We have a bunch of interfaces that have only a single implementation
for 6 years now. These interfaces are pretty useless from a SW development
perspective and only add unnecessary abstractions. They also require
lots of casting in many places where we expect that there is only one
concrete implementation. This change removes the interfaces, makes
all of the classes final and removes the duplicate `foo` `getFoo` accessors
in favor of `getFoo` from these classes.
Elasticsearch v5.0.0 uses allocation IDs to safely allocate primary shards whereas prior versions of ES used a version-based mode instead. Elasticsearch v5 still has support for version-based primary shard allocation as it needs to be able to load 2.x shards. ES v6 can drop the legacy support.
#22194 gave us the ability to open low level temporary connections to remote node based on their address. With this use case out of the way, actual full blown connections should validate the node on the other side, making sure we speak to who we think we speak to. This helps in case where multiple nodes are started on the same host and a quick node restart causes them to swap addresses, which in turn can cause confusion down the road.
Secure settings from the elasticsearch keystore were not yet validated.
This changed improves support in Settings so that secure settings more
seamlessly blend in with normal settings, allowing the existing settings
validation to work. Note that the setting names are still not validated
(yet) when using the elasticsearc-keystore tool.
As part of #22116 we are going to forbid usage of api
java.net.URL#openStream(). However in a number of places across the
we use this method to read files from the local filesystem. This commit
introduces a helper method openFileURLStream(URL url) to read files
from URLs. It does specific validation to only ensure that file:/
urls are read.
Additionlly, this commit removes unneeded method
FileSystemUtil.newBufferedReader(URL, Charset). This method used the
openStream () method which will soon be forbidden. Instead we use the
Files.newBufferedReader(Path, Charset).
This is in order to trigger listeners for disconnect events, most importantly the NodeFaultDetection. MockTransportService now does slightly a better job at mimicking real life failures: connecting to already connected node will be a noop (we don't detect any errors here in production either) and failing to send will cause the target node to be disconnected.
This is the cause of failure in https://elasticsearch-ci.elastic.co/job/elastic+elasticsearch+5.2+multijob-unix-compatibility/os=debian/72
When a node receives a new cluster state from the master, it opens up connections to any new node in the cluster state. That has always been done serially on the cluster state thread but it has been a long standing TODO to do this concurrently, which is done by this PR.
This is spin off of #22828, where an extra handshake is done whenever connecting to a node, which may slow down connecting. Also, the handshake is done in a blocking fashion which triggers assertions w.r.t blocking requests on the cluster state thread. Instead of adding an exception, I opted to implement concurrent connections which both side steps the assertion and compensates for the extra handshake.
This commit upgrades the checkstyle configuration from version 5.9 to
version 7.5, the latest version as of today. The main enhancement
obtained via this upgrade is better detection of redundant modifiers.
Relates #22960
This change adds a strict mode for xcontent parsing on the rest layer. The strict mode will be off by default for 5.x and in a separate commit will be enabled by default for 6.0. The strict mode, which can be enabled by setting `http.content_type.required: true` in 5.x, will require that all incoming rest requests have a valid and supported content type header before the request is dispatched. In the non-strict mode, the Content-Type header will be inspected and if it is not present or not valid, we will continue with auto detection of content like we have done previously.
The content type header is parsed to the matching XContentType value with the only exception being for plain text requests. This value is then passed on with the content bytes so that we can reduce the number of places where we need to auto-detect the content type.
As part of this, many transport requests and builders were updated to provide methods that
accepted the XContentType along with the bytes and the methods that would rely on auto-detection have been deprecated.
In the non-strict mode, deprecation warnings are issued whenever a request with body doesn't provide the Content-Type header.
See #19388
This commit change ElasticsearchException.failureFromXContent() method so that it now parses root causes which were ignored before, and adds them as suppressed exceptions of the returned exception.
The seq# base recovery logic relies on rolling back lucene to remove any operations above the global checkpoint. This part of the plan is not implemented yet but have to have these guarantees. Instead we should make the seq# logic validate that the last commit point (and the only one we have) maintains the invariant and if not, fall back to file based recovery.
This commit adds a test that creates situation where rollback is needed (primary failover with ops in flight) and fixes another issue that was surfaced by it - if a primary can't serve a seq# based recovery request and does a file copy, it still used the incoming `startSeqNo` as a filter.
