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Cardinality aggregation missing from response inconsistently #64142
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Pinging @elastic/es-analytics-geo (:Analytics/Aggregations) |
This sounds like something I may have broken when I was reworking the timing of aggs. And it may be fixed by #64016 which is an extension of a bug that I fixed that looked similar. |
I've created a local reproduction and confirmed that it still hits master. This happens when a few things line up:
All of that causes us to run the "Range.Unmapped" special aggregator which mistakenly doesn't include its subAggs. I'll open a fix for it. |
It's a bit simpler than that, I just discovered: all you need is for the date_range to target an index that doesn't map the target field. That'll get you the same results. |
Now that we're consistently using `cat_match` to filter which shards we run on we can get this confusing case: 1. You have a search with, say, a range and a sub-agg. 2. That search has a query that `can_match` can recognize will match no docs. On *any* shard. 3. So we dutifully run it on a single shard so it can produce the "empty" aggs. 4. The shard we pick happens to not have the target of the range mapped. 5. This kicks in the special range aggregator that doesn't collect any documents. 6. Before this commit, that range aggregator *also* never produced any sub-aggs. So, without this change, it was quite possible for a search that happened to match no documents to "throw away" the sub-aggs of a range and a few other aggs. We've had this problem for a long, long time but it is more confusing now because `can_match` is really kicking in and causing us to see cases where it looks like you are targeting a lot of shards but you really are only targeting a couple. It used to be that to get the "no sub-aggs" behavior you had to explicitly target only shards that didn't map the target field of the `range` agg. And, like, in that case it isn't too bad because you targeted a sort of degenerate shard. But now that `can_match` is doing its thing you can end up with the confusing steps above. It took me several hours to track down what what happening I know how the individual pieces of all of this works. It took four hours to figure out how they fit together in this case.... Anyway! This replaces all the aggregator implementations that throw out the sub-aggregators with ones that keep them. I think this'll be less confusing in the future. Closes elastic#64142
Now that we're consistently using `cat_match` to filter which shards we run on we can get this confusing case: 1. You have a search with, say, a range and a sub-agg. 2. That search has a query that `can_match` can recognize will match no docs. On *any* shard. 3. So we dutifully run it on a single shard so it can produce the "empty" aggs. 4. The shard we pick happens to not have the target of the range mapped. 5. This kicks in the special range aggregator that doesn't collect any documents. 6. Before this commit, that range aggregator *also* never produced any sub-aggs. So, without this change, it was quite possible for a search that happened to match no documents to "throw away" the sub-aggs of a range and a few other aggs. We've had this problem for a long, long time but it is more confusing now because `can_match` is really kicking in and causing us to see cases where it looks like you are targeting a lot of shards but you really are only targeting a couple. It used to be that to get the "no sub-aggs" behavior you had to explicitly target only shards that didn't map the target field of the `range` agg. And, like, in that case it isn't too bad because you targeted a sort of degenerate shard. But now that `can_match` is doing its thing you can end up with the confusing steps above. It took me several hours to track down what what happening I know how the individual pieces of all of this works. It took four hours to figure out how they fit together in this case.... Anyway! This replaces all the aggregator implementations that throw out the sub-aggregators with ones that keep them. I think this'll be less confusing in the future. Closes #64142
…4214) Now that we're consistently using `cat_match` to filter which shards we run on we can get this confusing case: 1. You have a search with, say, a range and a sub-agg. 2. That search has a query that `can_match` can recognize will match no docs. On *any* shard. 3. So we dutifully run it on a single shard so it can produce the "empty" aggs. 4. The shard we pick happens to not have the target of the range mapped. 5. This kicks in the special range aggregator that doesn't collect any documents. 6. Before this commit, that range aggregator *also* never produced any sub-aggs. So, without this change, it was quite possible for a search that happened to match no documents to "throw away" the sub-aggs of a range and a few other aggs. We've had this problem for a long, long time but it is more confusing now because `can_match` is really kicking in and causing us to see cases where it looks like you are targeting a lot of shards but you really are only targeting a couple. It used to be that to get the "no sub-aggs" behavior you had to explicitly target only shards that didn't map the target field of the `range` agg. And, like, in that case it isn't too bad because you targeted a sort of degenerate shard. But now that `can_match` is doing its thing you can end up with the confusing steps above. It took me several hours to track down what what happening I know how the individual pieces of all of this works. It took four hours to figure out how they fit together in this case.... Anyway! This replaces all the aggregator implementations that throw out the sub-aggregators with ones that keep them. I think this'll be less confusing in the future. Closes elastic#64142
