This commit simplifies the throttling logic in InitialSearchPhase and removes some asserts from it. Also, a few formatting changes are applied to its code and surrounding classes.
A publication can succeed and complete before all nodes have applied the
published state and acknowledged it, thanks to the publication timeout; however
we need every node eventually either to apply the published state (or a later
state) or be removed from the cluster. This change introduces the LagDetector
which achieves this liveness property by removing any lagging nodes from the
cluster.
The `wait_for_metadata_version` parameter will instruct the cluster state
api to only return a cluster state until the metadata's version is equal or
greater than the version specified in `wait_for_metadata_version`. If
the specified `wait_for_timeout` has expired then a timed out response
is returned. (a response with no cluster state and wait for timed out flag set to true)
In the case metadata's version is equal or higher than `wait_for_metadata_version`
then the api will immediately return.
This feature is useful to avoid external components from constantly
polling the cluster state to whether somethings have changed in the
cluster state's metadata.
Code that operates on-top of the engine requires all readers returned to be
unwrapped into ElasticsearchDirectoryReader. The special reader
the FrozenEngine uses wasn't wrapped.
Today voting tombstones are stored in CoordinationMetaData as
Set<DiscoveryNode>.
DiscoveryNode is not a lightweight object and have a lot of fields.
It also has toXContent method, but no fromXContent method and the
output of toXContent is not enough to re-create DiscoveryNode
object.
And votingTombstone set should be persisted as a part of MetaData.
On the other hand, the only thing required from the tombstone is the
nodeId.
This PR adds VotingTombstone class for voting tombstones, which
consists of two fields for now - nodeId and nodeName. It could be
extended/shrank in the future if needed.
This PR also resolves TODO's related to the voting tombstones xcontent
story.
Example of CoordinationMetaData.toXContent with voting tombstones:
{
"term": 1,
"last_committed_config": [
"fkwLdOBvXSlgRTBfgNAL",
"tmQiPGHvUxXzPkkCDSJo",
"HhOmtQBZAThpHIGWhxpz",
"qZHWGpoDNPYRNIiqKsDl"
],
"last_accepted_config": [
"lhqacKmriwhHGFZcvqbx",
"MYysmBuROkvJRlDcusyd"
],
"voting_tombstones": [
{
"node_id": "McjbZbRkEz",
"node_name": "pdKIWeNJUO"
},
{
"node_id": "cpXkVibGwo",
"node_name": "UnCvFgdVsc"
},
{
"node_id": "EylRNOztbc",
"node_name": "ohOhkbMWZX"
}
]
}
Today when rolling a transog generation we copy the checkpoint from
`translog.ckp` to `translog-nnnn.ckp` using a simple `Files.copy()` followed by
appropriate `fsync()` calls. The copy operation is not atomic, so if we crash
at the wrong moment we can leave an incomplete checkpoint file on disk. In
practice the checkpoint is so small that it's either empty or fully written.
However, we do not correctly handle the case where it's empty when the node
restarts.
In contrast, in `recoverFromFiles()` we _do_ copy the checkpoint atomically.
This commit extracts the atomic copy operation from `recoverFromFiles()` and
re-uses it in `rollGeneration()`.
This pull request exposes two new methods in the IndexShard and
TransportReplicationAction classes in order to allow transport replication
actions to acquire all index shard operation permits for their execution.
It first adds the acquireAllPrimaryOperationPermits() and the
acquireAllReplicaOperationsPermits() methods to the IndexShard class
which allow to acquire all operations permits on a shard while exposing
a Releasable. It also refactors the TransportReplicationAction class to
expose two protected methods (acquirePrimaryOperationPermit() and
acquireReplicaOperationPermit()) that can be overridden when a transport
replication action requires the acquisition of all permits on primary and/or
replica shard during execution.
Finally, it adds a TransportReplicationAllPermitsAcquisitionTests which
illustrates how a transport replication action can grab all permits before
adding a cluster block in the cluster state, making subsequent operations
that requires a single permit to fail).
Related to elastic #33888
* Forbid negative scores in functon_score query
- Throw an exception when scores are negative in field_value_factor
function
- Throw an exception when scores are negative in script_score
function
Relates to #33309
After #35332 has been merged, we noticed some test failures like #35597
in which one or more replica shards failed to be promoted as primaries
because the primary replica re-synchronization never succeed.
