| 1234567891011121314151617181920212223242526272829303132333435363738394041424344454647484950515253545556575859606162636465666768697071727374757677 | [[breaking_70_api_changes]]=== Breaking API changes in 7.0==== Camel case and underscore parameters deprecated in 6.x have been removedA number of duplicate parameters deprecated in 6.x have been removed fromBulk request, Multi Get request, Term Vectors request, and More Like This Queryrequests.The following camel case parameters have been removed:* `opType`* `versionType`, `_versionType`The following parameters starting with underscore have been removed:* `_parent`* `_retry_on_conflict`* `_routing`* `_version`* `_version_type`Instead of these removed parameters, use their non camel case equivalents withoutstarting underscore, e.g. use `version_type` instead of `_version_type` or `versionType`.==== Thread pool infoIn previous versions of Elasticsearch, the thread pool info returned in the<<cluster-nodes-info,nodes info API>> returned `min` and `max` values reflectingthe configured minimum and maximum number of threads that could be in eachthread pool. The trouble with this representation is that it does not align withthe configuration parameters used to configure thread pools. For<<modules-threadpool,scaling thread pools>>, the minimum number of threads isconfigured by a parameter called `core` and the maximum number of threads isconfigured by a parameter called `max`. For <<modules-threadpool,fixed threadpools>>, there is only one configuration parameter along these lines and thatparameter is called `size`, reflecting the fixed number of threads in thepool. This discrepancy between the API and the configuration parameters has beenrectified. Now, the API will report `core` and `max` for scaling thread pools,and `size` for fixed thread pools.Similarly, in the cat thread pool API the existing `size` output has beenrenamed to `pool_size` which reflects the number of threads currently in thepool; the shortcut for this value has been changed from `s` to `psz`.  The `min`output has been renamed to `core` with a shortcut of `cr`, the shortcut for`max` has been changed to `mx`, and the `size` output with a shortcut of `sz`has been reused to report the configured number of threads in the pool.  Thisaligns the output of the API with the configuration values for threadpools. Note that `core` and `max` will be populated for scaling thread pools,and `size` will be populated for fixed thread pools.==== The parameter `fields` deprecated in 6.x has been removed from Bulk request and Update request. The Update API returns `400 - Bad request` if request contains unknown parameters (instead of ignored in the previous version).[[remove-suggest-metric]]==== Remove support for `suggest` metric/index metric in indices stats and nodes stats APIsPreviously, `suggest` stats were folded into `search` stats. Support for the`suggest` metric on the indices stats and nodes stats APIs remained forbackwards compatibility. Backwards support for the `suggest` metric wasdeprecated in 6.3.0 and now removed in 7.0.0.[[remove-field-caps-body]]In the past, `fields` could be provided either as a parameter, or as part of the requestbody. Specifying `fields` in the request body as opposed to a parameter was deprecatedin 6.4.0, and is now unsupported in 7.0.0.==== `copy_settings` is deprecated on shrink and split APIsVersions of Elasticsearch prior to 6.4.0 did not copy index settings on shrinkand split operations. Starting with Elasticsearch 7.0.0, the default behaviorwill be for such settings to be copied on such operations. To enable users in6.4.0 to transition in 6.4.0 to the default behavior in 7.0.0, the`copy_settings` parameter was added on the REST layer. As this behavior will bethe only behavior in 8.0.0, this parameter is deprecated in 7.0.0 for removal in8.0.0.
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