…4214) Now that we're consistently using `cat_match` to filter which shards we run on we can get this confusing case: 1. You have a search with, say, a range and a sub-agg. 2. That search has a query that `can_match` can recognize will match no docs. On *any* shard. 3. So we dutifully run it on a single shard so it can produce the "empty" aggs. 4. The shard we pick happens to not have the target of the range mapped. 5. This kicks in the special range aggregator that doesn't collect any documents. 6. Before this commit, that range aggregator *also* never produced any sub-aggs. So, without this change, it was quite possible for a search that happened to match no documents to "throw away" the sub-aggs of a range and a few other aggs. We've had this problem for a long, long time but it is more confusing now because `can_match` is really kicking in and causing us to see cases where it looks like you are targeting a lot of shards but you really are only targeting a couple. It used to be that to get the "no sub-aggs" behavior you had to explicitly target only shards that didn't map the target field of the `range` agg. And, like, in that case it isn't too bad because you targeted a sort of degenerate shard. But now that `can_match` is doing its thing you can end up with the confusing steps above. It took me several hours to track down what what happening I know how the individual pieces of all of this works. It took four hours to figure out how they fit together in this case.... Anyway! This replaces all the aggregator implementations that throw out the sub-aggregators with ones that keep them. I think this'll be less confusing in the future. Closes elastic#64142
…64247) Now that we're consistently using `cat_match` to filter which shards we run on we can get this confusing case: 1. You have a search with, say, a range and a sub-agg. 2. That search has a query that `can_match` can recognize will match no docs. On *any* shard. 3. So we dutifully run it on a single shard so it can produce the "empty" aggs. 4. The shard we pick happens to not have the target of the range mapped. 5. This kicks in the special range aggregator that doesn't collect any documents. 6. Before this commit, that range aggregator *also* never produced any sub-aggs. So, without this change, it was quite possible for a search that happened to match no documents to "throw away" the sub-aggs of a range and a few other aggs. We've had this problem for a long, long time but it is more confusing now because `can_match` is really kicking in and causing us to see cases where it looks like you are targeting a lot of shards but you really are only targeting a couple. It used to be that to get the "no sub-aggs" behavior you had to explicitly target only shards that didn't map the target field of the `range` agg. And, like, in that case it isn't too bad because you targeted a sort of degenerate shard. But now that `can_match` is doing its thing you can end up with the confusing steps above. It took me several hours to track down what what happening I know how the individual pieces of all of this works. It took four hours to figure out how they fit together in this case.... Anyway! This replaces all the aggregator implementations that throw out the sub-aggregators with ones that keep them. I think this'll be less confusing in the future. Closes #64142
…64244) Now that we're consistently using `cat_match` to filter which shards we run on we can get this confusing case: 1. You have a search with, say, a range and a sub-agg. 2. That search has a query that `can_match` can recognize will match no docs. On *any* shard. 3. So we dutifully run it on a single shard so it can produce the "empty" aggs. 4. The shard we pick happens to not have the target of the range mapped. 5. This kicks in the special range aggregator that doesn't collect any documents. 6. Before this commit, that range aggregator *also* never produced any sub-aggs. So, without this change, it was quite possible for a search that happened to match no documents to "throw away" the sub-aggs of a range and a few other aggs. We've had this problem for a long, long time but it is more confusing now because `can_match` is really kicking in and causing us to see cases where it looks like you are targeting a lot of shards but you really are only targeting a couple. It used to be that to get the "no sub-aggs" behavior you had to explicitly target only shards that didn't map the target field of the `range` agg. And, like, in that case it isn't too bad because you targeted a sort of degenerate shard. But now that `can_match` is doing its thing you can end up with the confusing steps above. It took me several hours to track down what what happening I know how the individual pieces of all of this works. It took four hours to figure out how they fit together in this case.... Anyway! This replaces all the aggregator implementations that throw out the sub-aggregators with ones that keep them. I think this'll be less confusing in the future. Closes #64142
Elasticsearch version: 7.9.1 (reproducible on demo.elastic.co)
Description of the problem including expected versus actual behavior:
The response to the exact same search request sometimes contains the cardinality aggregation and sometimes it doesn't - the issue is transient.
Steps to reproduce:
The following request (on demo.elastic.co):
Results in:
And other times in
Notice the
unique_users
metric missing from the second response. It doesn't take more than a few tries to get both responses.The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: