* chore(ci): upgraded linter to 1.53.3
This flagged a bunch of unused parameters, so the PR is larger than
usual, but 99% mechanical.
* separate lint CI task
* run Lint in separate CI
- removed a bunch of hacks and should improve the logging
performance by avoiding interfaces and data translation. This will
allow using of de-sugared loggers in performance-critical
logging situations.
- this will also allow using features of ZAP more directly without
having to reimplement them.
- moved logging.Printf() to testlogging
- refactored `uitask` to store logs in a structural format and
present them as JSON only in the UI
- renamed printf_logger.go to printf.go so that fewer columns are used
in the logs
* logging: added Logger.Debugw(message, key1, value1, ..., keyN, valueN)
This is based on ZAP and allows structural logs to be emitted.
* cli: added --json-log-console and --json-log-file flags
* logging: updated storage logging wrapper to use structural logging
* pr feedback
Removed Warning, Notify and Fatal:
* `Warning` => `Error` or `Info`
* `Notify` => `Info`
* `Fatal` was never used.
Note that --log-level=warning is still supported for backwards
compatibility, but it is the same as --log-level=error.
Co-authored-by: Julio López <julio+gh@kasten.io>
* logging: cleaned up stderr logging
- do not show module
- do not show timestamps by default (enable with --console-timestamps)
* logging: replaced most printStderr() with log.Info
* cli: additional logging cleanup
This is mostly mechanical and changes how loggers are instantiated.
Logger is now associated with a context, passed around all methods,
(most methods had ctx, but had to add it in a few missing places).
By default Kopia does not produce any logs, but it can be overridden,
either locally for a nested context, by calling
ctx = logging.WithLogger(ctx, newLoggerFunc)
To override logs globally, call logging.SetDefaultLogger(newLoggerFunc)
This refactoring allowed removing dependency from Kopia repo
and go-logging library (the CLI still uses it, though).
It is now also possible to have all test methods emit logs using
t.Logf() so that they show up in failure reports, which should make
debugging of test failures suck less.