Relates to #22484 & #10708
With the new secure settings, methods like getAsMap() no longer work
correctly as a means of checking for empty settings, or the total size.
This change converts the existing uses of that method to use methods
directly on Settings. Note this does not update the implementations to
account for SecureSettings, as that will require a followup which
changes how secure settings work.
Also adds many `equals` and `hashCode` implementations and moves
the failure printing in `MatchAssertion` into a common spot and
exposes it over `assertEqualsWithErrorMessageFromXContent` which
does an object equality test but then uses `toXContent` to print
the differences.
Relates to #22278
This moves the building blocks for delete by query into core. This
should enabled two thigns:
1. Plugins other than reindex to implement "bulk by scroll" style
operations.
2. Plugins to directly call delete by query. Those plugins should
be careful to make sure that task cancellation still works, but
this should be possible.
Notes:
1. I've mostly just moved classes and moved around tests methods.
2. I haven't been super careful about cohesion between these core
classes and reindex. They are quite interconnected because I wanted
to make the change as mechanical as possible.
Closes#22616
* S3 repository: Add named configurations
This change implements named configurations for s3 repository as
proposed in #22520. The access/secret key secure settings which were
added in #22479 are reverted, and the only secure settings are those
with the new named configs. All other previously used settings for the
connection are deprecated.
closes#22520
Also adds many `equals` and `hashCode` implementations and moves
the failure printing in `MatchAssertion` into a common spot and
exposes it over `assertEqualsWithErrorMessageFromXContent` which
does an object equality test but then uses `toXContent` to print
the differences.
Relates to #22278
This commit introduces sequence-number-based recovery. When a replica
has fallen out of sync, rather than performing a file-based recovery we
first attempt to replay operations since the last local checkpoint on
the replica. To do this, at the start of recovery the replica tells the
primary what its local checkpoint is. The primary will then wait for all
operations between that local checkpoint and the current maximum
sequence number to complete; this is to ensure that there are no gaps in
the operations that will be replayed from the primary to the
replica. This is a best-effort attempt as we currently have no
guarantees on the primary that these operations will be available; if we
are not able to replay all operations in the desired range, we just
fallback to file-based recovery. Later work will strengthen the
guarantees.
Relates #22484
* Add top hits collapsing to search request
The field collapsing is done with a custom top docs collector that "collapse" search hits with same field value.
The distributed aspect is resolve using the two passes that the regular search uses. The first pass "collapse" the top hits, then the coordinating node merge/collapse the top hits from each shard.
```
GET _search
{
"collapse": {
"field": "category",
}
}
```
This change also adds an ExpandCollapseSearchResponseListener that intercepts the search response and expands collapsed hits using the CollapseBuilder#innerHit} options.
The retrieval of each inner_hits is done by sending a query to all shards filtered by the collapse key.
```
GET _search
{
"collapse": {
"field": "category",
"inner_hits": {
"size": 2
}
}
}
```
To effectively allow a plugin to intercept a transport handler it needs
to know if the handler must be executed even if there is a rejection on the
thread pool in the case the wrapper forks a thread to execute the actual handler.
Today we try to be smart and make a generic decision if an exception should
be treated as a document failure but in some cases concurrency in the index writer
make this decision very difficult since we don't have a consistent state in the case
another thread is currently failing the IndexWriter/InternalEngine due to a tragic event.
This change simplifies the exception handling and makes specific decisions about document failures
rather than using a generic heuristic. This prevent exceptions to be treated as document failures
that should have failed the engine but backed out of failing since since some other thread has
already taken over the failure procedure but didn't finish yet.
* S3 repository: Deprecate specifying credentials through env vars and sys props
This is a follow up to #22479, where storing credentials secure way was
added.
Today we do not preserve response headers if they are present on a transport protocol
response. While preserving these headers is not always desired, in the most cases we
should pass on these headers to have consistent results for depreciation headers etc.
yet, this hasn't been much of a problem since most of the deprecations are detected early
ie. on the coordinating node such that this bug wasn't uncovered until #22647
This commit allow to optionally preserve headers when a context is restored and also streamlines
the context restore since it leaked frequently into the callers thread context when the callers
context wasn't restored again.
Previously, certain settings that could take multiple comma delimited
values would pick up incorrect values for all entries but the first if
each comma separated value was followed by a whitespace character. For
example, the multi-value "A,B,C" would be correctly parsed as
["A", "B", "C"] but the multi-value "A, B, C" would be incorrectly parsed
as ["A", " B", " C"].
