Commit Graph

22202 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Kristin Laemmert
d1f27ce8c2 registry: renaming module-specific registry functions 2018-10-16 18:56:50 -07:00
Kristin Laemmert
082af84131 registry: adding provider functions to registry client 2018-10-16 18:53:51 -07:00
James Bardin
7d24936507 updates to teh StateUpgraders
Fix documentation.
Require StateUpgraders to be add in order, and test in validation.
2018-10-16 18:53:51 -07:00
James Bardin
0c33b26e04 StateUpgrade redux
It turns out that state upgrades need to be handled differently since
providers are going to be backwards compatible. This means that new
state upgrades may still be stored in the flatmap format when used wih
terraform 0.11. Because we can't account for the specific version which
could produce a legacy state, all future state upgrades need to record
the schema types for decoding.

Rather than defining a single Upgrade function for states, we now have a
list of functions, each of which handle upgrading a specific version to
the next. In practice this isn't much different from the way many
resources implement upgrades themselves, with a separate function for
each version dispatched from the MigrateState function. The only added
burden is the recording of the schema type, and we intend to supply
tools and helper function to prevent the need to copy the entire
existing schema in all cases.
2018-10-16 18:53:51 -07:00
James Bardin
9eef5e3f91 implement UpgradeState for schema.Resource
This is the provider-side UpgradeState implementation for a particular
resource. This new function will be called to upgrade a saved state with
an old schema version to the current schema.

UpgradeState also requires a record of the last schema and version that
could have been stored as a flatmapped state. If the stored state is in
the legacy flatmap format, this will allow the provider to properly
decode the flatmapped state into the expected structure for the new json
encoded state. If the stored state's version is below that of the
LegacySchema.Version value, it will first be processed by the legacy
MigrateState function.
2018-10-16 18:53:51 -07:00
James Bardin
bcc8be7400 add schema.InternalMap
This exposes the internal schemaMap for use by the new provider shims.
2018-10-16 18:53:51 -07:00
James Bardin
f4416ee1df update the new RequiresReplace function
Make the function work specifically how we need for RequiresReplace.
Skip index changes, any set changes are only recorded as the set itself,
and filter out duplicate paths.

Add a few more tests to check for various nested structures.
2018-10-16 18:53:51 -07:00
James Bardin
30ff37f335 change PathFromFlatmapKey to RequiresReplace
Rather than try and make a generalized path function here, what we
really need in a function to generate the paths needed for
RequiresReplace. This needs to take into account that sets elements
don't need to be indexed themselves, and changes to collection index
values aren't needed.
2018-10-16 18:53:51 -07:00
James Bardin
44e993ec29 add hcl2shim.PathFromFlatmapKey
PathFromFlatmapKey is used to convert a flatmap key to a cty.Path, and
ensures it conforms to the type schema.

This is used when handling Diffs, where the ResourceAttrDiffs are
indexed by the flatmapped key values, and we need to convert those to
addresses to apply to a cty.Value.
2018-10-16 18:53:51 -07:00
James Bardin
6c01444a8a update grpc packages 2018-10-16 18:53:51 -07:00
James Bardin
8f51b2fba5 add grpc service definitions
This add the grpc protobuf service definitions for the new plugin
protocol, as well as the generated code.
2018-10-16 18:53:51 -07:00
James Bardin
4fedf6c6f4 removing connection data from the providers
Very few resources need connection info, and rather than relying on
providers to set default for some resources, we are going to require
that connection blocks be explicitly set in the configuration.
2018-10-16 18:53:51 -07:00
James Bardin
cd53b333f2 add config value to ApplyResourceChange
Providers will also need the config for reference during apply, in case
some of the config values were still unknown during plan.
2018-10-16 18:53:51 -07:00
James Bardin
05e85885f9 handle Null collections in flatmaps
When creating a flatmap from a cty.Value, there may be Null collections
which don't need to be added to the flatmap at all. Skip over these to
avoid panicking in ElementIterator with a Null value.
2018-10-16 18:53:51 -07:00
James Bardin
8f295fcb22 CoerceValue should insert Null for unset attrs
This matches the decoder spec, where a value unset in the configuration
is always Null.
2018-10-16 18:53:51 -07:00
James Bardin
50e099ad10 don't set Unknown for computed values
Any value that is not set in the configuration should decode as a Null
value. Unknown should still be returned if a computed value expression
is unknown.
2018-10-16 18:53:51 -07:00
Martin Atkins
d8bf3cc4e0 configschema: Fix ConfigSchema bugs with nested blocks
We were iterating over the wrong value to recursively coerce content for
nested blocks, and also incorrectly constructing the cty.Path used in
errors.
2018-10-16 18:53:51 -07:00
James Bardin
0120d53baf only add "id" to top-level resources
Make sure we only add "id" to the top-level resource, since Resource is
also used for nested blocks.
2018-10-16 18:53:51 -07:00
Martin Atkins
3855b79736 govendor fetch github.com/hashicorp/hcl2/...
This includes updates to various diagnostic messages to improve precision
and consistency of terminology.

