After #13834 many tests that used Groovy scripts (for good or bad reason) in their tests have been moved in the lang-groovy module and the issue #13837 has been created to track these messy tests in order to clean them up.
This commit moves more tests back in core, removes the dependency on Groovy, changes the scripts in order to use the mocked script engine, and change the tests to integration tests.
This commit moves back some messy tests that have been placed in lang-groovy module in https://github.com/elastic/elasticsearch/pull/13834. It removes the dependency on Groovy plugin as well as change back the tests to integration tests (IT suffix).
It also changes the current MockScriptEngine and MockScriptPlugin to make it easier to use.
This change activates the doc_values on the _size field for indices created after 5.0.0-alpha4.
It also adds a note in the breaking changes that explain the situation and how to get around it.
Closes#18334
Node IDs are currently randomly generated during node startup. That means they change every time the node is restarted. While this doesn't matter for ES proper, it makes it hard for external services to track nodes. Another, more minor, side effect is that indexing the output of, say, the node stats API results in creating new fields due to node ID being used as keys.
The first approach I considered was to use the node's published address as the base for the id. We already [treat nodes with the same address as the same](https://github.com/elastic/elasticsearch/blob/master/core/src/main/java/org/elasticsearch/discovery/zen/NodeJoinController.java#L387) so this is a simple change (see [here](https://github.com/elastic/elasticsearch/compare/master...bleskes:node_persistent_id_based_on_address)). While this is simple and it works for probably most cases, it is not perfect. For example, if after a node restart, the node is not able to bind to the same port (because it's not yet freed by the OS), it will cause the node to still change identity. Also in environments where the host IP can change due to a host restart, identity will not be the same.
Due to those limitation, I opted to go with a different approach where the node id will be persisted in the node's data folder. This has the upside of connecting the id to the nodes data. It also means that the host can be adapted in any way (replace network cards, attach storage to a new VM). I
It does however also have downsides - we now run the risk of two nodes having the same id, if someone copies clones a data folder from one node to another. To mitigate this I changed the semantics of the protection against multiple nodes with the same address to be stricter - it will now reject the incoming join if a node exists with the same id but a different address. Note that if the existing node doesn't respond to pings (i.e., it's not alive) it will be removed and the new node will be accepted when it tries another join.
Last, and most importantly, this change requires that *all* nodes persist data to disk. This is a change from current behavior where only data & master nodes store local files. This is the main reason for marking this PR as breaking.
Other less important notes:
- DummyTransportAddress is removed as we need a unique network address per node. Use `LocalTransportAddress.buildUnique()` instead.
- I renamed `node.add_lid_to_custom_path` to `node.add_lock_id_to_custom_path` to avoid confusion with the node ID which is now part of the `NodeEnvironment` logic.
- I removed the `version` paramater from `MetaDataStateFormat#write` , it wasn't really used and was just in the way :)
- TribeNodes are special in the sense that they do start multiple sub-nodes (previously known as client nodes). Those sub-nodes do not store local files but derive their ID from the parent node id, so they are generated consistently.
Once all of these are migrated we'll be able to remove aggregation's
custom "streams" which function that same as NamedWriteable. It also
allows us to make most of the fields on aggregations final which is
rather nice.
The internal representation of the object that JsonPath gives access to is a map. That is independent of the initial input format, which is json but could also be yaml etc.
This commit renames JsonPath to ObjectPath and adds a static method to create an ObjectPath from an XContent
We introduced a special response_body assertion to test our docs snippets. The match assertion does the same job though and can be reused and adapted where needed. ResponseBodyAssertion contains provides much better and accurate errors though, which can be now utilized in MatchAssertion so that many more REST tests can benefit from readable error messages.
Each response body gets always stashed and can be retrieved for later evaluations already. Instead of providing the response body as strings that get parsed to json objects separately, then converted to maps as ResponseBodyAssertion did, we parse everything once, the json is part of the yaml test, which is supported. The only downside is that json comments cannot be used, rather yaml comments should be used (// C style vs # ). There were only two docs tests that were using comments in ingest-node.asciidoc where I went ahead and remove the comments which didn't seem that useful anyways.
As discussed at https://github.com/elastic/elasticsearch-cloud-azure/issues/91#issuecomment-229113595, we know that the current `discovery-azure` plugin only works with Azure Classic VMs / Services (which is somehow Legacy now).
The proposal here is to rename `discovery-azure` to `discovery-azure-classic` in case some users are using it.
And deprecate it for 5.0.
Closes#19144.
