This commit fixes the inequality symbol used in a test assertion in
RepositoryS3SettingsTests#testInvalidChunkBufferSizeRepositorySettings. The
inequality symbol was previously backwards but fixed in commit
cad0608cdb but fixing the inequality
symbol here was missed in that commit.
Closes#18449
This change does the following:
- Queries that are currently unsupported such as prefix queries on numeric
fields or term queries on geo fields now throw an error rather than returning
a query that does not match anything.
- Fuzzy queries on numeric, date and ip fields are now unsupported: they used
to create range queries, we now expect users to use range queries directly.
Fuzzy, regexp and prefix queries are now only supported on text/keyword
fields (including `_all`).
- The `_uid` and `_id` fields do not support prefix or range queries anymore as
it would prevent us to store them more efficiently in the future, eg. by
using a binary encoding.
Note that it is still possible to ignore these errors by using the `lenient`
option of the `match` or `query_string` queries.
Previously multiple extensions could be provided, however, this can lead
to confusion with on-disk scripts (ie, "foo.js" and "foo.javascript")
having different content. Only a single extension is now supported.
The only language currently supporting multiple extensions was the
Javascript engine ("js" and "javascript"). It now only supports the
`.js` extension.
Relates to #10598
This removes all the mentions of the sandbox from the script engine
services and permissions model. This means that the following settings
are no longer supported:
```yaml
script.inline: sandbox
script.stored: sandbox
```
Instead, only a `true` or `false` value can be specified.
Since this would otherwise break the default-allow parameter for
languages like expressions, painless, and mustache, all script engines
have been updated to have individual settings, for instance:
```yaml
script.engine.groovy.inline: true
```
Would enable all inline scripts for groovy. (they can still be
overridden on a per-operation basis).
Expressions, Painless, and Mustache all default to `true` for inline,
file, and stored scripts to preserve the old scripting behavior.
Resolves#17114
I am unable to set ec2 discovery tags because this setting was
accidentally omitted from the register settings list in
Ec2DiscoveryPlugin.java. I get this:
java.lang.IllegalArgumentException: unknown setting [discovery.ec2.tag.project]
This removes dead/duplicate code and makes the `_index` field not configurable.
(Configuration used to jus be ignored, now we would throw an exception if any
is provided.)
Most of the current implementations of BaseNodesResponse (plural Nodes) ignore FailedNodeExceptions.
- This adds a helper function to do the grouping to TransportNodesAction
- Requires a non-null array of FailedNodeExceptions within the BaseNodesResponse constructor
- Reads/writes the array to output
- Also adds StreamInput and StreamOutput methods for generically reading and writing arrays
QueryBuilder has generics, but those are never used: all call sites use
`QueryBuilder<?>`. Only `AbstractQueryBuilder` needs generics so that the base
class can contain a default implementation for setters that returns `this`.
This commit introduces a handshake when initiating a light
connection. During this handshake, node information, cluster name, and
version are received from the target node of the connection. This
information can be used to immediately validate that the target node is
a member of the same cluster, and used to set the version on the
stream. This will allow us to extend APIs that are used during initial
cluster recovery without a major version change.
Relates #15971
This commit removes the method Strings#splitStringToArray and replaces
the call sites with invocations to String#split. There are only two
explanations for the existence of this method. The first is that
String#split is slightly tricky in that it accepts a regular expression
rather than a character to split on. This means that if s is a string,
s.split(".") does not split on the character '.', but rather splits on
the regular expression '.' which splits on every character (of course,
this is easily fixed by invoking s.split("\\.") instead). The second
possible explanation is that (again) String#split accepts a regular
expression. This means that there could be a performance concern
compared to just splitting on a single character. However, it turns out
that String#split has a fast path for the case of splitting on a single
character and microbenchmarks show that String#split has 1.5x--2x the
throughput of Strings#splitStringToArray. There is a slight behavior
difference between Strings#splitStringToArray and String#split: namely,
the former would return an empty array in cases when the input string
was null or empty but String#split will just NPE at the call site on
null and return a one-element array containing the empty string when the
input string is empty. There was only one place relying on this behavior
and the call site has been modified accordingly.
When working on #18008 I found while reading the code that we don't filter anymore `repositories.s3.access_key` and `repositories.s3.secret_key`.
Also fixed a typo in REST test
Lucene allows to create a ICUTokenizer with a special config argument
enabling the customization of the rule based iterator by providing
custom rules files.
This commit enable this feature. Users could provide a list of RBBI rule
files to ICU tokenizer.
closes#13146
Now that the current uses of magical camelCase support have been
deprecated, we can remove these in master (sans remaining issues like
BulkRequest). This change removes camel case support from ParseField,
query types, analysis, and settings lookup.
see #8988
* `rename` processor, renamed `to` to `target_field`
* `date` processor, renamed `match_field` to `field` and renamed `match_formats` to `formats`
* `geoip` processor, renamed `source_field` to `field` and renamed `fields` to `properties`
* `attachment` processor, renamed `source_field` to `field` and renamed `fields` to `properties`
Closes#17835
This makes all numeric fields including `date`, `ip` and `token_count` use
points instead of the inverted index as a lookup structure. This is expected
to perform worse for exact queries, but faster for range queries. It also
requires less storage.