After some digging it appeared that the execution of the resync action was
blocked because of the presence of a global cluster block in the cluster state
(in this case, the "no master" block), making the resync action to fail when
executed on the primary.
Until #35332 such failures never happened because the
TransportResyncReplicationAction is skipping the reroute phase, the only
place where blocks were checked. Now with #35332 blocks are checked
during reroute and also during the execution of the transport replication
action on the primary. After some internal discussion, we decided that the TransportResyncReplicationAction should never be blocked. This action is
part of the replica to primary promotion and makes sure that replicas are in
sync and should not be blocked when the cluster state has no master or
when the index is read only.
This commit changes the TransportResyncReplicationAction to make obvious
that it does not honor blocks. It also adds a simple test that fails if the resync
action is blocked during the primary action execution.
Closes#35597
`testIncompatibleDiffResendsFullState` sometimes makes a 2-node cluster and
then partitions one of the nodes from the leader, which makes the leader stand
down. Then when the partition is removed the cluster re-forms but does so by
sending full cluster states, not diffs, causing the test to fail.
Additionally `testDiffBasedPublishing` sometimes fails if a publication is
delivered out-of-order, wiping out a fresher last-received cluster state with a
less-fresh one. This is fixed here by passing the received cluster state to the
coordinator before recording it as the last-received one, relying on the
coordinator's freshness checks.
Adds an XContent sub parser class that can to wrap another
XContent parser at the beginning of an object and allow skiping
all children in case of the parsing failure. It also uses this
subparser to ignore the rest of the GeoJson shape if the
parsing fails and we need to ignore the geoshape due to the
ignore_malformed flag.
Supersedes #34498Closes#34047
* [GEO] Add support to ShapeBuilders for building Lucene geometry
This commit adds support for building lucene geometry from the ShapeBuilders.
This is needed for integrating LatLonShape as the primary indexing approach
for geo_shape field types. All unit and integration tests are updated to
add randomization for testing both jts/s4j shapes and lucene shapes.
This test is failing sometimes with Zen2 due to the lack of lag detection.
Zen1 does not have this problem as it only considers a join as valid if the
corresponding cluster state update is successfully published and committed
on the joining node.
Today we have a way to atomically persist global MetaData and
IndexMetaData to disk when new ClusterState is received. All other
ClusterState fields are not persisted.
However, there are other parts of ClusterState that should be
persisted, namely:
version
term
lastCommittedConfiguration
lastAcceptedConfiguration
votingTombstones
version is changed frequently, other fields are not. We decided
to group term, lastCommittedConfiguration,
lastAcceptedConfiguration and votingTombstones into
CoordinationMetaData class and make CoordinationMetaData a field
inside MetaData.
MetaData.toXContent and MetaData.fromXContent should take care of
CoordinationMetaData.
version stays as a top level field in ClusterState and will be
persisted as part of Manifest in a follow-up commit.
Also MetaData.isGlobalStateEquals should be extended to include
coordinationMetaData in comparison.
This commit favors exposing getters, such as getTerm directly in
ClusterState to avoid massive code changes.
An example of CoordinationMetaState.toXContent:
{
"term": 1,
"last_committed_config": [
"TiIuBcbBtpuXyDDVHXeD",
"ZIAoVbkjjLPLUuYLaTkw"
],
"last_accepted_config": [
"OwkXbXZNOZPJqccdFHdz",
"LouzsGYwmQzpeQMrboZe",
"fCKGRZdjLTqzXAqPUtGL",
"pLoxshjpJXwDhbgjfYJy",
"SjINLwFIlIEFZCbjrSFo",
"MDkVncJEVyZLJktopWje"
]
}
- Moves disruption tests to Zen2
- Registers a few missing settings
- Removes .put(TestZenDiscovery.USE_ZEN2.getKey(), true) from tests where Zen2 is now enabled
by default through the parent test class
- Moves QuorumGatewayIT back to Zen1, as it is not stable with Zen2 as it currently relies on
dangling indices due to the lack of proper CS persistence, which triggers secondary failures
Queries across multiple fields generate MatchNoDocsQuerys for fields that are
unmapped. In certain situation this can lead to erroneous behaviour,
for example when an umapped field is used in a query_string query across
several fields. If some of the tokens in the query string get eliminated by an
analyzer on the mapped fields, the same token will currently generate
MatchNoDocsQuerys combined into a disjunction, which in turn
leads to no matches in the overall query. Instead we should simply not add
MatchNoDocsQuerys to those disjunctions.
