We should not create a follower index and abort a follow request if the
leader does not have soft-deletes. Moreover, we also should not
auto-follow an index if it does not have soft-deletes.
* Adding stack_monitoring_agent role
* Fixing checkstyle issues
* Adding tests for new role
* Tighten up privileges around index templates
* s/stack_monitoring_user/remote_monitoring_collector/ + remote_monitoring_user
* Fixing checkstyle violation
* Fix test
* Removing unused field
* Adding missed code
* Fixing data type
* Update Integration Test for new builtin user
With this change, we apply the common test config automatically to all
newly created tasks instead of opting in specifically.
For plugin authors using the plugin externally this means that the
configuration will be applied to their RandomizedTestingTasks as well.
The purpose of the task is to simplify setup and make it easier to
change projects that use the `test` task but actually run integration
tests to use a task called `integTest` for clarity, but also because
we may want to configure and run them differently.
E.x. using different levels of concurrency.
Implemented null handling for both the value tested but also for
values inside the list of values tested against.
The null handling is implemented for local processors, painless scripts
and Lucene Terms queries making it available for `IN` expressions occuring
in `SELECT`, `WHERE` and `HAVING` clauses.
Closes: #34582
#33708 introduced a strict deprecation mode that makes a REST request
fail if there is a warning header in the response returned by
Elasticsearch (usually a deprecation message signaling that a feature
or a field has been deprecated).
This change adds the strict deprecation mode into the REST integration
tests, and makes the tests fail if a deprecated feature is used. Also
any test using a deprecated feature has been modified to pass the build.
The YAML integration tests already analyzed HTTP warnings so they do
not use this mode, keeping their "expected vs actual" behavior.
Per #31717 this commit changes the defaults to the following:
Batch size of 5120 ops.
Maximum of 12 concurrent read requests.
Maximum of 9 concurrent write requests.
This is not necessarily our final values but it's good to have these as defaults for the purposes of initial testing.
The changes introduced in cca1a2a mean that we should
not encrypt the public keys that might be generated by
the key-pair-generator when storing the file, as the code
that would consume them assumes that they are not encrypted
* Change the `TransportPauseFollowAction` to extend from `TransportMasterNodeAction`
instead of `HandledAction`, this removes a sync cluster state api call.
* Introduced `ResponseHandler` that removes duplicated code in `TransportPauseFollowAction` and
`TransportResumeFollowAction`.
* Changed `PauseFollowAction.Request` to not use `readFrom()`.
In #34407, we supposed to clone the list of replicas of ReplicationGroup
when computing replication targets, but somehow we missed it. If we
don't clone the list, a WriteReplicationAction may use an old
ReplicationTargets which consists replicas which are removed from the
current list of replicas
Relates #34407Closes#33457
Access to special variables _source and _fields were accidentally
removed in recent refactorings. This commit adds them back, along with a
test.
closes#33884
In a future major version, we will be introducing a soft limit on the
number of shards in a cluster based on the number of nodes in the
cluster. This limit will be configurable, and checked on operations
which create or open shards and issue a warning if the operation would
take the cluster over the limit.
There is an option to enable strict enforcement of the limit, which
turns the warnings into errors. In a future release, the option will be
removed and strict enforcement will be the default (and only) behavior.
With the move to separate RequestConverters classes for each client,
some of the access restrictions on the new classes are more open than
the prior RequestConverters classes. This standardizes the
*RequestConverters classes as package-private, final, and with a private
constructor so that no instances of the can be inadvertently created.
- Restrict visibility of Aggregators and Factories
- Move PipelineAggregatorBuilders up a level so it is consistent with
AggregatorBuilders
- Checkstyle line length fixes for a few classes
- Minor odds/ends (swapping to method references, formatting, etc)
Both testFollowIndexAndCloseNode and testFailOverOnFollower failed
because they responded to the FollowTask a TransportService closed
exception which is currently considered as a fatal error. This behavior
is not desirable since a closing node can throw that exception, and we
should retry in that case.
