Commit Graph

116 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Martin Atkins
e2380b1038 cliconfig: Allow forcing use of the plugin cache despite the lock file
Currently Terraform will use an entry from the global plugin cache only if
it matches a checksum already recorded in the dependency lock file. This
allows Terraform to produce a complete lock file entry on the first
encounter with a new provider, whereas using the cache in that case would
cause the lock file to only cover the single package in the cache and
thereefore be unusable on any other operating system or CPU architecture.

This temporary CLI config option is a pragmatic exception to support those
who cannot currently correctly use the dependency lock file but who still
want to benefit from the plugin cache. With this setting enabled,
Terraform has permission to produce a dependency lock file that is only
suitable for the current system if that would allow use of an existing
entry in the plugin cache.

We are introducing this option to resolve a conflict between the needs of
folks who are using the dependency lock file as expected and the needs of
folks who cannot use the dependency lock file for some reason. The hope
then is to give respite to those who need this exception in the meantime
while we understand better why they cannot use the dependency lock file
and improve its design so that everyone will be able to use it
successfully in a future version of Terraform. This option will become a
silent no-op in a future version of Terraform, once the dependency lock
file behavior is sufficient for all supported Terraform development
workflows.
2023-01-25 08:23:01 -08:00
Martin Atkins
fda0579537 Experiments supported only in alpha/dev builds
We originally introduced the idea of language experiments as a way to get
early feedback on not-yet-proven feature ideas, ideally as part of the
initial exploration of the solution space rather than only after a
solution has become relatively clear.

Unfortunately, our tradeoff of making them available in normal releases
behind an explicit opt-in in order to make it easier to participate in the
feedback process had the unintended side-effect of making it feel okay
to use experiments in production and endure the warnings they generate.
This in turn has made us reluctant to make use of the experiments feature
lest experiments become de-facto production features which we then feel
compelled to preserve even though we aren't yet ready to graduate them
to stable features.

In an attempt to tweak that compromise, here we make the availability of
experiments _at all_ a build-time flag which will not be set by default,
and therefore experiments will not be available in most release builds.

The intent (not yet implemented in this PR) is for our release process to
set this flag only when it knows it's building an alpha release or a
development snapshot not destined for release at all, which will therefore
allow us to still use the alpha releases as a vehicle for giving feedback
participants access to a feature (without needing to install a Go
toolchain) but will not encourage pretending that these features are
production-ready before they graduate from experimental.

Only language experiments have an explicit framework for dealing with them
which outlives any particular experiment, so most of the changes here are
to that generalized mechanism. However, the intent is that non-language
experiments, such as experimental CLI commands, would also in future
check Meta.AllowExperimentalFeatures and gate the use of those experiments
too, so that we can be consistent that experimental features will never
be available unless you explicitly choose to use an alpha release or
a custom build from source code.

Since there are already some experiments active at the time of this commit
which were not previously subject to this restriction, we'll pragmatically
leave those as exceptions that will remain generally available for now,
and so this new approach will apply only to new experiments started in the
future. Once those experiments have all concluded, we will be left with
no more exceptions unless we explicitly choose to make an exception for
some reason we've not imagined yet.

It's important that we be able to write tests that rely on experiments
either being available or not being available, so here we're using our
typical approach of making "package main" deal with the global setting
that applies to Terraform CLI executables while making the layers below
all support fine-grain selection of this behavior so that tests with
different needs can run concurrently without trampling on one another.

As a compromise, the integration tests in the terraform package will
run with experiments enabled _by default_ since we commonly need to
exercise experiments in those tests, but they can selectively opt-out
if they need to by overriding the loader setting back to false again.
2022-06-17 14:46:07 -07:00
Martin Atkins
5b266dd5ca command: Remove the experimental "terraform add" command
We introduced this experiment to gather feedback, and the feedback we saw
led to us deciding to do another round of design work before we move
forward with something to meet this use-case.

In addition to being experimental, this has only been included in alpha
releases so far, and so on both counts it is not protected by the
Terraform v1.0 Compatibility Promises.
2021-10-20 06:42:47 -07:00
Martin Atkins
65e0c448a0 workdir: Start of a new package for working directory state management
Thus far our various interactions with the bits of state we keep
associated with a working directory have all been implemented directly
inside the "command" package -- often in the huge command.Meta type -- and
not managed collectively via a single component.

