There is no point in writing out snapshots that contain no data that can be restored
whatsoever. It may have made sense to do so in the past when there was an `INIT` snapshot
step that wrote data to the repository that would've other become unreferenced, but in the
current day state machine without the `INIT` step there is no point in doing so.
Many of the parameters we pass into this method were only used to
build the `SnapshotInfo` instance to write.
This change simplifies the signature. Also, it seems less error prone to build
`SnapshotInfo` in `SnapshotsService` isntead of relying on the fact that each repository
implementation will build the correct `SnapshotInfo`.
This PR introduces two new fields in to `RepositoryData` (index-N) to track the blob name of `IndexMetaData` blobs and their content via setting generations and uuids. This is used to deduplicate the `IndexMetaData` blobs (`meta-{uuid}.dat` in the indices folders under `/indices` so that new metadata for an index is only written to the repository during a snapshot if that same metadata can't be found in another snapshot.
This saves one write per index in the common case of unchanged metadata thus saving cost and making snapshot finalization drastically faster if many indices are being snapshotted at the same time.
The implementation is mostly analogous to that for shard generations in #46250 and piggy backs on the BwC mechanism introduced in that PR (which means this PR needs adjustments if it doesn't go into `7.6`).
Relates to #45736 as it improves the efficiency of snapshotting unchanged indices
Relates to #49800 as it has the potential of loading the index metadata for multiple snapshots of the same index concurrently much more efficient speeding up future concurrent snapshot delete
Currently we combine coordinating and primary bytes into a single bucket
for indexing pressure stats. This makes sense for rejection logic.
However, for metrics it would be useful to separate them.
We have recently added internal metrics to monitor the amount of
indexing occurring on a node. These metrics introduce back pressure to
indexing when memory utilization is too high. This commit exposes these
stats through the node stats API.
We don't need to switch to the generic or snapshot pool for loading
cached repository data (i.e. most of the time in normal operation).
This makes `executeConsistentStateUpdate` less heavy if it has to retry
and lowers the chance of having to retry in the first place.
Also, this change allowed simplifying a few other spots in the codebase
where we would fork off to another pool just to load repository data.
Backport of #59293 to 7.x branch.
* Create new data-stream xpack module.
* Move TimestampFieldMapper to the new module,
this results in storing a composable index template
with data stream definition only to work with default
distribution. This way data streams can only be used
with default distribution, since a data stream can
currently only be created if a matching composable index
template exists with a data stream definition.
* Renamed `_timestamp` meta field mapper
to `_data_stream_timestamp` meta field mapper.
* Add logic to put composable index template api
to fail if `_data_stream_timestamp` meta field mapper
isn't registered. So that a more understandable
error is returned when attempting to store a template
with data stream definition via the oss distribution.
In a follow up the data stream transport and
rest actions can be moved to the xpack data-stream module.
With the removal of mapping types and the immutability of FieldTypeLookup in #58162, we no longer
have any cause to compare MappedFieldType instances. This means that we can remove all equals
and hashCode implementations, and in addition we no longer need the clone implementations which
were required for equals/hashcode testing. This greatly simplifies implementing new MappedFieldTypes,
which will be particularly useful for the runtime fields project.
These tests sometimes install a template so they can be compatible with older versions, but they run
amok of the occasionally installed "global" template which changes the default number of shards.
This commit adds `allowedWarnings` and allows these warnings to be present, but doesn't fail if they
are not (since the global template is only randomly installed).
Resolves#58807Resolves#58258
The recovery chunk size setting was injected in #58018, but too
aggressively and broke several tests. This change removes that
random injection.
Relates #58018
Backport of #59076 to 7.x branch.
The commit makes the following changes:
* The timestamp field of a data stream definition in a composable
index template can only be set to '@timestamp'.
* Removed custom data stream timestamp field validation and reuse the validation from `TimestampFieldMapper` and
instead only check that the _timestamp field mapping has been defined on a backing index of a data stream.
* Moved code that injects _timestamp meta field mapping from `MetadataCreateIndexService#applyCreateIndexRequestWithV2Template58956(...)` method
to `MetadataIndexTemplateService#collectMappings(...)` method.
* Fixed a bug (#58956) that cases timestamp field validation to be performed
for each template and instead of the final mappings that is created.