Closes#34708
This parameter in the `query_string` query was deprecated in 6.0 and ignored
since then. Its API methods and remaining uses can be removed in the upcoming
major version.
Relates to #35734
This commit adds a rest endpoint for freezing and unfreezing an index.
Among other cleanups mainly fixing an issue accessing package private APIs
from a plugin that got caught by integration tests this change also adds
documentation for frozen indices.
Note: frozen indices are marked as `beta` and available as a basic feature.
Relates to #34352
Zen2 is now feature-complete enough to run most ESIntegTestCase tests. The changes in this PR
are as follows:
- ClusterSettingsIT is adapted to not be Zen1 specific anymore (it was using Zen1 settings).
- Some of the integration tests require persistent storage of the cluster state, which is not fully
implemented yet (see #33958). These tests keep running with Zen1 for now but will be switched
over as soon as that is fully implemented.
- Some very few integration tests are not running yet with Zen2 for other reasons, depending on
some of the other open points in #32006.
Elasticsearch node is responsible for storing cluster metadata.
There are 2 types of metadata: global metadata and index metadata.
`GatewayMetaState` implements `ClusterStateApplier` and receives all
`ClusterStateChanged` events and is responsible for storing modified
metadata to disk.
When new `ClusterStateChanged` event is received, `GatewayMetaState`
checks if global metadata has changed and if it's the case writes new
global metadata to disk. After that `GatewayMetaState` checks if index
metadata has changed or there are new indices assigned to this node and
if it's the case writes new index metadata to disk. Atomicity of global
metadata and index metadata writes is ensured by `MetaDataStateFormat`
class.
Unfortunately, there is no atomicity when more than one metadata changes
(global and index, or metadata for two indices). And atomicity is
important for Zen2 correctness.
This commit adds atomicity by adding a notion of manifest file,
represented by `MetaState` class. `MetaState` contains pointers to
current metadata.
More precisely, it stores global state generation as long and map from
`Index` to index metadata generation as long. Atomicity of writes for
manifest file is ensured by `MetaStateFormat` class.
The algorithm of writing changes to the disk would be the following:
1. Write global metadata state file to disk and remember
it's generation.
2. For each new/changed index write state file to disk and remember
it's generation. For each not-changed index use generation from
previous manifest file. If index is removed or this node is no longer
responsible for this index - forget about the index.
3. Create `MetaState` object using previously remembered generations and
write it to disk.
4. Remove old state files for global metadata, indices metadata and
manifest.
Additonally new implementation relies on enhanced `MetaDataStateFormat`
failure semantics, `applyClusterState` throws IOException, whose
descendant `WriteStateException` could be (and should be in Zen2)
explicitly handled.
The list of official plugins accidentally included `qa` projects like,
well, `qa` and `amazon-ec2`. This changes the mechanism that we use to
build the list and adds a test to catch this.
Closes#35623
Randomize test assertion and test set size instead of asserting on an
exhaustive list of dates with fixed test set size. Also refactor common
objects used to avoid recreating them, avoid date to string conversion
and reduce duplicate test code
Closes#33181
Removed extending of AbstractComponent and changed logger usage to
explicit declaration. Abstract classes still have logger
declaration using this.getClass() in order to show implementation class
name in its logs.
See #34488
* Deprecate types in count requests.
* Move RestCountAction to the 'search' package.
* Deprecate types in multi search requests.
* Add tests for types deprecation in the _search endpoint.
This change fixes#35351. Users were no longer able to return types of numbers other than doubles for bucket aggregation scripts. This change reverts to the previous behavior of being able to return any type of number and having it converted to a double outside of the script.
This inserts newlines in order to reduce line lengths in the
o.e.action.admin.cluster package to 140 characters or less. This
also remves the checkstyle suppressions for affected files.
Relates #34884, #34923
The javadocs of the CharSequence interface state that not all of its
implementations define the general contracts of the Object#equals and
Object#hashCode methods, therefore it is dangerous to use different CharSequence
instances as elements in a set or as keys in a map. While we probably mostly use
Strings in sets, in some places this is not enforced. To prevent this from
accidentally happening, this change replaces all occurances of Set<CharSequence>
which are currently mostly used in the completion suggester code with the more
concrete usage of Set<String>.
