CCS with remote indices only does not require any privileges on the local cluster.
This PR ensures that search with scroll follow the permission model.
This commit ensures that the final order of the terms aggregations
is registered correctly after the final reduce.
This bug was introduced in #62028 which is not released yet so this PR is marked
as a non-issue.
This issue was discovered when running a terms aggregation under an auto-date
histogram. In such a case, the auto-date histogram may run multiple final reduce
to merge buckets together. This change makes sure that running multiple final reduces
doesn't create duplicates but it doesn't fix the fact that the final reduce may prune
the list of terms prematurely. This other bug is tracked separately in #62731.
This assertion does not always hold because there can be a race between
`putReaderContext` and `afterIndexRemoved` when an index is deleted.
Closes#62624
This is a follow up of #62480 where we are oversizing one array when initialising. In addition it prevents a possible CircuitBreaker leak during initialisation.
Make serializing `RepositoryData` a little faster and split up/document the code for it a little
as well given how massive this method has gotten at this point.
As part of the conversion, adds the ability to customize merge validation - in this case, we
allow an update to the constant value if it is currently set to null, but refuse further
updates once it has been set once.
This commit also converts ParametrizedMapperTests to use MapperServiceTestCase.
If HyperLogLogPlusPlus failed during construction, it would
not release already allocated resources, causing the request
circuit breaker to not be adjusted down.
Closes#62439
This PR adds a new 'version' field type that allows indexing string values
representing software versions similar to the ones defined in the Semantic
Versioning definition (semver.org). The field behaves very similar to a
'keyword' field but allows efficient sorting and range queries that take into
accound the special ordering needed for version strings. For example, the main
version parts are sorted numerically (ie 2.0.0 < 11.0.0) whereas this wouldn't
be possible with 'keyword' fields today.
Valid version values are similar to the Semantic Versioning definition, with the
notable exception that in addition to the "main" version consiting of
major.minor.patch, we allow less or more than three numeric identifiers, i.e.
"1.2" or "1.4.6.123.12" are treated as valid too.
Relates to #48878
The `standard` tokenfilter was removed by #33310, and should have been
unuseable in any indexes created since 7.0. However, a cacheing bug fixed
by #51092 meant that it was still possible in certain circumstances to create
indexes referencing the standard filter in versions up to 7.5.2. Our checks
in AnalysisModule still refer to 7.0.0, however, meaning that a cluster that
contains one of these rogue indexes cannot be upgraded.
This commit adjusts the AnalysisModule checks so that we only refuse to
build a mapping referring to standard filter if the index created version is
7.6 or later.
Fixes#62644
In the context of of a recurring test failure tracked by #32827, we added trace logging and an extra cache key renderer argument to IndicesRequestCache#getOrCompute (see #39475 and #34180).
We addressed the issue with #54071, but the extra argument was left behind, with a NORELEASE comment saying it should be removed.
With this commit, we remove the extra cache key rendered argument and the corresponding log lines which are not so useful without it.
Closes#55837
This commit adds the `index.routing.allocation.prefer._tier` setting to the
`DataTierAllocationDecider`. This special-purpose allocation setting lets a user specify a
preference-based list of tiers for an index to be assigned to. For example, if the setting were set
to:
```
"index.routing.allocation.prefer._tier": "data_hot,data_warm,data_content"
```
If the cluster contains any nodes with the `data_hot` role, the decider will only allow them to be
allocated on the `data_hot` node(s). If there are no `data_hot` nodes, but there are `data_warm` and
`data_content` nodes, then the index will be allowed to be allocated on `data_warm` nodes.
This allows us to specify an index's preference for tier(s) without causing the index to be
unassigned if no nodes of a preferred tier are available.
Subsequent work will change the ILM migration to make additional use of this setting.
Relates to #60848
Backports #61590 to 7.x
So far we don't allow metadata fields in the document _source. However, in the case of the _doc_count field mapper (#58339) we want to be able to set
This PR adds a method to the metadata field parsers that exposes if the field can be included in the document source or not.
This way each metadata field can configure if it can be included in the document _source
We removed index-time boosting back in 5x, and we no longer document the 'boost'
parameter on any of our mapping types. However, it is still possible to define an
index-time boost on a field mapper for a surprisingly large number of field types, and
they even have an effect (sometimes, on some queries).
As a first step in finally removing all traces of index time boosting, this comment emits
a deprecation warning whenever a boost parameter is found on a mapping definition.
In #62357 we introduced an additional optimization that allows us to skip the
most of the fetch phase early if no results are found. This change caused
some cancellation test failures that were relying on definitive cancellation
during the fetch phase. This commit adds an additional quick cancellation
check at the very beginning of the fetch phase to make cancellation process
more deterministic.
