116 lines
4.7 KiB
Plaintext
116 lines
4.7 KiB
Plaintext
[[breaking-changes-7.4]]
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== Breaking changes in 7.4
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++++
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<titleabbrev>7.4</titleabbrev>
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++++
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This section discusses the changes that you need to be aware of when migrating
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your application to Elasticsearch 7.4.
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See also <<release-highlights>> and <<es-release-notes>>.
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coming[7.4.0]
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//NOTE: The notable-breaking-changes tagged regions are re-used in the
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//Installation and Upgrade Guide
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//tag::notable-breaking-changes[]
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// end::notable-breaking-changes[]
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[[breaking_74_plugin_changes]]
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=== Plugins changes
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[float]
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==== TokenizerFactory changes
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TokenizerFactory now has a `name()` method that must be implemented. Most
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plugin-provided TokenizerFactory implementations will extend `AbstractTokenizerFactory`,
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which now takes a `name` parameter in its constructor.
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[float]
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[[breaking_74_search_changes]]
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=== Search Changes
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[float]
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==== Forbid empty doc values in vector functions
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If a document doesn't have a value for a vector field (dense_vector
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or sparse_vector) on which a vector function is executed, an error will
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be thrown.
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[float]
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[[breaking_74_snapshots_changes]]
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=== Snapshot and Restore changes
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[float]
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==== The S3 repository plugin uses the DNS style access pattern by default
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Starting in version 7.4 the `repository-s3` plugin does not use the
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now-deprecated path-style access pattern by default. In versions 7.0, 7.1, 7.2
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and 7.3 the `repository-s3` plugin always used the path-style access pattern.
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This is a breaking change for deployments that only support path-style access
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but which are recognized as supporting DNS-style access by the AWS SDK. If your
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deployment only supports path-style access and is affected by this change then
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you must configure the S3 client setting `path_style_access` to `true`. This
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breaking change was made necessary by
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https://aws.amazon.com/blogs/aws/amazon-s3-path-deprecation-plan-the-rest-of-the-story/[AWS's
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announcement] that the path-style access pattern is deprecated and will be
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unsupported on buckets created after September 30th 2020.
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[float]
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[[breaking_80_http_changes]]
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=== HTTP changes
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[float]
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==== Changes to Encoding Plus Signs in URLs
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Starting in version 7.4, a `+` in a URL will be encoded as `%2B` by all REST API functionality. Prior versions handled a `+` as a single space.
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If your application requires handling `+` as a single space you can return to the old behaviour by setting the system property
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`es.rest.url_plus_as_space` to `true`. Note that this behaviour is deprecated and setting this system property to `true` will cease
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to be supported in version 8.
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[float]
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[[breaking_74_cluster_changes]]
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=== Cluster changes
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[float]
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==== Rerouting after starting a shard runs at lower priority
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After starting each shard the elected master node must perform a reroute to
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search for other shards that could be allocated. In particular, when creating
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an index it is this task that allocates the replicas once the primaries have
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started. In versions prior to 7.4 this task runs at priority `URGENT`, but
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starting in version 7.4 its priority is reduced to `NORMAL`. In a
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well-configured cluster this reduces the amount of work the master must do, but
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means that a cluster with a master that is overloaded with other tasks at
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`HIGH` or `URGENT` priority may take longer to allocate all replicas.
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Additionally, before 7.4 the `GET
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_cluster_health?wait_for_no_initializing_shards` and `GET
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_cluster/health?wait_for_no_relocating_shards` APIs would return only once all
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pending reroutes have completed too, but starting in version 7.4 if you want to
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wait for the rerouting process to completely finish you should add the
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`wait_for_events=languid` query parameter when calling these APIs.
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[float]
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[[breaking_74_allocation_changes]]
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=== Allocation changes
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[float]
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==== Auto-release of read-only-allow-delete block
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If a node exceeds the flood-stage disk watermark then {es} adds the
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`index.blocks.read_only_allow_delete` block to all of its indices to prevent
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further writes, as a last-resort attempt to prevent the node completely
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exhausting its disk space. In earlier versions this block would remain in place
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until manually removed, causing confusion for users who currently have ample
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disk space and who are not aware that they nearly ran out at some point in the
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past. From 7.4 onwards the block is automatically removed when the node drops
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below the high watermark again, with the expectation that the high watermark is
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some distance below the flood-stage watermark and therefore the disk space
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problem is truly resolved. Since this block may be automatically removed, you
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can no longer rely on adding this block manually to prevent writes to an index.
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You should use the `index.blocks.read_only` block instead. This behaviour can
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be disabled by setting the system property
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`es.disk.auto_release_flood_stage_block` to `false`.
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