[[breaking_20_java_api_changes]] === Java API changes ==== Transport API construction The `TransportClient` construction code has changed, it now uses the builder pattern. Instead of: [source,java] -------------------------------------------------- Settings settings = Settings.settingsBuilder() .put("cluster.name", "myClusterName").build(); Client client = new TransportClient(settings); -------------------------------------------------- Use the following: [source,java] -------------------------------------------------- Settings settings = Settings.settingsBuilder() .put("cluster.name", "myClusterName").build(); Client client = TransportClient.builder().settings(settings).build(); -------------------------------------------------- The transport client also no longer supports loading settings from config files. If you have a config file, you can load it into settings yourself before constructing the transport client: [source,java] -------------------------------------------------- Settings settings = Settings.settingsBuilder() .loadFromPath(pathToYourSettingsFile).build(); Client client = TransportClient.builder().settings(settings).build(); -------------------------------------------------- ==== Exception are only thrown on total failure Previously, many APIs would throw an exception if any shard failed to execute the request. Now the exception is only thrown if all shards fail the request. The responses for these APIs will always have a `getShardFailures` method that you can and should check for failures. ==== Automatically thread client listeners Previously, the user had to set request listener threads to `true` when on the client side in order not to block IO threads on heavy operations. This proved to be very trappy for users, and ended up creating problems that are very hard to debug. In 2.0, Elasticsearch automatically threads listeners that are used from the client when the client is a node client or a transport client. Threading can no longer be manually set. ==== Query/filter refactoring `org.elasticsearch.index.queries.FilterBuilders` has been removed as part of the merge of queries and filters. These filters are now available in `QueryBuilders` with the same name. All methods that used to accept a `FilterBuilder` now accept a `QueryBuilder` instead. In addition some query builders have been removed or renamed: * `commonTerms(...)` renamed with `commonTermsQuery(...)` * `queryString(...)` renamed with `queryStringQuery(...)` * `simpleQueryString(...)` renamed with `simpleQueryStringQuery(...)` * `textPhrase(...)` removed * `textPhrasePrefix(...)` removed * `textPhrasePrefixQuery(...)` removed * `filtered(...)` removed. Use `filteredQuery(...)` instead. * `inQuery(...)` removed. ==== GetIndexRequest `GetIndexRequest.features()` now returns an array of Feature Enums instead of an array of String values. The following deprecated methods have been removed: * `GetIndexRequest.addFeatures(String[])` - Use `GetIndexRequest.addFeatures(Feature[])` instead * `GetIndexRequest.features(String[])` - Use `GetIndexRequest.features(Feature[])` instead. * `GetIndexRequestBuilder.addFeatures(String[])` - Use `GetIndexRequestBuilder.addFeatures(Feature[])` instead. * `GetIndexRequestBuilder.setFeatures(String[])` - Use `GetIndexRequestBuilder.setFeatures(Feature[])` instead. ==== BytesQueryBuilder removed The redundant BytesQueryBuilder has been removed in favour of the WrapperQueryBuilder internally. ==== TermsQueryBuilder execution removed The `TermsQueryBuilder#execution` method has been removed as it has no effect, it is ignored by the corresponding parser. ==== ImmutableSettings removed Use `Settings.builder()` instead of `ImmutableSettings.builder()`. ==== InetSocketTransportAddress removed Use `InetSocketTransportAddress(InetSocketAddress address)` instead of `InetSocketTransportAddress(String, int)`. You can create an InetSocketAddress instance with `InetSocketAddress(String, int)`. For example: [source,java] ----------------------------- new InetSocketTransportAddress(new InetSocketAddress("127.0.0.1", 0)); ----------------------------- ==== Shading and package relocation removed Elasticsearch used to shade its dependencies and to relocate packages. We no longer use shading or relocation. You might need to change your imports to the original package names: * `com.google.common` was `org.elasticsearch.common` * `com.carrotsearch.hppc` was `org.elasticsearch.common.hppc` * `jsr166e` was `org.elasticsearch.common.util.concurrent.jsr166e` * `com.fasterxml.jackson` was `org.elasticsearch.common.jackson` * `org.joda.time` was `org.elasticsearch.common.joda.time` * `org.joda.convert` was `org.elasticsearch.common.joda.convert` * `org.jboss.netty` was `org.elasticsearch.common.netty` * `com.ning.compress` was `org.elasticsearch.common.compress` * `com.github.mustachejava` was `org.elasticsearch.common.mustache` * `com.tdunning.math.stats` was `org.elasticsearch.common.stats` * `org.apache.commons.lang` was `org.elasticsearch.common.lang` * `org.apache.commons.cli` was `org.elasticsearch.common.cli.commons`