terraform/configs/configupgrade/upgrade_expr.go

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package configupgrade
import (
"bytes"
"fmt"
"log"
"strconv"
"strings"
hcl2 "github.com/hashicorp/hcl2/hcl"
hcl2syntax "github.com/hashicorp/hcl2/hcl/hclsyntax"
configs/configupgrade: Remove redundant list brackets In early versions of Terraform where the interpolation language didn't have any real list support, list brackets around a single string was the signal to split the string on a special uuid separator to produce a list just in time for processing, giving expressions like this: foo = ["${test_instance.foo.*.id}"] Logically this is weird because it looks like it should produce a list of lists of strings. When we added real list support in Terraform 0.7 we retained support for this behavior by trimming off extra levels of list during evaluation, and inadvertently continued relying on this notation for correct type checking. During the Terraform 0.10 line we fixed the type checker bugs (a few remaining issues notwithstanding) so that it was finally possible to use the more intuitive form: foo = "${test_instance.foo.*.id}" ...but we continued trimming off extra levels of list for backward compatibility. Terraform 0.12 finally removes that compatibility shim, causing redundant list brackets to be interpreted as a list of lists. This upgrade rule attempts to identify situations that are relying on the old compatibility behavior and trim off the redundant extra brackets. It's not possible to do this fully-generally using only static analysis, but we can gather enough information through or partial type inference mechanism here to deal with the most common situations automatically and produce a TF-UPGRADE-TODO comment for more complex scenarios where the user intent isn't decidable with only static analysis. In particular, this handles by far the most common situation of wrapping list brackets around a splat expression like the first example above. After this and the other upgrade rules are applied, the first example above will become: foo = test_instance.foo.*.id
2018-12-06 20:56:43 +01:00
"github.com/zclconf/go-cty/cty"
hcl1ast "github.com/hashicorp/hcl/hcl/ast"
hcl1printer "github.com/hashicorp/hcl/hcl/printer"
hcl1token "github.com/hashicorp/hcl/hcl/token"
"github.com/hashicorp/hil"
hilast "github.com/hashicorp/hil/ast"
"github.com/hashicorp/terraform/addrs"
"github.com/hashicorp/terraform/configs/configschema"
"github.com/hashicorp/terraform/tfdiags"
)
func upgradeExpr(val interface{}, filename string, interp bool, an *analysis) ([]byte, tfdiags.Diagnostics) {
var buf bytes.Buffer
var diags tfdiags.Diagnostics
// "val" here can be either a hcl1ast.Node or a hilast.Node, since both
// of these correspond to expressions in HCL2. Therefore we need to
// comprehensively handle every possible HCL1 *and* HIL AST node type
// and, at minimum, print it out as-is in HCL2 syntax.
Value:
switch tv := val.(type) {
case *hcl1ast.LiteralType:
return upgradeExpr(tv.Token, filename, interp, an)
case hcl1token.Token:
litVal := tv.Value()
switch tv.Type {
case hcl1token.STRING:
if !interp {
// Easy case, then.
printQuotedString(&buf, litVal.(string))
break
}
hilNode, err := hil.Parse(litVal.(string))
if err != nil {
diags = diags.Append(&hcl2.Diagnostic{
Severity: hcl2.DiagError,
Summary: "Invalid interpolated string",
Detail: fmt.Sprintf("Interpolation parsing failed: %s", err),
Subject: hcl1PosRange(filename, tv.Pos).Ptr(),
})
return nil, diags
}
interpSrc, interpDiags := upgradeExpr(hilNode, filename, interp, an)
buf.Write(interpSrc)
diags = diags.Append(interpDiags)
case hcl1token.HEREDOC:
// HCL1's "Value" method for tokens pulls out the body and removes
// any indents in the source for a flush heredoc, which throws away
// information we need to upgrade. Therefore we're going to
// re-implement a subset of that logic here where we want to retain
// the whitespace verbatim even in flush mode.