* only apply _timestamp meta field if index is created as part of a data stream or data stream rollover,
this fixes a docs test, where a regular index creation matches (logs-*) with a template with a data stream definition.
Relates to #58642
Relates to #53100Closes#58956Closes#58583
This makes a `parentCardinality` available to every `Aggregator`'s ctor
so it can make intelligent choices about how it collects bucket values.
This replaces `collectsFromSingleBucket` and is similar to it but:
1. It supports `NONE`, `ONE`, and `MANY` values and is generally
extensible if we decide we can use more precise counts.
2. It is more accurate. `collectsFromSingleBucket` assumed that all
sub-aggregations live under multi-bucket aggregations. This is
normally true but `parentCardinality` is properly carried forward
for single bucket aggregations like `filter` and for multi-bucket
aggregations configured in single-bucket for like `range` with a
single range.
While I was touching every aggregation I renamed `doCreateInternal` to
`createMapped` because that seemed like a much better name and it was
right there, next to the change I was already making.
Relates to #56487
Co-authored-by: Elastic Machine <elasticmachine@users.noreply.github.com>
In order to ensure that we do not write a broken piece of `RepositoryData`
because the phyiscal repository generation was moved ahead more than one step
by erroneous concurrent writing to a repository we must check whether or not
the current assumed repository generation exists in the repository physically.
Without this check we run the risk of writing on top of stale cached repository data.
Relates #56911
Today, we send operations in phase2 of peer recoveries batch by batch
sequentially. Normally that's okay as we should have a fairly small of
operations in phase 2 due to the file-based threshold. However, if
phase1 takes a lot of time and we are actively indexing, then phase2 can
have a lot of operations to replay.
With this change, we will send multiple batches concurrently (defaults
to 1) to reduce the recovery time.
Backport of #58018
Today we do not allow a node to start if its filesystem is readonly, but
it is possible for a filesystem to become readonly while the node is
running. We don't currently have any infrastructure in place to make
sure that Elasticsearch behaves well if this happens. A node that cannot
write to disk may be poisonous to the rest of the cluster.
With this commit we periodically verify that nodes' filesystems are
writable. If a node fails these writability checks then it is removed
from the cluster and prevented from re-joining until the checks start
passing again.
Closes#45286
Co-authored-by: Bukhtawar Khan <bukhtawar7152@gmail.com>
For #58994 it would be useful to be able to share test infrastructure.
This PR shares `AbstractSnapshotIntegTestCase` for that purpose, dries up SLM tests
accordingly and adds a shared and efficient (compared to the previous implementations)
way of waiting for no running snapshot operations to the test infrastructure to dry things up further.
Dry up tests that use a disruption that isolates the master from all other nodes.
Also, turn disruption types that have neither parameters nor state into constants
to make things a little clearer.
Working through a heap dump for an unrelated issue I found that we can easily rack up
tens of MBs of duplicate empty instances in some cases.
I moved to a static constructor to guard against that in all cases.
This is a follow-up to #57573. This commit combines coordinating and
primary bytes under the same "write" bucket. Double accounting is
prevented by only accounting the bytes at either the reroute phase or
the primary phase. TransportBulkAction calls execute directly, so the
operations handler is skipped and the bytes are not double accounted.
Ingest script processors were changed to eagerly compile their scripts
when the ingest pipeline is saved, but conditional scripts were missed.
This commit adds eager compilation to ingest conditional scripts, which
will help surface errors before runtime, as well as adds tests for each
case we might encounter between inline and stored script compilation
failures.
closes#58864
The read-only-allow-delete block is not really under the user's control
since Elasticsearch adds/removes it automatically. This commit removes
support for it from the new API for adding blocks to indices that was
introduced in #58094.
Restoring from a snapshot (which is a particular form of recovery) does not currently take recovery throttling into account
(i.e. the `indices.recovery.max_bytes_per_sec` setting). While restores are subject to their own throttling (repository
setting `max_restore_bytes_per_sec`), this repository setting does not allow for values to be configured differently on a
per-node basis. As restores are very similar in nature to peer recoveries (streaming bytes to the node), it makes sense to
configure throttling in a single place.
The `max_restore_bytes_per_sec` setting is also changed to default to unlimited now, whereas previously it was set to
`40mb`, which is the current default of `indices.recovery.max_bytes_per_sec`). This means that no behavioral change
will be observed by clusters where the recovery and restore settings were not adapted.
