Tweak the introduction to akka persistence

Specifically:

* avoid "internal", as I initially though that meant the Akka framework's internal state of an actor
* dropped "started" in the context of recovering an actor: in order to recover you have to have been already started
* rather than refering to "changes", reference that what's persisted are the actor's received events
* some general English re-wording
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Dale Wijnand 2018-11-13 19:19:04 +00:00
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@ -30,13 +30,13 @@ to see what this looks like in practice.
## Introduction
Akka persistence enables stateful actors to persist their internal state so that it can be recovered when an actor
is started, restarted after a JVM crash or by a supervisor, or migrated in a cluster. The key concept behind Akka
persistence is that only changes to an actor's internal state are persisted but never its current state directly
(except for optional snapshots). These changes are only ever appended to storage, nothing is ever mutated, which
allows for very high transaction rates and efficient replication. Stateful actors are recovered by replaying stored
changes to these actors from which they can rebuild internal state. This can be either the full history of changes
or starting from a snapshot which can dramatically reduce recovery times. Akka persistence also provides point-to-point
Akka persistence enables stateful actors to persist their state so that it can be recovered when an actor
is either restarted, such as after a JVM crash, by a supervisor or a manual stop-start, or migrated within a cluster. The key concept behind Akka
persistence is that only the _events_ received by the actor are persisted, not the actual state of the actor
(though actor state snapshot support is also available). The events are persisted by appending to storage (nothing is ever mutated) which
allows for very high transaction rates and efficient replication. A stateful actor is recovered by replaying the stored
events to the actor, allowing it to rebuild its state. This can be either the full history of changes
or starting from a checkpoint in a snapshot which can dramatically reduce recovery times. Akka persistence also provides point-to-point
communication with at-least-once message delivery semantics.
@@@ note
@ -59,14 +59,14 @@ concepts and architecture of [eventsourced](https://github.com/eligosource/event
* @scala[`PersistentActor`]@java[`AbstractPersistentActor`]: Is a persistent, stateful actor. It is able to persist events to a journal and can react to
them in a thread-safe manner. It can be used to implement both *command* as well as *event sourced* actors.
When a persistent actor is started or restarted, journaled messages are replayed to that actor so that it can
recover internal state from these messages.
recover its state from these messages.
* @scala[`AtLeastOnceDelivery`]@java[`AbstractPersistentActorAtLeastOnceDelivery`]: To send messages with at-least-once delivery semantics to destinations, also in
case of sender and receiver JVM crashes.
* `AsyncWriteJournal`: A journal stores the sequence of messages sent to a persistent actor. An application can control which messages
are journaled and which are received by the persistent actor without being journaled. Journal maintains `highestSequenceNr` that is increased on each message.
The storage backend of a journal is pluggable. The persistence extension comes with a "leveldb" journal plugin, which writes to the local filesystem.
Replicated journals are available as [Community plugins](http://akka.io/community/).
* *Snapshot store*: A snapshot store persists snapshots of a persistent actor's internal state. Snapshots are
* *Snapshot store*: A snapshot store persists snapshots of a persistent actor's state. Snapshots are
used for optimizing recovery times. The storage backend of a snapshot store is pluggable.
The persistence extension comes with a "local" snapshot storage plugin, which writes to the local filesystem. Replicated snapshot stores are available as [Community plugins](http://akka.io/community/)
* *Event sourcing*. Based on the building blocks described above, Akka persistence provides abstractions for the