There is a problematic scenario with x-pack-cluster master-nodes
attempting to install custom metadata into the cluster-state and
broadcasting that to non-x-pack-enabled nodes. Since those nodes
are not aware of this custom metadata, their cluster-state recovery
will be broken. This change ensures that newly-elected x-pack master
nodes bootstrap IndexLifecycleMetadata upon the first request to
leverage its features. This means that PutLifecycleAction is
now responsible for installing the metadata. Since this X-Pack API
can only be called once all nodes in the cluster have x-pack enabled,
it is safe to assume that the cluster will appropriately handle the
cluster-state recovery with the new set of index-lifecycle metadata.
This pull request removes the relationship between the state
of persistent task (as stored in the cluster state) and the status
of the task (as reported by the Task APIs and used in various
places) that have been confusing for some time (#29608).
In order to do that, a new PersistentTaskState interface is added.
This interface represents the persisted state of a persistent task.
The methods used to update the state of persistent tasks are
renamed: updatePersistentStatus() becomes updatePersistentTaskState()
and now takes a PersistentTaskState as a parameter. The
Task.Status type as been changed to PersistentTaskState in all
places were it make sense (in persistent task customs in cluster
state and all other methods that deal with the state of an allocated
persistent task).
This is related to #28898. With the addition of the http nio transport,
we now have two different modules that provide http transports.
Currently most of the http logic lives at the module level. However,
some of this logic can live in server. In particular, some of the
setting of headers, cors, and pipelining. This commit begins this moving
in that direction by introducing lower level abstraction (HttpChannel,
HttpRequest, and HttpResonse) that is implemented by the modules. The
higher level rest request and rest channel work can live entirely in
server.
For 6.3 we renamed the `tar` and `zip` distributions to `oss-tar` and
`oss-zip`. Then we added new `tar` and `zip` distributions that contain
x-pack and are licensed under the Elastic License. Unfortunately we
accidentally generated POM files along side the new `tar` and `zip`
distributions that incorrectly claimed that they were Apache 2 licensed.
Oooops.
This fixes the license on the POMs generated for the `tar` and `zip`
distributions.
This adds a `description` to ML filters in order
to allow users to describe their filters in a human
readable form which is also editable (filter updates
to be added shortly).
Due to a runtime classpath clash, featureAware task was failing on JVMs
higher than 1.8 (since the ASM version from Painless was used instead
which does not recognized Java 9 or 10 bytecode) causing the task to
fail.
This commit excludes the ASM dependency (since it's not used by SQL
itself).
We currently have a specific REST action to retrieve all aliaes, which
uses internally the get index API. This doesn't seem to be required
anymore though as the existing RestGetAliaesAction could as well take
the requests with no indices and aliases specified.
This commit removes the RestGetAllAliasesAction in favour of using
RestGetAliasesAction also for requests that don't specify indices nor
aliases. Similar to #31129.
x-pack/sql depends on lang-painless which depends on ASM 5.1
FeatureAwareCheck needs ASM 6
This is a hack to strip ASM5 from the classpath for FeatureAwareCheck
This is related to #27260. Currently when we queue a write with a
channel we set OP_WRITE and wait until the next selection loop to flush
the write. However, if the channel does not have a pending write, it
is probably ready to flush. This PR implements an optimistic flush logic
that will attempt this flush.
- All rollup pages should be marked as experimental instead of just
the top page
- While the job config docs state which aggregations are allowed, adding
a section which specifically details this in one place is more convenient
for the user
- Add a clarification that the DeleteJob API does not delete the rollup
data, just the rollup job.
* Adds API to assign or change the policy for an index
This api will change `index.lifecycle.name` for all indexes in the
provided pattern as long as they are not currently in the shrink action.
Later changes will loosen this restriction so an index is only reject
if it is currently in the shrink action AND the diff between the old
and new policy includes changes to the shrink action.
Also later changes will detect if the current step is not present in
the new policy and move the index onto the next available step
* Changes name to SetPolicyForIndexAction
Also changes all related Classes and api endpoints
* fixes tests
The parser for the Metric config was directly instantiating
the config object, rather than using the builder. That means it was
bypassing the validation logic built into the builder, and would allow
users to create invalid metric configs (like using unsupported metrics).
The job would later blow up and abort due to bad configs, but this isn't
immediately obvious to the user since the PutJob API succeeded.
This change prevents a datafeed using cross cluster search from starting if the remote cluster
does not have x-pack installed and a sufficient license. The check is made only when starting a
datafeed.
Rules allow users to supply a detector with domain
knowledge that can improve the quality of the results.
The model detects statistically anomalous results but it
has no knowledge of the meaning of the values being modelled.
For example, a detector that performs a population analysis
over IP addresses could benefit from a list of IP addresses
that the user knows to be safe. Then anomalous results for
those IP addresses will not be created and will not affect
the quantiles either.
Another example would be a detector looking for anomalies
in the median value of CPU utilization. A user might want
to inform the detector that any results where the actual
value is less than 5 is not interesting.
This commit introduces a `custom_rules` field to the `Detector`.
A detector may have multiple rules which are combined with `or`.
A rule has 3 fields: `actions`, `scope` and `conditions`.
Actions is a list of what should happen when the rule applies.
The current options include `skip_result` and `skip_model_update`.
The default value for `actions` is the `skip_result` action.
Scope is optional and allows for applying filters on any of the
partition/over/by field. When not defined the rule applies to
all series. The `filter_id` needs to be specified to match the id
of the filter to be used. Optionally, the `filter_type` can be specified
as either `include` (default) or `exclude`. When set to `include`
the rule applies to entities that are in the filter. When set to
`exclude` the rule only applies to entities not in the filter.
There may be zero or more conditions. A condition requires `applies_to`,
`operator` and `value` to be specified. The `applies_to` value can be
either `actual`, `typical` or `diff_from_typical` and it specifies
the numerical value to which the condition applies. The `operator`
(`lt`, `lte`, `gt`, `gte`) and `value` complete the definition.
Conditions are combined with `and` and allow to specify numerical
conditions for when a rule applies.
A rule must either have a scope or one or more conditions. Finally,
a rule with scope and conditions applies when all of them apply.
TransportAction has many variants of execute. One of those variants
executes by returning a future, which is then often blocked on by
calling get(). This commit removes this variant of execute, instead
using a helper method for tests that want to block, or having tests
pass in a PlainActionFuture directly as a listener.
Co-authored-by: Simon Willnauer <simonw@apache.org>
This is in preparation of pushing the new
rules design in the `ml-cpp` side. These
tests will be switched on again after merging
in the new rules implementation.
* Support RequestedAuthnContext
This implements limited support for RequestedAuthnContext by :
- Allowing SP administrators to define a list of authnContextClassRef
to be included in the RequestedAuthnContext of a SAML Authn Request
- Veirifying that the authnContext in the incoming SAML Asertion's
AuthnStatement contains one of the requested authnContextClassRef
- Only EXACT comparison is supported as the semantics of validating
the incoming authnContextClassRef are deployment dependant and
require pre-established rules for MINIMUM, MAXIMUM and BETTER
Also adds necessary AuthnStatement validation as indicated by [1] and
[2]
[1] https://docs.oasis-open.org/security/saml/v2.0/saml-core-2.0-os.pdf
3.4.1.4, line 2250-2253
[2] https://kantarainitiative.github.io/SAMLprofiles/saml2int.html
[SDP-IDP10]