Relates https://github.com/elastic/elasticsearch/issues/57023
Co-authored-by: James Rodewig <james.rodewig@elastic.co>
Today the disk-based shard allocator accounts for incoming shards by
subtracting the estimated size of the incoming shard from the free space on the
node. This is an overly conservative estimate if the incoming shard has almost
finished its recovery since in that case it is already consuming most of the
disk space it needs.
This change adds to the shard stats a measure of how much larger each store is
expected to grow, computed from the ongoing recovery, and uses this to account
for the disk usage of incoming shards more accurately.
Backport of #58029 to 7.x
* Picky picky
* Missing type
This PR implements recursive mapping merging for composable index templates.
When creating an index, we perform the following:
* Add each component template mapping in order, merging each one in after the
last.
* Merge in the index template mappings (if present).
* Merge in the mappings on the index request itself (if present).
Some principles:
* All 'structural' changes are disallowed (but everything else is fine). An
object mapper can never be changed between `type: object` and `type: nested`. A
field mapper can never be changed to an object mapper, and vice versa.
* Generally, each section is merged recursively. This includes `object`
mappings, as well as root options like `dynamic_templates` and `meta`. Once we
reach 'leaf components' like field definitions, they always overwrite an
existing one instead of being merged.
Relates to #53101.
* Replace compile configuration usage with api (#58451)
- Use java-library instead of plugin to allow api configuration usage
- Remove explicit references to runtime configurations in dependency declarations
- Make test runtime classpath input for testing convention
- required as java library will by default not have build jar file
- jar file is now explicit input of the task and gradle will ensure its properly build
* Fix compile usages in 7.x branch
Adds an API for putting an index block in place, which also ensures for write blocks that, once successfully returning to
the user, all shards of the index are properly accounting for the block, for example that all in-flight writes to an index have
been completed after adding the write block.
This API allows coordinating more complex workflows, where it is crucial that an index is no longer receiving writes after
the API completes, useful for example when marking an index as read-only during an upgrade in order to reindex its
documents.
RandomZone test method returns a ZoneId from the set of ids supported by
java. The only difference between joda and java supported timezones are
SystemV* timezones.
These should be excluded from randomZone method as they would break
testing. They also do not bring much confidence when used in testing as
I suspect they are rarely used.
That exclude should be removed for simplification once joda support is removed.
Minor bugs/inconsistencies:
If a shard hasn't changed at all we were reporting `0` for total size and total file count
while it was ongoing.
If a data node restarts/drops out during snapshot creation the fallback logic did not load the correct statistic from the repository but just created a status with `0` counts from the snapshot state in the CS. Added a fallback to reading from the repository in this case.
Fixes two bugs introduced by #57627:
1. We were not properly letting go of memory from the request breaker
when the aggregation finished.
2. We no longer supported totally arbitrary stuff produced by the init
script because we *assumed* that it'd be ok to run the script once
and clone its results. Sadly, cloning can't clone *anything* that the
init script can make, like `String` arrays. This runs the init script
once for every new bucket so we don't need to clone.
Today we have individual settings for configuring node roles such as
node.data and node.master. Additionally, roles are pluggable and we have
used this to introduce roles such as node.ml and node.voting_only. As
the number of roles is growing, managing these becomes harder for the
user. For example, to create a master-only node, today a user has to
configure:
- node.data: false
- node.ingest: false
- node.remote_cluster_client: false
- node.ml: false
at a minimum if they are relying on defaults, but also add:
- node.master: true
- node.transform: false
- node.voting_only: false
If they want to be explicit. This is also challenging in cases where a
user wants to have configure a coordinating-only node which requires
disabling all roles, a list which we are adding to, requiring the user
to keep checking whether a node has acquired any of these roles.
This commit addresses this by adding a list setting node.roles for which
a user has explicit control over the list of roles that a node has. If
the setting is configured, the node has exactly the roles in the list,
and not any additional roles. This means to configure a master-only
node, the setting is merely 'node.roles: [master]', and to configure a
coordinating-only node, the setting is merely: 'node.roles: []'.
With this change we deprecate the existing 'node.*' settings such as
'node.data'.
Implements a new histogram aggregation called `variable_width_histogram` which
dynamically determines bucket intervals based on document groupings. These
groups are determined by running a one-pass clustering algorithm on each shard
and then reducing each shard's clusters using an agglomerative
clustering algorithm.
