This makes them more reliable to parse. redo-log can parse each line,
format and print it, then recurse if necessary. This got a little ugly
because I wanted 'redo --raw-logs' to work, which we want to format the
output nicely, but not call redo-log.
(As a result, --raw-logs has a different meaning to redo and
redo-log, which is kinda dumb. I should fix that.)
As an added bonus, redo-log now handles indenting of recursive logs, so
if the build was a -> a/b -> a/b/c, and you look at the log for a/b, it
can still start at the top level indentation.
We already printed an error at build time, but added the broken
dependency anyway. If the .do script decided to succeed despite
redo-ifchange aborting, the target would be successfully created
and we'd end up with an infinite loop when running isdirty() later.
The result was still "correct", because python helpfully aborted
the infinite loop after the recursion got too deep. But let's
explicitly detect it and print a better error message.
(Thanks to Nils Dagsson Moskopp's redo-testcases repo for exposing this
problem. If you put a #!/bin/sh header on your .do script means you
need to run 'set -e' yourself if you want .do scripts to abort after an
error, which you almost always do, and those testcases don't, which
exposed this bug if you ran the tests twice.)