Fix rare bug where the takeWhileZero method would fail to repopulate the underlying buffer. This caused intermittent de-compression errors if takeWhileZero happened at a 64 bit boundary while the underlying buffer was empty.
The change also alters how sequence-lengths are encoded, to more consistently use the getGamma method instead of adding special significance to a zero first byte.
Finally, assertions are added checking the invariants of the gamma and delta coding logic as well as UrlIdCodec to earlier detect issues.
The priority index documents file can be trivially compressed to a large degree.
Compression schema:
```
00b -> diff docord (E gamma)
01b -> diff domainid (E delta) + (1 + docord) (E delta)
10b -> rank (E gamma) + domainid,docord (raw)
11b -> 30 bit size header, followed by 1 raw doc id (61 bits)
```
Btree index adds overhead and disk space and doesn't fill any function for the prio index.
* Update finalize logic with a new IO transformer that copies the data and prepends a size
* Update the reader to read the new format
* Added a test
IntArray gets the YAGNI axe. The array library had two implementations, one for longs which was used, and one for ints, which only ever saw bit rot. Removing the latter, as all it ever did was clutter up the codebase and add technical debt. If we need int arrays, we fork LongArray again (or add int capabilities to it)
Also cleaning up the interfaces, removing layers of redundant abstractions and adding javadocs.
Finally adding sz=2 specializations to the quick- and insertion sort algorithms. It seems the JIT isn't optimizing these particularly well, this is an attempt to help it out a bit.
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.