This PR addresses #9572.
The shard-level clustering is done in one pass to minimize memory overhead. The
algorithm was lightly inspired by
[this paper](https://ieeexplore.ieee.org/abstract/document/1198387). It fetches
a small number of documents to sample the data and determine initial clusters.
Subsequent documents are then placed into one of these clusters, or a new one
if they are an outlier. This algorithm is described in more details in the
aggregation's docs.
At reduce time, a
[hierarchical agglomerative clustering](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hierarchical_clustering)
algorithm inspired by [this paper](https://arxiv.org/abs/1802.00304)
continually merges the closest buckets from all shards (based on their
centroids) until the target number of buckets is reached.
The final values produced by this aggregation are approximate. Each bucket's
min value is used as its key in the histogram. Furthermore, buckets are merged
based on their centroids and not their bounds. So it is possible that adjacent
buckets will overlap after reduction. Because each bucket's key is its min,
this overlap is not shown in the final histogram. However, when such overlap
occurs, we set the key of the bucket with the larger centroid to the midpoint
between its minimum and the smaller bucket’s maximum:
`min[large] = (min[large] + max[small]) / 2`. This heuristic is expected to
increases the accuracy of the clustering.
Nodes are unable to share centroids during the shard-level clustering phase. In
the future, resolving https://github.com/elastic/elasticsearch/issues/50863
would let us solve this issue.
It doesn’t make sense for this aggregation to support the `min_doc_count`
parameter, since clusters are determined dynamically. The `order` parameter is
not supported here to keep this large PR from becoming too complex.
Co-authored-by: James Dorfman <jamesdorfman@users.noreply.github.com>
Netty4HttpServerTransportTests has started to fail intermittently. It
seems like unexpected successful responses are being received when the
test is simulating errors. This commit adds logging to the test to
provide additional information when there is an unexpected success. It
also adds the logging to the nio http test.
Similarities only apply to a few text-based field types, but are currently set directly on
the base MappedFieldType class. This commit moves similarity information into
TextSearchInfo, and removes any mentions of it from MappedFieldType or FieldMapper.
It was previously possible to include a similarity parameter on a number of field types
that would then ignore this information. To make it obvious that this has no effect, setting
this parameter on non-text field types now issues a deprecation warning.
When assigning ports for internal cluster tests, we use the gradle
worker id as an adjustment on the base port of 10300. In order to not go
outside the max port range, we modulo the worker id by 223. Since gradle
worker ids start at 1, we expect to never actually get the base port of
10300. However, as the gradle daemon lasts for longer, the module can
result in a value of 0, which cases the test to fail. This commit
adjusts the modulo to ensure the value is never 0.
closes#58279
There was a discrepancy in the implementation of flush
acknowledgements: most of the class was designed on the
basis that the "last finalized bucket time" could be null
but the wire serialization assumed that it was never
null. This works because, the C++ sends zero "last
finalized bucket time" when it is not known or not
relevant. But then the Java code will print that to
XContent as it is assuming null represents not known or
not relevant.
This change corrects the discrepancies. Internally within
the class null represents not known or not relevant, but
this is translated from/to 0 for communications from the
C++ and old nodes that have the bug.
Additionally I switched from Date to Instant for this
class and made the member variables final to modernise it
a bit.
Backport of #58413
Now that MappedFieldType no longer extends lucene's FieldType, we need to have a
way of getting the index information about a field necessary for building text queries,
building term vectors, highlighting, etc. This commit introduces a new TextSearchInfo
abstraction that holds this information, and a getTextSearchInfo() method to
MappedFieldType to make it available. Field types that do not support text search can
just return null here.
This allows us to remove the MapperService.getLuceneFieldType() shim method.
Backporting #58096 to 7.x branch.
Relates to #53100
* use mapping source direcly instead of using mapper service to extract the relevant mapping details
* moved assertion to TimestampField class and added helper method for tests
* Improved logic that inserts timestamp field mapping into an mapping.
If the timestamp field path consisted out of object fields and
if the final mapping did not contain the parent field then an error
occurred, because the prior logic assumed that the object field existed.
Fixes a bug in TextFieldMapper serialization when index is false, and adds a
base-class test to ensure that all field mappers are tested against all variations
with defaults both included and excluded.
