Added new flag "-R" to command line to perform an automatic removal.
This should be the last of the ways in which a single command could
block the nilmdb thread for a long time.
Enable the following pragmas: synchronous=NORMAL, journal_mode=WAL.
This offers a significant speedup to INSERT times compared to
synchronous=FULL, and is roughly the same as synchronous=OFF
but should be a bit safer.
Things are now block-focused, rather than line-focused. This should
give a pretty big speedup to inserting client data, especially when
inserting preformatted data.
The server buffers the string and passes it to nilmdb. Nilmdb passes
the string to bulkdata. Bulkdata uses the rocket interface to parse
it in chunks, as necessary. Everything gets passed back up and
everyone is happy.
Currently, only pyrocket implements append_string.
This is a pretty big change that will render existing clients unable
to modify the database, but it's important that we use POST or PUT
instead of GET for anything that may change state, in case this
is ever put behind a cache.
These functions can now take an object or a type (class).
If given an object, they will wrap subsequent calls to that object.
If given a type, they will return an object that can be instantiated
to create a new object, and all calls including __init__ will be
covered by the serialization or thread verification.
Previously, we could get empty intervals anyway by having a non-empty
interval and removing a smaller interval around each piece of data.
Turns out that empty intervals are OK and needed in some situations,
so explicitly allow and test for it.
Now nilmdb.client, nilmdb.server, nilmdb.cmdline, and nilmdb.utils
are each their own modules, and there is a little bit more of a
logical separation between them. Various changes scattered throughout
to fix naming (for example, nilmdb.nilmdb.NilmDBError is now
nilmdb.server.errors.NilmDBError).
Reduced usage of "from __future__ import absolute_import" as much
as possible. It's still needed for the functions in the nilmdb/server
directory to be able to import the nilmdb module rather than the
nilmdb.py script.
This should hopefully ease future packaging a bit.