remove LevelFilter

We want to always be using the hclogger to filter whenever possible
This commit is contained in:
James Bardin 2020-10-18 11:25:44 -04:00
parent 0b31ffa587
commit a3a20e0396
4 changed files with 3 additions and 302 deletions

View File

@ -4,7 +4,6 @@ import (
"bytes"
"flag"
"fmt"
"io"
"io/ioutil"
"log"
"os"
@ -12,7 +11,6 @@ import (
"reflect"
"regexp"
"strings"
"syscall"
"testing"
"github.com/davecgh/go-spew/spew"
@ -25,11 +23,12 @@ import (
"github.com/hashicorp/terraform/configs"
"github.com/hashicorp/terraform/configs/configload"
"github.com/hashicorp/terraform/internal/initwd"
"github.com/hashicorp/terraform/internal/logging"
"github.com/hashicorp/terraform/providers"
"github.com/hashicorp/terraform/states"
"github.com/hashicorp/terraform/terraform"
"github.com/hashicorp/terraform/tfdiags"
_ "github.com/hashicorp/terraform/internal/logging"
)
// flagSweep is a flag available when running tests on the command line. It
@ -392,46 +391,6 @@ type TestStep struct {
// Set to a file mask in sprintf format where %s is test name
const EnvLogPathMask = "TF_LOG_PATH_MASK"
func LogOutput(t TestT) (logOutput io.Writer, err error) {
logOutput = ioutil.Discard
logLevel := logging.CurrentLogLevel()
if logLevel == "" {
return
}
logOutput = os.Stderr
if logPath := os.Getenv(logging.EnvLogFile); logPath != "" {
var err error
logOutput, err = os.OpenFile(logPath, syscall.O_CREAT|syscall.O_RDWR|syscall.O_APPEND, 0666)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
}
if logPathMask := os.Getenv(EnvLogPathMask); logPathMask != "" {
// Escape special characters which may appear if we have subtests
testName := strings.Replace(t.Name(), "/", "__", -1)
logPath := fmt.Sprintf(logPathMask, testName)
var err error
logOutput, err = os.OpenFile(logPath, syscall.O_CREAT|syscall.O_RDWR|syscall.O_APPEND, 0666)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
}
// This was the default since the beginning
logOutput = &logging.LevelFilter{
Levels: logging.ValidLevels,
MinLevel: logging.LogLevel(logLevel),
Writer: logOutput,
}
return
}
// ParallelTest performs an acceptance test on a resource, allowing concurrency
// with other ParallelTest.
//
@ -464,12 +423,6 @@ func Test(t TestT, c TestCase) {
return
}
logWriter, err := LogOutput(t)
if err != nil {
t.Error(fmt.Errorf("error setting up logging: %s", err))
}
log.SetOutput(logWriter)
// We require verbose mode so that the user knows what is going on.
if !testTesting && !testing.Verbose() && !c.IsUnitTest {
t.Fatal("Acceptance tests must be run with the -v flag on tests")

View File

@ -1,159 +0,0 @@
package logging
import (
"bytes"
"io"
"sync"
)
// LogLevel is a special string, conventionally written all in uppercase, that
// can be used to mark a log line for filtering and to specify filtering
// levels in the LevelFilter type.
type LogLevel string
// LevelFilter is an io.Writer that can be used with a logger that
// will attempt to filter out log messages that aren't at least a certain
// level.
//
// This filtering is HEURISTIC-BASED, and so will not be 100% reliable. The
// assumptions it makes are:
//
// - Individual log messages are never split across multiple calls to the
// Write method.
//
// - Messages that carry levels are marked by a sequence starting with "[",
// then the level name string, and then "]". Any message without a sequence
// like this is an un-levelled message, and is not subject to filtering.
//
// - Each \n-delimited line in a write is a separate log message, unless a
// line starts with at least one space in which case it is interpreted
// as a continuation of the previous line.
//
// - If a log line starts with a non-whitespace character that isn't a digit
// then it's recognized as a degenerate continuation, because "real" log
// lines should start with a date/time and thus always have a leading
// digit. (This also cleans up after some situations where the assumptuion
// that messages arrive atomically aren't met, which is sadly sometimes
// true for longer messages that trip over some buffering behavior in
// panicwrap.)
//
// Because logging is a cross-cutting concern and not fully under the control
// of Terraform itself, there will certainly be cases where the above
// heuristics will fail. For example, it is likely that LevelFilter will
// occasionally misinterpret a continuation line as a new message because the
// code generating it doesn't know about our indentation convention.
//
// Our goal here is just to make a best effort to reduce the log volume,
// accepting that the results will not be 100% correct.
//
// Logging calls within Terraform Core should follow the above conventions so
// that the log output is broadly correct, however.
//
// Once the filter is in use somewhere, it is not safe to modify
// the structure.
type LevelFilter struct {
// Levels is the list of log levels, in increasing order of
// severity. Example might be: {"DEBUG", "WARN", "ERROR"}.
Levels []LogLevel
// MinLevel is the minimum level allowed through
MinLevel LogLevel
// The underlying io.Writer where log messages that pass the filter
// will be set.
Writer io.Writer
badLevels map[LogLevel]struct{}
show bool
once sync.Once
}
// Check will check a given line if it would be included in the level
// filter.
func (f *LevelFilter) Check(line []byte) bool {
f.once.Do(f.init)
// Check for a log level
var level LogLevel
x := bytes.IndexByte(line, '[')
if x >= 0 {
y := bytes.IndexByte(line[x:], ']')
if y >= 0 {
level = LogLevel(line[x+1 : x+y])
}
}
//return level == ""
_, ok := f.badLevels[level]
return !ok
}
// Write is a specialized implementation of io.Writer suitable for being
// the output of a logger from the "log" package.
//
// This Writer implementation assumes that it will only recieve byte slices
// containing one or more entire lines of log output, each one terminated by
// a newline. This is compatible with the behavior of the "log" package
// directly, and is also tolerant of intermediaries that might buffer multiple
// separate writes together, as long as no individual log line is ever
// split into multiple slices.
//
// Behavior is undefined if any log line is split across multiple writes or
// written without a trailing '\n' delimiter.
func (f *LevelFilter) Write(p []byte) (n int, err error) {
for len(p) > 0 {
// Split at the first \n, inclusive
idx := bytes.IndexByte(p, '\n')
if idx == -1 {
// Invalid, undelimited write. We'll tolerate it assuming that
// our assumptions are being violated, but the results may be
// non-ideal.
idx = len(p) - 1
break
}
var l []byte
l, p = p[:idx+1], p[idx+1:]
// Lines starting with characters other than decimal digits (including
// whitespace) are assumed to be continuations lines. This is an
// imprecise heuristic, but experimentally it seems to generate
// "good enough" results from Terraform Core's own logging. Its mileage
// may vary with output from other systems.
if l[0] >= '0' && l[0] <= '9' {
f.show = f.Check(l)
}
if f.show {
_, err = f.Writer.Write(l)
if err != nil {
// Technically it's not correct to say we've written the whole
// buffer, but for our purposes here it's good enough as we're
// only implementing io.Writer enough to satisfy logging
// use-cases.
return len(p), err
}
}
}
// We always behave as if we wrote the whole of the buffer, even if
// we actually skipped some lines. We're only implementiong io.Writer
// enough to satisfy logging use-cases.
return len(p), nil
}
// SetMinLevel is used to update the minimum log level
func (f *LevelFilter) SetMinLevel(min LogLevel) {
f.MinLevel = min
f.init()
}
func (f *LevelFilter) init() {
badLevels := make(map[LogLevel]struct{})
for _, level := range f.Levels {
if level == f.MinLevel {
break
}
badLevels[level] = struct{}{}
}
f.badLevels = badLevels
f.show = true
}