This commit allows a comma separated list to have whitespace characters
after each entry. The specific settings that were affected by this are:
cluster.routing.allocation.awareness.attributes
index.routing.allocation.require.*
index.routing.allocation.include.*
index.routing.allocation.exclude.*
cluster.routing.allocation.require.*
cluster.routing.allocation.include.*
cluster.routing.allocation.exclude.*
http.cors.allow-methods
http.cors.allow-headers
For the allocation filtering related settings, this commit also provides
validation of each specified entry if the filtering is done by _ip,
_host_ip, or _publish_ip, to ensure that each entry is a valid IP
address.
Closes#22297
Today we have quite some abstractions that are essentially providing a simple
dispatch method to the plugins defining a `HttpServerTransport`. This commit
removes `HttpServer` and `HttpServerAdaptor` and introduces a simple `Dispatcher` functional
interface that delegate to `RestController` by default.
Relates to #18482
All the language clients support a special ignore parameter that doesn't get passed to elasticsearch with the request, but used to indicate which error code should not lead to an exception if returned for a specific request.
Moving this to the low level REST client will allow the high level REST client to make use of it too, for instance so that it doesn't have to intercept ResponseExceptions when the get api returns a 404.
TransportInterceptors are commonly used to enrich requests with headers etc.
which requires access the the thread context. This is not always easily possible
since threadpools are hard to access for instance if the interceptor is used on a transport client.
This commit passes on the thread context to all the interceptors for further consumption.
Closes#22585
ClusterService and TransportService expect the local discovery node to be set
before they are started but this requires manual interaction and is error prone since
to work absolutely correct they should share the same instance (same ephemeral ID).
TransportService also has 2 modes of operation, mainly realted to transport client vs. internal
to a node. This change removes the mode where we don't maintain a local node and uses a dummy local
node in the transport client since we don't bind to any port in such a case.
Local discovery node instances are now managed by the node itself and only suppliers and factories that allow
creation only once are passed to TransportService and ClusterService.
There was still small race in MockTcpTransport where channesl that are concurrently
closing are not yet removed from the reference tracking causing tests to fail. Compared to
the other races before this is a rather small windown and requires very very short test durations.
Today there are several races / holes in TcpTransport and MockTcpTransport
that can allow connections to be opened and remain unclosed while the actual
transport implementation is closed. A recently added assertions in #22554 exposes
these problems. This commit fixes several issues related to missed locks or channel
creations outside of a lock not checking if the resource is still open.
There are some parameters that are accepted by each and every api we expose. Those (pretty, source, error_trace and filter_path) are not explicitly listed in the spec of every api, rather whitelisted in clients test runners so that they are always accepted. The `human` flag has been treated up until now as a parameter that's accepted by only some stats and info api, but that doesn't reflect reality as es core treats it exactly like `pretty` (relevant especially now that we validate params and throw exception when we find one that is not supported). Furthermore, the human flag has effect on every api that outputs a date, time, percentage or byte size field. For instance the tasks api outputs a date field although they don't have the human flag explicitly listed in their spec. There are other similar cases. This commit removes the human flag from the rest spec and makes it an always accepted query_string param.
TcpTransport has an actual mechanism to stop resources in subclasses.
Instead of overriding `doStop` subclasses should override `stopInternal`
that is executed under the connection lock guaranteeing that there is no
concurrency etc.
Relates to #22554
* Settings: Make s3 repository sensitive settings use secure settings
This change converts repository-s3 to use the new secure settings. In
order to support the multiple ways we allow aws creds to be configured,
it also moves the main methods for the keystore wrapper into a
SecureSettings interface, in order to allow settings prefixing to work.
The low level TCP handshake can cause channel / connection leaks if it's interrupted
since the caller doesn't close the channel / connection if the handshake was not successful.
This commit fixes the channel leak and adds general test infrastructure to detect channel leaks
in the future.
This commit adds the parsing fromXContent() methods to the IndexResponse class. The method is based on a ObjectParser because it is easier to use when parsing parent abstract classes like DocWriteResponse.
It also changes the ReplicationResponse.ShardInfo so that it now implements ToXContentObject. This way, the ShardInfo.fromXContent() method can be used by the IndexResponse's ObjectParser.