This changes the test to not use a `CountDownlatch`, instead adding an assertion
for the final logging message and waiting until the `MockAppender` has seen it
before proceeding.
Resolves#23739
Today, the bootstrapping of a Zen2 cluster is driven externally, requiring
something else to wait for discovery to converge and then to inject the initial
configuration. This is hard to use in some situations, such as REST tests.
This change introduces the `ClusterBootstrapService` which brings the bootstrap
retry logic within each node and allows it to be controlled via an (unsafe)
node setting.
The `composite` aggregation can optimize its execution when the query
is a `match_all` or a `range` over the field that is used in the first source
of the aggregation. However we only check for instances of `PointRangeQuery` whereas
the range query builder creates an `IndexOrDocValuesQuery`. This means that
today the optimization does not apply to `range` query even if the code could handle it.
This change fixes this issue by extracting the index query inside `IndexOrDocValuesQuery`.
In #23175 we renamed `ThreadPool$EstimatedTimeThread` to
`ThreadPool$CachedTimeThread` but did not update the corresponding entry in
`HotThreads#isIdleThread`. This commit addresses this.
This pull request replaces some blocks of code that must be run once
and that are currently based on AtomicBoolean by the convient RunOnce
class added in #35489.
Today, the TransportReplicationAction checks the global level blocks and
the index level blocks before routing the operation to the primary, in the
ReroutePhase, and it happens at the very beginning of the transport
replication action execution. For the upcoming rework of the Close Index
API and in order to deal with primary relocation, we'll need to also check
for blocks before executing the operation on the primary (while holding a
permit) but before routing to the new primary.
This pull request change the AsyncPrimaryAction so that it checks for
replication action's blocks before executing the operation locally or before
routing the primary action to the newly primary shard. The check is done
while holding a PrimaryShardReference.
Related to #33888
The way ScoreAccessor implements `compareTo()` is problematic because it doesn't
completely follow the Comparable contract, specificaly symmetry (if x is a
ScoreAccessor and y any Number then x.comparTo(y) works, but y.compareTo(x)
generally does not even compile). Fortunately we don't seem to use the fact that
ScoreAccessor is a Comparable anywhere, so we can simply remove it.
Today the `PeerFinder` probes each address it obtains, identifies the node to
which it just connected, and then returns all such nodes. However, this can
lead to duplicates if a node manages to connect to another node via two
distinct addresses. This causes bootstrapping to fail since
`BootstrapConfiguration#resolve` forbids duplicates.
This change alters the behaviour of the `PeerFinder` to remove duplicates in
this situation.
If shutting down half or more of the master-eligible nodes, their votes must
first be explicitly withdrawn to ensure that the cluster doesn't lose its
quorum. This works via _voting tombstones_, stored in the cluster state, which
tell the reconfigurator to remove nodes from the voting configuration.
This change introduces voting tombstones to the cluster state, together with
transport APIs for adding and removing them, and makes use of these APIs in
`InternalTestCluster` to support tests which remove at least half of the
master-eligible nodes at once (e.g. shrinking from two master-eligible nodes to
one).
AbstractComponent was deprecated in #35140 and is looking like it will be
removed at some point by #34888. Today all it does is provide a logger. This
change removes the usages of AbstractComponent that live solely in the zen2
feature branch to avoid some future merge pain, and replaces it where necessary
with some directly-created loggers.
This change adds a special caching reader that caches all relevant
values for a range query to rewrite correctly in a can_match phase
without actually opening the underlying directory reader. This
allows frozen indices to be filtered with can_match and in-turn
searched with wildcards in a efficient way since it allows us to
exclude shards that won't match based on their date-ranges without
opening their directory readers.
Relates to #34352
Depends on #34357
The ParsedReverseNested implementation should implement the ReverseNested
interface and not the Nested interface. Although this is an empty marker
interface it is confusing and can lead to casting errors. Also adding a test to
check that both ParsedNested and ParsedReverseNested implement the correct
interface.
Closes#35449
Some very old ancient versions of Linux do not have /etc/os-release. For
example, old Red Hat-like OS. This commit adds a fallback for handling
pretty name for these OS.
