The following settings are now no-ops:
* xpack.flattened.enabled
* xpack.logstash.enabled
* xpack.rollup.enabled
* xpack.slm.enabled
* xpack.sql.enabled
* xpack.transform.enabled
* xpack.vectors.enabled
Since these settings no longer need to be checked, we can remove settings
parameters from a number of constructors and methods, and do so in this
commit.
We also update documentation to remove references to these settings.
* Make xpack.monitoring.enabled setting a no-op
This commit turns xpack.monitoring.enabled into a no-op. Mostly, this involved
removing the setting from the setup for integration tests. Monitoring may
introduce some complexity for test setup and teardown, so we should keep an eye
out for turbulence and failures
* Docs for making deprecated setting a no-op
* Make xpack.ilm.enabled setting a no-op
* Add watcher setting to not use ILM
* Update documentation for no-op setting
* Remove NO_ILM ml index templates
* Remove unneeded setting from test setup
* Inline variable definitions for ML templates
* Use identical parameter names in templates
* New ILM/watcher setting falls back to old setting
* Add fallback unit test for watcher/ilm setting
We believe there's no longer a need to be able to disable basic-license
features completely using the "xpack.*.enabled" settings. If users don't
want to use those features, they simply don't need to use them. Having
such features always available lets us build more complex features that
assume basic-license features are present.
This commit deprecates settings of the form "xpack.*.enabled" for
basic-license features, excluding "security", which is a special case.
It also removes deprecated settings from integration tests and unit
tests where they're not directly relevant; e.g. monitoring and ILM are
no longer disabled in many integration tests.
The main changes are:
1. Throw an error when updating `include_in_parent` or `include_in_root` attribute of nested field dynamically by the PUT mapping API.
2. Add a test for the change.
Closes#53792
Co-authored-by: bellengao <gbl_long@163.com>
In 7.x, an index template will fail to apply if it contains a `_default_`
mapping. Several users have expressed confusion over the fact that loading the
template doesn't show any default mappings. This docs change clarifies that in
order to see all mappings in the template, you must pass `include_type_name`.
In #33933 we disallowed changing the `enabled` parameter in object mappings.
However, the fix didn't cover the root object mapper. This PR adjusts the change
to also include the root mapper and clarifies the error message.
This setting is not documented and has dubious value since it means
there can be nodes in the cluster (non-data and non-master nodes) that
do not have persistent node IDs. This does not have any use cases so
this commit removes the setting.
The joda to java.time migration requires users to upgrade their mappings. We allow them to still use 6.x created indices with joda patterns in 7 but ask them to upgrade their patterns in 7.x.
This migration guide is to help them understand how they could be affected and what needs to be changed in their mappings.
closes#51614closes#51236
Keyword field values with length more than ignore_above are not
indexed. But highlighters still were retrieving these values
from _source and were trying to highlight them. This sometimes lead to
errors if a field length exceeded max_analyzed_offset. But also this
is an overall wrong behaviour to attempt to highlight something that was
ignored during indexing.
This PR checks if a keyword value was ignored because of its length,
and if yes, skips highlighting it.
Backport: #53408Closes#43800
The changes are to help users prepare for migration to next major
release (v8.0.0) regarding to the break change of realm order config.
Warnings are added for when:
* A realm does not have an order config
* Multiple realms have the same order config
The warning messages are added to both deprecation API and loggings.
The main reasons for doing this are: 1) there is currently no automatic relay
between the two; 2) deprecation API is under basic and we need logging
for OSS.
In 2bb31fe (v0.6.0!) we added DEBUG-level logging to the default config of
action loggers "for easier debugging". This change to the default config lives
on to this day. It does not obviously make debugging any easier any more, but
it does result in a good deal of log noise sometimes. This commit removes this
special case from the default config.
Closes#51198
We deprecated and removed the camel-case versions of the nGram and edgeNGram
filters a while ago and we should do the same with the nGram and edgeNGram tokenizers.
This PR deprecates the use of these names in favour of ngram and edge_ngram in
7. Usage will be disallowed on new indices starting with 8 then.
The docs/reference/redirects.asciidoc file stores a list of relocated or
deleted pages for the Elasticsearch Reference documentation.
This prunes several older redirects that are no longer needed.
The breaking changes cover the removal of TLSv1 from the default
protocols, but assume that users who need to retain TLSv1 support will
understand all the places where they may used it.
This has proven not to be true, as it is easy to be unaware that (for
example) an LDAP server is using TLSv1.
This change explicitly lists all the places where TLS protocols may
need to be configured.
Co-Authored-By: Lisa Cawley <lcawley@elastic.co>
Co-Authored-By: Pius <pius@elastic.co>
Previously the functions accepted a doc values reference, whereas they now
accept the name of the vector field. Here's an example of how a vector function
was called before and after the change.
```
Before: cosineSimilarity(params.query_vector, doc['field'])
After: cosineSimilarity(params.query_vector, 'field')
```
This seems more intuitive, since we don't allow direct access to vector doc
values and the the meaning of `doc['field']` is unclear.
The PR makes the following changes (broken into distinct commits):
* Add new function signatures of the form `function(params.query_vector,
'field')` and deprecates the old ones. Because Painless doesn't allow two
methods with the same name and number of arguments, we allow a generic `Object`
to be passed in to the function and decide on the behavior through an
`instanceof` check.
* Refactor the class bindings so that the document field is passed to the
constructor instead of the instance method. This allows us to avoid retrieving
the vector doc values on every function invocation, which gives a tiny speed-up
in benchmarks.
Note that this PR adds new signatures for the sparse vector functions too, even
though sparse vectors are deprecated. It seemed simplest to understand (for both
us and users) to keep everything symmetric between dense and sparse vectors.
Previously, queries on the _index field were not able to specify index aliases.
This was a regression in functionality compared to the 'indices' query that was
deprecated and removed in 6.0.
Now queries on _index can specify an alias, which is resolved to the concrete
index names when we check whether an index matches. To match a remote shard
target, the pattern needs to be of the form 'cluster:index' to match the
fully-qualified index name. Index aliases can be specified in the following query
types: term, terms, prefix, and wildcard.
The changes in #32006 mean that the discovery process can no longer use
master-ineligible nodes as a stepping-stone between master-eligible nodes.
This was normally an indication of a strange and possibly-fragile configuration
and was not recommended, but this commit adds a note to the breaking changes
docs to note that this kind of configuration is more obviously broken in recent
versions.
Changes the order of parameters in Geometries from lat, lon to lon, lat
and moves all Geometry classes are moved to the
org.elasticsearch.geomtery package.
Backport of #45332Closes#45048
Adds to the `index.blocks.read_only_allow_delete` docs the information that
this block may be added or removed automatically, and rewords the
breaking-changes docs to mention the blocks explicitly and to recommend using a
different block.
Relates #42559
If a node exceeds the flood-stage disk watermark then we add a block to all of
its indices to prevent further writes as a last-ditch attempt to prevent the
node completely exhausting its disk space. However today this block remains in
place until manually removed, and this block is a source of confusion for users
who current have ample disk space and did not even realise they nearly ran out
at some point in the past.
This commit changes our behaviour to automatically remove this block when a
node drops below the high watermark again. The expectation is that the high
watermark is some distance below the flood-stage watermark and therefore the
disk space problem is truly resolved.
Fixes#39334