This change ensures that the rewrite of the shard request is executed in the network thread or in the refresh listener when waiting for an active shard. This allows queries that rewrite to match_no_docs to bypass the search thread pool entirely even if the can_match phase was skipped (pre_filter_shard_size > number of shards). Coordinating nodes don't have the ability to create empty responses so this change also ensures that at least one shard creates a full empty response while the other can return null ones. This is needed since creating true empty responses on shards require to create concrete aggregators which would be too costly to build on a network thread. We should move this functionality to aggregation builders in a follow up but that would be a much bigger change.
This change is also important for #49601 since we want to add the ability to use the result of other shards to rewrite the request of subsequent ones. For instance if the first M shards have their top N computed, the top worst document in the global queue can be pass to subsequent shards that can then rewrite to match_no_docs if they can guarantee that they don't have any document better than the provided one.
QueryBuilders that throw exceptions on shards when building the Lucene query
returns the full serialization of the query builder in the exception message.
For large queries that fails to execute due to the max boolean clause, this means
that we keep a reference of these big messages for every shard that participate
in the request. In order to limit the memory needed to hold these query shard
exceptions in the coordinating node, this change removes the query builder
serialization from the shard exception. The query is known by the user so
there should be no need to repeat it on every shard exception. We could also
omit the entire stack trace for known bad request exception but it would deserve
a separate issue/pr.
Closes#51843Closes#48910
When the `rare_terms` aggregation contained another aggregation it'd
break them. Most of the time. This happened because the process that it
uses to remove buckets that turn out not to be rare was incorrectly
merging results from multiple leaves. This'd cause array index out of
bounds issues. We didn't catch it in the test because the issue doesn't
happen on the very first bucket. And the tests generated data in such a
way that the first bucket always contained the rare terms. Randomizing
the order of the generated data fixed the test so it caught the issue.
Closes#51020
Currently, the same class `FieldCapabilities` is used both to represent the
capabilities for one index, and also the merged capabilities across indices. To
help clarify the logic, this PR proposes to create a separate class
`IndexFieldCapabilities` for the capabilities in one index. The refactor will
also help when adding `source_path` information in #49264, since the merged
source path field will have a different structure from the field for a single index.
Individual changes:
* Add a new class IndexFieldCapabilities.
* Remove extra constructor from FieldCapabilities.
* Combine the add and merge methods in FieldCapabilities.Builder.
Currently, a mappings update request, where dynamic_mappings is an object
instead of an array, results in a http response with a 500 code. This PR checks
for this condition and throws a MapperParsingException like we do for other
malformed mapping cases.
Closes#51486
ActionListener.completeWith would catch exceptions from
listener.onResponse and deliver them to lister.onFailure, essentially
double notifying the listener. Instead we now assert that listeners do
not throw when using ActionListener.completeWith.
Relates #50886
when a timezone is not provided Ingest logic should consider a time to be in a timezone provided as a parameter.
When a timezone is provided Ingest should recalculate a time to the timezone provided as a parameter
closes#51108
backport(#51215)
With the new mechanism for storing cluster state in lucene, we store
index metadata in multiple data paths too. This causes cluster state
publish to timeout too frequently with a 1s timeout, so increasing it to
5s. Also increasing follower check timeout to 5s since it also sometimes
has fsync in its timeout path and leader check for symmetry.
Closes#51329
While we use `== false` as a more visible form of boolean negation
(instead of `!`), the true case is implied and the true value does not
need to explicitly checked. This commit converts cases that have slipped
into the code checking for `== true`.
LoggingOutputStream reads a stream and breaks on newlines. This commit
fixes the behavior to account for windows newlines also containing `\r`.
closes#51532
This commit inlines the `weightShardAdded` and `weightShardRemoved` methods
from the `BalancedShardsAllocator#WeightFunction` that respectively add and
subtract 1 (±ε) from the result of `weight`. It then follows up with a number
of simplifications that this inlining enables.
As a side-effect it also somewhat reduces the number of calls to canRebalance
and canAllocate during rebalancing when there are multiple shards of the same
index on a node that is heavier than average.
When running Elasticsearch on a flaky network, we may see nodes leaving the
cluster with reason `disconnected`. It may be useful to the cluster
administrator to see the full exception that caused the disconnection, but this
is only available with `TRACE` level logging which commingles the details of
the problem with other messages that are not useful to end users.
This commit promotes logging of exceptions in `TcpTransport` from `TRACE` to
`DEBUG` to separate them from the truly `TRACE`-level messages.
This commit switches the strategy for managing dot-prefixed indices that
should be hidden indices from using "fake" system indices to an explicit
exclusions list that must be updated when those indices are converted to
hidden indices.
* Fix InternalEngineTests.testSeqNoAndCheckpoints
If we force flush while possibly triggering a merge the local checkpoint may change
from the expectation from the loop that just increments on every operation.
Closes#51604
There is no reason not to allow deletes in parallel to restores
if they're dealing with different snapshots.
A delete will not remove any files related to the snapshot that
is being restored if it is different from the deleted snapshot
because those files will still be referenced by the restoring
snapshot.
Loading RepositoryData concurrently to modifying it is concurrency
safe nowadays as well since the repo generation is tracked in the
cluster state.
Closes#41463
ActionListener.map would call listener.onFailure for exceptions from
listener.onResponse, but this means we could double trigger some
listeners which is generally unexpected. Instead, we should assume that
a listener's onResponse (and onFailure) implementation is responsible
for its own exception handling.
In #50259 we redirected stdout and stderr to log4j, to capture jdk
and external library messages. However, a typo in the method name used
to redirect the stream in java means stdout is currently being
duplicated twice, and stderr not captured. This commit corrects that
mistake. Unfortunately this is at a level that cannot really be tested,
thus we are still missing tests for this behavior.
We need to warm up the engine (i.e., perform an external refresh) before
accessing the external refresh. Note that we refresh externally before
allowing reading from a shard.
