This is the last YAML test, that waits for a watch execution by
specifying some timeout value. This one also gets replaced with a java
test that uses `assertBusy()` and thus is much more likely to succeed.
relates elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch#1513
Original commit: elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch@c2ab8777f4
... yet support updates. This commit introduces a few changes of how
watches are put.
The GET Watch API will never return credentials like basic auth
passwords, but a placeholder instead now. If the watcher is enabled to
encrypt sensitive settings, then the original encrypted value is
returned otherwise a "::es_redacted::" place holder.
There have been several Put Watch API changes.
The API now internally uses the Update API and versioning. This has
several implications. First if no version is supplied, we assume an
initial creation. This will work as before, however if a credential is
marked as redacted we will reject storing the watch, so users do not
accidentally store the wrong watch.
The watch xcontent parser now has an additional methods to tell the
caller if redacted passwords have been found. Based on this information
an error can be thrown.
If the user now wants to store a watch that contains a password marked
as redacted, this password will not be part of the toXContent
representation of the watch and in combinatination with update request
the existing password will be merged in. If the encrypted password is
supplied this one will be stored.
The serialization for GetWatchResponse/PutWatchRequest has changed.
The version checks for this will be put into the 6.x branch.
The Watcher UI now needs specify the version, when it wants to store a
watch. This also prevents last-write-wins scenarios and is the reason
why the put/get watch response now contains the internal version.
relates elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch#3089
Original commit: elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch@bb63be9f79
In order to more easily integrate xpack once it moves into the
elasticsearch repo, references to the existing x-pack-elasticsearch need
to be reduced. This commit introduces a few helper "methods" available
to any project within xpack (through gradle project extension
properties, as closures). All refeerences to project paths now use these
helper methods, except for those pertaining to bwc, which will be
handled in a followup.
Original commit: elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch@850668744c
This commit moves the source file in x-pack-core to a org.elasticsearch.xpack.core package. This is to prevent issues where we have compile-time success reaching through packages that will cross module boundaries at runtime (due to being in different classloaders). By moving these to a separate package, we have compile-time safety. Follow-ups can consider build time checking that only this package is defined in x-pack-core, or sealing x-pack-core until modules arrive for us.
Original commit: elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch@232e156e0e
This commit hacks up the xpack repo in such a way that it moves all
actions that the transport client uses to plugin core. It also moves
any classes that those actions use to plugin core, with a few
exceptions. I tried to split up any classes that pulled in server side
logic into the client, but that was not always 100% possible. Consider
this commit a guide, and since I do not know the codebase for each
plugin, consider it a best guess for what should be moved. A few other
things were merged in below.
This commit extracts the parts of Condition and AlwaysCondition that are
needed by classes that will be moved into the client package. The only
odd thing here is that since there are two parent classes (Condition and
AlwaysCondition) it was not possible to make AlwaysConditionInteral
extend from AlwaysCondition and still parse a ConditionInternal object,
which is what the ConditionFactory expects.
This commit removes the use of internal users in the User class, and
instead moves them to Authentication, where they are used.
[insert obligatory chuck norris karate image here]
ref elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch#2925
Original commit: elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch@42d0b72209
This change removes the InternalClient and the InternalSecurityClient. These are replaced with
usage of the ThreadContext and a transient value, `action.origin`, to indicate which component the
request came from. The security code has been updated to look for this value and ensure the
request is executed as the proper user. This work comes from elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch#2808 where @s1monw suggested
that we do this.
While working on this, I came across index template registries and rather than updating them to use
the new method, I replaced the ML one with the template upgrade framework so that we could
remove this template registry. The watcher template registry is still needed as the template must be
updated for rolling upgrades to work (see elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch#2950).
Original commit: elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch@7dbf2f263e
These tests have repeating but not reproducible failures,
where the stash is filled with a second PUT operation and the
watcher stats response does not match. Setting the log to trace
should shed some light on this.
As the smoke tests are only four tests this will not lead to a
log explosion.
Relates elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch#1513, elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch#1874
Original commit: elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch@5832dc7990
Some standalone tests set the max script compilation limit. However,
this setting is now set in the main cluster setup in core so it is no
longer needed here. This commit removes these obviated settings in
standalone tests.
Original commit: elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch@089328c8d7
This is related to elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch#1217. This PR removes the default password of
"changeme" from the reserved users.
This PR adds special behavior for authenticating the reserved users. No
ReservedRealm user can be authenticated until its password is set. The
one exception to this is the elastic user. The elastic user can be
authenticated with an empty password if the action is a rest request
originating from localhost. In this scenario where an elastic user is
authenticated with a default password, it will have metadata indicating
that it is in setup mode. An elastic user in setup mode is only
authorized to execute a change password request.
