Use the same update mechanism as for updates on the interpolations
themselves. Updates must solely happen in place_insert as this is
the place where actual changes of the data happen.
Instead of normalising the names simply compare them in lower
case. This removes the dependency on the tokenizer for
linking boundaries and nodes. When looking up the linked places
by place type also allow that one name is simply contained in the
other. This catches the frequent case where one of the names has
an addendum (e.g. Newport vs. City of Newport).
Drops the special index for the name lookup and insted relies
on a slightly extended version of the geometry index used for
reverse lookup. Saves around 100MB on a planet.
On Postgresql versions 11+ add an index to speed up the lookup
of housenumbers for terms found in search_name. This is really
just a band-aid around the query planer's interpretation of the
query.
Also switches to jinja-based preprocessing, which allows to
simplify the SQL files. Use 'if not exists' where possible
so that the step can be rerun to fix missing indexes.