Adding new ranking parameters to the API and routing them through the system, in order to permit integration of the new position data with the ranking algorithm.
The change also cleans out several parameters that no longer filled any function.
This corrects an annoying bug that had the system crash and burn on first start-up due to a race condition in service initialization, where the services were attempting to access the database before it was properly migrated.
A fix was in principle already in place, but it was running too late and did not prevent attempts to access the as-yet uninitialized database. Move the first boot check into the MainClass instead of the Service constructor.
The change also adds more appropriate docker dependencies to the services to fix rare errors resolving the hostname of the database.
Before the gRPC migration, the system would serve both public and internal requests over HTTP, but distinguish the two using path prefixes and a few HTTP Headers (X-Public, X-Context) added by the reverse proxy to prevent misconfigurations.
Since internal requests meaningfully no longer use HTTP, this convention is just an obstacle now, adding the need to always run the system behind a reverse proxy that rewrites the paths.
The change removes the path prefix, and updates the docker templates to reflect the change. This will require a migration for existing systems.
This is necessary as we use zookeeper to orchestrate first-time startup of the services, to ensure that the database is properly migrated by the control service before anything else is permitted to start.
Roll back to JDK 21 for now, and make Java version configurable in the root build.gradle
The project has run into no less than three distinct show-stopping bugs in JDK22, across multiple vendors, and gradle still doesn't fully support it, meaning you need multiple JDK versions installed.
Look, this will make the git history look funny, but trimming unnecessary depth from the source tree is a very necessary sanity-preserving measure when dealing with a super-modularized codebase like this one.
While it makes the project configuration a bit less conventional, it will save you several clicks every time you jump between modules. Which you'll do a lot, because it's *modul*ar. The src/main/java convention makes a lot of sense for a non-modular project though. This ain't that.