Fixes#62530
Changes the way we collecting ordinals in the Cardinality aggregation from Lucene FixedBitSet to BitArray. The benefit is that BitArray is tracked by our Circuit breakers so it is safer.
Today when a snapshot restore is aborted (for example when the index is
explicitly deleted) while the restoration of the files from the repository has
already started the file restores are not interrupted. It means that Elasticsearch
will continue to read the files from the repository and will continue to write
them to disk until all files are restored; the store will then be closed and
files will be deleted from disk at some point but this can take a while. This
will also take some slots in the SNAPSHOT thread pool too. The Recovery
API won't show any files actively being recovered, the only notable
indicator would be the active threads in the SNAPSHOT thread pool.
This commit adds a check before reading a file to restore and before
writing bytes on disk so that a closing store can be detected more
quickly and the file recovery process aborted. This way the file
restores just stops and for most of the repository implementations
it means that no more bytes are read (see #62370 for S3), finishing
threads in the SNAPSHOT thread pool more quickly too.
This test (in-part) verifies that snapshot creation is not
retried on master fail-over once a snaphot has been started already.
Unless we wait for the snapshot creation to show up in the cluster
state before failing the master node though, we could run into a
race where the snapshot wasn't yet in the cluster state and a retry goes through
successfully.
a dateformatter can be created with a list of parsers which are iterated
during parsing and the first one that passes will return a parsed date.
DateMathParser should do the same, when created based on a list of
non-rounding parsers it should also iterate over all of them - it is at
the moment only taking first element
closing #62207
Removes the unnecessary `synchronized` introduced in #62433 and adjusts
the others to return `this` not `null` as required by the parent
method's Javadocs.
Backport of #62527 to 7.x branch.
This commit adds validation that prohibits the creation of regular indices
in the namespace of templates with data streams enabled.
It shouldn't be possible to create ordinary indices when the name of the index
matches with a composable index template that enables data streams. Auto creation
has logic that creates data streams instead of regular indices. However validation
logic for the create index api was missing.
Faster sequential access for stored fields
Spinoff of #61806
Today retrieving stored fields at search time is optimized for random access.
So we make no effort to keep state in order to not decompress the same data
multiple times because two documents might be in the same compressed block.
This strategy is acceptable when retrieving a top N sorted by score since
there is no guarantee that documents will be on the same block.
However, we have some use cases where the document to retrieve might be
completely sequential:
Scrolls or normal search sorted by document id.
Queries on Runtime fields that extract from _source.
This commit exposes a sequential stored fields reader in the
custom leaf reader that we use at search time.
That allows to leverage the merge instances of stored fields readers that
are optimized for sequential access.
This change focuses on the fetch phase for now and leverages the merge instances
for stored fields only if all documents to retrieve are adjacent.
Applying the same logic in the source lookup of runtime fields should
be trivial but will be done in a follow up.
The speedup on queries sorted by doc id is significant.
I played with the scroll task of the http_logs rally track
on my laptop and had the following result:
| Metric | Task | Baseline | Contender | Diff | Unit |
|--------------------------------------------------------------:|-------:|------------:|------------:|---------:|--------:|
| Total Young Gen GC | | 0.199 | 0.231 | 0.032 | s |
| Total Old Gen GC | | 0 | 0 | 0 | s |
| Store size | | 17.9704 | 17.9704 | 0 | GB |
| Translog size | | 2.04891e-06 | 2.04891e-06 | 0 | GB |
| Heap used for segments | | 0.820332 | 0.820332 | 0 | MB |
| Heap used for doc values | | 0.113979 | 0.113979 | 0 | MB |
| Heap used for terms | | 0.37973 | 0.37973 | 0 | MB |
| Heap used for norms | | 0.03302 | 0.03302 | 0 | MB |
| Heap used for points | | 0 | 0 | 0 | MB |
| Heap used for stored fields | | 0.293602 | 0.293602 | 0 | MB |
| Segment count | | 541 | 541 | 0 | |
| Min Throughput | scroll | 12.7872 | 12.8747 | 0.08758 | pages/s |
| Median Throughput | scroll | 12.9679 | 13.0556 | 0.08776 | pages/s |
| Max Throughput | scroll | 13.4001 | 13.5705 | 0.17046 | pages/s |
| 50th percentile latency | scroll | 524.966 | 251.396 | -273.57 | ms |
| 90th percentile latency | scroll | 577.593 | 271.066 | -306.527 | ms |
| 100th percentile latency | scroll | 664.73 | 272.734 | -391.997 | ms |
| 50th percentile service time | scroll | 522.387 | 248.776 | -273.612 | ms |
| 90th percentile service time | scroll | 573.118 | 267.79 | -305.328 | ms |
| 100th percentile service time | scroll | 660.642 | 268.963 | -391.678 | ms |
| error rate | scroll | 0 | 0 | 0 | % |
Closes#62024
FetchSubPhase#getProcessor currently takes a SearchLookup parameter. This
however is only needed by a couple of subphases, and will almost certainly change in
future as we want to simplify how fetch phases retrieve values for individual hits.
