I observed a [test failure][1] that I believe was caused by the fact
that an OpenSearch server happened to be running at localhost:9200 when
these unit tests were executed. The code under test has logic to try to
connect to localhost:9200 and then fall back to defaults if that port is
not open. The tests expect these defaults and will fail if different
data is returned. The change here is to use a non-default port to make
it very unlikely that a real instance will be running at the non-default
port. I don't know why an OpenSearch service happened to be running
during the linked test failure, but I think making these unit tests more
independent and isolated is helpful no matter the underlying cause in
this case.
[1]: https://fork-jenkins.searchservices.aws.dev/job/OpenSearch_CI/job/PR_Checks/job/Gradle_Check/975/artifact/gradle_check_975.log/*view*/
Signed-off-by: Andrew Ross <andrross@amazon.com>
Add validation to check for official plugins during the plugins installation task for the upgrade tool.
Signed-off-by: Vacha Shah <vachshah@amazon.com>
This change adds the initial version of a new CLI tool `opensearch-upgrade` as part of the OpenSearch distribution. This tool is meant for assisting during an upgrade from an existing Elasticsearch v7.10.2/v6.8.0 node to OpenSearch. It automates the process of importing existing configurations and installing of core plugins.
Signed-off-by: Rabi Panda <adnapibar@gmail.com>