Relates #48605Closes#51548
When checking if a device is up, today we can run into virtual ethernet
devices that disappear while we are in the middle of checking. This
leads to "no such device". This commit addresses such devices by
treating them as not being up, if they are virtual ethernet devices that
disappeared while we were checking.
This commit moves the logic that cancels search requests when the rest channel is closed
to a generic client that can be used by other APIs. This will be useful for any rest action
that wants to cancel the execution of a task if the underlying rest channel is closed by the
client before completion.
Relates #49931
Relates #50990
Relates #50990
* Allow Repository Plugins to Filter Metadata on Create
Add a hook that allows repository plugins to filter the repository metadata
before it gets written to the cluster state.
This commit deprecates the creation of dot-prefixed index names (e.g.
.watches) unless they are either 1) a hidden index, or 2) registered by
a plugin that extends SystemIndexPlugin. This is the first step
towards more thorough protections for system indices.
This commit also modifies several plugins which use dot-prefixed indices
to register indices they own as system indices, and adds a plugin to
register .tasks as a system index.
* Reload secure settings with password (#43197)
If a password is not set, we assume an empty string to be
compatible with previous behavior.
Only allow the reload to be broadcast to other nodes if TLS is
enabled for the transport layer.
* Add passphrase support to elasticsearch-keystore (#38498)
This change adds support for keystore passphrases to all subcommands
of the elasticsearch-keystore cli tool and adds a subcommand for
changing the passphrase of an existing keystore.
The work to read the passphrase in Elasticsearch when
loading, which will be addressed in a different PR.
Subcommands of elasticsearch-keystore can handle (open and create)
passphrase protected keystores
When reading a keystore, a user is only prompted for a passphrase
only if the keystore is passphrase protected.
When creating a keystore, a user is allowed (default behavior) to create one with an
empty passphrase
Passphrase can be set to be empty when changing/setting it for an
existing keystore
Relates to: #32691
Supersedes: #37472
* Restore behavior for force parameter (#44847)
Turns out that the behavior of `-f` for the add and add-file sub
commands where it would also forcibly create the keystore if it
didn't exist, was by design - although undocumented.
This change restores that behavior auto-creating a keystore that
is not password protected if the force flag is used. The force
OptionSpec is moved to the BaseKeyStoreCommand as we will presumably
want to maintain the same behavior in any other command that takes
a force option.
* Handle pwd protected keystores in all CLI tools (#45289)
This change ensures that `elasticsearch-setup-passwords` and
`elasticsearch-saml-metadata` can handle a password protected
elasticsearch.keystore.
For setup passwords the user would be prompted to add the
elasticsearch keystore password upon running the tool. There is no
option to pass the password as a parameter as we assume the user is
present in order to enter the desired passwords for the built-in
users.
For saml-metadata, we prompt for the keystore password at all times
even though we'd only need to read something from the keystore when
there is a signing or encryption configuration.
* Modify docs for setup passwords and saml metadata cli (#45797)
Adds a sentence in the documentation of `elasticsearch-setup-passwords`
and `elasticsearch-saml-metadata` to describe that users would be
prompted for the keystore's password when running these CLI tools,
when the keystore is password protected.
Co-Authored-By: Lisa Cawley <lcawley@elastic.co>
* Elasticsearch keystore passphrase for startup scripts (#44775)
This commit allows a user to provide a keystore password on Elasticsearch
startup, but only prompts when the keystore exists and is encrypted.
The entrypoint in Java code is standard input. When the Bootstrap class is
checking for secure keystore settings, it checks whether or not the keystore
is encrypted. If so, we read one line from standard input and use this as the
password. For simplicity's sake, we allow a maximum passphrase length of 128
characters. (This is an arbitrary limit and could be increased or eliminated.
It is also enforced in the keystore tools, so that a user can't create a
password that's too long to enter at startup.)
In order to provide a password on standard input, we have to account for four
different ways of starting Elasticsearch: the bash startup script, the Windows
batch startup script, systemd startup, and docker startup. We use wrapper
scripts to reduce systemd and docker to the bash case: in both cases, a
wrapper script can read a passphrase from the filesystem and pass it to the
bash script.
In order to simplify testing the need for a passphrase, I have added a
has-passwd command to the keystore tool. This command can run silently, and
exit with status 0 when the keystore has a password. It exits with status 1 if
the keystore doesn't exist or exists and is unencrypted.
A good deal of the code-change in this commit has to do with refactoring
packaging tests to cleanly use the same tests for both the "archive" and the
"package" cases. This required not only moving tests around, but also adding
some convenience methods for an abstraction layer over distribution-specific
commands.
* Adjust docs for password protected keystore (#45054)
This commit adds relevant parts in the elasticsearch-keystore
sub-commands reference docs and in the reload secure settings API
doc.
* Fix failing Keystore Passphrase test for feature branch (#50154)
One problem with the passphrase-from-file tests, as written, is that
they would leave a SystemD environment variable set when they failed,
and this setting would cause elasticsearch startup to fail for other
tests as well. By using a try-finally, I hope that these tests will fail
more gracefully.
It appears that our Fedora and Ubuntu environments may be configured to
store journald information under /var rather than under /run, so that it
will persist between boots. Our destructive tests that read from the
journal need to account for this in order to avoid trying to limit the
output we check in tests.
* Run keystore management tests on docker distros (#50610)
* Add Docker handling to PackagingTestCase
Keystore tests need to be able to run in the Docker case. We can do this
by using a DockerShell instead of a plain Shell when Docker is running.
* Improve ES startup check for docker
Previously we were checking truncated output for the packaged JDK as
an indication that Elasticsearch had started. With new preliminary
password checks, we might get a false positive from ES keystore
commands, so we have to check specifically that the Elasticsearch
class from the Bootstrap package is what's running.