This change adds TransportService closed error to the list of retryable
errors.
Closes#34694
As part of this change the leader index name and leader cluster name are
stored in the CCR metadata in the follow index. The resume follow api
will read that when a resume follow request is executed.
This commit introduces two corrections to the way simulate?verbose
handles conditionals on processors.
1) Prior to this change when executing simulate?verbose for
processors with conditionals that evaluate to false, that processor
would still be displayed in the result set. What was displayed was
correct, such that no changes to the document occurred. However, if the
conditional evaluates to false, the processor should not even be
displayed.
2) Prior to this change when executing simulate?verbose for
pipeline processors with conditionals, the individual steps would no
longer be displayed. Commit e37e5df addressed the issue, but
failed account for a conditional on the pipeline processor. Since
a pipeline processor can introduce cycles and is effectively a
single processor that encapsulates multiple other processors that
are potentially guarded by a single conditional, special handling is
needed to for pipeline and conditional pipeline processors.
We should delete a job by directly talking to the allocated
task and telling it to shutdown. Today we shut down a job
via the persistent task framework. This is not ideal because,
while the job has been removed from the persistent task
CS, the allocated task continues to live until it gets the
shutdown message.
This means a user can delete a job, immediately delete
the rollup index, and then see new documents appear in
the just-deleted index. This happens because the indexer
in the allocated task is still running and indexes a few
more documents before getting the shutdown command.
In this PR, the transport action is changed to a TransportTasksAction,
and we invoke onCancelled() directly on the matching job.
The race condition still exists after this PR (albeit less likely),
but this was a precursor to fixing the issue and a self-contained
chunk of code. A second PR will followup to fix the race itself.
Since #34412 and #34474, a follower must have soft-deletes enabled
to work correctly. This change requires soft-deletes on the follower.
Relates #34412
Relates #34474
This fixes a bug about aliases authorization.
That is, a user might see aliases which he is not authorized to see.
This manifests when the user is not authorized to see any aliases
and the `GetAlias` request is empty which normally is a marking
that all aliases are requested. In this case, no aliases should be
returned, but due to this bug, all aliases will have been returned.
Extend querying support on multiple indices from being strictly
identical to being just compatible.
Use FieldCapabilities API (extended through #33803) for mapping merging.
Close#31837#31611
* Changed the resource id of auto follow patterns to be a user defined name
instead of being the leader cluster alias name.
* Fail when an unfollowed leader index matches with two or more auto follow patterns.
The `ignore` set contains entries of type Class<?>, but the check is performed
on Path objects. This always returns false so is useless currently. Looking at
the first commit of this test that already shows this behaviour this never
excluded anything, so it can be removed.
This change introduces stats per processors. Total, time, failed,
current are currently supported. All pipelines will now show all
top level processors that belong to it. Failure processors are not
displayed, however, the time taken to execute the failure chain is part
of the stats for the top level processor.
The processor name is the type of the processor, ordered as defined in
the pipeline. If a tag for the processor is found, then the tag is
appended to the type.
Pipeline processors will have the pipeline name appended to the name of
the name of the processors (before the tag if one exists). If more
then one pipeline is used to process the document, then each pipeline
will carry its own stats. The outer most pipeline will also include the
inner most pipeline stats.
Conditional processors will only included in the stats if the condition evaluates
to true.
Implement the functionality to translate the
`field IN (value1, value2,...)` expressions to proper Lucene queries
or painless script or local processors depending on the use case.
The `IN` expression can be used in SELECT, WHERE and HAVING clauses.
Closes: #32955
Adds checks for parsed geo distance query. It is a bit hack-ish since it
compares with query's toString() output, but it is better than no
checks. The parsed query itself has default visibility, so we cannot
access it here unless we move the test to org.apache.lucene.document
package.
Fixes#34043
This switches from joda time to java time when resolving index names
using date math. This commit also removes two non registered settings
from the code, which could not be used anyway. An unused method was
removed as well.
Relates #27330