Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
113 lines (82 loc) · 7.89 KB

PLUGIN_MIGRATION.md

File metadata and controls

113 lines (82 loc) · 7.89 KB

Plugin Migration

Note: This document is evolving and is in draft state.

The goal of the Extensions SDK is to ease developer migration of plugins to extensions. We'll be supporting this goal by doing the following:

  • Migrating plugin interfaces and their extension points to equivalent extension interfaces.
  • Using same-named methods and arguments whenever possible, with differences highlighted in this migration guide.
  • Providing wrapper classes when possible to retain existing code logic.

Migration of the Anomaly Detection plugin to an extension is in progress. We'll use it to identify and refine migration challenges and provide examples to other plugin developers.

Use the notes in the following sections to help migrate a plugin to an extension.

Implement extension interfaces and extension points

  • Change the implementing class FooPlugin to FooExtension and either implement the Extension interface or extend BaseExtension.
  • Implement other corresponding extension interfaces, for example, the ActionPlugin interface becomes ActionExtension.
  • Change extension point implementation, if necessary, to conform to new types. For example, RestHandler classes become ExtensionRestHandler classes. Consider extending base implementations, such as BaseExtensionRestHandler, to provide additional convenience methods.
  • The createComponents() method no longer takes parameters. The parameters formerly sent in a constructor may be accessed using Guice @Inject annotation.
  • Extension developers who need to use a REST client should initialize it using SDKClient and return the appropriate client as an object in createComponents() to make it available for extension actions.
  • Annotations of @Inject in actions bound using getActions() should change the import from the OpenSearch internal package to com.google.inject.Inject.

Use wrapper classes

Refer to the following notes for using wrapper classes.

Replace ClusterService with SDKClusterService

  • Calls to clusterService.getClusterSettings().addSettingsUpdateConsumer() with a single consumer do not require changes. However, this method has an overloaded version that takes a map parameter and can perform multiple consumer updates more efficiently.
  • Calls to clusterService.state() do not require changes.

Replace Client with SDKClient: either OpenSearchClient (JavaClient) or SDKRestClient

The SDKClient provides two (eventually three) client options.

The Java client for OpenSearch (OpenSearchClient) will be supported with both synchronous and asynchronous clients, is actively developed along with other language clients, and should be used whenever possible. These clients do have significant implementation differences compared to the existing Client interface implemented by plugins.

Change plugin and OpenSearch TransportAction implementations

The SDKRestClient provides wrapper methods matching the Client API (but not implementing it), implemented internally with the (soon to be deprecated) RestHighLevelClient. While this expedites migration efforts, it should be considered a temporary "bridge," with follow-up migration efforts to the OpenSearchClient planned.

  • While the class names and method parameters are the same, the Request and Response classes are often in different packages. In most cases, other than changing import statements, no additional code changes are required. In a few cases, there are minor changes required to interface with the new response class API.

The client.execute(action, request, responseListener) method is implemented in the SDKClient.

For TransportActions internal to the plugin (registered with getActions()), change the transport action inheritance from HandledTransportAction to directly inherit from TransportAction.

OpenSearch TransportActions are not accessible to extensions and will need to be replaced with functionality from either a client (OpenSearch client for Java or the SDKRestClient) or some other functionality directly provided by the Extensions SDK. The following are a few examples of the types of changes needed:

  • Some transport actions on OpenSearch, such as the GetFieldMappingsAction, are exposed via the REST API and should be called using those clients.
  • Some information available from OpenSearch services, such as the state on ClusterService, stats on the IndexingPressure object, and others, are designed for local access and would transfer far more data than needed if implemented directly. Calls to these services should be replaced by REST API calls to endpoints, which filter to just the information required. For example, cluster state associated with indexes should use one of the Index API endpoints. Indexing Pressure can be retrieved by Node API endpoints.

Replace RestHandler with ExtensionRestHandler

Pass the ExtensionsRunner and Extension objects to the handler and access createComponent equivalents, such as:

this.sdkNamedXContentRegistry = extensionsRunner.getNamedXContentRegistry();

When a NamedXContentRegistry object is required, get the current one from this.sdkNamedXContentRegistry.getRegistry().

When initializing objects for createComponents, the SDKNamedXContentRegistry should be passed to the component constructors. In the objects that are instantiated for createComponents, whenever there is a NamedXContentRegistry object required, call getRegistry() from the SDKNamedXContentRegistry object passed from the constructor, for example:

XContentParser parser = XContentType.JSON
                    .xContent()
                    .createParser(sdkNamedXContentRegistry.getRegistry(), LoggingDeprecationHandler.INSTANCE, value);

Other potential initialization values are:

this.environmentSettings = extensionsRunner.getEnvironmentSettings();
this.transportService = extensionsRunner.getSdkTransportService().getTransportService();
this.restClient = anomalyDetectorExtension.getRestClient();
this.sdkClusterService = new SDKClusterService(extensionsRunner);

Many of these components are also available via Guice injection.

Replace Route with NamedRoute

Change routes() to be NamedRoutes. Here is a sample of an existing route converted to a named route: Before:

public List<Route> routes() {
    return ImmutableList.of(
            new Route(GET, "/uri")
        );
}

With new scheme:

private Function<RestRequest, RestResponse> uriHandler = () -> {};
public List<NamedRoute> routes() {
    return ImmutableList.of(
            new NamedRoute.Builder().method(GET).path("/uri").uniqueName("extension:uri").handler(uriHandler).build()
        );
}

You can optionally also add actionNames() to this route. These should correspond to any current actions defined as permissions in roles. actionNames() serve as a valuable tool for converting plugins into extensions while maintaining compatibility with pre-defined reserved roles. Ensure that these name-to-route mappings are easily accessible to the cluster admins to allow granting access to these APIs.

Change prepareRequest() to handleRequest().

Replace BytesRestResponse with ExtensionRestResponse

  • Add the request as the first parameter. The remaining parameters should be the same.

Replace Return Type for SDKRestClient

While most SDKRestClient client return types match existing classes, some changes may be necessary to conform to the new method signatures. Examples include:

  • InternalAggregation/Min/Max should be replaced with the corresponding Parsed class. For example:
    1. ParsedStringTerms from StringTerms to fetch the aggregation for a specific index.
    2. ParsedMax from InternalMax to fetch max agg result parsed between nodes.
  • Replace ObjectObjectCursor<String, List<AliasMetadata>> entry with Entry<String, Set<AliasMetadata>> entry