
`fail()` call inside the try-catch, which silently smothered some
failures.
This modifies the test to throw at the end of the try-catch
block to prevent from accidentally catching itself.
Catching the AssertionError is convenient because there are other locations
that do throw an assertion in tests (due to hitting an assertion
before the exception is thrown) so I think we should keep it around.
Also includes a variety of fixes to other tests which were failing
but being silently smothered.