This change splits the previous 'repartition' action into two steps, one for recalculating the domain rankings, and one for recalculating the other ranking sets. Since only the first is necessary before the index construction, the rest can be delayed until after...
To avoid issues in handling the shotgun blast of MqNotifications, Service was switched over to use a synchronous message queue instead of an asynchronous one.
The change also modifies the behavior so that only node 1 will push the changes to the EC_DOMAIN database table, to avoid unnecessary db locks and contention with the loader.
Additionally, the change fixes a bug where the index construction code wasn't actually picking up the rankings data.
Since the index construction used to be performed by the index-service, merely saving the data to memory was enough for it to be accessible within the index-construction logic, but since it's been broken out into a separate process, the new process just injected an empty DomainRankings object instead.
To fix this, DomainRankings can now be persisted to disk, and a pre-loaded version of the object is injected into the index-construction process.
The EC_DOMAIN_LINK MariaDB table stores links between domains. This is problematic, as both updating and querying this table is very slow in relation to how small the data is (~10 GB). This slowness is largely caused by the database enforcing ACID guarantees we don't particularly need.
This changeset replaces the EC_DOMAIN_LINK table with a file in each index node containing 32 bit integer pairs corresponding to links between two domains. This file is loaded in memory in each node, and can be queried via the Query Service.
A migration step is needed before this file is created in each node. Until that happens, the actual data is loaded from the EC_DOMAIN_LINK table, but accessed as though it was a file.
The changeset also migrates/renames the links.db file to documents.db to avoid naming confusion between the two.
... also move some common configuration into the root build.gradle-file.
Support for JDK21 in lombok is a bit sketchy at the moment, but it seems to work. This upgrade is kind of important as the new index construction really benefits from Arena based lifecycle control over off-heap memory.
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.