Original commit: elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch@e1e101a237
The current testing setup only checked if watcher was started, but it
also needs to check for the index template in order to be sure that
everything is set up correctly, before trying to put a watch.
relates elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch#1762
Original commit: elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch@3ed78b15a1
* Reduced a longish timeout to a shorter one, as a watch should be
executed in a HTTP test.
* Ensured that the TimeThrottleIntegration tests only query for own
watches in the watch history, also use random names for watch ids
* HipChatServiceTests configured deprecated logging package, so it was
not possible to follow the HTTP calls to the hipchat service endpoint.
relates elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch#1514
Relates elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch#1515
Original commit: elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch@adb492e4e9
As this does not require any reindexing this is easy to fix by just
changing the watch history template.
In addition the old templates are deleted on start up and the new ones
are instantiated.
Original commit: elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch@7e1ad495ad
The distribution of watches now happens on the node which holds the
watches index, instead of on the master node. This requires several
changes to the current implementation.
1. Running on shards and replicas
In order to run watches on the nodes with the watches index on its
primaries and replicas. To ensure that watches do not run twice, there is
a logic which checks the local shards, runs a murmurhash on the id and
runs modulo against the number of shards and replicas, this is the way to
find out, if a watch should run local. Reloading happens
2. Several master node actions moved to a HandledTransportAction, as they
are basically just aliases for indexing actions, among them the
put/delete/get watch actions, the acknowledgement action, the de/activate
actions
3. Stats action moved to a broadcast node action, because we potentially
have to query every node to get watcher statistics
4. Starting/Stopping watcher now is a master node action, which updates
the cluster state and then listeners acts on those. Because of this watches
can be running on two systems, if you those have different cluster state
versions, until the new watcher state is propagated
5. Watcher is started on all nodes now. With the exception of the ticker
schedule engine most classes do not need a lot of resources while running.
However they have to run, because of the execute watch API, which can hit
any node - it does not make sense to find the right shard for this watch
and only then execute (as this also has to work with a watch, that has not
been stored before)
6. By using a indexing operation listener, each storing of a watch now
parses the watch first and only stores on successful parsing
7. Execute watch API now uses the watcher threadpool for execution
8. Getting the number of watches for the stats now simply queries the
different execution engines, how many watches are scheduled, so this is
not doing a search anymore
There will be follow up commits on this one, mainly to ensure BWC compatibility.
Original commit: elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch@0adb46e658
The watcher tests were recently marked with `@Network`, which prevents them from
normally being run. Unfortunately, this means no tests run by default and the
entire suite fails.
Original commit: elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch@40cfc75b26
This commit delete the JIRA issues after the integration test execution. All issues from the testing project XWT are deleted, even if they have not been created during this specific test execution.
closeselastic/elasticsearch#4535
Original commit: elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch@0362463633
In Jira integration tests, some watches are triggered every second whereas they are executed using the watch execute API. This commit increases the triggering interval to 1d so that the watches are not executed on slow machines.
Original commit: elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch@4d0462bc00
This commit moves the Jira rest integration tests from the smoke-test-watcher-with-mustache project to the smoke-test-watcher project.
Original commit: elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch@c6b03d557f
standalone-rest-test doesn't configure unit tests and for these
integTest only projects that is what we want.
Original commit: elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch@f576dfdfbb
It used to be that RestTestPlugin "came with" StandaloneTestBasePlugin
but we'd like to use it with BuildPlugin for the high level rest client.
Also fix some license headers.
Original commit: elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch@3d5549d170
* Build: Convert xplugins to use new extra projects setup
This change makes the gradle initialization for xplugins look in the
correct location for elasticsearch, which is now as a sibling of an
elasticsearch-extra directory, with x-plugins as a child of the extra
directory.
The elasticsearch side of this change is
elastic/elasticsearchelastic/elasticsearch#21773. This change will enable renaming x-plugins
to x-pack, see elastic/elasticsearch#3643.
Original commit: elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch@09398aea5a
In order to prepare to the distributed watch execution, this commit
removes the in memory watch store.
Whenever a watch is needed now, a get request is executed and the parsing
is done. This happens when
* Put
* Get
* Ack
* Activate/Deactivate
* Execute
Note: This also means there are no usage stats currently regarding
the watch count, because we would need to execute a query. This would
require the usage stats to be async, see elastic/elasticsearch#3569
Another advantage is, that there is no dirty flag in the watch itself
needed anymore, because the watch is always the latest. Also write
operations store immediately and dont leave anything in memory.
Also ActionListener.wrap() was used a lot instead of more verbose anonmyous
inner classes.
Original commit: elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch@c47465b47c