* Test password-protected keystore with Docker (#50803)
This commit adds two tests for the case where we mount a
password-protected keystore into a Docker container and provide a
password via a Docker environment variable.
We also fix a logging bug where we were logging the identifier for an
array of strings rather than the contents of that array.
* Add documentation for keystore startup prompting (#50821)
When a keystore is password-protected, Elasticsearch will prompt at
startup. This commit adds documentation for this prompt for the archive,
systemd, and Docker cases.
Co-authored-by: Lisa Cawley <lcawley@elastic.co>
* Warn when unable to upgrade keystore on debian (#51011)
For Red Hat RPM upgrades, we warn if we can't upgrade the keystore. This
commit brings the same logic to the code for Debian packages. See the
posttrans file for gets executed for RPMs.
* Restore handling of string input
Adds tests that were mistakenly removed. One of these tests proved
we were not handling the the stdin (-x) option correctly when no
input was added. This commit restores the original approach of
reading stdin one char at a time until there is no more (-1, \r, \n)
instead of using readline() that might return null
* Apply spotless reformatting
* Use '--since' flag to get recent journal messages
When we get Elasticsearch logs from journald, we want to fetch only log
messages from the last run. There are two reasons for this. First, if
there are many logs, we might get a string that's too large for our
utility methods. Second, when we're looking for a specific message or
error, we almost certainly want to look only at messages from the last
execution.
Previously, we've been trying to do this by clearing out the physical
files under the journald process. But there seems to be some contention
over these directories: if journald writes a log file in between when
our deletion command deletes the file and when it deletes the log
directory, the deletion will fail.
It seems to me that we might be able to use journald's "--since" flag to
retrieve only log messages from the last run, and that this might be
less likely to fail due to race conditions in file deletion.
Unfortunately, it looks as if the "--since" flag has a granularity of
one-second. I've added a two-second sleep to make sure that there's a
sufficient gap between the test that will read from journald and the
test before it.
* Use new journald wrapper pattern
* Update version added in secure settings request
Co-authored-by: Lisa Cawley <lcawley@elastic.co>
Co-authored-by: Ioannis Kakavas <ikakavas@protonmail.com>
This commit modifies the bounding box for geogrid unit tests
to only consider bounding boxes that have significant longitudinal
width and whose coordinates are normalized to quantized space
Closes#51103.
We added a new rounding in #50609 that handles offsets to the start and
end of the rounding so that we could support `offset` in the `composite`
aggregation. This starts moving `date_histogram` to that new offset.
This is a redo of #50873 with more integration tests.
This reverts commit d114c9db3e1d1a766f9f48f846eed0466125ce83.
We've been parsing the `time_zone` parameter on `date_hitogram` for a
while but it hasn't *done* anything. This wires it up.
Closes#45199
Inspired by #45200
We shouldn't be using potentially changing versions of the cluster state
when answering a snapshot status API call by calling `SnapshotService#currentSnapshots` multiple times (each time using `ClusterService#state` under the hood) but instead pass down the state from the transport action.
Having these API behave more in a more deterministic way will make it easier to use them once parallel repository operations
are introduced.
This commit overrides the stdout and stderr print streams to be
redirected to the main elasticsearch.log file. While the Elasticsearch
project ensures stdout and stderr are not written to, the jdk or 3rd
party libs may do this, which can be unexepected for users used to
looking the elasticsearch log.
closes#50156
Wait for the cluster to have settled down and have the same accepted version on all nodes before
executing and cancelling request so that a slow CS accept on one node doesn't make it fall behind
and then get sent the full CS because of the diff-version mismatch, breaking the mechanics of this test.
Closes#51308
Added node closed exception to the retryable remote exceptions as it's possible to run into this exception instead of a connect exception when the master node is just shutting down but still responding to requests.
* Fix Inconsistent Shard Failure Count in Failed Snapshots
This fix was necessary to allow for the below test enhancement:
We were not adding shard failure entries to a failed snapshot for those
snapshot entries that were never attempted because the snapshot failed during
the init stage and wasn't partial. This caused the never attempted snapshots
to be counted towards the successful shard count which seems wrong and
broke repository consistency tests.
Also, this change adjusts snapshot resiliency tests to run another snapshot
at the end of each test run to guarantee a correct `index.latest` blob exists
after each run.
Closes#47550
The order indices are returned in in the metadata is not guaranteed.
This commit accounts for any possible ordering in assertions about
hidden indices.
closes#51340
It is permitted for nodes to accept transport connections at addresses other
than their publish address, which allows a good deal of flexibility when
configuring discovery. However, it is not unusual for users to misconfigure
nodes to pick a publish address which is inaccessible to other nodes. We see
this happen a lot if the nodes are on different networks separated by a proxy,
or if the nodes are running in Docker with the wrong kind of network config.
In this case we offer no useful feedback to the user unless they enable
TRACE-level logs. It's particularly tricky to diagnose because if we test
connectivity between the nodes (using their discovery addresses) then all will
appear well.
This commit adds a WARN-level log if this kind of misconfiguration is detected:
the probe connection has succeeded (to indicate that we are really talking to a
healthy Elasticsearch node) but the followup connection attempt fails.
It also tidies up some loose ends in `HandshakingTransportAddressConnector`,
removing some TODOs that need not be completed, and registering its
accidentally-unregistered timeout settings.
IndexWriter might not filter out fully deleted segments if retention
leases exist or the number of the retaining operations is non-zero.
SoftDeletesDirectoryReaderWrapper, however, always filters out fully
deleted segments.
This change uses the original directory reader when calculating segment
stats instead.
Relates #51192Closes#51303
We were loading `RepositoryData` twice during snapshot initialization,
redundantly checking if a snapshot existed already.
The first snapshot existence check is somewhat redundant because a snapshot could be
created between loading `RepositoryData` and updating the cluster state with the `INIT`
state snapshot entry.