firstNewlineIdx := strings.IndexByte(tv.Text, '\n')
if firstNewlineIdx < 0 {
// Should never happen, because tv.Value would already have
// panicked above in this case.
panic("heredoc doesn't contain newline")
}
introducer := tv.Text[:firstNewlineIdx+1]
marker := introducer[2:] // trim off << prefix
if marker[0] == '-' {
marker = marker[1:] // also trim of - prefix for flush heredoc
}
body := tv.Text[len(introducer) : len(tv.Text)-len(marker)]
flush := introducer[2] == '-'
if flush {
// HCL1 treats flush heredocs differently, trimming off any
// spare whitespace that might appear after the trailing
// newline, and so we must replicate that here to avoid
// introducing additional whitespace in the output.
body = strings.TrimRight(body, " \t")
}
// Now we have:
// - introducer is the first line, like "<<-FOO\n"
// - marker is the end marker, like "FOO\n"
// - body is the raw data between the introducer and the marker,
// which we need to do recursive upgrading for.
buf.WriteString(introducer)
if !interp {
// Easy case: escape all interpolation-looking sequences.
printHeredocLiteralFromHILOutput(&buf, body)
} else {
hilNode, err := hil.Parse(body)
if err != nil {
diags = diags.Append(&hcl2.Diagnostic{
Severity: hcl2.DiagError,
Summary: "Invalid interpolated string",
Detail: fmt.Sprintf("Interpolation parsing failed: %s", err),
Subject: hcl1PosRange(filename, tv.Pos).Ptr(),
})
}
if hilNode != nil {
if _, ok := hilNode.(*hilast.Output); !ok {
// hil.Parse usually produces an output, but it can sometimes
// produce an isolated expression if the input is entirely
// a single interpolation.
if hilNode != nil {
hilNode = &hilast.Output{
Exprs: []hilast.Node{hilNode},
Posx: hilNode.Pos(),
}
}
}
interpDiags := upgradeHeredocBody(&buf, hilNode.(*hilast.Output), filename, an)
diags = diags.Append(interpDiags)
}
}
if !strings.HasSuffix(body, "\n") {
// The versions of HCL1 vendored into Terraform <=0.11
// incorrectly allowed the end marker to appear at the end of
// the final line of the body, rather than on a line of its own.
// That is no longer valid in HCL2, so we need to fix it up.
buf.WriteByte('\n')
}
// NOTE: Marker intentionally contains an extra newline here because
// we need to ensure that any follow-on expression bits end up on
// a separate line, or else the HCL2 parser won't be able to
// recognize the heredoc marker. This causes an extra empty line
// in some cases, which we accept for simplicity's sake.
buf.WriteString(marker)
case hcl1token.BOOL:
if litVal.(bool) {
buf.WriteString("true")
} else {
buf.WriteString("false")
}
case hcl1token.NUMBER:
num := tv.Value()
buf.WriteString(strconv.FormatInt(num.(int64), 10))
case hcl1token.FLOAT:
num := tv.Value()
buf.WriteString(strconv.FormatFloat(num.(float64), 'f', -1, 64))
default:
// For everything else we'll just pass through the given bytes verbatim,
// but we should't get here because the above is intended to be exhaustive.
