This turned out to be very difficult to do in small isolated steps.
* Design overhaul of the control gui using bootstrap
* Move the actors out of control-service into to a new executor-service, that can be run on multiple nodes
* Add node-affinity to message queue
* Reduce memory churn in LoaderIndexJournalWriter, fix bug with keyword mappings as well
* Remove remains of OldDomains
* Ensure LOADER_PROCESS_OPTS gets fed to the processes
* LinkdbStatusWriter won't execute batch after each added item post 100 items
This is a system-wide change. The index used to have a lexicon, mapping words to wordIds using a large in-memory hash table. This made index-construction easier, but it
also added a fairly significant RAM penalty to both the index service and the loader.
The new design moves to 64 bit word identifiers calculated using the murmur hash of the keyword, and an index construction based on merging smaller indices.
It also became necessary half-way through to upgrade guice as its error reporting wasn't *quite* compatible with JDK20.
This provides a much cleaner separation of concerns, and makes it possible to get rid of a lot of the gunkier parts of the index service. It will also permit lowering the Xmx on the index service a fair bit, so we can get CompressedOOps again :D
Deprecate the LoadUrl instruction entirely. We no longer need to be told upfront about which URLs to expect, as IDs are generated from the domain id and document ordinal.
For now, we no longer store new URLs in different domains. We need to re-implement this somehow, probably in a different job or a as a different output.