Also, it is much safer to do the subsequent checks for index existence in the repo and
and the presence of old version snapshots once the `INIT` state entry prevents further
snapshots from being created concurrently.
While the current state of things will never lead to corruption on a concurrent snapshot
creation, it could result in a situation (though unlikely) where all the snapshot's work
is done on the data nodes, only to find out that the repository generation was off during
snapshot finalization, failing there and leaving a bunch of dead data in the repository
that won't be used in a subsequent snapshot (because the shard generation was never referenced
due to the failed snapshot finalization).
Note: This is a step on the way to parallel repository operations by making snapshot related CS
and repo related CS more tightly correlated.
This reverts commit c7fd24ca1569a809b499caf34077599e463bb8d6.
Now that JDK-8236582 is fixed in JDK 14 EA, we can revert the workaround.
Relates #50523 and #50512
LuceneChangesSnapshot can be slow if nested documents are heavily used.
Also, it estimates the number of operations to be recovered in peer
recoveries inaccurately. With this change, we prefer excluding the
nested non-root documents in a Lucene query instead.
The method parameter is not used in the percentile aggs, instead
the method is determined by the presence of `hdr` or `tdigest`
objects.
Relates to #8324
After we rollover the index we wait for the configured number of shards for the
rolled index to become active (based on the index.write.wait_for_active_shards
setting which might be present in a template, or otherwise in the default case,
for the primaries to become active).
This wait might be long due to disk watermarks being tripped, replicas not
being able to spring to life due to cluster nodes reconfiguration and others
and, the RolloverStep might not complete successfully due to this inherent
transient situation, albeit the rolled index having been created.
(cherry picked from commit 457a92fb4c68c55976cc3c3e2f00a053dd2eac70)
Signed-off-by: Andrei Dan <andrei.dan@elastic.co>
On master failover we have to resent all the shard failed messages,
but the transport requests remain the same in the eyes of `equals`.
If the master failover is registered and the requests to the new master
are sent before all the callbacks have executed and the request to the
old master removed from the deduplicator then the requuests to the new
master will incorrectly fail and the snapshot get stuck.
Closes#51253
Add the character position of a scripting error to error responses.
The contents of the `position` field are experimental and subject to
change. Currently, `offset` refers to the character location where the
error was encountered, `start` and `end` define a range of characters
that contain the error.
eg.
```
{
"error": {
"root_cause": [
{
"type": "script_exception",
"reason": "runtime error",
"script_stack": [
"y = x;",
" ^---- HERE"
],
"script": "def x = new ArrayList(); Map y = x;",
"lang": "painless",
"position": {
"offset": 33,
"start": 29,
"end": 35
}
}
```
Refs: #50993
This replaces the message we return for unknown queries with the standard
one that we use for unknown fields from `ObjectParser`. This is nice
because it includes "did you mean". One day we might convert parsing
queries to using object parser, but that looks complex. This change is
much smaller and seems useful.
Adding back accidentally removed jvm option that is required to enforce
start of the week = Monday in IsoCalendarDataProvider.
Adding a `feature` to yml test in order to skip running it in JDK8
commit that removed it 398c802
commit that backports SystemJvmOptions c4fbda3
relates 7.x backport of code that enforces CalendarDataProvider use #48349
The tests, when creating broken serialized blobs could randomly create
a sequence of bytes that is partially readable by the deserializer and then
not throw `IOException` but instead `ElasticsearchParseException`.
We should just handle these unexpected exceptions downstream properly and pass them
wrapped as `RepositoryException` to the listener to fix the test and keep the API consistent.
This change introduces a new feature for indices so that they can be
hidden from wildcard expansion. The feature is referred to as hidden
indices. An index can be marked hidden through the use of an index
setting, `index.hidden`, at creation time. One primary use case for
this feature is to have a construct that fits indices that are created
by the stack that contain data used for display to the user and/or
intended for querying by the user. The desire to keep them hidden is
to avoid confusing users when searching all of the data they have
indexed and getting results returned from indices created by the
system.
Hidden indices have the following properties:
* API calls for all indices (empty indices array, _all, or *) will not
return hidden indices by default.
* Wildcard expansion will not return hidden indices by default unless
the wildcard pattern begins with a `.`. This behavior is similar to
shell expansion of wildcards.
* REST API calls can enable the expansion of wildcards to hidden
indices with the `expand_wildcards` parameter. To expand wildcards
to hidden indices, use the value `hidden` in conjunction with `open`
and/or `closed`.
* Creation of a hidden index will ignore global index templates. A
global index template is one with a match-all pattern.
* Index templates can make an index hidden, with the exception of a
global index template.
* Accessing a hidden index directly requires no additional parameters.
Backport of #50452
When you declare an ObjectParser with top level named objects like we do
with `significant_terms` we didn't support "did you mean". This fixes
that.
Relates #50938
* Fix Infinite Retry Loop in loading RepositoryData
We were running into an infinite loop when trying to load corrupted (or otherwise un-loadable)
repository data for a repo that uses best effort consistency (e.g. that was just freshly mounted
as done in the test) because we kepy resetting to `-1` on `IOException`, listing and finding the broken
generation `N` and then interpreted the subsequent reset to `-1` as a concurrent change to the repository.
This moves the testing of custom significance heuristic plugins from an
`ESIntegTestCase` to an example plugin. This is *much* more "real" and
can be used as an example for anyone that needs to actually build such a
plugin. The old test had testing concerns and the example all jumbled
together.
The PreConfiguredTokenFilter#singletonWithVersion uses the version
internally for the token filter factories but it registers only one
instance in the cache and not one instance per version. This can lead
to exceptions like the one described in #50734 since the singleton is
created and cached using the version created of the first index
that is processed.
Remove the singletonWithVersion() methods and use the
elasticsearchVersion() methods instead.
Fixes: #50734
(cherry picked from commit 24e1858)
Backport: #50467
This commit adds the name of the current pipeline to ingest metadata.