This is a follow up to #35357. That commit failed to register the new
cluster.remote.cluster_name.transport.compress setting with
`ClusterSettings`. This commit fixes that.
Some OS (e.g., Oracle Linux Server 6.9) have a trailing space at the end
of the PRETTY_NAME line in /etc/os-release. This commit addresses this
by accounting for this trailing space when extracting the pretty name.
Implements serialization compatibility between Zen1 and Zen2 transport action, allowing a Zen1 node to join a fully formed Zen2 cluster and vice-versa.
The MockTcpTransport is not friendly in regards to memory usage. It must
allocate multiple byte arrays for every message. This improves the
memory situation by failing fast if the message is improperly formatted.
Additionally, it uses reusable big arrays for at least half of the
allocated byte arrays.
This change adds a logger for the query and fetch phases that prints all requests
before their execution at the trace level. This will help debugging cases where an issue
occurs during the execution since only completed queries are logged by the slow logs.
This is related to #34483. It introduces a namespaced setting for
compression that allows users to configure compression on a per remote
cluster basis. The transport.tcp.compress remains as a fallback
setting. If transport.tcp.compress is set to true, then all requests
and responses are compressed. If it is set to false, only requests to
clusters based on the cluster.remote.cluster_name.transport.compress
setting are compressed. However, after this change regardless of any
local settings, responses will be compressed if the request that is
received was compressed.
Today our OS information returned in node stats only returns a
high-level name of the OS (e.g., "Linux"). Yet, for some uses this is
too high-level and knowing at a finer level of granularity the
underlying OS can be useful. This commit extracts the pretty name on
Linux from /etc/os-release. This pretty name usually includes the Linux
vendor and the Linux vendor version number (e.g., Fedora 28).
Enables diff-based publishing, which is an optimization where only the changing parts of the cluster
state are published to the nodes in the cluster, falling back to full cluster state publishing if the
receiver does not have the previous cluster state.
- Introduces a transport API for bootstrapping a Zen2 cluster
- Introduces a transport API for requesting the set of nodes that a
master-eligible node has discovered and for waiting until this comprises the
expected number of nodes.
- Alters ESIntegTestCase to use these APIs when forming a cluster, rather than
injecting the initial configuration directly.
Currently we introduced a hard limit of 1024 to the number of fields a query can
be expanded to in #26541. Instead of using a hard limit, we should make this
configurable. This change removes the hard limit check and uses the existing
`max_clause_count` setting instead.
Closes#34778
Currently when aggregating on an unmapped date field (e.g. using a
date_histogram) we don't preserve the aggregations `format` setting but instead
use the default format. This can lead to loosing the aggregations `format` when
aggregating over several indices where some of them contain unmapped date fields
and are encountered first in the reduce phase.
Related to #31760
Today the `composite` aggregation throws an error if a source targets an
unmapped field and `missing_bucket` is set to false. Documents without a
value for a source cannot produce any bucket if `missing_bucket` is not
activated so the error is a shortcut to say that the response will be empty.
However this is not consistent with the `terms` aggregation which accepts
unmapped field by default even if the response is also guaranteed to be empty.
This commit removes this restriction, if a source contains an unmapped field
we now return an empty response (no buckets).
Closes#35317
The current implementation of asyncBlockOperations() can be used to
execute some code once all indexing operations permits have been acquired,
then releases all permits immediately after the code execution. This
immediate release is not suitable for treatments that need to keep all
permits over multiple execution steps.
This commit adds a new asyncBlockOperations() that exposes a Releasable,
making it possible to acquire all permits and only release them all
when needed by closing the Releasable. The existing blockOperations()
method has been modified to delegate permit acquisition/releasing to this new
method.
Relates to #33888
This commit uses the index settings version so that a follower can
replicate index settings changes as needed from the leader.
Co-authored-by: Martijn van Groningen <martijn.v.groningen@gmail.com>
The lookup vars under params (namely _fields and _source) were
inadvertently removed when scoring scripts were converted to using
script contexts. This commit adds them back, along with deprecation
warnings for those that should not be used.
A CCR test failure shows that the approach in #34474 is flawed.
Restoring the LocalCheckpointTracker from an index commit can cause both
FollowingEngine and InternalEngine to incorrectly ignore some deletes.