Fixes#58188
This is currently used to set the indexVersionCreated parameter on FieldMapper.
However, this parameter is only actually used by two implementations, and clutters
the API considerably. We should just remove it, and use it directly in the
implementations that require it.
The version of java printed when a test fails currently is passed in
from gradle. However, we already know this from java itself, so it is
not necessary. This commit changes how the runtime.java repro parameter
is found, as well as removes the compiler.java parameter which is no
longer relevant.
closes#57756
Currently a failed replication action will fail an entire replica. This
includes when replication fails due to potentially short lived transient
issues such as network distruptions or circuit breaking errors.
This commit implements retries using the retryable action.
Backport of #50920. Part of #48366. Implement an API for listing,
importing and deleting dangling indices.
Co-authored-by: David Turner <david.turner@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
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.
* 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
Ensures that InternalClusterInfoService's internally cached stats are refreshed whenever the
shard size or disk usage function (to mock out disk usage) are overridden.
Closes#57888
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
Improve efficiency of background indexer by allowing to add
an assertion for failures while they are produced to prevent
queuing them up.
Also, add non-blocking stop to the background indexer so that when
stopping multiple indexers we don't needlessly continue indexing
on some indexers while stopping another one.
Closes#57766
The test failed when it was running with 4 replicas and 3 indexing
threads. The recovering replicas can prevent the global checkpoint from
advancing. This commit increases the timeout to 60 seconds for this
suite and the check for no inflight requests.
Closes#57204
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.
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>
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.
This saves some memory when the `histogram` aggregation is not a top
level aggregation by dropping `asMultiBucketAggregator` in favor of
natively implementing multi-bucket storage in the aggregator. For the
most part this just uses the `LongKeyedBucketOrds` that we built the
first time we did this.
* Add new circuitbreaker plugin and refactor CircuitBreakerService (#55695)
This commit lays the ground work for plugins supplying their own circuit breakers.
It adds a new interface: `CircuitBreakerPlugin`.
This interface provides methods for providing custom child CircuitBreaker objects. There are also facilities for allowing dynamic settings for the custom breakers.
With the refactor, circuit breakers are no longer replaced on setting changes. Instead, the two mutable settings themselves are `volatile`. Plugins that want to use their custom circuit breaker should keep a reference of their constructed breaker.
* Fix GCS Mock Behavior for Missing Bucket
We were throwing a 500 instead of a 404 for a missing bucket.
This would make yaml tests needlessly wait for multiple seconds, retrying
the 500 response with backoff, in the test checking behavior for missing buckets.
If an upgraded node is restarted multiple times without flushing a new
index commit, then we will wrongly exclude all commits from the starting
commits. This bug is reproducible with these minimal steps: (1) create
an empty index on 6.1.4 with translog retention disabled, (2) upgrade
the cluster to 7.7.0, (3) restart the upgraded the cluster. The problem
is that with the new translog policy can trim translog without having a
new index commit, while the existing commit still refers to the previous
translog generation.
Closes#57091
When we had multiple mapping types, an update to a field in one type had to be
propagated to the same field in all other types. This was done using the
Mapper.updateFieldType() method, called at the end of a merge. However, now
that we only have a single type per index, this method is unnecessary and can
be removed.
Relates to #41059
Backport of #56986
Closes#57168 by using `AggregatorTestCase#newIndexSearcher` in the
`AggregatorTestCase#testCase`. Without that global ordinals will
*sometimes* fail to work.
When slicing a releasable bytes reference we would create a new counter
every time and pass the original reference chain to the new slice on every
slice invocation. This would lead to extremely deep reference chains and
needlessly uses a dedicated counter for every slice when all the slices
eventually just refer to the same underlying bytes and `Releasable`.
This commit tracks the ref count wrapper with its releasable in a separate
object that can be passed around on every slicing, making the slices' tree
as flat as the original releasable bytes reference.
Also, we were needlessly creating a redundant releasable bytes reference from
a releasable bytes-stream-output that we never actually used for releasing (all code
that uses it just releases the stream itself instead).
