Commit Graph

3 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Martin Atkins
4a21b763aa core: Get tests compiling again
After the refactoring to integrate HCL2 many of the tests were no longer
using correct types, attribute names, etc.

This is a bulk update of all of the tests to make them compile again, with
minimal changes otherwise. Although the tests now compile, many of them
do not yet pass. The tests will be gradually repaired in subsequent
commits, as we continue to complete the refactoring and retrofit work.
2018-10-16 18:46:46 -07:00
Mitchell Hashimoto
cfb440ea60
terraform: don't prune state on init()
Init should only _add_ values, not remove them.

During graph execution, there are steps that expect that a state isn't
being actively pruned out from under it. Namely: writing deposed states.

Writing deposed states has no way to handle if a state changes
underneath it because the only way to uniquely identify a deposed state
is its index in the deposed array. When destroying deposed resources, we
set the value to `<nil>`. If the array is pruned before the next deposed
destroy, then the indexes have changed, and this can cause a crash.

This PR does the following (with more details below):

  * `init()` no longer prunes.

  * `ReadState()` always prunes before returning. I can't think of a
    scenario where this is unsafe since generally we can always START
    from a pruned state, its just causing problems to prune
    mid-execution.

  * Exported State APIs updated to be robust against nil ModuleStates.

Instead, I think we should adopt the following semantics for init/prune
in our structures that support it (Diff, for example). By having
consistent semantics around these functions, we can avoid this in the
future and have set expectations working with them.

  * `init()` (in anything) will only ever be additive, and won't change
    ordering or existing values. It won't remove values.

  * `prune()` is destructive, expectedly.

  * Functions on a structure must not assume a pruned structure 100% of
    the time. They must be robust to handle nils. This is especially
    important because in many cases values such as `Modules` in state
    are exported so end users can simply modify them outside of the
    exported APIs.

This PR may expose us to unknown crashes but I've tried to cover our
cases in exposed APIs by checking for nil.
2016-12-02 11:48:34 -05:00
Mitchell Hashimoto
2608c5f282
terraform: transform for adding orphan resources + tests 2016-11-08 13:59:27 -08:00