This pipeline name is accessible under the following key: '_ingest.pipeline'.
Example usage in pipeline:
PUT /_ingest/pipeline/2
{
"processors": [
{
"set": {
"field": "pipeline_name",
"value": "{{_ingest.pipeline}}"
}
}
]
}
Closes#42106
Index templates created in the 5x line can still be present in the cluster state
through multiple upgrades, and may have more than one mapping defined. 8x
will stop supporting templates with multiple mappings, and we should emit
deprecation warnings in 7x clusters to give users a chance to update their
templates before upgrading.
Check it out:
```
$ curl -u elastic:password -HContent-Type:application/json -XPOST localhost:9200/test/_update/foo?pretty -d'{
"dac": {}
}'
{
"error" : {
"root_cause" : [
{
"type" : "x_content_parse_exception",
"reason" : "[2:3] [UpdateRequest] unknown field [dac] did you mean [doc]?"
}
],
"type" : "x_content_parse_exception",
"reason" : "[2:3] [UpdateRequest] unknown field [dac] did you mean [doc]?"
},
"status" : 400
}
```
The tricky thing about implementing this is that x-content doesn't
depend on Lucene. So this works by creating an extension point for the
error message using SPI. Elasticsearch's server module provides the
"spell checking" implementation.
s
We seem to have settled on the `ContextParser` interface for parsing
stuff, mostly because `ObjectParser` implements it. We don't really
*need* the old `Aggregator.Parser` interface any more because it
duplicates `ContextParser` but with the arguments reversed.
This adds support to `AggregationSpec` to declare aggregation parsers
using `ContextParser`. This should integrate cleanly with
`ObjectParser`. It doesn't drop support for `Aggregator.Parser` or
change the plugin intrface at all so it *should* be safe to backport to
7.x. And we can remove `Aggregator.Parser` in a follow up which is only
targeted to 8.0.
We added a new rounding in #50609 that handles offsets to the start and
end of the rounding so that we could support `offset` in the `composite`
aggregation. This starts moving `date_histogram` to that new offset.
* Adds support for geo-bounds filtering in geogrid aggregations (#50002)
It is fairly common to filter the geo point candidates in
geohash_grid and geotile_grid aggregations according to some
viewable bounding box. This change introduces the option of
specifying this filter directly in the tiling aggregation.
This is even more relevant to `geo_shape` where the bounds will restrict
the shape to be within the bounds
this optional `bounds` parameter is parsed in an equivalent fashion to
the bounds specified in the geo_bounding_box query.
* Track Snapshot Version in RepositoryData (#50930)
Add tracking of snapshot versions to RepositoryData to make BwC logic more efficient.
Follow up to #50853
Currently, proxy mode allows a remote cluster connection to be setup by
expecting all open connections to be routed through an intermediate
proxy. The proxy must use some logic to ensure that the connections end
up on the correct remote cluster. One mechanism provided is that the
default distribution TLS implementations will forward the host component
of the configured address to the remote connection using the SNI
extension. This is limiting as it requires that the proxy be configured
in a way that always uses a valid hostname as the proxy address.
Instead, this commit adds an additional setting to allow the server_name
to be configured independently. This allows the proxy address to be
specified as a IP literal, but the server_name specified as an arbitrary
string which still must be a valid hostname. It also decouples the
server_name from the requirement of being a DNS resolvable domain.
Generally speaking, deprecated analysis components in elasticsearch will issue deprecation
warnings when they are first used. However, this means that no warnings are emitted when
indexes are created with deprecated components, and users have to actually index a document
to see warnings. This makes it much harder to see these warnings and act on them at
appropriate times.
This is worse in the case where components throw exceptions on upgrade. In this case, users
will not be aware of a problem until a document is indexed, instead of at index creation time.
This commit adds a new check that pushes an empty string through all user-defined analyzers
and normalizers when an IndexAnalyzers object is built for each index; deprecation warnings
and exceptions are now emitted when indexes are created or opened.
Fixes#42349
* Move metadata storage to Lucene (#50907)
Today we split the on-disk cluster metadata across many files: one file for the metadata of each
index, plus one file for the global metadata and another for the manifest. Most metadata updates
only touch a few of these files, but some must write them all. If a node holds a large number of
indices then it's possible its disks are not fast enough to process a complete metadata update before timing out. In severe cases affecting master-eligible nodes this can prevent an election
from succeeding.
This commit uses Lucene as a metadata storage for the cluster state, and is a squashed version
of the following PRs that were targeting a feature branch:
* Introduce Lucene-based metadata persistence (#48733)
This commit introduces `LucenePersistedState` which master-eligible nodes
can use to persist the cluster metadata in a Lucene index rather than in
many separate files.
Relates #48701
* Remove per-index metadata without assigned shards (#49234)
Today on master-eligible nodes we maintain per-index metadata files for every
index. However, we also keep this metadata in the `LucenePersistedState`, and
only use the per-index metadata files for importing dangling indices. However
there is no point in importing a dangling index without any shard data, so we
do not need to maintain these extra files any more.
This commit removes per-index metadata files from nodes which do not hold any
shards of those indices.
Relates #48701
* Use Lucene exclusively for metadata storage (#50144)
This moves metadata persistence to Lucene for all node types. It also reenables BWC and adds
an interoperability layer for upgrades from prior versions.
This commit disables a number of tests related to dangling indices and command-line tools.
Those will be addressed in follow-ups.
Relates #48701
* Add command-line tool support for Lucene-based metadata storage (#50179)
Adds command-line tool support (unsafe-bootstrap, detach-cluster, repurpose, & shard
commands) for the Lucene-based metadata storage.
Relates #48701
* Use single directory for metadata (#50639)
Earlier PRs for #48701 introduced a separate directory for the cluster state. This is not needed
though, and introduces an additional unnecessary cognitive burden to the users.