There's too many little codepaths reading and writing from the working
directory and data directory to refactor it all in one step, but this is
an attempt at a first step towards a future where everything that reads
and writes from the current working directory would do so via an object
that encapsulates the implementation details and offers a high-level API
to read and write all of these session-persistent settings.

The design here continues our gradual path towards using a dependency
injection style where "package main" is solely responsible for directly
interacting with the OS command line, the OS environment, the OS working
directory, the stdio streams, and the CLI configuration, and then
communicating the resulting information to the rest of Terraform by wiring
together objects. It seems likely that eventually we'll have enough wiring
code in package main to justify a more explicit organization of that code,
but for this commit the new "workdir.Dir" object is just wired directly in
place of its predecessors, without any significant change of code
organization at that top layer.

This first commit focuses on the main files and directories we use to
find provider plugins, because a subsequent commit will lightly reorganize
the separation of concerns for plugin launching with a similar goal of
collecting all of the relevant logic together into one spot.
2021-09-10 14:56:49 -07:00
Kristin Laemmert
583859e510
commands: terraform add (#28874)
* command: new command, terraform add, generates resource templates

terraform add ADDRESS generates a resource configuration template with all required (and optionally optional) attributes set to null. This can optionally also pre-populate nonsesitive attributes with values from an existing resource of the same type in state (sensitive vals will be populated with null and a comment indicating sensitivity)

* website: terraform add documentation
2021-06-17 12:08:37 -04:00
Martin Atkins
b40a4fb741 Move plugin/ and plugin6/ to internal/plugin{,6}/
This is part of a general effort to move all of Terraform's non-library
package surface under internal in order to reinforce that these are for
internal use within Terraform only.

If you were previously importing packages under this prefix into an
external codebase, you could pin to an earlier release tag as an interim
solution until you've make a plan to achieve the same functionality some
other way.
2021-05-17 14:09:07 -07:00
Martin Atkins
ffe056bacb Move command/ to internal/command/
This is part of a general effort to move all of Terraform's non-library
package surface under internal in order to reinforce that these are for
internal use within Terraform only.

If you were previously importing packages under this prefix into an
external codebase, you could pin to an earlier release tag as an interim
solution until you've make a plan to achieve the same functionality some
other way.
2021-05-17 14:09:07 -07:00
Martin Atkins
b9a93a0fe7 Move addrs/ to internal/addrs/
This is part of a general effort to move all of Terraform's non-library
package surface under internal in order to reinforce that these are for
internal use within Terraform only.

If you were previously importing packages under this prefix into an
external codebase, you could pin to an earlier release tag as an interim
solution until you've make a plan to achieve the same functionality some
other way.
2021-05-17 14:09:07 -07:00
Martin Atkins
bf396b5f1b command/views: main View type aware if it's running in automation
This "running in automation" idea is a best effort thing where we try to
avoid printing out specific suggestions of commands to run in the main
workflow when the user is running Terraform inside a wrapper script or
other automation, because they probably don't want to bypass that
automation.

This just makes that information available to the main views.View type,
so we can then make use of it in the implementation of more specialized
view types that embed views.View.

However, nothing is using it as of this commit. We'll use it in later
commits.
2021-05-10 10:50:05 -07:00
Martin Atkins
7f78342953 command: Experimental "terraform test" command
This is just a prototype to gather some feedback in our ongoing research
on integration testing of Terraform modules. The hope is that by having a
command integrated into Terraform itself it'll be easier for interested
module authors to give it a try, and also easier for us to iterate quickly
based on feedback without having to coordinate across multiple codebases.

Everything about this is subject to change even in future patch releases.
Since it's a CLI command rather than a configuration language feature it's
not using the language experiments mechanism, but generates a warning
similar to the one language experiments generate in order to be clear that
backward compatibility is not guaranteed.
2021-02-22 14:21:45 -08:00
Pam Selle
08b649b6f9 Remove removed upgrade commands
Delete commands that are no longer in Terraform and have been
removed for a full release cycle.
2021-02-17 14:34:58 -05:00
Alisdair McDiarmid
c5a6aa31d3 cli: Add initial command views abstraction
Terraform supports multiple output formats for several sub-commands.
The default format is user-readable text, but many sub-commands support
a `-json` flag to output a machine-readable format for the result. The
output command also supports a `-raw` flag for a simpler, scripting-
focused machine readable format.

