The Plugin interface currently contains 6 different methods for
adding modules. Elasticsearch has 3 different levels of injectors,
and for each of those, there are two methods. The first takes no
arguments and returns a collection of class objects to construct. The
second takes a Settings object and returns a collection of module
objects already constructed. The settings argument is unecessary because
the plugin can already get the settings from its constructor. Removing
that, the only difference between the two versions is returning an
already constructed Module, or a module Class, and there is no reason
the plugin can't construct all their modules themselves.
This change reduces the plugin api down to just 3 methods for adding
modules. Each returns a Collection<Module>. It also removes the
processModule method, which was unnecessary since onModule
implementations fullfill the same requirement. And finally, it renames
the modules() method to nodeModules() so it is clear these are created
once for each node.
The IndicesModule was made up of two submodules, one which
handled registering queries, and the other for registering
hunspell dictionaries. This change moves those into
IndicesModule. It also adds a new extension point type,
InstanceMap. This is simply a Map<K,V>, where K and V are
actual objects, not classes like most other extension points.
I also added a test method to help testing instance map extensions.
This was particularly painful because of how guice binds the key
and value as separate bindings, and then reconstitutes them
into a Map at injection time. In order to gain access to the
object which links the key and value, I had to tweak our
guice copy to not use an anonymous inner class for the Provider.
Note that I also renamed the existing extension point types, since
they were very redundant. For example, ExtensionPoint.MapExtensionPoint
is now ExtensionPoint.ClassMap.
See #12783.
* Centralised plugin docs in docs/plugins/
* Moved integrations into same docs
* Moved community clients into the clients section of the docs
* Removed docs/community
Closes#11734Closes#11724Closes#11636Closes#11635Closes#11632Closes#11630Closes#12046Closes#12438Closes#12579
This method has multiple modes of resolving config files by
first looking in the config directory, then on the classpath,
and finally by prefixing with "config/" on the classpath.
Most of the places taking advantage of this were tests, so they
did not have to setup a real home dir with config. The only place
that was really relying on it was the code which loads names.txt
to randomly choose a node name.
This change fixes test to setup fake home dirs with their config
files. It also makes the logic for finding names.txt explicit:
look in config dir, and if it doesn't exist, load /config/names.txt
from the classpath.
Settings currently has a classloader member, which any user (plugin
or core ES code) can access to load classes/resources. This is extremely
error prone as setting the classloder on the Settings instance is a
public method. Furthermore, it is not really necessary. Classes that
need resources should load resources using normal means
(getClass().getResourceAsStream). Those that need classes
should use Class.forName, which will load the class with the
same classloader as the calling class. This means, in the few
places where classes are loaded by string name, they will use
the appropriate loader: either the default classloader which loads
core ES code, or a child classloader for each plugin.
This change removes the classloader member from Settings, as
well as other classloader related uses (except for a handful
of cases which must use a classloader, at least for now).
We use google transport mock as we can simulate whatever JSON answer GCE platform will send us and really test Gce implementation.
We also remove GceSimpleITest as the goal of this class was only to check that when we start elasticsearch with this plugin, elasticsearch works fine.
We don't need that anymore as we now have RestIT which do that right (and better)!
Closes#12622
the default classloader. It had all kinds of leniency in how the
classname was found, and simply cannot work with plugins having isolated
classloaders.
This change removes that method. Some of the uses of it were for custom
extension points, like custom repository or discovery types. A lot were
just there to plugin mock implementations for tests. For the settings
that were legitimate, all now support plugins adding the given setting
via onModule. For those that were specific to tests for mocks, they now
use Classes.loadClass (a helper around Class.forName). This is a
temporary measure until (in a future PR) tests can change the
implementation via package private statics.
I also removed a number of unnecessary intermediate modules, added a
"jvm-example" plugin that can be filled in in the future as a smoke test
for breaking plugins, and gave some documentation to "spawn" modules
interface.
closes#12643closes#12656
Adds an explicit description the RPM package so it doesn't inherit the description from the POM.
Closes#12550
Also, modified descriptions for deb and rpm packages to be the same and to reference the documentation rather than listing features that are out of date.
Moved the license checker config into the parent pom, and overrede
the license dir/target-to-check in distributions/pom.
Disabled the license checker explicitly for projects which run integration
tests but have no licenses dir:
* core
* distribution
* qa
* plugins/delete-by-query
* plugins/mapper-size
* plugins/site-example
Closes#12752Closes#12754
This is one of our esoteric metadata mappers so I think we should distribute
it in a plugin rather than in elasticsearch core.
This introduces one limitation: the value of the `_size` parameter is not
retrievable for documents that are only in the transaction log.
This commit adds a new API to allow scripts to say whether they need scores.
In practice, only the `expression` script engine makes use of it correctly,
other engines just return `true` since they can't predict whether they'll
need scores. This should make scripted aggregations and `function_query`
faster as we'll now be able to pass needsScores=false to Query.createWeight.
Most of the abstract base test classes we have were previously @Ignored.
However, there were also some other tests ignored. Having two ways to
quiet tests is confusing, and clearly it has caused some tests
to get lost in the fold.
This change moves all base test classes to use the "TestCase" suffix,
which is not picked up by the test class name pattern. It also removes
@Ignore from (almost) all tests, and adds it to forbidden apis.
And since we were renaming, I shorted base test class names to use
"ES" instead of "Elasticsearch". I type this a lot of types a day,
and I have heard others express a similar desire for a shorter name.
closes#10659
Now that integ tests are moved into `mvn verify`, we don't really have
a need for @Slow, and especially not @Integration. This removes
uses of the first, and completely removes uses of the latter.