Alexander Reelsen 80593fb23c Watcher: Add execution state to watch status (elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch#2699)
The execution state is kind of a global indicator if a watch has been
running successfully and is used by the watcher UI.

However this field is only stored in the watch history but not part of
the watch status, thus it is not available everywhere. In order to
simplify the watcher UI this commit also adds the field to the
watch status which is stored together with the watch.

It is stored under the `status.execution_state` field as `status.state`
is already taken. This is also reflects with the name of the java class.

The WatchStatus class does not contain serialization checks, as this is
intended to be backported to 6.x, where those checks will be added.

Once the backport is done, the old execution state field can be fully
deleted from the master branch in another commit (syncing with Kibana
folks required).

relates elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch#2385

* fix doc tests

Original commit: elastic/x-pack-elasticsearch@26e8f99571
2017-10-10 09:07:33 +02:00
2017-03-19 16:37:21 -04:00
2017-02-10 11:02:42 -08:00
2015-10-30 11:16:29 -06:00
2015-11-25 10:39:08 -05:00
2018-04-20 14:16:58 -07:00
2017-08-28 11:35:42 -07:00

= Elasticsearch X-Pack

A set of Elastic's commercial plugins for Elasticsearch:

- License
- Security
- Watcher
- Monitoring
- Machine Learning
- Graph

= Setup

You must checkout `x-pack-elasticsearch` and `elasticsearch` with a specific directory structure. The
`elasticsearch` checkout will be used when building `x-pack-elasticsearch`. The structure is:

- /path/to/elastic/elasticsearch
- /path/to/elastic/elasticsearch-extra/x-pack-elasticsearch

== Vault Secret

The build requires a Vault Secret ID. You can use a GitHub token by following these steps:

1. Go to https://github.com/settings/tokens
2. Click *Generate new token*
3. Set permissions to `read:org`
4. Copy the token into `~/.elastic/github.token`
5. Set the token's file permissions to `600`

```
$ mkdir ~/.elastic
$ vi ~/.elastic/github.token
# Add your_token exactly as it is into the file and save it
$ chmod 600 ~/.elastic/github.token
```

If you do not create the token, then you will see something along the lines of this as the failure when trying to build X-Pack:

```
* What went wrong:
Missing ~/.elastic/github.token file or VAULT_SECRET_ID environment variable, needed to authenticate with vault for secrets
```

=== Offline Mode

When running the build in offline mode (`--offline`), it will not required to have the vault secret setup.

== Native Code

**This is mandatory as tests depend on it**

Machine Learning requires platform specific binaries, build from https://github.com/elastic/machine-learning-cpp via CI servers.

The native artifacts are stored in S3. To retrieve them infra's team Vault service is utilized, which 
requires a github token. Please setup a github token as documented: 

https://github.com/elastic/infra/blob/master/docs/vault.md#github-auth

The github token has to be put into ~/.elastic/github.token, while the file rights must be set to 0600. 

= Build

- Run unit tests:
+
[source, txt]
-----
gradle clean test
-----

- Run all tests:
+
[source, txt]
-----
gradle clean check
-----

- Run integration tests:
+
[source, txt]
-----
gradle clean integTest
-----

- Package X-Pack (without running tests)
+
[source, txt]
-----
gradle clean assemble
-----

- Install X-Pack (without running tests)
+
[source, txt]
-----
gradle clean install
-----

= Building documentation

The source files in this repository can be included in either the X-Pack Reference or the Elasticsearch Reference. 

NOTE: In 5.5 and later, the Elasticsearch Reference includes X-Pack-specific content when it is built from this repo.

To build the Elasticsearch Reference on your local machine:

* Use the `index.asciidoc` file in the docs/en directory.
* Specify the location of the `elasticsearch/docs` directory with the `--resource` option when you run `build_docs.pl`.

For example:

[source, txt]
-----
./docs/build_docs.pl --doc elasticsearch-extra/x-pack-elasticsearch/docs/en/index.asciidoc --resource=elasticsearch/docs --chunk 1
-----

For information about building the X-Pack Reference, see the README in the x-pack repo.

To build a release notes page for the pull requests in this repository:

* Use the dev-tools/xes-release-notes.pl script to pull PRs from the x-pack-elasticsearch repo.  Alternatively, use the dev-tools/xescpp_release_notes.pl script to pull PRs from both the x-pack-elasticsearch and machine-learning-cpp repos.
* Specify the version label for which you want the release notes.
* Redirect the output to a new local file.

NOTE: You must have a personal access token called ~/.github_auth with "repo" scope. Use steps similar to "Vault Secret" to create this file. 

For example:
[source, txt]
-----
./dev-tools/xes_release_notes.pl v5.5.2 > ~/tmp/5.5.2.asciidoc
-----

== Adding Images

When you include an image in the documentation, specify the path relative to the location of the asciidoc file. By convention, we put images in an `images` subdirectory.

For example to insert `watcher-ui-edit-watch.png` in `watcher/limitations.asciidoc`:

. Add an `images` subdirectory to the watcher directory if it doesn't already exist. 
. In `limitations.asciidoc` specify:
+
[source, txt]
-----
 image::images/watcher-ui-edit-watch.png["Editing a watch"]
-----
 
Please note that image names and anchor IDs must be unique within the book, so do not use generic identifiers.
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🔎 Open source distributed and RESTful search engine.
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