It also includes some other changes to portions of HCL API that Terraform
isn't yet using.
2018-10-16 18:53:51 -07:00
Martin Atkins
aa6b55bb17 govendor fetch github.com/zclconf/go-cty/...
This update includes a new conversion from tuple types to set types and
improvements to the error messages returned when conversions fail.
2018-10-16 18:53:51 -07:00
James Bardin
f77dd12e5c add Config to the PlanResourceChangeRequest
In order for providers to determine if a computed value was unset in the
configuration, the configuration must be passed along with the prior and
proposed states. Terraform core will still handle the creation of the
ProposedNewState to ensure correctness, but the raw configuration value
will also be supplied for comparison.
2018-10-16 18:53:51 -07:00
Kristin Laemmert
52ae93cf97 builtin/providers: terraform remote state datasource (#18446)
* builtin/providers: implement terraform remote state datasource as providers.Interface

* append and return diags separately (to match the idiomatic usage
elsewhere in Terraform)
* diagnostic summary style improvements
* update tests to pass config to schema.CoerceValue
* trust that the schema will be enforced and there is no need to check
that a given attribute exists
* added dataSourceRemoteStateGetSchema() (effectively replacing a
function that was inappropriately removed) for consistency with other
terraform providers
* builtin/provider terraform test: added InternalValidate() test for dataSourceRemoteStateGetSchema
2018-10-16 18:53:51 -07:00
Martin Atkins
05936df0e7 statemgr: Backup file support for statemgr.Filesystem
In the old state package we had this as a separate manager
state.BackupState, but that doesn't work with our new interfaces because
we handle lineage and serial within the state managers themselves and
don't expose them to callers anymore.

In practice it being built in to the filesystem manager is not a problem
because we only use the backup functionality for local state anyway.

This also slightly adjusts the behavior to be more intuitive. The old
BackupState relied on the implementation detail that Terraform re-persists
the original state early in an apply operation, which meant that by
coincidence it would back up the right snapshot. In this new approach,
we instead take an in-memory copy during State and then write _that_ to
disk in WriteState if the new state seems different, so we're guaranteed
that we'll always write out what we read before any changes were made.

In future we may improve this further, such as keeping multiple
generations of backups, etc. But for now this is intended to preserve the
goals of the original implementation while making its behavior
self-contained and not dependent on coincidences.
2018-10-16 18:50:57 -07:00
James Bardin
15ccf2dda5 use a custom comparer for cty.Type
Make sure we also compare cty.Types in `cmp.Equal`, even though they
contain unexported fields.
2018-10-16 18:50:57 -07:00
James Bardin
3112b707be SetId should set the attribute as well
The update protocol shims will also check for this this, but eventually
"id" will only be a normal attribute, and we shouldn't have to special
case this.
2018-10-16 18:50:57 -07:00
James Bardin
befa81c74f add implicit "id" to resource attribute schemas
When converting a legacy schemaMap to a configschema, we need to add
"id" as a required attribute to top-level resources if it's not
declared.

The "id" field will be required to interoperate with the legacy helper
schema, since the presence of an id was used to indicate the existence
of a resource.
2018-10-16 18:50:57 -07:00
James Bardin
e3f706c97d add go-cmp
This was much easier to use when tracking down diffs in large
structures.
2018-10-16 18:50:57 -07:00
Martin Atkins
074db88636 plans: Include target addresses in the plan
We shouldn't really need these because the plan is already filtered to
include diffs only for targeted resources, but we currently rely on this
to filter out non-resource items from the diff, and so we'll retain it
for now to avoid reworking how the apply-time graph builder works.
2018-10-16 18:50:29 -07:00
Martin Atkins
d9dfd135c6 plans: Include backend settings in plan and plan files
On the first pass here we erroneously assumed that this was redundant with
the backend settings embedded in the configuration itself. In practice,
users can override backend configuration when running "terraform init"
and so we need to record the _effective_ backend configuration.

