Due to how `execute` is implemented, it returns a `Connection` clone
which internally shares a turso_core::Connection with every other
Connection. Since `execute` returns `Connection` and immediatly it is
dropped, it will close connection, checkpoint and leave database in
weird state.
Makes it easier to test the feature:
```
$ cargo run -- --experimental-indexes
Limbo v0.0.22
Enter ".help" for usage hints.
Connected to a transient in-memory database.
Use ".open FILENAME" to reopen on a persistent database
limbo> CREATE TABLE t(x);
limbo> CREATE INDEX t_idx ON t(x);
limbo> DROP INDEX t_idx;
```
OwnedValue has become a powerhouse of madness, mainly because I decided
to do it like that when I first introduced AggContext. I decided it was
enough and I introduced a `Register` struct that contains `OwnedValue`,
`Record` and `Aggregation`, this way we don't use `OwnedValue` for
everything make everyone's life harder.
This is the next step towards making ImmutableRecords the default
because I want to remove unnecessary allocations. Right now we clone
OwnedValues when we generate a record more than needed.
We currently have two value types, `Value` and `OwnedValue`. The
original thinking was that `Value` is external type and `OwnedValue` is
internal type. However, this just results in unnecessary transformation
between the types as data crosses the Limbo library boundary.
Let's just follow SQLite here and consolidate on a single value type
(where `sqlite3_value` is just an alias for the internal `Mem` type).
The way this will eventually work is that we can have bunch of
pre-allocated `OwnedValue` objects in `ProgramState` and basically
return a reference to them all the way to the application itself, which
extracts the actual value.
This makes io_uring the default in CLI, but makes it non-default in
core. Before, if one built CLI without io_uring, core still built with
it as it was a default feature. To accommodate for the change, all
bindings have been updated to select the feature, except for WASM which
has a separate fs implementation.
This also adds some #[cfg] and #[allow] to silence unused-* warnings,
which I discovered when testing with different features disabled.
Closes#942