OpenSearch/docs
Martijn van Groningen 3d9671a668
[PERCOLATOR] Allowing range queries with now ranges inside percolator queries.
Before now ranges where forbidden, because the percolator query itself could get cached and then the percolator queries with now ranges that should no longer match, incorrectly will continue to match.
By disabling caching when the `percolator` is being used, the percolator can now correctly support range queries with now based ranges.

 I think this is the right tradeoff. The percolator query is likely to not be the same between search requests and disabling range queries with now ranges really disabled people using the percolator for their use cases.

 Also fixed an issue that existed in the percolator fieldmapper, it was unable to find forbidden queries inside `dismax` queries.

 Closes #23859
2017-04-07 08:44:43 +02:00
..
community-clients Add a preface title 2017-02-04 21:23:41 +01:00
groovy-api Use Versions.asciidoc for groovy docs too 2017-02-04 11:42:45 +01:00
java-api Docs: fix response object name 2017-04-05 16:03:49 -04:00
java-rest Use include-tagged macro for high level client docs (#23438) 2017-03-20 14:50:19 -04:00
perl Updated copyright years to include 2016 (#17808) 2016-04-18 12:39:23 +02:00
plugins Add Backoff policy to azure repository 2017-04-03 10:52:44 +02:00
python Remove most of the need for `// NOTCONSOLE` 2016-09-06 10:32:54 -04:00
reference [PERCOLATOR] Allowing range queries with now ranges inside percolator queries. 2017-04-07 08:44:43 +02:00
resiliency Add note regarding out-of-sync replicas 2017-03-07 14:25:23 -05:00
ruby Updated copyright years to include 2016 (#17808) 2016-04-18 12:39:23 +02:00
src/test CONSOLEify the "using scripts" documentation 2017-04-03 10:15:29 -04:00
README.asciidoc Fix confusing section in docs/README 2017-02-09 16:17:14 -05:00
Versions.asciidoc Defguide link should not use {branch} 2017-02-04 21:21:46 +01:00
build.gradle CONSOLEify highlighting a function_score docs 2017-04-06 08:13:56 -04:00

README.asciidoc

The Elasticsearch docs are in AsciiDoc format and can be built using the
Elasticsearch documentation build process.

See: https://github.com/elastic/docs

Snippets marked with `// CONSOLE` are automatically annotated with "VIEW IN
CONSOLE" in the documentation and are automatically tested by the command
`gradle :docs:check`. To test just the docs from a single page, use e.g.
`gradle :docs:check -Dtests.method=*rollover*`.

By default `// CONSOLE` snippet runs as its own isolated
test. You can manipulate the test execution in the following ways:

* `// TEST`: Explicitly marks a snippet as a test. Snippets marked this way
are tests even if they don't have `// CONSOLE`.
  * `// TEST[s/foo/bar/]`: Replace `foo` with `bar` in the test. This should be
  used sparingly because it makes the test "lie". Sometimes, though, you can use
  it to make the tests more clear.
  * `// TEST[catch:foo]`: Used to expect errors in the requests. Replace `foo`
  with `request` to expect a 400 error, for example. If the snippet contains
  multiple requests then only the last request will expect the error.
  * `// TEST[continued]`: Continue the test started in the last snippet. Between
  tests the nodes are cleaned: indexes are removed, etc. This will prevent that.
  This is really useful when you have text and snippets that work together to
  tell the story of some use case because it merges the snippets (and thus the
  use case) into one big test.
  * `// TEST[skip:reason]`: Skip this test. Replace `reason` with the actual
  reason to skip the test. Snippets without `// TEST` or `// CONSOLE` aren't
  considered tests anyway but this is useful for explicitly documenting the
  reason why the test shouldn't be run.
  * `// TEST[setup:name]`: Run some setup code before running the snippet. This
  is useful for creating and populating indexes used in the snippet. The setup
  code is defined in `docs/build.gradle`.
  * `// TEST[warning:some warning]`: Expect the response to include a `Warning`
  header. If the response doesn't include a `Warning` header with the exact
  text then the test fails. If the response includes `Warning` headers that
  aren't expected then the test fails.
* `// TESTRESPONSE`: Matches this snippet against the body of the response of
  the last test. If the response is JSON then order is ignored. If you add
  `// TEST[continued]` to the snippet after `// TESTRESPONSE` it will continue
  in the same test, allowing you to interleve requests with responses to check.
  * `// TESTRESPONSE[s/foo/bar/]`: Substitutions. See `// TEST[s/foo/bar]`.
  * `// TESTRESPONSE[_cat]`: Add substitutions for testing `_cat` responses. Use
  this after all other substitutions so it doesn't make other substitutions
  difficult.
* `// TESTSETUP`: Marks this snippet as the "setup" for all other snippets in
  this file. This is a somewhat natural way of structuring documentation. You
  say "this is the data we use to explain this feature" then you add the
  snippet that you mark `// TESTSETUP` and then every snippet will turn into
  a test that runs the setup snippet first. See the "painless" docs for a file
  that puts this to good use. This is fairly similar to `// TEST[setup:name]`
  but rather than the setup defined in `docs/build.gradle` the setup is defined
  right in the documentation file.

Any place you can use json you can use elements like `$body.path.to.thing`
which is replaced on the fly with the contents of the thing at `path.to.thing`
in the last response.