Co-Authored-By: David Turner <david.turner@elastic.co>
* Add async dangling indices support (#50642)
Adds support for writing out dangling indices in an asynchronous way. Also provides an option to
avoid writing out dangling indices at all.
Relates #48701
* Fold node metadata into new node storage (#50741)
Moves node metadata to uses the new storage mechanism (see #48701) as the authoritative source.
* Write CS asynchronously on data-only nodes (#50782)
Writes cluster states out asynchronously on data-only nodes. The main reason for writing out
the cluster state at all is so that the data-only nodes can snap into a cluster, that they can do a
bit of bootstrap validation and so that the shard recovery tools work.
Cluster states that are written asynchronously have their voting configuration adapted to a non
existing configuration so that these nodes cannot mistakenly become master even if their node
role is changed back and forth.
Relates #48701
* Remove persistent cluster settings tool (#50694)
Adds the elasticsearch-node remove-settings tool to remove persistent settings from the on
disk cluster state in case where it contains incompatible settings that prevent the cluster from
forming.
Relates #48701
* Make cluster state writer resilient to disk issues (#50805)
Adds handling to make the cluster state writer resilient to disk issues. Relates to #48701
* Omit writing global metadata if no change (#50901)
Uses the same optimization for the new cluster state storage layer as the old one, writing global
metadata only when changed. Avoids writing out the global metadata if none of the persistent
fields changed. Speeds up server:integTest by ~10%.
Relates #48701
* DanglingIndicesIT should ensure node removed first (#50896)
These tests occasionally failed because the deletion was submitted before the
restarting node was removed from the cluster, causing the deletion not to be
fully acked. This commit fixes this by checking the restarting node has been
removed from the cluster.
Co-authored-by: David Turner <david.turner@elastic.co>
* fix tests
Co-authored-by: David Turner <david.turner@elastic.co>
Currently, the connection manager is configured with a default profile
for both the sniff and proxy connection stratgies. This profile
correctly reflects the expected number of connection (6 for sniff, 18
for proxy). This commit removes the proxy strategy usages of the per
connection attempt profile configuration.
Additionally, it refactors other unnecessary code around the connection
manager. The connection manager now can always be built inside the
remote connection.
Currently we reuse the same test connection for all connection attempts
in the testConcurrentConnectsAndDisconnects test. This means that if the
connection fails due to a pre-existing connection, the connection will
be closed impacting the state of all connection attempts. This commit
fixes the test, by returning a unique connection for each attempt.
Fixes#49903.
Follow up to #50692 that starts writing a `min_version` field to
the `RepositoryData` so that pre-7.6 ES versions can not read it
(and potentially corrupt it if they attempt to modify the repo contents)
after the repository moved to the new metadata format.
When deserializing time zones in the Rounding classes we used to include a tiny
normalization step via `DateUtils.of(in.readString())` that was lost in #50609.
Its at least necessary for some tests, e.g. the cause of #50827 is that when
sending the default time zone ZoneOffset.UTC on a stream pre 7.0 we convert it
to a "UTC" string id via `DateUtils.zoneIdToDateTimeZone`. This gets then read
back as a UTC ZoneRegion, which should behave the same but fails the equality
tests in our serialization tests. Reverting to the previous behaviour with an
additional normalization step on 7.x.
Co-authored-by: Nik Everett <nik9000@gmail.com>
Closes#50827
Today we make multiple attempts to corrupt the translog header in
`TranslogHeaderTests#testCurrentHeaderVersion`, but if we are extraordinarily
unlucky then this sequence of corruptions may restore the file to its original
state. This change adjusts the test to only corrupt the file once, which is
certain not to leave the file in its original state.
The test checked queue size and active count, however,
ThreadPoolExecutor pulls out the request from the queue before marking
the worker active, risking that we think all tasks are done when they
are not. Now check on completed-tasks metric instead, which is
guaranteed to be monotonic.
Relates #50769
Today we periodically check the indexing buffer memory every 5 seconds
or after we have used 1/30 of the configured memory. If the total used
memory is over the threshold, then we refresh the "largest" shards. If
refreshing takes longer these intervals (i.e., 5s or 1/30 buffer), then
we continue to enqueue refreshes to these shards. This leads to two
issues:
- The refresh thread pool can be exhausted and other shards can't refresh
- Execute too many refreshes for the "largest" shards
With this change, we only refresh the largest shards if they are not refreshing.
Here we rely on the periodic check to trigger another refresh if needed. We can
harden this by making the ongoing refresh triggers the memory check when
it's completed. I opted out this option in this PR for simplicity.
See: https://discuss.elastic.co/t/write-queue-continue-to-rise/213652/
When a composite aggregation is reduced using the results from an
index that has one of the fields unmapped we were throwing away the
formatter. This is mildly annoying, except in the case of IP addresses
which were coming out as non-utf-8-characters. And tripping assertions.
This carefully preserves the formatter from the working bucket.
Closes#50600
This change fixes the upgrade of index metadata that contain
a custom similarity with options that are not compatible with BM25.
The upgrade doesn't need a real similarity service so we fake one that
resolves all custom similarity to BM25 but this logic fails because the
BM25 provider checks that all options are compatible. This commit removes
the verification step as it is not needed during the upgrade (the verification
is done when the index is restored/opened).
Closes#50763
* Fix Snapshot Shard Status Request Deduplication
The request deduplication didn't actually work for these requests
since they had no `equals` and `hashCode` so the deduplicator wouldn't
actually recognize equal requests.
Replaces the "funny"
`Function<String, ConstructingObjectParser<T, Void>>` with a much
simpler `ConstructingObjectParser<T, String>`. This makes pretty much
all of our object parsers static.
* Fix Snapshot Repository Corruption in Downgrade Scenarios (#50692)
This PR introduces test infrastructure for downgrading a cluster while interacting with a given repository.
It fixes the fact that repository metadata in the new format could be written while there's still older snapshots in the repository that require the old-format metadata to be restorable.