View File

@ -1,93 +0,0 @@
package logging
import (
"bytes"
"io"
"log"
"testing"
)
func TestLevelFilter_impl(t *testing.T) {
var _ io.Writer = new(LevelFilter)
}
func TestLevelFilter(t *testing.T) {
buf := new(bytes.Buffer)
filter := &LevelFilter{
Levels: []LogLevel{"DEBUG", "WARN", "ERROR"},
MinLevel: "WARN",
Writer: buf,
}
logger := log.New(filter, "", 0)
logger.Print("2019/01/01 00:00:00 [WARN] foo")
logger.Println("2019/01/01 00:00:00 [ERROR] bar\n2019/01/01 00:00:00 [DEBUG] buzz")
logger.Println("2019/01/01 00:00:00 [DEBUG] baz\n continuation\n2019/01/01 00:00:00 [WARN] buzz\n more\n2019/01/01 00:00:00 [DEBUG] fizz")
result := buf.String()
expected := "2019/01/01 00:00:00 [WARN] foo\n2019/01/01 00:00:00 [ERROR] bar\n2019/01/01 00:00:00 [WARN] buzz\n more\n"
if result != expected {
t.Fatalf("wrong result\ngot:\n%s\nwant:\n%s", result, expected)
}
}
func TestLevelFilterCheck(t *testing.T) {
filter := &LevelFilter{
Levels: []LogLevel{"DEBUG", "WARN", "ERROR"},
MinLevel: "WARN",
Writer: nil,
}
testCases := []struct {
line string
check bool
}{
{"[WARN] foo\n", true},
{"[ERROR] bar\n", true},
{"[DEBUG] baz\n", false},
{"[WARN] buzz\n", true},
}
for _, testCase := range testCases {
result := filter.Check([]byte(testCase.line))
if result != testCase.check {
t.Errorf("Fail: %s", testCase.line)
}
}
}
func TestLevelFilter_SetMinLevel(t *testing.T) {
filter := &LevelFilter{
Levels: []LogLevel{"DEBUG", "WARN", "ERROR"},
MinLevel: "ERROR",
Writer: nil,
}
testCases := []struct {
line string
checkBefore bool
checkAfter bool
}{
{"[WARN] foo\n", false, true},
{"[ERROR] bar\n", true, true},
{"[DEBUG] baz\n", false, false},
{"[WARN] buzz\n", false, true},
}
for _, testCase := range testCases {
result := filter.Check([]byte(testCase.line))
if result != testCase.checkBefore {
t.Errorf("Fail: %s", testCase.line)
}
}
// Update the minimum level to WARN
filter.SetMinLevel("WARN")
for _, testCase := range testCases {
result := filter.Check([]byte(testCase.line))
if result != testCase.checkAfter {
t.Errorf("Fail: %s", testCase.line)
}
}
}

View File

@ -20,7 +20,7 @@ const (
)
// ValidLevels are the log level names that Terraform recognizes.
var ValidLevels = []LogLevel{"TRACE", "DEBUG", "INFO", "WARN", "ERROR"}
var ValidLevels = []string{"TRACE", "DEBUG", "INFO", "WARN", "ERROR"}
// logger is the global hclog logger
var logger hclog.Logger