This commit switches to using a trial license in the docs tests that run
on the default distribution. This is needed so that docs tests can be
executed against non-basic features.
With remote clusters taking on a larger role, we have make the
infrastructure more generic than being tied to cross-cluster search
(CCS). We want to refer to the remote clusters configuration in the
cross-cluster replication (CCR) docs. Yet, these docs are still tied to
CCS. This commit extracts the remote clusters docs from CCS (with some
wording changes to make them more general) so that we can refer to them
in the CCR docs.
When a envelope that crosses the dateline is specified as a part of
geo_shape query is parsed it shouldn't have its left and right points
flipped.
Fixes#34418
Make SQL aware of missing and/or unmapped fields treating them as NULL
Make _all_ functions and operators null-safe aware, including when used
in filtering or sorting contexts
Add missing and null-safe doc value extractor
Modify dataset to have null fields spread around (in groups of 10)
Enforce missing last and unmapped_type inside sorting
Consolidate Predicate templating and declaration
Add support for Like/RLike in scripting
Generalize NULLS LAST/FIRST
Introduce early schema declaration for CSV spec tests: to keep the doc
snippets in place (introduce schema:: prefix for declaration)
upfront.
Fix#32079
The `term` and `phrase` suggesters have different options to filter candidates
based on their frequencies. The `popular` mode for instance filters candidate
terms that occur in less docs than the original term. However when we compute this threshold
we use the total term frequency of a term instead of the document frequency. This is not inline
with the actual filtering which is always based on the document frequency. This change fixes
this discrepancy and clarifies the meaning of the different frequencies in use in the suggesters.
It also ensures that the threshold doesn't overflow the maximum allowed value (Integer.MAX_VALUE).
Closes#34282
Add example for selectively clearing just the request, query or fielddata cache
and for selectively clearing the cache for specific fields.
Closes#34287
* Adding new xpack.ml.max_lazy_ml_nodes setting to docs
* Fixing docs, making it clearer what the setting does
* Adding note about external process need
We'd disabled them because we didn't have a way to clean up after each
test. I implemented #34342 which adds the clean ups so now we can
re-enable the tests.
In the `setup` sections we have to use `raw` requests instead of
`x-pack` requests because we don't have the json config for x-pack.
Closes#33319
This commit moves the definition of domainSplit into java and exposes it
as a painless whitelist extension. The method also no longer needs
params, and version which ignores params is added and deprecated.
Tweak the upgrade instructions for moving from pre-6.3-with-x-pack to
post-6.3-default distribution. Specifically, you have to remove the
x-pack plugin before upgrading because 6.4 doesn't understand how to
remove it.
Relates to #34307
This change disallows negative query boosts. Negative scores are not allowed in Lucene 8 so
it is easier to just disallow negative boosts entirely. We should also deprecate negative boosts
in 6x in order to ensure that users are aware when they'll upgrade to ES 7.
Relates #33309
The ingest pipeline that is produced is very simple. It
contains a grok processor if the format is semi-structured
text, a date processor if the format contains a timestamp,
and a remove processor if required to remove the interim
timestamp field parsed out of semi-structured text.
Eventually the UI should offer the option to customize the
pipeline with additional processors to perform other data
preparation steps before ingesting data to an index.
* New OCTET_LENGTH function
* Changed the way the FunctionRegistry stores functions, considering the alphabetic ordering by name
* Added documentation for the RANDOM function
The "lookupUser" method on a realm facilitates the "run-as" and
"authorization_realms" features.
This commit allows a realm to be used for "lookup only", in which
case the "authenticate" method (and associated token methods) are
disabled.
It does this through the introduction of a new
"authentication.enabled" setting, which defaults to true.
Building automatons can be costly. For the most part we cache things
that use automatons so the cost is limited.
However:
- We don't (currently) do that everywhere (e.g. we don't cache role
mappings)
- It is sometimes necessary to clear some of those caches which can
cause significant CPU overhead and processing delays.
This commit introduces a new cache in the Automatons class to avoid
unnecesarily recomputing automatons.
This changes the delete job API by adding
the choice to delete a job asynchronously.