buf.WriteString(tv.Text)
}
case *hcl1ast.ListType:
multiline := tv.Lbrack.Line != tv.Rbrack.Line
buf.WriteString("[")
if multiline {
buf.WriteString("\n")
}
for i, node := range tv.List {
src, moreDiags := upgradeExpr(node, filename, interp, an)
diags = diags.Append(moreDiags)
buf.Write(src)
if lit, ok := node.(*hcl1ast.LiteralType); ok && lit.LineComment != nil {
for _, comment := range lit.LineComment.List {
buf.WriteString(", " + comment.Text)
buf.WriteString("\n")
}
} else {
if multiline {
buf.WriteString(",\n")
} else if i < len(tv.List)-1 {
buf.WriteString(", ")
}
}
}
buf.WriteString("]")
case *hcl1ast.ObjectType:
if len(tv.List.Items) == 0 {
buf.WriteString("{}")
break
}
buf.WriteString("{\n")
for _, item := range tv.List.Items {
if len(item.Keys) != 1 {
diags = diags.Append(&hcl2.Diagnostic{
Severity: hcl2.DiagError,
Summary: "Invalid map element",
Detail: "A map element may not have any block-style labels.",
Subject: hcl1PosRange(filename, item.Pos()).Ptr(),
})
continue
}
keySrc, moreDiags := upgradeExpr(item.Keys[0].Token, filename, interp, an)
diags = diags.Append(moreDiags)
valueSrc, moreDiags := upgradeExpr(item.Val, filename, interp, an)
diags = diags.Append(moreDiags)
if item.LeadComment != nil {
for _, c := range item.LeadComment.List {
buf.WriteString(c.Text)
buf.WriteByte('\n')
}
}
buf.Write(keySrc)
buf.WriteString(" = ")
buf.Write(valueSrc)
if item.LineComment != nil {
for _, c := range item.LineComment.List {
buf.WriteByte(' ')
buf.WriteString(c.Text)
}
}
buf.WriteString("\n")
}
buf.WriteString("}")
case hcl1ast.Node:
// If our more-specific cases above didn't match this then we'll
// ask the hcl1printer package to print the expression out
// itself, and assume it'll still be valid in HCL2.
// (We should rarely end up here, since our cases above should
// be comprehensive.)
log.Printf("[TRACE] configupgrade: Don't know how to upgrade %T as expression, so just passing it through as-is", tv)
hcl1printer.Fprint(&buf, tv)
case *hilast.LiteralNode:
switch tl := tv.Value.(type) {
case string:
// This shouldn't generally happen because literal strings are
// always wrapped in hilast.Output in HIL, but we'll allow it anyway.
printQuotedString(&buf, tl)
case int:
buf.WriteString(strconv.Itoa(tl))
case float64:
buf.WriteString(strconv.FormatFloat(tl, 'f', -1, 64))
case bool:
if tl {
buf.WriteString("true")
} else {
buf.WriteString("false")
}
}
case *hilast.VariableAccess:
// In HIL a variable access is just a single string which might contain
// a mixture of identifiers, dots, integer indices, and splat expressions.
// All of these concepts were formerly interpreted by Terraform itself,
// rather than by HIL. We're going to process this one chunk at a time
// here so we can normalize and introduce some newer syntax where it's
// safe to do so.
parts := strings.Split(tv.Name, ".")
transformed := transformCountPseudoAttribute(&buf, parts, an)
if transformed {
break Value
}
parts = upgradeTraversalParts(parts, an) // might add/remove/change parts
vDiags := validateHilAddress(tv.Name, filename)
if len(vDiags) > 0 {
diags = diags.Append(vDiags)
break
}
printHilTraversalPartsAsHcl2(&buf, parts)
case *hilast.Arithmetic:
op, exists := hilArithmeticOpSyms[tv.Op]
if !exists {
panic(fmt.Errorf("arithmetic node with unsupported operator %#v", tv.Op))
}
lhsExpr := tv.Exprs[0]
rhsExpr := tv.Exprs[1]
lhsSrc, exprDiags := upgradeExpr(lhsExpr, filename, true, an)
diags = diags.Append(exprDiags)
rhsSrc, exprDiags := upgradeExpr(rhsExpr, filename, true, an)
diags = diags.Append(exprDiags)
// HIL's AST represents -foo as (0 - foo), so we'll recognize
// that here and normalize it back.
if tv.Op == hilast.ArithmeticOpSub && len(lhsSrc) == 1 && lhsSrc[0] == '0' {
buf.WriteString("-")
buf.Write(rhsSrc)
break
}
buf.Write(lhsSrc)
buf.WriteString(op)
buf.Write(rhsSrc)
case *hilast.Call:
name := tv.Func
args := tv.Args
// Some adaptations must happen prior to upgrading the arguments,
// because they depend on the original argument AST nodes.
switch name {
case "base64sha256", "base64sha512", "md5", "sha1", "sha256", "sha512":
// These functions were sometimes used in conjunction with the
// file() function to take the hash of the contents of a file.