To future-proof against further signature changes, this commit moves the SearchLookup
reference into FetchContext instead.
Currently we throw an error if stored fields are disabled, but hit version metadata is
requested on a search. This doesn't make much sense, as the version information
is stored in docvalues and so has no connection with stored fields.
This commit removes the link between the two, allowing version metadata to be loaded
even when stored fields are disabled in a request.
Fixes#62456
In #57666 we changed when null_value was parsed for ip and date fields. Previously,
the null value was stored as a string, and parsed into a date or InetAddress whenever
a document containing a null value was encountered. Now, the values are parsed when
the mappings are built, which means that bad values are detected up front; if you try and
add a mapping with a badly-parsed ip or date for a null_value, the mapping will be
rejected.
This causes problems for upgrades in the case when you have a badly-formed null_value
in a pre-7.9 cluster. This commit fixes the upgrade case by changing the logic to only
logging a warning on the badly formed value, replicating the earlier behaviour.
Fixes#62363
We currently pass a SearchContext around to share configuration among
FetchSubPhases. With the introduction of runtime fields, it would be useful
to start storing some state on this context to be shared between different
subphases (for example, stored fields or search lookups can be loaded lazily
but referred to by many different subphases). However, SearchContext is a
very large and unwieldy class, and adding more methods or state here feels
like a bridge too far.
This commit introduces a new FetchContext class that exposes only those
methods on SearchContext that are required for fetch phases. This reduces
the API surface area for fetch phases considerably, and should give us some
leeway to add further state.
The CodecReader wrapper we use to remove the `_recovery_source` field
doesn't override `StoredFieldsreader#getMergeInstance`, which has the
undesired side-effect of preventing the wrapped stored fields reader
from optimizing merging.
`VersionConflictEngineException` is thrown on the hot path for updates,
but stack traces are expensive to compute and transport and rarely
useful for this kind of exception. This commit avoids computing the
stack trace for these exceptions.
This new snapshot contains the following JIRAs that we're interested in:
- [LUCENE-9525](https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/LUCENE-9525)
Better handling of small documents. This should improve retrieval times
when documents are less than ~1kB.
- [LUCENE-9510](https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/LUCENE-9510)
Faster flushes when index sorting is enabled by not compressing the
temporary files that store stored fields and term vectors.
Today we only emit `DEBUG` logs if the source disconnects from the
target during a recovery. This deserves to be noisier by default since
it should be rare and may help users identify other problems with their
network or with their shard movements.
This commit promotes this message to `INFO`. There's no need for `WARN`
since these days we will normally resume the recovery where it left off.
This commit makes the LocalNodeMasterListener interface extend the
ClusterStateListener interface and use a default implementation for
detecting whether the local node master status changed.
Backport of #62422
This implements the `fields` API in `_search` for runtime fields using
doc values. Most of that implementation is stolen from the
`docvalue_fields` fetch sub-phase, just moved into the same API that the
`fields` API uses. At this point the `docvalue_fields` fetch phase looks
like a special case of the `fields` API.
While I was at it I moved the "which doc values sub-implementation
should I use for fetching?" question from a bunch of `instanceof`s to a
method on `LeafFieldData` so we can be much more flexible with what is
returned and we're not forced to extend certain classes just to make the
fetch phase happy.
Relates to #59332
This speeds up `StreamOutput#writeVInt` quite a bit which is nice
because it is *very* commonly called when serializing aggregations. Well,
when serializing anything. All "collections" serialize their size as a
vint. Anyway, I was examining the serialization speeds of `StringTerms`
and this saves about 30% of the write time for that. I expect it'll be
useful other places.
This adds two extra bits of info to the profiler:
1. Count of the number of different types of collectors. This lets us figure
out if we're using the optimization for segment ordinals. It adds a few
more similar counters just for good measure.
2. Profiles the `getLeafCollector` and `postCollection` methods. These are
non-trivial for some aggregations, like cardinality.
We never see this exception in the logs even though it's pretty severe.
All we might see is an exception about a transport message not having been read fully
from the logic that follows this code.
Technically we should probably bubble up the exception but that's a bigger change
and needs some carefully reasoning, this change for the time being at least simplifies
tracking down deserialization issues in responses.
FastVectorHighlighter uses the top-level reader to rewrite queries against, which
it gets via an IndexSearcher field on HitContext. However, we can already access
this top-level reader via HitContext's existing LeafReaderContext field.
This commit removes the unnecessary field and constructor parameter, and
changes the implementation of topLevelReader to go via ReaderUtils and
the leaf reader context.