The commit adds a `wait_for_completion` parameter
to the delete job request. When set to `false`,
the action returns immediately and the response
contains the task id.
This also changes the handling of subsequent
delete requests for a job that is already being
deleted. It now uses the task framework to check
if the job is being deleted instead of the cluster
state. This is a beneficial for it is going to also
be working once the job configs are moved out of the
cluster state and into an index. Also, force delete
requests that are waiting for the job to be deleted
will not proceed with the deletion if the first task
fails. This will prevent overloading the cluster. Instead,
the failure is communicated better via notifications
so that the user may retry.
Finally, this makes the `deleting` property of the job
visible (also it was renamed from `deleted`). This allows
a client to render a deleting job differently.
Closes#32836
The `status` part of the tasks API reflects the internal status of a
running task. In general, we do not make backwards breaking changes to
the `status` but because it is internal we reserve the right to do so. I
suspect we will very rarely excercise that right but it is important
that we have it so we're not boxed into any particular implementation
for a request.
In some sense this is policy making by documentation change. In another
it is clarification of the way we've always thought of this field.
I also reflect the documentation change into the Javadoc in a few
places. There I acknowledge Kibana's "special relationship" with
Elasticsearch. Kibana parses `_reindex`'s `status` field and, because
we're friends with those folks, we should talk to them before we make
backwards breaking changes to it. We *want* to be friends with everyone
but there is only so much time in the day and we don't *want* to make
backwards breaking fields to `status` at all anyway. So we hope that
breaking changes documentation should be enough for other folks.
Relates to #34245.
We generate tests from our documentation, including assertions about the
responses returned by a particular API. But sometimes we *can't* assert
that the response is correct because of some defficiency in our tooling.
Previously we marked the response `// NOTCONSOLE` to skip it, but this
is kind of odd because `// NOTCONSOLE` is really to mark snippets that
are json but aren't requests or responses. This introduces a new
construct to skip response assertions:
```
// TESTRESPONSE[skip:reason we skipped this]
```
This enables Elasticsearch to use the JVM-wide configured
PKCS#11 token as a keystore or a truststore for its TLS configuration.
The JVM is assumed to be configured accordingly with the appropriate
Security Provider implementation that supports PKCS#11 tokens.
For the PKCS#11 token to be used as a keystore or a truststore for an
SSLConfiguration, the .keystore.type or .truststore.type must be
explicitly set to pkcs11 in the configuration.
The fact that the PKCS#11 token configuration is JVM wide implies that
there is only one available keystore and truststore that can be used by TLS
configurations in Elasticsearch.
The PIN for the PKCS#11 token can be set as a truststore parameter in
Elasticsearch or as a JVM parameter ( -Djavax.net.ssl.trustStorePassword).
The basic goal of enabling PKCS#11 token support is to allow PKCS#11-NSS in
FIPS mode to be used as a FIPS 140-2 enabled Security Provider.
* Make text message not required in constructor for slack
* Remove unnecessary comments in test file
* Throw exception when reduce or combine is not provided; update tests
* Update integration tests for scripted metrics to always include reduce and combine
* Remove some old changes from previous branches
* Rearrange script presence checks to be earlier in build
* Change null check order in script builder for aggregated metrics; correct test scripts in IT
* Add breaking change details to PR
As user-defined cluster metadata is accessible to anyone with access to
get the cluster settings, stored in the logs, and likely to be tracked
by monitoring solutions, it is useful to clarify in the documentation
that it should not be used to store secret information.
Previously, parsing an arithmetic expression with `*` and no spaces,
e.g.: `2*i` threw a parsing exception as the grammar rule for
tableIdentifier was clashing with the rule for arithmetic operator `*`.
This issue comes already in the lexer and the left part of the
expression (in our example `2*`) was recognised as a
TABLE_IDENTIFIER token.
The solution adopted is to allow the `*` wildcard in the table name
only if it's surrounded with double quotes, e.g.: `"my*index"`
Closes: #33957
This change fixes a potential deadlock problem in the unit
test introduced in #34117.
It also removes a piece of debug code and corrects a docs
formatting problem that were both added in that same PR.