This commit adds a "views" abstraction, intended to help ensure
consistency between the various output formats. This extracts the render
specific code from the command package, and moves it into a views
package. Each command is expected to create an interface for its view,
and one or more implementations of that interface.

By doing so, we separate the concerns of generating the sub-command
result from rendering the result in the specified output format. This
should make it easier to ensure that all output formats will be updated
together when changes occur in the result-generating phase.

There are some other consequences of this restructuring:

- Views now directly access the terminal streams, rather than the
  now-redundant cli.Ui instance;
- With the reorganization of commands, parsing CLI arguments is now the
  responsibility of a separate "arguments" package.

For now, views are added only for the output sub-command, as an example.
Because this command uses code which is shared with the apply and
refresh commands, those are also partially updated.
2021-02-11 15:06:39 -05:00
Nick Fagerlund
a60120477c Update links to CLI docs in code comments, messages, and readme 2021-01-22 12:22:21 -08:00
Martin Atkins
d2c3403ab6 command: Use the new terminal.Streams object
Here we propagate in the initialized terminal.Streams from package main,
and then onwards to backends running in CLI mode.

This also replaces our use of helper/wrappedstreams to determine whether
stdin is a terminal or a pipe. helper/wrappedstreams returns incorrect
file descriptors on Windows, causing StdinPiped to always return false on
that platform and thus causing one of the odd behaviors discussed in

Finally, this includes some wrappers around the ability to look up the
number of columns in the terminal in preparation for use elsewhere. These
wrappers deal with the fact that our unit tests typically won't populate
meta.Streams.
2021-01-13 15:37:04 -08:00
Martin Atkins
15c0645bd5 main: initialize the terminal (if any) using internal/terminal
We need to call into terminal.Init in early startup to make sure that we
either have a suitable Terminal or that we disable attempts to use virtual
terminal escape sequences.

This commit gets the terminal initialized but doesn't do much with it
after that. Subsequent commits will make more use of this.
2021-01-13 15:37:04 -08:00
Pam Selle
83e6703bf7 Remove revision from version command
The revision field is only populated on dev builds so this means
most releases of Terraform have an empty "terraform_revision" field
in the JSON output. Since we recommend developers use go tooling
to `go build` this tool when developing, the revision is not useful
data and so it is removed.
2021-01-12 16:35:30 -05:00
James Bardin
bdfea50cc8 remove unused 2020-12-02 13:59:18 -05:00
James Bardin
5e089c2c09 run built-in provisioners in-process
Use the new provisioner interfaces, and run the built-in provisioners
in-process.
2020-12-02 12:45:00 -05:00
Martin Atkins
0a596d2a12 command/version: Report the current platform
Along with all of the other information we previously reported in the
"terraform version" output, we'll now include the name of the current
platform as our provider mechanisms represent it.

This is addressing a long-standing minor annoyance where we often can't
tell from an incomplete bug report which platform Terraform was running
on, and incomplete bug reporters do tend to at least include the
"terraform version" output even if they don't also include the requested
full trace log.

However, what motivated doing it _now_ is that anyone building a provider
registry or mirror needs to have some awareness of these platform
identifiers which have been, until v0.13, mostly an implementation detail.
This additional information is a small thing we can do to help registry
builders find out what the platform identifier ought to be for each of
the platforms they aim to support, even if some of them are platforms
which the Go compiler allows but which HashiCorp doesn't officially
support.

The new information is on a line of its own in the output as a pragmatic
way to avoid breaking anyone who might be using something like
$(terraform version | head -n1) to print a brief Terraform version
identifier into some logs. That's not an interface we officially support
for machine consumption, but it's easy to avoid breaking it here and so we
won't do so.
2020-11-19 14:15:30 -08:00
Martin Atkins
6a44586a8f website: Update the CLI commands index page for latest help output
My initial motivation here was to update the example output from
Terraform's top-level help list to match recent updates in the layout
and language used.

However, while here I took the opportunity to update some dated language
that was not consistent with our modern documentation writing style,
in particular including a totally unnecessary and potentially-alienating
claim that Terraform is "very easy to use". Our modern writing style
discourages this sort of "boastful" language and encourages us to focus on
the facts at hand.
2020-10-26 09:55:21 -07:00
Martin Atkins
9665901e8e main: Emphasize only the primary workflow commands in our help
A long time ago we introduced this separation between "common commands"
and "all other commands", but over the intervening years we've not really
done a good job of classifying new commands we've added and so by default
most of them ended up being classified as "common".

