Chaange ResourceProvider to providers.Interface starting from the
context, and fix all type errors.
This only replaced some of method calls directly applicable to the
providers themselves. The resource methods will follow.
The "config" package is no longer used and will be removed as part
of the 0.12 release cleanup. Since configschema is part of the
"new world" of configuration modelling, it makes more sense for
it to live as a subdirectory of the newer "configs" package.
Previously we would attempt to DynamicExpand during the validate walk and
then validate each expanded instance separately. However, this meant that
we would not be able to validate the contents of a block where count = 0
or if count is not yet known.
Here we instead do a more static validation pass against the resource
configuration itself, setting count.index to cty.UnknownVal(cty.Number) so
we can type-check everything inside the block as being correct regardless
of the final count.
This is another step towards repairing the "validate" command for our
changed assumptions in a world where we have a more sophisticated type
checker.
This doesn't yet address the remaining problem that the expression
evaluator can't, with the current state structures, distinguish between
a completed resource with count = 0 and a resource that doesn't exist
at all (during validate), and so we'll still get errors if an expression
elsewhere in configuration refers to a dynamic index of a resource with
"count" set. That's a pre-existing condition that's no longer being masked
by _this_ problem, but can't be addressed until we've introduced the new
state types (states.State, etc) and thus we _can_ distinguish these two
situations. That will therefore be addressed in a later commit.
The approach here is a little hacky, since this edge case applies only to
validate and all of the other evaluateResourceCountExpression callers
don't care about it: we overload the "count" return value as a flag to
allow NodeValidatableResource to allow it to detect this situation and
silently ignore errors in this case.
EvalValidateSelfRef needs schema in order to extract references. It was
previously expecting a *configschema.Block directly, but we weren't
actually passing that in from anywhere except the tests because it's not
available directly in that form during the evaltree for
node_resource_validate.
Instead, we now pass in the whole *ProviderSchema for the associated
provider and have this EvalNode find the schema itself based on the
address. This breaks some of the generality of this node (now only really
works for resource addresses) but that's okay since we have no other
use-case right now anyway.
This is a little awkward since we need to instantiate the providers much
earlier than before. To avoid a lot of reshuffling here we just spin each
one up and then immediately shut it down again, letting our existing init
functionality during the graph walk still do the main initialization.
Due to how deeply the configuration types go into Terraform Core, there
isn't a great way to switch out to HCL2 gradually. As a consequence, this
huge commit gets us from the old state to a _compilable_ new state, but
does not yet attempt to fix any tests and has a number of known missing
parts and bugs. We will continue to iterate on this in forthcoming
commits, heading back towards passing tests and making Terraform
fully-functional again.
The three main goals here are:
- Use the configuration models from the "configs" package instead of the
older models in the "config" package, which is now deprecated and
preserved only to help us write our migration tool.
- Do expression inspection and evaluation using the functionality of the
new "lang" package, instead of the Interpolator type and related
functionality in the main "terraform" package.
- Represent addresses of various objects using types in the addrs package,
rather than hand-constructed strings. This is not critical to support
the above, but was a big help during the implementation of these other
points since it made it much more explicit what kind of address is
expected in each context.
Since our new packages are built to accommodate some future planned
features that are not yet implemented (e.g. the "for_each" argument on
resources, "count"/"for_each" on modules), and since there's still a fair
amount of functionality still using old-style APIs, there is a moderate
amount of shimming here to connect new assumptions with old, hopefully in
a way that makes it easier to find and eliminate these shims later.
I apologize in advance to the person who inevitably just found this huge
commit while spelunking through the commit history.
This turned out to be a big messy commit, since the way providers are
referenced is tightly coupled throughout the code. That starts to unify
how providers are referenced, using the format output node Name method.
Add a new field to the internal resource data types called
ResolvedProvider. This is set by a new setter method SetProvider when a
resource is connected to a provider during graph creation. This allows
us to later lookup the provider instance a resource is connected to,
without requiring it to have the same module path.
The InitProvider context method now takes 2 arguments, one if the
provider type and the second is the full name of the provider. While the
provider type could still be parsed from the full name, this makes it
more explicit and, and changes to the name format won't effect this
code.
Since the validation of connection blocks is delegated to the communicator
selected by "type", we were not previously doing any validation of the
attribute names in these blocks until running provisioners during apply.
Proper validation here requires us to already have the instance state,
since the final connection info is a merge of values provided in config
with values assigned automatically by the resource. However, we can do
some basic name validation to catch typos during the validation pass, even
though semantic validation and checking for missing attributes will still
wait until the provisioner is instantiated.
This fixes#6582 as much as we reasonably can.
This disables the computed value check for `count` during the validation
pass. This enables partial support for #3888 or #1497: as long as the
value is non-computed during the plan, complex values will work in
counts.
**Notably, this allows data source values to be present in counts!**
The "count" value can be disabled during validation safely because we
can treat it as if any field that uses `count.index` is computed for
validation. We then validate a single instance (as if `count = 1`) just
to make sure all required fields are set.