This behavior is an old vestige from the days of only having a single loader process. We'd truncate the links table because doing inserts/updates was too slow. This was also important because we had 32 bit ID, and there's a lot of links between domains to go around...
Instead we delete the rows associated with the current node with a stored procedure PURGE_LINKS_TABLE.
We also update the PRIMARY KEY to a BIGINT. We'll need to load the data in excess of billion times to hit an ID rollover, so it'll be fine.
* Added new (optional) model file in $WMSA_HOME/data/atags.parquet
* Converter gets a component for creating a projection of its domains onto the full atags parquet file
* New WordFlag ExternalLink
* These terms are also for now flagged as title words
* Fixed a bug where Title words aliased with UrlDomain words
* Fixed a bug in the encyclopedia sideloader that gave everything too high topology ranking
Don't log the PROCESS stream to executor's logs, as it will also be logged in the spawned process' log files.
Also tell the spawned process which "service" it is so that it gets a log file with a name that makes sense.
* Encyclopedia sideloader; permit providing base URL.
* Storage base shows node id in GUI
* ProcessLivenessMonitorActor restarts automatically
* Clean-up of outbox code
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
This makes index complete in the sense that you can deploy an index instance and build a complete separate application on top of it, without having to go through the Marginalia-laden search service.
... 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.