// Prior to Terraform 0.11 there was a chance of silent corruption
// of strings containing non-UTF8 byte sequences, and so we have
// made it illegal to use file() with non-text files in 0.12 even
// though in this _particular_ situation (passing the function
// result directly to another function) there would not be any
// corruption; the general rule keeps things consistent.
// However, to still meet those use-cases we now have variants of
// the hashing functions that have a "file" prefix on their names
// and read the contents of a given file, rather than hashing
// directly the given string.
if len(args) > 0 {
if subCall, ok := args[0].(*hilast.Call); ok && subCall.Func == "file" {
// We're going to flatten this down into a single call, so
// we actually want the arguments of the sub-call here.
name = "file" + name
args = subCall.Args
// For this one, we'll fall through to the normal upgrade
// handling now that we've fixed up the name and args...
}
}
}
argExprs := make([][]byte, len(args))
multiline := false
totalLen := 0
for i, arg := range args {
if i > 0 {
totalLen += 2
}
exprSrc, exprDiags := upgradeExpr(arg, filename, true, an)
diags = diags.Append(exprDiags)
argExprs[i] = exprSrc
if bytes.Contains(exprSrc, []byte{'\n'}) {
// If any of our arguments are multi-line then we'll also be multiline
multiline = true
}
totalLen += len(exprSrc)
}
if totalLen > 60 { // heuristic, since we don't know here how indented we are already
multiline = true
}
// Some functions are now better expressed as native language constructs.
// These cases will return early if they emit anything, or otherwise
// fall through to the default emitter.
switch name {
case "list":
// Should now use tuple constructor syntax
buf.WriteByte('[')
if multiline {
buf.WriteByte('\n')
}
for i, exprSrc := range argExprs {
buf.Write(exprSrc)
if multiline {
buf.WriteString(",\n")
} else {
if i < len(args)-1 {
buf.WriteString(", ")
}
}
}
buf.WriteByte(']')
break Value
case "map":
// Should now use object constructor syntax, but we can only
// achieve that if the call is valid, which requires an even
// number of arguments.
if len(argExprs) == 0 {
buf.WriteString("{}")
break Value
} else if len(argExprs)%2 == 0 {
buf.WriteString("{\n")
for i := 0; i < len(argExprs); i += 2 {
k := argExprs[i]
v := argExprs[i+1]
buf.Write(k)
buf.WriteString(" = ")
buf.Write(v)
buf.WriteByte('\n')
}
buf.WriteByte('}')
break Value
}
case "lookup":
// A lookup call with only two arguments is equivalent to native
// index syntax. (A third argument would specify a default value,
// so calls like that must be left alone.)
// (Note that we can't safely do this for element(...) because
// the user may be relying on its wraparound behavior.)
if len(argExprs) == 2 {
buf.Write(argExprs[0])
buf.WriteByte('[')
buf.Write(argExprs[1])
buf.WriteByte(']')
break Value
}
configs/configupgrade: Detect and fix element(...) usage with sets Although sets do not have indexed elements, in Terraform 0.11 and earlier element(...) would work with sets because we'd automatically convert them to lists on entry to HIL -- with an arbitrary-but-consistent ordering -- and this return an arbitrary-but-consistent element from the list. The element(...) function in Terraform 0.12 does not allow this because it is not safe in general, but there was an existing pattern relying on this in Terraform 0.11 configs which this upgrade rule is intended to preserve: resource "example" "example" { count = "${length(any_set_attribute)}" foo = "${element(any_set_attribute, count.index}" } The above works because the exact indices assigned in the conversion are irrelevant: we're just asking Terraform to create one resource for each distinct element in the set. This upgrade rule therefore inserts an explicit conversion to list if it is able to successfully provide that the given expression will return a set type: foo = "${element(tolist(any_set_attribute), count.index}" This makes the conversion explicit, allowing users to decide if it is safe and rework the configuration if not. Since our static type analysis functionality focuses mainly on resource type attributes, in practice this rule will only apply when the given expression is a statically-checkable resource reference. Since sets are an SDK-only concept in Terraform 0.11 and earlier anyway, in practice that works out just right: it's not possible for sets to appear anywhere else in older versions anyway.