In the interests of making this output more useful for those getting
started, this switches the two categories so that "Main commands" is now
the curated list, and "all other commands" is the bucket for everything
else.

The intent here is that the "main commands" are the ones users are likely
to try as part of their initial learning of Terraform, while the other
commands are for less common situations where the user is more likely to
learn about a specific command in some other context, like a tutorial
about a special situation.

The "main commands" are also now ordered by the sequence users will
typically run them in, rather than alphabetical order. That's a subjective
readability tradeoff, but I think as long as the list stays relatively
short (which it should) it's still relatively easy to scan and find a
particular command in the shortlist.
2020-10-26 09:55:21 -07:00
Martin Atkins
f44265e59e main: Hide several commands from our help
These are commands that either no longer do anything aside from emitting
an error message or are just backward-compatibility aliases for other
commands.

This generalizes our previous situation where we were specifically
hiding "internal-plugin", and does so in a way that fixes the
long-standing cosmetic bug that the column width in the help output was
chosen based on the hidden command "internal-plugin", which is
unfortunately also the longest command in our command set.
2020-10-26 09:55:21 -07:00
Martin Atkins
39504ede05 command: Remove the useless "debug" subcommand
This is just a husk of a container command that has no nested commands
under it, so it isn't serving any purpose.
2020-10-26 09:55:21 -07:00
Martin Atkins
30204ecded command/cliconfig: Allow development overrides for providers
For normal provider installation we want to associate each provider with
a selected version number and find a suitable package for that version
that conforms to the official hashes for that release.

Those requirements are very onerous for a provider developer currently
testing a not-yet-released build, though. To allow for that case this new
CLI configuration feature allows overriding specific providers to refer
to give local filesystem directories.

Any provider overridden in this way is not subject to the usual
restrictions about selected versions or checksum conformance, and
activating an override won't cause any changes to the selections recorded
in the lock file because it's intended to be a temporary setting for one
developer only.

This is, in a sense, a spiritual successor of an old capability we had to
override specific plugins in the CLI configuration file. There were
some vestiges of that left in the main package and CLI config package
but nothing has actually been honoring them for several versions now and
so this commit removes them to avoid confusion with the new mechanism.
2020-10-16 14:31:15 -07:00
Martin Atkins
e270291f19 command: terraform providers lock
This command is intended to help support situations where Terraform is
configured to use only local mirrors for provider installation and so the
normal "terraform init" flow would not have direct access to the official
package checksums published in the origin registry.

The intended workflow here is to use this command only when adding a new
provider or changing an existing provider's version in the configuration,
to augment the lock file with all of the checksums required to verify
the provider across a variety of different platforms. Once this command
has recorded all of the official checksums, future runs of
"terraform init" will verify that provider packages obtained from a local
mirror match with those upstream checksums.
2020-10-09 09:26:23 -07:00
Martin Atkins
efe78b2910 main: new global option -chdir
This new option is intended to address the previous inconsistencies where
some older subcommands supported partially changing the target directory
(where Terraform would use the new directory inconsistently) where newer
commands did not support that override at all.

Instead, now Terraform will accept a -chdir command at the start of the
command line (before the subcommand) and will interpret it as a request
to direct all actions that would normally be taken in the current working
directory into the target directory instead. This is similar to options
offered by some other similar tools, such as the -C option in "make".

The new option is only accepted at the start of the command line (before
the subcommand) as a way to reflect that it is a global command (not
specific to a particular subcommand) and that it takes effect _before_
executing the subcommand. This also means it'll be forced to appear before
any other command-specific arguments that take file paths, which hopefully
communicates that those other arguments are interpreted relative to the
overridden path.

As a measure of pragmatism for existing uses, the path.cwd object in
the Terraform language will continue to return the _original_ working
directory (ignoring -chdir), in case that is important in some exceptional
workflows. The path.root object gives the root module directory, which
will always match the overriden working directory unless the user
simultaneously uses one of the legacy directory override arguments, which
is not a pattern we intend to support in the long run.