Here is a small scenario illustrating the problem:
1. Delete doc with seq=1 => engine will add a delete tombstone to Lucene
2. Flush a commit consisting of only the delete tombstone
3. Index doc with seq=0 => engine will add that doc to Lucene but soft-deleted
4. Restart an engine with the commit (step 2); the engine will fill its
LocalCheckpointTracker with the delete tombstone in the commit
5. Replay the local translog in reverse order: index#0 then delete#1
6. When process index#0, an engine will add it into Lucene as a live doc
and advance the local checkpoint to 1 (seq#1 was restored from the
commit - step 4).
7. When process delete#1, an engine will skip it because seq_no=1 is
less than or equal to the local checkpoint.
We should have zero document after recovering from translog, but here we
have one.
Since all operations after the local checkpoint of the safe commit are
retained, we should find them if the look-up considers also soft-deleted
documents. This PR fills the disparity between the version map and the
local checkpoint tracker by taking soft-deleted documents into account
while resolving strategy for engine operations.
Relates #34474
Relates #33656
Today when a percolator query contains a date range then the query
analyzer extracts that range, so that at search time the `percolate` query
can exclude percolator queries efficiently that are never going to match.
The problem is that if 'now' is used it is evaluated at index time.
So the idea is to rewrite date ranges with 'now' to a match all query,
so that the query analyzer can't extract it and the `percolate` query
is then able to evaluate 'now' at query time.
This change adds a `frozen` engine that allows lazily open a directory reader
on a read-only shard. The engine wraps general purpose searchers in a LazyDirectoryReader
that also allows to release and reset the underlying index readers after any and before
secondary search phases.
Relates to #34352
Today we only apply `ingore_throttled` to expansions from wildcards,
date math expressions and aliases. Yet, this is tricky since we might
have resolved certain expressions in pre-filter steps like security.
It's more consistent to apply this logic to all expressions including
concrete indices.
Relates to #34354
With this change, `Version` no longer carries information about the qualifier,
we still need a way to show the "display version" that does have both
qualifier and snapshot. This is now stored by the build and red from `META-INF`.
This is related to #29023. Additionally at other points we have
discussed a preference for removing the need to unnecessarily block
threads for opening new node connections. This commit lays the groudwork
for this by opening connections asynchronously at the transport level.
We still block, however, this work will make it possible to eventually
remove all blocking on new connections out of the TransportService
and Transport.
We've decided that the bulk, delete, get, index, update, and search APIs should not
contain this request parameter, and we will instead accept both typed and typeless calls.
Today we allow the user to set the minimum size of a voting configuration. On
reflection we would rather this was simply '3' where possible, and we can use
the retirement API to control the removal of nodes more explicitly.
This change replaces the old reconfigurator setting with a new one,
`cluster.auto_shrink_voting_configuration`, which determines whether
Elasticsearch should automatically remove nodes from the voting configuration
or not.
We have seen an improvement when we bumped the timeout from 1s to 5s, but there are still a few failures for this tests. With this commit we bump the timeout to 10 seconds hoping it will stop all the failures.
Today if a wildcard, date-math expression or alias expands/resolves
to an index that is search-throttled we still search it. This is likely
not the desired behavior since it can unexpectedly slow down searches
significantly.
This change adds a new indices option that allows `search`, `count`
and `msearch` to ignore throttled indices by default. Users can
force expansion to throttled indices by using `ignore_throttled=true`
on the rest request to expand also to throttled indices.
Relates to #34352
This test has a bug that got introduced during the refactoring of #32442. With 2 concurrent term increments,
we can only assert under the operation permit that we are in the correct operation term, not that there is
not already another term bump pending.
Closes#34862
If the random query string is "now" by accident _and_ we are also not setting
some field names to use explicitely, then we can hit the "mapped_date" field
from default test setup. This correctly leads to the query being was marked as
not cacheable, but we assume and check so later. This change fixes this rare
edge case by making sure we don't hit the "date" field in this rare cases.
Closes#35183
When the engine is asked for historical operations, we check if some of the requested operations
are not yet refreshed and if so we refresh before returning the operations. The refresh check is
based on capturing the local checkpoint before each refresh and comparing that value to the one
requested when `newChangesSnapshot` was called. If the requested range is above the captured
local checkpoint we issue a refresh.