A very large number of recursive calls can cause a stack overflow
exception. This commit forks the recursive calls for non-async
processors. Once forked, each thread will handle at most 10
recursive calls to help keep the stack size and thread count
down to a reasonable size.
Adds support for the `offset` parameter to the `date_histogram` source
of composite aggs. The `offset` parameter is supported by the normal
`date_histogram` aggregation and is useful for folks that need to
measure things from, say, 6am one day to 6am the next day.
This is implemented by creating a new `Rounding` that knows how to
handle offsets and delegates to other rounding implementations. That
implementation doesn't fully implement the `Rounding` contract, namely
`nextRoundingValue`. That method isn't used by composite aggs so I can't
be sure that any implementation that I add will be correct. I propose to
leave it throwing `UnsupportedOperationException` until I need it.
Closes#48757
Previously, the following situation would throw an error:
* A search contains a `collapse` on a particular field.
* The search spans multiple indices, and in one index the field is mapped as a
concrete field, but in another it is a field alias.
The error occurs when we attempt to merge `CollapseTopFieldDocs` across shards.
When merging, we validate that the name of the collapse field is the same across
shards. But the name has already been resolved to the concrete field name, so it
will be different on shards where the field was mapped as an alias vs. shards
where it was a concrete field.
This PR updates the collapse field name in `CollapseTopFieldDocs` to the
original requested field, so that it will always be consistent across shards.
Note that in #32648, we already made a fix around collapsing on field aliases.
However, we didn't test this specific scenario where the field was mapped as an
alias in only one of the indices being searched.
Currently, if an updateable synonym filter is included in a multiplexer filter,
it is not reloaded via the _reload_search_analyzers because the multiplexer
itself doesn't pass on the analysis mode of the filters it contains, so its not
recognized as "updateable" in itself. Instead we can check and merge the
AnalysisMode settings of all filters in the multiplexer and use the resulting
mode (e.g. search-time only) for the multiplexer itself, thus making any synonym
filters contained in it reloadable. This, of course, will also make the
analyzers using the multiplexer be usable at search-time only.
Closes#50554
strict_date_optional_time changes to have optional minute part.
It already allowed optional second and fraction of second part.
This allows parsing 2018-01-01T00+01 , 2018-01-01T00:00+01 , 2018-01-01T00:00:00+01 , 2018-01-01T00:00:00.000+01
It won't allow parsing a timezone without an hour part as this is not allowed by iso8601 spec
closes#49351
ElasticsearchException.guessRootCauses would return wrapper exception if
inner exception was not an ElasticsearchException. Fixed to never return
wrapper exceptions.
At least following APIs change root_cause.0.type as a result:
_update with bad script
_index with bad pipeline
Relates #50417
This PR adds per-field metadata that can be set in the mappings and is later
returned by the field capabilities API. This metadata is completely opaque to
Elasticsearch but may be used by tools that index data in Elasticsearch to
communicate metadata about fields with tools that then search this data. A
typical example that has been requested in the past is the ability to attach
a unit to a numeric field.
In order to not bloat the cluster state, Elasticsearch requires that this
metadata be small:
- keys can't be longer than 20 chars,
- values can only be numbers or strings of no more than 50 chars - no inner
arrays or objects,
- the metadata can't have more than 5 keys in total.
Given that metadata is opaque to Elasticsearch, field capabilities don't try to
do anything smart when merging metadata about multiple indices, the union of
all field metadatas is returned.
Here is how the meta might look like in mappings:
```json
{
"properties": {
"latency": {
"type": "long",
"meta": {
"unit": "ms"
}
}
}
}
```
And then in the field capabilities response:
```json
{
"latency": {
"long": {
"searchable": true,
"aggreggatable": true,
"meta": {
"unit": [ "ms" ]
}
}
}
}
```
When there are no conflicts, values are arrays of size 1, but when there are
conflicts, Elasticsearch includes all unique values in this array, without
giving ways to know which index has which metadata value:
```json
{
"latency": {
"long": {
"searchable": true,
"aggreggatable": true,
"meta": {
"unit": [ "ms", "ns" ]
}
}
}
}
```
Closes#33267
Introduce a new static setting, `gateway.auto_import_dangling_indices`, which prevents dangling indices from being automatically imported. Part of #48366.
In security we currently monitor a set of files for changes:
- config/role_mapping.yml (or alternative configured path)
- config/roles.yml
- config/users
- config/users_roles
This commit prevents unnecessary reloading when the file change actually doesn't change the internal structure.
Backport of: #50207
Co-authored-by: Anton Shuvaev <anton.shuvaev91@gmail.com>
We *very* commonly have object with ctors like:
```
public Foo(String name)
```
And then declare a bunch of setters on the object. Every aggregation
works like this, for example. This change teaches `ObjectParser` how to
build these aggregations all on its own, without any help. This'll make
it much cleaner to parse aggs, and, probably, a bunch of other things.
It'll let us remove lots of wrapping. I've used this new power for the
`avg` aggregation just to prove that it works outside of a unit test.
If an auto-refresh happens, then version_map_memory is reset to 0. By
default, the auto-refresh occurs for every second in the first 30
seconds until search becomes idle.
Closes#50362
In 7.x an internal API used for validating remote cluster does not throw, see #50420 for the
details. This change implements a workaround for remote cluster validation, only for 7.x branches.
fixes#50420
A failure of a recovering shard can race with a new allocation of the shard, and cause the new
allocation to be failed as well. This can result in a shard being marked as initializing in the cluster
state, but not exist on the node anymore.
Closes#50508
This change removes a no longer used method, `fromByte`, in
IndicesOptions. This method was necessary for backwards compatibility
with versions prior to 6.4.0 and was used when talking to those
versions. However, the minimum wire compatibility version has changed
and we no longer use this code.
Backport of #50665
This replaces the hand written xcontent parsers for significance
heristics with `ObjectParser` and parsing named xcontent.