Along with this, we also return the selected workspace name at the time
the plan was created so we'll later be able to produce a specialized error
for the situation of having the wrong workspace selected. This isn't
strictly required because we'll also check the lineage of the state, but
the error message that would result from that failure would be relatively
opaque and thus less helpful to the user.
2018-10-16 18:50:29 -07:00
Martin Atkins
6dcaafa6ba govendor fetch github.com/zclconf/go-cty/...
This adds an ImpliedType to the msgpack package, which serves the same
purpose as ImpliedType in the json package.
2018-10-16 18:50:29 -07:00
James Bardin
c28ce02f2a return a nil flatmap when presented with a NullVal
A nil flatmap will be encoded as a NullVal of the correct type. When
Converting a NullVal back to a flatmap, return nil immediately rather
than attempting to build the values.
2018-10-16 18:50:29 -07:00
James Bardin
ac8ee20233 return a NullVal when presented with a nil flatmap
This allows us to decode the cty.Value back to a nil map, rather than
trying to create a map with nil values.
2018-10-16 18:50:29 -07:00
Martin Atkins
479c6b2466 move "configschema" from "config" to "configs"
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.
2018-10-16 18:50:29 -07:00
Martin Atkins
e4efe92e83 core: validate that depends_on addresses are for objects
Since the "References" function on graph nodes can't return errors, we
need to catch invalid depends_on references during the validation pass.

In this case, we're checking that the address is exact, rather than being
part of a traversal into an attribute of the object. In other words,
aws_instance.example is valid but aws_instance.example.id is not.
2018-10-16 18:50:29 -07:00
James Bardin
83538bbecb add tfdiags.GetAttribute
The only contextual information returned by the plugins in a diagnostic
is an attribute path. In order to test the conversions, we need to be
able to extract the cty.Path from a diagnostic if it exists.
2018-10-16 18:50:29 -07:00
Martin Atkins
adb88eaa16 configupgrade: Analysis of input configuration
In order to properly migrate the contents of resource, data, provider and
provisioner blocks we will need the provider's schema in order to
understand what is expected, so we can resolve some ambiguities inherent
in the legacy HCL AST.

This includes an initial prototype of migrating the content of resource
blocks just to verify that the information is being gathered correctly.
As with the rest of the upgrade_native.go file, this will be reorganized
significantly once the basic end-to-end flow is established and we can
see how to organize this code better.
2018-10-16 18:50:29 -07:00
Martin Atkins
ccd90bcf35 lang/funcs: never include the private key in error output
This is based on c811440188 made against the
old "config" package implementations, but also catches a few other cases
where we would previously have printed the private key into the error
messages.
2018-10-16 18:50:29 -07:00
Martin Atkins
2d9c779784 core: Assorted small test fixes
Rebasing the v0.12 dev branch to master caught a few changes that didn't
pass tests afterwards, so this is a catchup commit to fix those.
2018-10-16 18:50:29 -07:00
Martin Atkins
cf4a5e6336 core: Don't DynamicExpand during validate
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.
2018-10-16 18:50:29 -07:00
Martin Atkins
fd371d838d core: Handle count.index evaluation more explicitly
Previously we had the evaluate methods accept directly an
addrs.InstanceKey and had our evaluator infer a suitable value for
count.index for it, but that prevents us from setting the index to be
unknown in the validation scenario where we may not be able to predict
the number of instances yet but we still want to be able to check that
the configuration block is type-safe for all possible count values.

To achieve this, we separate the concern of deciding on a value for
count.index from the concern of evaluating it, which then allows for
other implementations of this in future. For the purpose of this commit
there is no change in behavior, with the count.index value being populated
whenever the instance key is a number.

This commit does a little more groundwork for the future implementation
of the for_each feature (which'll support each.key and each.value) but
still doesn't yet implement it, leaving it just stubbed out for the
moment.
2018-10-16 18:50:29 -07:00
Martin Atkins
eac8779870 command: validate must set values for root variables
Since the intent of the validate command is to check config validity
regardless of context (input variables, state, etc), we use unknown values
of the requested type here, which will then allow us to complete type
checking against the specified types of the variables without assuming
any particular values.
2018-10-16 18:50:29 -07:00
Martin Atkins
f77e7a61b0 various: helpers for collecting necessary provider types
Since schemas are required to interpret provider, resource, and
provisioner attributes in configs, states, and plans, these helpers intend
to make it easier to gather up the the necessary provider types in order
to preload all of the needed schemas before beginning further processing.

Config.ProviderTypes returns directly the list of provider types, since
at this level further detail is not useful: we've not yet run the
provider allocation algorithm, and so the only thing we can reliably
extract here is provider types themselves.

State.ProviderAddrs and Plan.ProviderAddrs each return a list of
absolute provider addresses, which can then be turned into a list of
provider types using the new helper providers.AddressedTypesAbs.

Since we're already using configs.Config throughout core, this also
updates the terraform.LoadSchemas helper to use Config.ProviderTypes
to find the necessary providers, rather than implementing its own
discovery logic. states.State is not yet plumbed in, so we cannot yet
use State.ProviderAddrs to deal with the state but there's a TODO comment
to remind us to update that in a later commit when we swap out
terraform.State for states.State.

