This updates our configuration code generator to now also include map marshal and unmarshalers. So we now have much more control over how things get read from pflags, and stored / read from viper configuration. This allows us to set ALL configuration variables by CLI and environment now, AND support nested configuration files. e.g.
```yaml
advanced:
scraper-deterrence = true
http-client:
allow-ips = ["127.0.0.1"]
```
is the same as
```yaml
advanced-scraper-deterrence = true
http-client-allow-ips = ["127.0.0.1"]
```
This also starts cleaning up of our jumbled Configuration{} type by moving the advanced configuration options into their own nested structs, also as a way to show what it's capable of. It's worth noting however that nesting only works if the Go types are nested too (as this is how we hint to our code generator to generate the necessary flattening code :p).
closes#3195
Reviewed-on: https://codeberg.org/superseriousbusiness/gotosocial/pulls/4109
Co-authored-by: kim <grufwub@gmail.com>
Co-committed-by: kim <grufwub@gmail.com>
This adds a lightweight form of tracing to GTS. Each incoming request is
assigned a Request ID which we then pass on and log in all our log
lines. Any function that gets called downstream from an HTTP handler
should now emit a requestID=value pair whenever it logs something.
Co-authored-by: kim <grufwub@gmail.com>
* update config generator to support nested structs, add cache configuration options
* update envparsing test
* add cache configuration to config parse tests
* set cache configuration in testrig
* move caches to sub-cache "gts" namespace, update envparsing, add cache config docs to example config
Signed-off-by: kim <grufwub@gmail.com>