2019-02-21 01:28:15 +01:00
case "element":
// We cannot replace element with index syntax safely in general
// because users may be relying on its special modulo wraparound
// behavior that the index syntax doesn't do. However, if it seems
// like the user is trying to use element with a set, we'll insert
// an explicit conversion to list to mimic the implicit conversion
// that we used to do as an unintended side-effect of how functions
// work in HIL.
if len(argExprs) > 0 {
argTy := an.InferExpressionType(argExprs[0], nil)
if argTy.IsSetType() {
newExpr := []byte(`tolist(`)
newExpr = append(newExpr, argExprs[0]...)
newExpr = append(newExpr, ')')
argExprs[0] = newExpr
}
}
// HIL used some undocumented special functions to implement certain
// operations, but since those were actually callable in real expressions
// some users inevitably depended on them, so we'll fix them up here.
// These each become two function calls to preserve the old behavior
// of implicitly converting to the source type first. Usage of these
// is relatively rare, so the result doesn't need to be too pretty.
case "__builtin_BoolToString":
buf.WriteString("tostring(tobool(")
buf.Write(argExprs[0])
buf.WriteString("))")
break Value
case "__builtin_FloatToString":
buf.WriteString("tostring(tonumber(")
buf.Write(argExprs[0])
buf.WriteString("))")
break Value
case "__builtin_IntToString":
buf.WriteString("tostring(floor(")
buf.Write(argExprs[0])
buf.WriteString("))")
break Value
case "__builtin_StringToInt":
buf.WriteString("floor(tostring(")
buf.Write(argExprs[0])
buf.WriteString("))")
break Value
case "__builtin_StringToFloat":
buf.WriteString("tonumber(tostring(")
buf.Write(argExprs[0])
buf.WriteString("))")
break Value
case "__builtin_StringToBool":
buf.WriteString("tobool(tostring(")
buf.Write(argExprs[0])
buf.WriteString("))")
break Value
case "__builtin_FloatToInt", "__builtin_IntToFloat":
// Since "floor" already has an implicit conversion of its argument
// to number, and the result is a whole number in either case,
// these ones are easier. (We no longer distinguish int and float
// as types in HCL2, even though HIL did.)
name = "floor"
}
buf.WriteString(name)
buf.WriteByte('(')
if multiline {
buf.WriteByte('\n')
}
for i, exprSrc := range argExprs {
buf.Write(exprSrc)
if multiline {
buf.WriteString(",\n")
} else {
if i < len(args)-1 {
buf.WriteString(", ")
}
}
}
buf.WriteByte(')')
case *hilast.Conditional:
condSrc, exprDiags := upgradeExpr(tv.CondExpr, filename, true, an)
diags = diags.Append(exprDiags)
trueSrc, exprDiags := upgradeExpr(tv.TrueExpr, filename, true, an)
diags = diags.Append(exprDiags)
falseSrc, exprDiags := upgradeExpr(tv.FalseExpr, filename, true, an)
diags = diags.Append(exprDiags)
buf.Write(condSrc)
buf.WriteString(" ? ")
buf.Write(trueSrc)
buf.WriteString(" : ")
buf.Write(falseSrc)
case *hilast.Index:
target, ok := tv.Target.(*hilast.VariableAccess)
if !ok {
panic(fmt.Sprintf("Index node with unsupported target type (%T)", tv.Target))
}
parts := strings.Split(target.Name, ".")
