Change the clustering key argument in mutation::set_cell from
exploded_clustering_prefix to clustering_key_prefix, which allows for
some overall code simplification and fewer copies. This mostly affects
the cql3 layer.
Signed-off-by: Duarte Nunes <duarte@scylladb.com>
Currently, the code is using bytes_opt and bytes_view_opt to represent
CQL values, which can hold a value or null. In preparation for
supporting a third state, unset value introduced in CQL v4, introduce
new raw_value and raw_value_view types and use them instead.
The new types are based on boost::variant<> and are capable of holding
null, unset values, and blobs that represent a value.
There's no benefit to using C include guards so switch to pragma once
everywhere for consistency.
Signed-off-by: Pekka Enberg <penberg@cloudius-systems.com>
To prepare a user-defined type, we need to look up its name in the keyspace.
While we get the keyspace name as an argument to prepare(), it is useless
without the database instance.
Fix the problem by passing a database reference along with the keyspace.
This precolates through the class structure, so most cql3 raw types end up
receiving this treatment.
Origin gets along without it by using a singleton. We can't do this due
to sharding (we could use a thread-local instance, but that's ugly too).
Hopefully the transition to a visitor will clean this up.
Instead of using inefficient std::ostream, use our own 'bytes' iterator class.
Compute ahead of time the length of the byte buffer.
Afterwards serialize the objects into it.
Gives ~X5 boost over previus results (that sometimes don't even
finish in reasonable time)
[avi: add missing include]