A later commit will probably refactor this further so that we can easily
obtain schema for the providers needed to interpret a plan too, but that
is deferred here because further work is required to make core work with
the new plan types first. At that point, terraform.LoadSchemas may become
providers.LoadSchemas with a different interface that just accepts lists
of provider and provisioner names that have been gathered by the caller
using these new helpers.
2018-10-16 18:50:29 -07:00
Martin Atkins
51aeba2cf2 plans: Record provider config address in each resource change
This allows us to record the resource-to-provider associations we made
during the plan phase and ensure that we use the same config during
apply.

This isn't technically necessary, since we can in principle just repeat
the same matching algorithm against the config, but that algorithm is
relatively complicated and so if we execute it just once during plan we
remove the risk of bugs causing different decisions to be made during
the apply phase.

This also includes updates to the plan file format to include the provider
addresses. Since we've not actually shipped any version of Terraform
using our protobuf schema yet, we renumber here all of the fields after
the new one to keep them incrementing consecutively. This example should
not be followed after we have a released version of Terraform using this,
as a courtesy to anyone trying to parse these files (even though we're
not yet guaranteeing compatibility between releases).
2018-10-16 18:50:29 -07:00
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
95b7b883a3 configupgrade: Basic expression formatting
This covers all of the expression node types in HIL's AST, and also
includes initial support for some of our top-level blocks so that we can
easily test that.

The initial implementations of the "variable" and "output" blocks are
pretty redundant and messy, so we can hopefully improve on these in a
later pass.
2018-10-16 18:50:29 -07:00
Martin Atkins
a345533573 configupgrade: Beginnings of Upgrade function
This function is the main functionality of this package. So far it just
deals with detecting and renaming JSON files that are mislabeled as
native syntax files. Other functionality will follow in later commits.
2018-10-16 18:50:29 -07:00
Martin Atkins
1132898fbc configupgrade: Load source code for a module and detect already upgraded
This package will do all of its work in-memory so that it can avoid making
partial updates and then failing, so we need to be able to load the
sources files from a particular directory into memory.

The upgrade process isn't idempotent, so we also attempt to detect
heuristically whether an upgrade has already been performed (can parse
with the new parser and has a version constraint that prevents versions
earlier than 0.12) so that the CLI tool that will eventually wrap this
will be able to produce a warning and prompt for confirmation in that
case.
2018-10-16 18:50:29 -07:00
Martin Atkins
2f85b47586 configupgrade: new package for upgrading configs for 0.12
Although the new HCL implementation and configuration loader is broadly
compatible with the prior implementation, it has a number of new idiomatic
forms and it also cannot parse some more extreme non-idiomatic usages
that were possible under the old parser.

To help users migrate to the new implementation, this package will rewrite
configuration to comply with the new idiom and fix as many cases as
possible where the legacy parser was too liberal or exposed implementation
details.
2018-10-16 18:50:29 -07:00
Martin Atkins
fc0e28b2b4 configload: Don't download the same module source multiple times
It is common for the same module source package to be referenced multiple
times in the same configuration, either because there are literally
multiple instances of the same module source or because a single package
(or repository) contains multiple modules in sub-directories and many
of them are referenced.

To optimize this, here we introduce a simple caching behavior where the
module installer will detect if it's asked to install multiple times from
the same source and produce the second and subsequent directories by
copying the first, rather than by downloading again over the network.

This optimization is applied once all of the go-getter detection has
completed and sub-directory portions have been trimmed, so it is also
able to normalize differently-specified source addresses that all
ultimately detect to the same resolved address. When installing, we
always extract the entire specified package (or repository) and then
reference the specified sub-directory, so we can safely re-use existing
directories when the base package is the same, even if the sub-directory
is different.

However, as a result we do not yet address the fact that the same package
will be stored multiple times _on disk_, which may still be problematic
when referencing large repositories multiple times in
disk-storage-constrained environments. We could address this in a
subsequent change by investigating the use of symlinks where possible.

Since the Registry installer is implemented just as an extra resolution
step in front of go-getter, this optimization applies to registry
modules too. This does not apply to local relative references, which will
continue to just resolve into the already-prepared directory of their
parent module.

The cache of previously installed paths lives only for the duration of
one call to InstallModules, so we will never re-use directories that
were created by previous runs of "terraform init" and there is no risk
that older versions will pollute the cache when attempting an upgrade
from a source address that doesn't explicitly specify a version.

No additional tests are added here because the existing module installer
tests (when TF_ACC=1) already cover the case of installing multiple
modules from the same source.
2018-10-16 18:50:29 -07:00
James Bardin
8c3c0418d4 add GetSchema to provisioner interface 2018-10-16 18:50:29 -07:00