keySrc, exprDiags := upgradeExpr(tv.Key, filename, true, an)
diags = diags.Append(exprDiags)
transformed := transformCountPseudoAttribute(&buf, parts, an)
if transformed {
break Value
}
parts = upgradeTraversalParts(parts, an) // might add/remove/change parts
vDiags := validateHilAddress(target.Name, filename)
if len(vDiags) > 0 {
diags = diags.Append(vDiags)
break
}
first, remain := parts[0], parts[1:]
var rAddr addrs.Resource
switch parts[0] {
case "data":
if len(parts) == 5 && parts[3] == "*" {
rAddr.Mode = addrs.DataResourceMode
rAddr.Type = parts[1]
rAddr.Name = parts[2]
}
default:
if len(parts) == 4 && parts[2] == "*" {
rAddr.Mode = addrs.ManagedResourceMode
rAddr.Type = parts[0]
rAddr.Name = parts[1]
}
}
// We need to check if the thing being referenced has count
// to retain backward compatibility
hasCount := false
if v, exists := an.ResourceHasCount[rAddr]; exists {
hasCount = v
}
hasSplat := false
buf.WriteString(first)
for _, part := range remain {
// Attempt to convert old-style splat indexing to new one
// e.g. res.label.*.attr[idx] to res.label[idx].attr
if part == "*" && hasCount {
hasSplat = true
buf.WriteString(fmt.Sprintf("[%s]", keySrc))
continue
}
buf.WriteByte('.')
buf.WriteString(part)
}
if !hasSplat {
buf.WriteString("[")
buf.Write(keySrc)
buf.WriteString("]")
}
case *hilast.Output:
if len(tv.Exprs) == 1 {
item := tv.Exprs[0]
naked := true
if lit, ok := item.(*hilast.LiteralNode); ok {
if _, ok := lit.Value.(string); ok {
naked = false
}
}
if naked {
// If there's only one expression and it isn't a literal string
// then we'll just output it naked, since wrapping a single
// expression in interpolation is no longer idiomatic.
interped, interpDiags := upgradeExpr(item, filename, true, an)
diags = diags.Append(interpDiags)
buf.Write(interped)
break
}
}
buf.WriteString(`"`)
for _, item := range tv.Exprs {
if lit, ok := item.(*hilast.LiteralNode); ok {
if litStr, ok := lit.Value.(string); ok {
printStringLiteralFromHILOutput(&buf, litStr)
continue
}
}
interped, interpDiags := upgradeExpr(item, filename, true, an)
diags = diags.Append(interpDiags)
buf.WriteString("${")
buf.Write(interped)
buf.WriteString("}")
}
buf.WriteString(`"`)
case hilast.Node:
// Nothing reasonable we can do here, so we should've handled all of
// the possibilities above.
panic(fmt.Errorf("upgradeExpr doesn't handle HIL node type %T", tv))
default:
// If we end up in here then the caller gave us something completely invalid.
panic(fmt.Errorf("upgradeExpr on unsupported type %T", val))
}
return buf.Bytes(), diags
}
func validateHilAddress(address, filename string) tfdiags.Diagnostics {
parts := strings.Split(address, ".")
var diags tfdiags.Diagnostics
label, ok := getResourceLabel(parts)
if ok && !hcl2syntax.ValidIdentifier(label) {
// We can't get any useful source location out of HIL unfortunately
diags = diags.Append(tfdiags.Sourceless(
tfdiags.Error,
fmt.Sprintf("Invalid address (%s) in ./%s", address, filename),
// The label could be invalid for another reason
// but this is the most likely, so we add it as hint
"Names of objects (resources, modules, etc) may no longer start with digits."))