A few relatively obvious issues here:
* We cannot run the different IT runs (large blob setting one and normal integ run) concurrently
* We need to set the dependency tasks up correctly for the large blob run so that it works in isolation
* We can't use the `localAddress` for the location header of the resumable upload
(this breaks in YAML tests because GCS is using a loopback port forward for the initial request and the
local address will be chosen as the actual Docker container host)
Closes#57026
Merging logic is currently split between FieldMapper, with its merge() method, and
MappedFieldType, which checks for merging compatibility. The compatibility checks
are called from a third class, MappingMergeValidator. This makes it difficult to reason
about what is or is not compatible in updates, and even what is in fact updateable - we
have a number of tests that check compatibility on changes in mapping configuration
that are not in fact possible.
This commit refactors the compatibility logic so that it all sits on FieldMapper, and
makes it called at merge time. It adds a new FieldMapperTestCase base class that
FieldMapper tests can extend, and moves the compatibility testing machinery from
FieldTypeTestCase to here.
Relates to #56814
Elasticsearch requires that a HttpRequest abstraction be implemented
by http modules before server processing. This abstraction controls when
underlying resources are released. This commit moves this abstraction to
be created immediately after content aggregation. This change will
enable follow-up work including moving Cors logic into the server
package and tracking bytes as they are aggregated from the network
level.
Add tracking for regular and multipart uploads.
Regular uploads are categorized as PUT.
Multi part uploads are categorized as POST.
The number of documents created for the test #testRequestStats
have been increased so all upload methods are exercised.
Backport of #56826
Add tracking for multipart and resumable uploads for GoogleCloudStorage.
For resumable uploads only the last request is taken into account for
billing, so that's the only request that's tracked.
Backport of #56821
This is another part of the breakup of the massive BuildPlugin. This PR
moves the code for configuring publications to a separate plugin. Most
of the time these publications are jar files, but this also supports the
zip publication we have for integ tests.
Backporting #56585 to 7.x branch.
Adds tracking for the API calls performed by the GoogleCloudStorage
underlying SDK. It hooks an HttpResponseInterceptor to the SDK
transport layer and does http request filtering based on the URI
paths that we are interested to track. Unfortunately we cannot hook
a wrapper into the ServiceRPC interface since we're using different
levels of abstraction to implement retries during reads
(GoogleCloudStorageRetryingInputStream).
This merges the code for the `significant_terms` agg into the package
for the code for the `terms` agg. They are *super* entangled already,
this mostly just admits that to ourselves.
Precondition for the terms work in #56487
In a race condition, a search context could remain enlisted in
SearchService when an index is deleted, potentially causing the index
folder to not be cleaned up (for either lengthy searches or scrolls with
timeouts > 30 minutes or if the scroll is kept active).
Two spots that allow for some optimization:
* We are often creating a composite reference of just a single item in
the transport layer => special cased via static constructor to make sure we never do that
* Also removed the pointless case of an empty composite bytes ref
* `ByteBufferReference` is practically always created from a heap buffer these days so there
is no point of dealing with all the bounds checks and extra references to sliced buffers from that
and we can just use the underlying array directly
Right now all implementations of the `terms` agg allocate a new
`Aggregator` per bucket. This uses a bunch of memory. Exactly how much
isn't clear but each `Aggregator` ends up making its own objects to read
doc values which have non-trivial buffers. And it forces all of it
sub-aggregations to do the same. We allocate a new `Aggregator` per
bucket for two reasons:
1. We didn't have an appropriate data structure to track the
sub-ordinals of each parent bucket.
2. You can only make a single call to `runDeferredCollections(long...)`
per `Aggregator` which was the only way to delay collection of
sub-aggregations.
This change switches the method that builds aggregation results from
building them one at a time to building all of the results for the
entire aggregator at the same time.
It also adds a fairly simplistic data structure to track the sub-ordinals
for `long`-keyed buckets.
It uses both of those to power numeric `terms` aggregations and removes
the per-bucket allocation of their `Aggregator`. This fairly
substantially reduces memory consumption of numeric `terms` aggregations
that are not the "top level", especially when those aggregations contain
many sub-aggregations. It also is a pretty big speed up, especially when
the aggregation is under a non-selective aggregation like
the `date_histogram`.
I picked numeric `terms` aggregations because those have the simplest
implementation. At least, I could kind of fit it in my head. And I
haven't fully understood the "bytes"-based terms aggregations, but I
imagine I'll be able to make similar optimizations to them in follow up
changes.
Backport of: #56413
Allow cluster health api to resolve data streams and
automatically remove data streams after each test in
test cases extending from `ESIntegTestCase`
Relates to #53100