As a happy accident, this was the last user of `ParseFieldRegistry` so
this PR entirely removes that class.
Closes#25519
Currently, we use delayed address resolution in the proxy strategy tests
to allow tests to connect to different addresses. Unfortunately, this
has the potential to introduce races as the address is resolved each
connection attempt. The number of connection attempts can vary based on
when connections are opening and closing. This commit modifies the test
be allowing them to specifically control which address is used.
Related to #50618
This test code fixes a serialization test bug:
https://gradle-enterprise.elastic.co/s/7x2ct6yywkw3o
Rarely stats for the same processor are generated and
the production code then sums up these stats. However
the test code wasn't summing up in that case,
which caused inconsistencies between the actual and expected results.
Closes#50507
Previously, as long as a deleted version value was kept as a tombstone,
another index or delete operation against the same id would leak that
the doc had existed (through seq_no info) or would allow the operation
if the client forged the seq_no. Fixed to disregard info on deleted docs
when doing seq_no based optimistic concurrency check.
Today the `InternalClusterInfoService` collects information on the sizes of
shards of open indices, but does not consider closed indices. This means that
shards of closed indices are treated as having zero size when they are being
allocated. This commit fixes this, obtaining the sizes of all shards.
Relates #33888
* Adds JavaDoc to `AbstractWireTestCase` and
`AbstractWireSerializingTestCase` so it is more obvious you should prefer
the latter if you have a choice
* Moves the `instanceReader` method out of `AbstractWireTestCase` becaue
it is no longer used.
* Marks a bunch of methods final so it is more obvious which classes are
for what.
* Cleans up the side effects of the above.
We have about 800 `ObjectParsers` in Elasticsearch, about 700 of which
are final. This is *probably* the right way to declare them because in
practice we never mutate them after they are built. And we certainly
don't change the static reference. Anyway, this adds `final` to these
parsers.
I found the non-final parsers with this:
```
diff \
<(find . -type f -name '*.java' -exec grep -iHe 'static.*PARSER\s*=' {} \+ | sort) \
<(find . -type f -name '*.java' -exec grep -iHe 'static.*final.*PARSER\s*=' {} \+ | sort) \
2>&1 | grep '^<'
```
A geo box with a top value of Double.NEGATIVE_INFINITY will yield an empty
xContent which translates to a null `geoBoundingBox`. This commit marks the
field as `Nullable` and guards against null when retrieving the `topLeft`
and `bottomRight` fields.
Fixes https://github.com/elastic/elasticsearch/issues/50505
(cherry picked from commit 051718f9b1e1ca957229b01e80d7b79d7e727e14)
Signed-off-by: Andrei Dan <andrei.dan@elastic.co>
This marks a couple of constants in the `DecayFunctionBuilder` as final.
They are written in CONSTANT_CASE and used as constants but not final
which is a little confusing and might lead to sneaky bugs.
FutureUtils.get() would unwrap ElasticsearchWrapperExceptions. This
is trappy, since nearly all usages of FutureUtils.get() expected only to
not have to deal with checked exceptions.
In particular, StepListener builds upon ListenableFuture which uses
FutureUtils.get to be informed about the exception passed to onFailure.
This had the bad consequence of masking away any exception that was an
ElasticsearchWrapperException like RemoteTransportException.
Specifically for recovery, this made CircuitBreakerExceptions happening
on the target node look like they originated from the source node.
The only usage that expected that behaviour was AdapterActionFuture.
The unwrap behaviour has been moved to that class.
Today we log changes to index settings like this:
updating [index.setting.blah] from [A] to [B]
The identity of the index whose settings were updated is conspicuously absent
from this message. This commit addresses this by adding the index name to these
messages.
Fixes#49818.
This intervals source will return terms that are similar to an input term, up to
an edit distance defined by fuzziness, similar to FuzzyQuery.
Closes#49595
The cat nodes API performs a `ClusterStateAction` then a `NodesInfoAction`.
Today it accepts the `?local` parameter and passes this to the
`ClusterStateAction` but this parameter has no effect on the `NodesInfoAction`.
This is surprising, because `GET _cat/nodes?local` looks like it might be a
completely local call but in fact it still depends on every node in the
cluster.
This commit deprecates the `?local` parameter on this API so that it can be
removed in 8.0.
Relates #50088
testCancelRecoveryDuringPhase1 uses a mock of IndexShard, which can't
create retention leases. We need to stub method createRetentionLease.
Relates #50351Closes#50424
The additional change to the original PR (#49657), is that `org.elasticsearch.client.cluster.RemoteConnectionInfo` now parses the initial_connect_timeout field as a string instead of a TimeValue instance.
The reason that this is needed is because that the initial_connect_timeout field in the remote connection api is serialized for human consumption, but not for parsing purposes.
Therefore the HLRC can't parse it correctly (which caused test failures in CI, but not in the PR CI
:( ). The way this field is serialized needs to be changed in the remote connection api, but that is a breaking change. We should wait making this change until rest api versioning is introduced.
Co-Authored-By: j-bean <anton.shuvaev91@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: j-bean <anton.shuvaev91@gmail.com>
Today, the replica allocator uses peer recovery retention leases to
select the best-matched copies when allocating replicas of indices with
soft-deletes. We can employ this mechanism for indices without
soft-deletes because the retaining sequence number of a PRRL is the
persisted global checkpoint (plus one) of that copy. If the primary and
replica have the same retaining sequence number, then we should be able
to perform a noop recovery. The reason is that we must be retaining
translog up to the local checkpoint of the safe commit, which is at most
the global checkpoint of either copy). The only limitation is that we
might not cancel ongoing file-based recoveries with PRRLs for noop
recoveries. We can't make the translog retention policy comply with
PRRLs. We also have this problem with soft-deletes if a PRRL is about to
expire.
Relates #45136
Relates #46959