}
return diags
}
func getResourceLabel(parts []string) (string, bool) {
if len(parts) < 1 {
return "", false
}
if parts[0] == "data" {
if len(parts) < 3 {
return "", false
}
return parts[2], true
}
if len(parts) < 2 {
return "", false
}
return parts[1], true
}
// transformCountPseudoAttribute deals with the .count pseudo-attributes
// that 0.11 and prior allowed for resources. These no longer exist,
// because they don't do anything we can't do with the length(...) function.
func transformCountPseudoAttribute(buf *bytes.Buffer, parts []string, an *analysis) (transformed bool) {
if len(parts) > 0 {
var rAddr addrs.Resource
switch parts[0] {
case "data":
if len(parts) == 4 && parts[3] == "count" {
rAddr.Mode = addrs.DataResourceMode
rAddr.Type = parts[1]
rAddr.Name = parts[2]
}
default:
if len(parts) == 3 && parts[2] == "count" {
rAddr.Mode = addrs.ManagedResourceMode
rAddr.Type = parts[0]
rAddr.Name = parts[1]
}
}
// We need to check if the thing being referenced is actually an
// existing resource, because other three-part traversals might
// coincidentally end with "count".
if hasCount, exists := an.ResourceHasCount[rAddr]; exists {
if hasCount {
buf.WriteString("length(")
buf.WriteString(rAddr.String())
buf.WriteString(")")
} else {
// If the resource does not have count, the .count
// attr would've always returned 1 before.
buf.WriteString("1")
}
transformed = true
return
}
}
return
}
func printHilTraversalPartsAsHcl2(buf *bytes.Buffer, parts []string) {
first, remain := parts[0], parts[1:]
buf.WriteString(first)
seenSplat := false
for _, part := range remain {
if part == "*" {
seenSplat = true
buf.WriteString(".*")
continue
}
// Other special cases apply only if we've not previously
// seen a splat expression marker, since attribute vs. index
// syntax have different interpretations after a simple splat.
if !seenSplat {
if v, err := strconv.Atoi(part); err == nil {
// Looks like it's old-style index traversal syntax foo.0.bar
// so we'll replace with canonical index syntax foo[0].bar.
fmt.Fprintf(buf, "[%d]", v)
continue
}
if !hcl2syntax.ValidIdentifier(part) {
// This should be rare since HIL's identifier syntax is _close_
// to HCL2's, but we'll get here if one of the intervening
// parts is not a valid identifier in isolation, since HIL
// did not consider these to be separate identifiers.
// e.g. foo.1bar would be invalid in HCL2; must instead be foo["1bar"].
buf.WriteByte('[')
printQuotedString(buf, part)
buf.WriteByte(']')
continue
}
}
buf.WriteByte('.')
buf.WriteString(part)
}
}
func upgradeHeredocBody(buf *bytes.Buffer, val *hilast.Output, filename string, an *analysis) tfdiags.Diagnostics {
var diags tfdiags.Diagnostics
for _, item := range val.Exprs {
if lit, ok := item.(*hilast.LiteralNode); ok {
if litStr, ok := lit.Value.(string); ok {
printHeredocLiteralFromHILOutput(buf, litStr)
continue
}
}
interped, interpDiags := upgradeExpr(item, filename, true, an)
diags = diags.Append(interpDiags)
buf.WriteString("${")
buf.Write(interped)
buf.WriteString("}")
}
return diags
}
func upgradeTraversalExpr(val interface{}, filename string, an *analysis) ([]byte, tfdiags.Diagnostics) {
if lit, ok := val.(*hcl1ast.LiteralType); ok && lit.Token.Type == hcl1token.STRING {
trStr := lit.Token.Value().(string)
if strings.HasSuffix(trStr, ".%") || strings.HasSuffix(trStr, ".#") {
// Terraform 0.11 would often not validate traversals given in
// strings and so users would get away with this sort of
// flatmap-implementation-detail reference, particularly inside
// ignore_changes. We'll just trim these off to tolerate it,
// rather than failing below in ParseTraversalAbs.