As a first step down the deprecation path, this commit adjusts the
documentation to de-emphasize the inconsistent old command line arguments,
including specific guidance on what to use instead for the main three
workflow commands, but all of those options remain supported in the same
way as they were before. In a later commit we'll make those arguments
produce a visible deprecation warning in Terraform's output, and then
in an even later commit we'll remove them entirely so that -chdir is the
single supported way to run Terraform from a directory other than the
one containing the root module configuration.
2020-09-04 15:31:08 -07:00
Martin Atkins
49e2e00231 command: terraform providers mirror
This new command is intended to make it easy to create or update a mirror
directory containing suitable providers for the current configuration,
producing a layout that is appropriate both for a filesystem mirror or,
if copied into the document root of an HTTP server, a network mirror.

This initial version is not customizable aside from being able to select
multiple platforms to install packages for.

Future iterations of this could include commands to turn the JSON index
generation on and off, or to instruct it to produce the unpacked directory
layout instead of the packed directory layout as it currently does. Both
of those options would make the generated directory unsuitable to be
a network mirror, but it would still work as a filesystem mirror.

In the long run this will hopefully form part of a replacement workflow to
terraform-bundle as a way to put copies of providers somewhere so we don't
need to re-download them every time, but some other changes will be needed
outside of just this command before that'd be true, such as adding support
for network and/or filesystem mirrors in Terraform Enterprise.
2020-06-01 14:49:43 -07:00
Alisdair McDiarmid
5e2b11657e command: Fix 0.12upgrade stub 2020-06-01 16:12:30 -04:00
Paddy
5127f1ef8b
command: Unmanaged providers
This adds supports for "unmanaged" providers, or providers with process
lifecycles not controlled by Terraform. These providers are assumed to
be started before Terraform is launched, and are assumed to shut
themselves down after Terraform has finished running.

To do this, we must update the go-plugin dependency to v1.3.0, which
added support for the "test mode" plugin serving that powers all this.

As a side-effect of not needing to manage the process lifecycle anymore,
Terraform also no longer needs to worry about the provider's binary, as
it won't be used for anything anymore. Because of this, we can disable
the init behavior that concerns itself with downloading that provider's
binary, checking its version, and otherwise managing the binary.

This is all managed on a per-provider basis, so managed providers that
Terraform downloads, starts, and stops can be used in the same commands
as unmanaged providers. The TF_REATTACH_PROVIDERS environment variable
is added, and is a JSON encoding of the provider's address to the
information we need to connect to it.

This change enables two benefits: first, delve and other debuggers can
now be attached to provider server processes, and Terraform can connect.
This allows for attaching debuggers to provider processes, which before
was difficult to impossible. Second, it allows the SDK test framework to
host the provider in the same process as the test driver, while running
a production Terraform binary against the provider. This allows for Go's
built-in race detector and test coverage tooling to work as expected in
provider tests.

Unmanaged providers are expected to work in the exact same way as
managed providers, with one caveat: Terraform kills provider processes
and restarts them once per graph walk, meaning multiple times during
most Terraform CLI commands. As unmanaged providers can't be killed by
Terraform, and have no visibility into graph walks, unmanaged providers
are likely to have differences in how their global mutable state behaves
when compared to managed providers. Namely, unmanaged providers are
likely to retain global state when managed providers would have reset
it. Developers relying on global state should be aware of this.
2020-05-26 17:48:57 -07:00
Alisdair McDiarmid
7165d6c429 command: Add state replace-provider subcommand
Terraform 0.13 will allow the installation of providers from various
sources. If a user updates their configuration to change the source of
an in-use provider (for example, if the provider namespace changes),
they will also need to update the state file accordingly.

This commit introduces a new `state replace-provider` subcommand which
supports this. All resources using the `from` provider will be updated
to use the `to` provider.
2020-04-02 08:15:52 -04:00
Kristin Laemmert
5f313a65ad
command: remove 0.12upgrade (#24403)
* command: remove 0.12upgrade and related `configupgrade` library
* leave deprecation warning for 0.12upgrade to point users to v0.12
2020-03-19 08:01:16 -04:00
Alisdair McDiarmid
3b0b29ef52 command: Add scaffold for 0.13upgrade command 2020-03-16 12:50:24 -04:00
James Bardin
1b45b744c3 remove json2dot command
There's no need for the json2dot command since we can't create json
debug graphs.
2020-02-19 14:53:19 -05:00
Alisdair McDiarmid
081f02971d command/logout: Add terraform logout command
Use terraform logout to remove stored credentials for a remote service
host.
2020-02-06 15:00:55 -05:00
Alisdair McDiarmid
b75201acc2 Enable login subcommand, add manual token support 2020-01-30 09:55:38 -05:00
Martin Atkins
e9d0822b2a command: Accept a "provider source" from the main package
Following the same approach we use for other CLI-Config-able objects like
the service discovery system, the main package is responsible for
producing a suitable implementation of this interface which the command
package can then use.

