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@@ -12,97 +12,21 @@ endif::[]
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// Add previous release to the list
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Other versions:
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-{ref-bare}/8.4/release-highlights.html[8.4]
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+{ref-bare}/8.6/release-highlights.html[8.6]
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+| {ref-bare}/8.5/release-highlights.html[8.5]
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+| {ref-bare}/8.4/release-highlights.html[8.4]
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| {ref-bare}/8.3/release-highlights.html[8.3]
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| {ref-bare}/8.2/release-highlights.html[8.2]
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| {ref-bare}/8.1/release-highlights.html[8.1]
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| {ref-bare}/8.0/release-highlights.html[8.0]
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+// The notable-highlights tag marks entries that
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+// should be featured in the Stack Installation and Upgrade Guide:
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// tag::notable-highlights[]
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-
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-[discrete]
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-[[speed_up_sql_queries_by_not_tracking_total_hits_by_default]]
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-=== Speed up SQL queries by not tracking total hits by default
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-SQL query translator now explicitly sets track_total_hits to false when
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-not needed.
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-This has a significant impact on SQL query performance in cases where total hits
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-are not needed to calculate the final result, in particular when the cost of evaluation
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-of a single document is particularly high (eg. queries that involve script evaluation)
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-and in queries with a small LIMIT value.
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-In our tests, on some specific queries, we see a speed-up of more than 50%,
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-with peaks of ~95% (from 600ms to 20ms).
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-
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-{es-pull}89106[#89106]
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-
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-[discrete]
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-[[ilm_no_longer_rolls_over_empty_indices]]
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-=== ILM no longer rolls over empty indices
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-For both new and existing Index Lifecycle Management (ILM) policies,
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-the rollover action will only execute if an index has at least one document.
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-
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-
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-For indices with a `max_age` condition that are no longer being written
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-to, this will mean that they will no longer roll over every time their
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-`max_age` is reached.
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-
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-A policy can override this behavior, and explicitly opt in to rolling over
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-empty indices, by adding a `"min_docs": 0` condition:
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-
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-[source,console]
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-----
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-PUT _ilm/policy/allow_empty_rollover_policy
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-{
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- "policy": {
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- "phases": {
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- "hot": {
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- "actions": {
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- "rollover" : {
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- "max_age": "7d",
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- "max_size": "100gb",
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- "min_docs": 0
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- }
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- }
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- }
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- }
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- }
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-}
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-----
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-
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-This can also be disabled on a cluster-wide basis by setting
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-`indices.lifecycle.rollover.only_if_has_documents` to `false`.
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-
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-{es-pull}89557[#89557]
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-
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-[discrete]
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-[[release_time_series_data_stream_tsds_functionality]]
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-=== Release time series data stream (TSDS) functionality
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-Elasticsearch offers support for time series data stream (TSDS) indices.
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-A TSDS index is an index that contains time series metrics data as part
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-of a data stream. Elasticsearch routes the incoming documents into a TSDS
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-index so that all the documents for a particular time series are on the
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-same shard, and then sorts the shard by time series and timestamp. This
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-structure has a few advantages:
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-
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-1. Documents from the same time series are next to each other on the shard, and
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-hence stored next to each other on the disk, so the operating system pages are
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-much more homogeneous and compress better, yielding massive reduction in TCO.
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-
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-2. The analysis of a time series typically involves comparing each two consecutive
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-docs (samples), examining the last doc in a given time window, etc., which is quite
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-complex when the next doc could be on any shard, and in fact on any index. Sorting
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-by time series and timestamp allows improved analysis, both in terms of performance
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-and in terms of our ability to add new aggregations.
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-
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-Finally, as part of the Index Lifecycle Management of metrics data time series,
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-Elasticsearch enables a Downsampling action. When an index is downsampled,
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-Elasticsearch keeps a single document with statistical summaries per each bucket
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-of time in the time series. Supported aggregations can then be run on the data
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-stream and include both downsampled indices and raw data indices, without the
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-user needing to be aware of that. Downsampling of downsampled indices, to more
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-coarse time resolution, is also supported.
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-
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-{es-pull}90116[#90116]
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-
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+// [discrete]
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+// === Heading
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+//
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+// Description.
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// end::notable-highlights[]
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