This commit modifies TimeValue parsing to keep the input time unit. This
enables round-trip parsing from instances of String to instances of
TimeValue and vice-versa. With this, this commit removes support for the
unit "w" representing weeks, and also removes support for fractional
values of units (e.g., 0.5s).
Relates #19102
Instead of plugins calling `registerTokenizer` to extend the analyzer
they now instead have to implement `AnalysisPlugin` and override
`getTokenizer`. This lines up extending plugins in with extending
scripts. This allows `AnalysisModule` to construct the `AnalysisRegistry`
immediately as part of its constructor which makes testing anslysis
much simpler.
This also moves the default analysis configuration into `AnalysisModule`
which is how search is setup.
Like `ScriptModule`, `AnalysisModule` no longer extends `AbstractModule`.
Instead it is only responsible for building `AnslysisRegistry`. We still
bind `AnalysisRegistry` but we only do so in `Node`. This is means it
is available at module construction time so we slowly remove the need to
bind it in guice.
This commit reverts the slow tests heartbeat added in
b6fbd18e09. The heartbeat has not served
its stated purpose of drawing attention to slow tests, and the heartbeat
can kill builds with SELinux enforcing enabled. While the heartbeats can
be disabled via the environment variable PULSE_SERVER, and SELinux
policy files can be changed, since the heartbeats are not accomplishing
their intended purpose they should be removed.
Relates #19071
This commit upgrades JNA from version 4.1.0 to 4.2.2. Additionally, this
dependency is now non-optional as JNA is dual-licensed with Apache
License 2.0 since JNA 4.0.0.
Relates #19045
ES only sends a non-200 response all shards fail but we should
fail the tests generated by docs if any of them fail.
Depending on the outcome of #18978 this might be a temporary
workaround.
Today we only emit that the setting wasn't found unless we have
some DYM suggestions. Yet, if a setting is not found at all and there
are no suggestions due to typos it's likely a removed setting or the plugin
that is supposed to be configured is not installed.
This commit adds some info text to the exception to help the user debugging
the problem before opening bugreports.
Instead of emitting:
`unknown setting [foo.bar]`
we now emit:
`unknown setting [foo.bar] please check the migration guide for removed settings and ensure that the plugin you are configuring is installed`
Relates to #18663
We pretended to be able to ackt like a different version node for so long it's
time to be honest and remove this ability. It's just confusing and where needed
and tested we should build dedicated extension points.
This change removes some unnecessary dependencies from ClusterService
and cleans up ClusterName creation. ClusterService is now not created
by guice anymore.
Projects that don't depend on elasticsearch-test fail otherwise because org.elasticsearch.test.EsIntegTestCase (default integ test class) is not in the classpath. They should provide their onw integ test base class, but having integration tests should not be mandatory. One can simply set skipIntegTestsInDisguise to true to prevent loading of integ test class.
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.
With this commit we add a benchmarks project that contains the necessary build
infrastructure and an example benchmark. It is added as a separate project to avoid
interfering with the regular build too much (especially sanity checks) and to keep
the microbenchmarks isolated.
Microbenchmarks are generated with `gradle :benchmarks:jmhJar` and can be run with
` gradle :benchmarks:jmh`.
We intentionally do not use the
[jmh-gradle-plugin](https://github.com/melix/jmh-gradle-plugin) as it causes all
sorts of problems (dependencies are not properly excluded, not all JMH parameters
can be set) and it adds another abstraction layer that is not needed.
Closes#18242
This will let things that don't depend on :test:framework like the
client use it.
Also skip initializing the classes we check because we don't care
about their initialization behavior because we're not executing them.
This makes the naming conventions check pretty close to instant
from a "human eye" perspective.
Groovy does some crazy capturing when using closures inside a loop. In
this case, it somehow decided the local loop variable would be
modified, and so each closure was getting a wrapped value that would be
updated on each loop iteration, until all the closures pointed at the
last value. This change fixes the loop to extract the object to be used by
the closures.
Testability of ICSS is achieved by introducing interfaces for IndicesService, IndexService and IndexShard. These interfaces extract all relevant methods used by ICSS (which do not deal directly with store) and give the possibility to easily mock all the store behavior away in the tests (and cuts down on dependencies).
Folded grok processor into ingest-common module.
The rest tests have been moved to ingest-common module as well, because these tests don't run in the rest-api-spec module but in the distribution:integ-test-zip module
and adding a test plugin there felt just wrong to me. I think this is ok. I left a tiny ingest rest test behind in that tests with an empty pipeline.
Removed messy tests, these tests were already covered in the rest tests
Added ingest test plugin in test infra so that each module testing integration with ingest doesn't need write its own plugin
Moved reindex ingest tests to qa module
Closes#18490