When unit testing in the command package we can then substitute mocks as
necessary, following the dependency inversion principle.
2020-01-24 13:45:37 -08:00
Pam Selle
78b1220558 Remove config.go and update things using its aliases 2020-01-13 16:50:05 -05:00
Radek Simko
32f9722d9d
Replace import paths & set UA string where necessary 2019-10-11 22:40:54 +01:00
Martin Atkins
67d6f58f31 main: use cliconfig.ConfigDir instead of just ConfigDir
main.ConfigDir is just a wrapper around cliconfig.ConfigDir to allow us to
gradually clean up the old calls here, but since this is new code we might
as well do it right from the start.
2019-09-09 11:15:24 -07:00
Martin Atkins
131656a237 main: Temporarily disable "terraform login" as a command
We're not ready to ship this in a release yet because there's still some
remaining work to do on the Terraform Cloud side, but we want to get the
implementation work behind this into the master branch so it's easier to
maintain it in the mean time, rather than letting this long-lived branch
live even longer.

We'll continue to iterate on UX polish and other details in subsequent
commits, and eventually enable this.
2019-09-09 11:15:24 -07:00
Martin Atkins
7ccd6204c4 command: Swappable implementation of launching web browsers
For unit testing in particular we can't launch a real browser for testing,
so this indirection is primarily to allow us to substitute a mock when
testing a command that can launch a browser.

This includes a simple mock implementation that expects to interact with
a running web server directly.
2019-09-09 11:15:24 -07:00
Martin Atkins
6bba3ceb42 command: "terraform login" command 2019-09-09 11:15:23 -07:00
Martin Atkins
22a2580e93 main: Use the new cliconfig package credentials source
This should not cause any change in behavior yet, but using this new
implementation will allow the "terraform login" and "terraform logout"
commands to store and forget credentials when they are implemented in
subsequent commits.
2019-08-23 11:57:11 -07:00
Martin Atkins
e1590d0a70 command/cliconfig: Factor out CLI config handling
This is just a wholesale move of the CLI configuration types and functions
from the main package into its own package, leaving behind some type
aliases and wrappers for now to keep existing callers working.

This commit alone doesn't really achieve anything, but in future commits
we'll expand the functionality in this package.
2019-08-01 10:56:41 -07:00
Kristin Laemmert
16823f43de
command/jsonprovider: export providers schemas to json (#20446)
* command/jsonprovider: a new package for exporting providers schemas as JSON
2019-02-25 13:32:47 -08:00
Martin Atkins
ffe5f7c4e6 command: 0.12upgrade command
This is the frontend to the work-in-progress codepath for upgrading the
source code for a module written for Terraform v0.11 or earlier to use
the new syntax and idiom of v0.12.

The underlying upgrade code is not yet complete as of this commit, and
so the command is not yet very useful. We will continue to iterate on
the upgrade code in subsequent commits.
2018-10-16 18:50:29 -07:00
Martin Atkins
618883596a command: remove "terraform push"
The remote API this talks to will be going away very soon, before our next
major release, and so we'll remove the command altogether in that release.

This also removes the "encodeHCL" function, which was used only for
adding a .tfvars-formatted file to the uploaded archive.
2018-10-16 18:24:47 -07:00
Sander van Harmelen
179b32d426 Add a CredentialsForHost method to disco.Disco
By adding this method you now only have to pass a `*disco.Disco` object around in order to do discovery and use any configured credentials for the discovered hosts.

Of course you can also still pass around both a `*disco.Disco` and a `auth.CredentialsSource` object if there is a need or a reason for that!
2018-08-03 11:29:11 +02:00
James Bardin
6884a07bba use the new Meta.ShutdownCh when building commands 2017-12-01 13:14:44 -05:00
Martin Atkins
3da5fefdc1 command: Allow TF_DATA_DIR env var to override data directory
This allows the user to customize the location where Terraform stores
the files normally placed in the ".terraform" subdirectory, if e.g. the
current working directory is not writable.
2017-11-01 16:55:23 -07:00