opentofu/terraform/state.go
2014-07-10 11:38:55 -07:00

293 lines
7.6 KiB
Go

package terraform
import (
"bytes"
"encoding/gob"
"errors"
"fmt"
"io"
"sort"
"sync"
"github.com/hashicorp/terraform/config"
)
// State keeps track of a snapshot state-of-the-world that Terraform
// can use to keep track of what real world resources it is actually
// managing.
type State struct {
Outputs map[string]string
Resources map[string]*ResourceState
once sync.Once
}
func (s *State) init() {
s.once.Do(func() {
s.Resources = make(map[string]*ResourceState)
})
}
func (s *State) deepcopy() *State {
result := new(State)
result.init()
if s != nil {
for k, v := range s.Resources {
result.Resources[k] = v
}
}
return result
}
// Orphans returns a list of keys of resources that are in the State
// but aren't present in the configuration itself. Hence, these keys
// represent the state of resources that are orphans.
func (s *State) Orphans(c *config.Config) []string {
keys := make(map[string]struct{})
for k, _ := range s.Resources {
keys[k] = struct{}{}
}
for _, r := range c.Resources {
delete(keys, r.Id())
// If there is only one of this instance, then we alias that
// to the ".0" version as well so that it can count
if r.Count == 1 {
delete(keys, r.Id()+".0")
}
}
result := make([]string, 0, len(keys))
for k, _ := range keys {
result = append(result, k)
}
return result
}
func (s *State) String() string {
if len(s.Resources) == 0 {
return "<no state>"
}
var buf bytes.Buffer
names := make([]string, 0, len(s.Resources))
for name, _ := range s.Resources {
names = append(names, name)
}
sort.Strings(names)
for _, k := range names {
rs := s.Resources[k]
id := rs.ID
if id == "" {
id = "<not created>"
}
buf.WriteString(fmt.Sprintf("%s:\n", k))
buf.WriteString(fmt.Sprintf(" ID = %s\n", id))
attrKeys := make([]string, 0, len(rs.Attributes))
for ak, _ := range rs.Attributes {
if ak == "id" {
continue
}
attrKeys = append(attrKeys, ak)
}
sort.Strings(attrKeys)
for _, ak := range attrKeys {
av := rs.Attributes[ak]
buf.WriteString(fmt.Sprintf(" %s = %s\n", ak, av))
}
if len(rs.Dependencies) > 0 {
buf.WriteString(fmt.Sprintf("\n Dependencies:\n"))
for _, dep := range rs.Dependencies {
buf.WriteString(fmt.Sprintf(" %s\n", dep.ID))
}
}
}
if len(s.Outputs) > 0 {
buf.WriteString("\nOutputs:\n\n")
ks := make([]string, 0, len(s.Outputs))
for k, _ := range s.Outputs {
ks = append(ks, k)
}
sort.Strings(ks)
for _, k := range ks {
v := s.Outputs[k]
buf.WriteString(fmt.Sprintf("%s = %s\n", k, v))
}
}
return buf.String()
}
// The format byte is prefixed into the state file format so that we have
// the ability in the future to change the file format if we want for any
// reason.
const stateFormatByte byte = 1
// ReadState reads a state structure out of a reader in the format that
// was written by WriteState.
func ReadState(src io.Reader) (*State, error) {
var result *State
var formatByte [1]byte
n, err := src.Read(formatByte[:])
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
if n != len(formatByte) {
return nil, errors.New("failed to read state version byte")
}
if formatByte[0] != stateFormatByte {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("unknown state file version: %d", formatByte[0])
}
dec := gob.NewDecoder(src)
if err := dec.Decode(&result); err != nil {
return nil, err
}
return result, nil
}
// WriteState writes a state somewhere in a binary format.
func WriteState(d *State, dst io.Writer) error {
n, err := dst.Write([]byte{stateFormatByte})
if err != nil {
return err
}
if n != 1 {
return errors.New("failed to write state version byte")
}
return gob.NewEncoder(dst).Encode(d)
}
// ResourceConnectionInfo holds addresses, credentials and configuration
// information require to connect to a resource. This is populated
// by a provider so that provisioners can connect and run on the
// resource.
type ResourceConnectionInfo struct {
// Type is set so that an appropriate connection can be formed.
// As an example, for a Linux machine, the Type may be "ssh"
Type string
// Raw is used to store any relevant keys for the given Type
// so that a provisioner can connect to the resource. This could
// contain credentials or address information.
Raw map[string]string
}
// ResourceState holds the state of a resource that is used so that
// a provider can find and manage an existing resource as well as for
// storing attributes that are uesd to populate variables of child
// resources.
//
// Attributes has attributes about the created resource that are
// queryable in interpolation: "${type.id.attr}"
//
// Extra is just extra data that a provider can return that we store
// for later, but is not exposed in any way to the user.
type ResourceState struct {
// This is filled in and managed by Terraform, and is the resource
// type itself such as "mycloud_instance". If a resource provider sets
// this value, it won't be persisted.
Type string
// The attributes below are all meant to be filled in by the
// resource providers themselves. Documentation for each are above
// each element.
// A unique ID for this resource. This is opaque to Terraform
// and is only meant as a lookup mechanism for the providers.
ID string
// Attributes are basic information about the resource. Any keys here
// are accessible in variable format within Terraform configurations:
// ${resourcetype.name.attribute}.
Attributes map[string]string
// ConnInfo is used for the providers to export information which is
// used to connect to the resource for provisioning. For example,
// this could contain SSH or WinRM credentials.
ConnInfo *ResourceConnectionInfo
// Extra information that the provider can store about a resource.
// This data is opaque, never shown to the user, and is sent back to
// the provider as-is for whatever purpose appropriate.
Extra map[string]interface{}
// Dependencies are a list of things that this resource relies on
// existing to remain intact. For example: an AWS instance might
// depend on a subnet (which itself might depend on a VPC, and so
// on).
//
// Terraform uses this information to build valid destruction
// orders and to warn the user if they're destroying a resource that
// another resource depends on.
//
// Things can be put into this list that may not be managed by
// Terraform. If Terraform doesn't find a matching ID in the
// overall state, then it assumes it isn't managed and doesn't
// worry about it.
Dependencies []ResourceDependency
}
// MergeDiff takes a ResourceDiff and merges the attributes into
// this resource state in order to generate a new state. This new
// state can be used to provide updated attribute lookups for
// variable interpolation.
//
// If the diff attribute requires computing the value, and hence
// won't be available until apply, the value is replaced with the
// computeID.
func (s *ResourceState) MergeDiff(d *ResourceDiff) *ResourceState {
var result ResourceState
if s != nil {
result = *s
}
result.Attributes = make(map[string]string)
if s != nil {
for k, v := range s.Attributes {
result.Attributes[k] = v
}
}
if d != nil {
for k, diff := range d.Attributes {
if diff.NewRemoved {
delete(result.Attributes, k)
continue
}
if diff.NewComputed {
result.Attributes[k] = config.UnknownVariableValue
continue
}
result.Attributes[k] = diff.New
}
}
return &result
}
// ResourceDependency maps a resource to another resource that it
// depends on to remain intact and uncorrupted.
type ResourceDependency struct {
// ID of the resource that we depend on. This ID should map
// directly to another ResourceState's ID.
ID string
}