Notes about how the change works:
- Numeric mappers have been split into a legacy version that is essentially
the current mapper, and a new version that uses points, eg.
LegacyDateFieldMapper and DateFieldMapper.
- Since new and old fields have the same names, the decision about which one
to use is made based on the index creation version.
- If you try to force using a legacy field on a new index or a field that uses
points on an old index, you will get an exception.
- IP addresses now support IPv6 via Lucene's InetAddressPoint and store them
in SORTED_SET doc values using the same encoding (fixed length of 16 bytes
and sortable).
- The internal MappedFieldType that is stored by the new mappers does not have
any of the points-related properties set. Instead, it keeps setting the index
options when parsing the `index` property of mappings and does
`if (fieldType.indexOptions() != IndexOptions.NONE) { // add point field }`
when parsing documents.
Known issues that won't fix:
- You can't use numeric fields in significant terms aggregations anymore since
this requires document frequencies, which points do not record.
- Term queries on numeric fields will now return constant scores instead of
giving better scores to the rare values.
Known issues that we could work around (in follow-up PRs, this one is too large
already):
- Range queries on `ip` addresses only work if both the lower and upper bounds
are inclusive (exclusive bounds are not exposed in Lucene). We could either
decide to implement it, or drop range support entirely and tell users to
query subnets using the CIDR notation instead.
- Since IP addresses now use a different representation for doc values,
aggregations will fail when running a terms aggregation on an ip field on a
list of indices that contains both pre-5.0 and 5.0 indices.
- The ip range aggregation does not work on the new ip field. We need to either
implement range aggs for SORTED_SET doc values or drop support for ip ranges
and tell users to use filters instead. #17700Closes#16751Closes#17007Closes#11513
When it comes to query parsing, either a field is tokenized and it would go
through analysis with its search_analyzer. Or it is not tokenized and the
raw string should be passed to termQuery(). Since numeric fields are not
tokenized and also declare a search analyzer, values would currently go through
analysis twice...
This commit removes `MappedFieldType.value` and simplifies
`MappedFieldType.valueforSearch`. `valueforSearch` was used to post-process
values that come for stored fields (eg. to convert a long back to a string
representation of a date in the case of a date field) and also values that
are extracted from the source but only in the case of GET calls: it would
not be called when performing source filtering on search requests.
`valueforSearch` is now only called for stored fields, since values that are
extracted from the source should already be formatted as expected.
* upgrades numerics to new Point format
* updates geo api changes
* adds GeoPointDistanceRangeQuery as XGeoPointDistanceRangeQuery
* cuts over to ES GeoHashUtils
CBOR is natively supported in Elasticsearch and allows for byte arrays.
This means, that by using CBOR the user can prevent base64 conversions
for the data being sent back and forth.
This PR adds support to extract data from a byte array in addition to
a string. This also required to add a ByteArrayValueSource class.
We have both `Settings.settingsBuilder` and `Settings.builder` that do exactly
the same thing, so we should keep only one. I kept `Settings.builder` since it
has my preference but also it is the one that we use in examples of the Java API.
This PR just adds a new test where we check that we forcing a value in the JSON document actually works as expected:
```json
{
"file": {
"_content": "BASE64"
"_name": "12-240.pdf",
"_language": "en",
"_content_type": "pdf"
}
}
```
Note that we don't support forcing all values. So sending:
```json
{
"file": {
"_content": "BASE64"
"_name": "12-240.pdf",
"_title": "12-240.pdf",
"_keywords": "Div42 Src580 LGE Mechtech",
"_language": "en",
"_content_type": "pdf"
}
}
```
Will have absolutely no effect on fields `title` and `keywords`.
Note that when `_language` is set, it only works if `index.mapping.attachment.detect_language` is set to `true`.
Related to https://discuss.elastic.co/t/mapper-attachments/46615/4
This removes the inconsistent output of IP addresses. The format was parsing-unfriendly and it makes it hard
to reason about API responses, such as to _nodes.
With this change in place, it will never print the hostname as part of the default format, which has the
added benefit that it can be used consistently for URIs, which was not the case when the hostname might
appear at the front with "hostname/ip:port".
`text` fields will have fielddata disabled by default. Fielddata can still be
enabled on an existing index by setting `fielddata=true` in the mappings.
Node roles are now serialized as well, they are not part of the node attributes anymore. DiscoveryNodeService takes care of dividing settings into attributes and roles. DiscoveryNode always requires to pass in attributes and roles separately.