This can currently cause unneeded extra refreshes if the method is called concurrently which may cause unwanted degradation in indexing performance. This is especially relevant for CCR where we always ask for a range below the global checkpoint. That range is guaranteed to be below the local
checkpoint of the shard and one refresh is enough to serve multiple changes requests.
This commit fixes this by introducing a dedicated mutex to make sure the test for whether a refresh
is needed actually wait for concurrents for concurrent refreshes that were caused by another
change refresh.
Note that this is not a big change in semantics as refreshes are serialized by lucene anyway. I also
opted not to keep the synchronization to the changes snapshot request only even if in theory we
can apply it to all refreshes, not matter where they come from.
This changes the current script.max_size_in_bytes to be dynamic so it can be
set through the cluster settings API. This setting is also applied to inline scripts
in the compile method of ScriptService to prevent excessively long inline
scripts from being compiled. The script length limit is removed from Painless as
this is no longer necessary with the protection in compile.
Currently we create a new netty event loop group for client connections
and all server profiles. Each new group creates new threads for io
processing. This means 2 * num of processors new threads for each group.
A single group should be able to handle all io processing (for the
transports). This also brings the netty module inline with what we do
for nio.
Additionally, this PR renames the worker threads to be the same for
netty and nio.
Currently, we assume that rollback always happens in the test
testRestoreLocalHistoryFromTranslogOnPromotion. However, if the global
checkpoint equals max_seq_no, we won't rollback. This causes the
max_seq_no_of_updates assertion failed because max_seq_no_of_updates
won't be advanced to the global checkpoint. With this commit, we assert
max_seq_no_of_updates in two different paths.
Today we always allocate a full buffer (1024 elements) in a
LuceneChangesSnapshot even though the requesting size is smaller.
With this change, we will use the requesting size as the buffer size if
it's smaller than the default batch size; otherwise uses the default
batch size.
With this commit we differentiate between permanent circuit breaking
exceptions (which require intervention from an operator and should not
be automatically retried) and transient ones (which may heal themselves
eventually and should be retried). Furthermore, the parent circuit
breaker will categorize a circuit breaking exception as either transient
or permanent based on the categorization of memory usage of its child
circuit breakers.
Closes#31986
Relates #34460
Stop passing `Settings` to `AbstractComponent`'s ctor. This allows us to
stop passing around `Settings` in a *ton* of places. While this change
touches many files, it touches them all in fairly small, mechanical
ways, doing a few things per file:
1. Drop the `super(settings);` line on everything that extends
`AbstractComponent`.
2. Drop the `settings` argument to the ctor if it is no longer used.
3. If the file doesn't use `logger` then drop `extends
AbstractComponent` from it.
4. Clean up all compilation failure caused by the `settings` removal
and drop any now unused `settings` isntances and method arguments.
I've intentionally *not* removed the `settings` argument from a few
files:
1. TransportAction
2. AbstractLifecycleComponent
3. BaseRestHandler
These files don't *need* `settings` either, but this change is large
enough as is.
Relates to #34488
* NETWORKING: MockTransportService Wait for Close
* Make `MockTransportService` wait `30s` for close listeners to run before failing the assertion
* Closes#34990
When we connect to remote clusters, there may be a few more routers/firewalls in-between compared to when we connect to nodes in the same cluster. We've experienced cases where firewalls drop connections completely and keep-alives seem not to be enough, or they are not properly configured. With this commit we allow to enable application-level pings specifically from CCS nodes to the selected remote nodes through the new setting `cluster.remote.${clusterAlias}.transport.ping_schedule`. The new setting is similar `transport.ping_schedule` but it does not affect intra-cluster communication, pings are only sent to specific remote cluster when specifically enabled, as they are disabled by default.
Relates to #34405
* DISCOVERY: Cleanup AbstractDisruptionTestCase
* Make the internal test cluster manage minimum master nodes where we used the default of (nodes / 2 + 1) before
* Remove use of the `NodeConfigurationSource` indirection
* Relates #33675
Drops the `Settings` member from `AbstractComponent`, moving it from the
base class on to the classes that use it. For the most part this is a
mechanical change that doesn't drop `Settings` accesses. The one
exception to this is naming threads where it switches from an invocation
that passes `Settings` and extracts the node name to one that explicitly
passes the node name.
This change doesn't drop the `Settings` argument from
`AbstractComponent`'s ctor because this change is big enough as is.
We'll do that in a follow up change.