trStr = trStr[:len(trStr)-2]
}
trSrc := []byte(trStr)
_, trDiags := hcl2syntax.ParseTraversalAbs(trSrc, "", hcl2.Pos{})
if !trDiags.HasErrors() {
return trSrc, nil
}
}
return upgradeExpr(val, filename, false, an)
}
var hilArithmeticOpSyms = map[hilast.ArithmeticOp]string{
hilast.ArithmeticOpAdd: " + ",
hilast.ArithmeticOpSub: " - ",
hilast.ArithmeticOpMul: " * ",
hilast.ArithmeticOpDiv: " / ",
hilast.ArithmeticOpMod: " % ",
hilast.ArithmeticOpLogicalAnd: " && ",
hilast.ArithmeticOpLogicalOr: " || ",
hilast.ArithmeticOpEqual: " == ",
hilast.ArithmeticOpNotEqual: " != ",
hilast.ArithmeticOpLessThan: " < ",
hilast.ArithmeticOpLessThanOrEqual: " <= ",
hilast.ArithmeticOpGreaterThan: " > ",
hilast.ArithmeticOpGreaterThanOrEqual: " >= ",
}
// upgradeTraversalParts might alter the given split parts from a HIL-style
// variable access to account for renamings made in Terraform v0.12.
func upgradeTraversalParts(parts []string, an *analysis) []string {
parts = upgradeCountTraversalParts(parts, an)
parts = upgradeTerraformRemoteStateTraversalParts(parts, an)
return parts
}
func upgradeCountTraversalParts(parts []string, an *analysis) []string {
// test_instance.foo.id needs to become test_instance.foo[0].id if
// count is set for test_instance.foo. Likewise, if count _isn't_ set
// then test_instance.foo.0.id must become test_instance.foo.id.
if len(parts) < 3 {
return parts
}
var addr addrs.Resource
var idxIdx int
switch parts[0] {
case "data":
addr.Mode = addrs.DataResourceMode
addr.Type = parts[1]
addr.Name = parts[2]
idxIdx = 3
default:
addr.Mode = addrs.ManagedResourceMode
addr.Type = parts[0]
addr.Name = parts[1]
idxIdx = 2
}
hasCount, exists := an.ResourceHasCount[addr]
if !exists {
// Probably not actually a resource instance at all, then.
return parts
}
// Since at least one attribute is required after a resource reference
// prior to Terraform v0.12, we can assume there will be at least enough
// parts to contain the index even if no index is actually present.
if idxIdx >= len(parts) {
return parts
}
maybeIdx := parts[idxIdx]
switch {
case hasCount:
if _, err := strconv.Atoi(maybeIdx); err == nil || maybeIdx == "*" {
// Has an index already, so no changes required.
return parts
}
// Need to insert index zero at idxIdx.
log.Printf("[TRACE] configupgrade: %s has count but reference does not have index, so adding one", addr)
newParts := make([]string, len(parts)+1)
copy(newParts, parts[:idxIdx])
newParts[idxIdx] = "0"
copy(newParts[idxIdx+1:], parts[idxIdx:])
return newParts
default:
// For removing indexes we'll be more conservative and only remove
// exactly index "0", because other indexes on a resource without
// count are invalid anyway and we're better off letting the normal
// configuration parser deal with that.
if maybeIdx != "0" {
return parts
}
// Need to remove the index zero.
log.Printf("[TRACE] configupgrade: %s does not have count but reference has index, so removing it", addr)
newParts := make([]string, len(parts)-1)
copy(newParts, parts[:idxIdx])
copy(newParts[idxIdx:], parts[idxIdx+1:])
return newParts
}
}
func upgradeTerraformRemoteStateTraversalParts(parts []string, an *analysis) []string {
// data.terraform_remote_state.x.foo needs to become
// data.terraform_remote_state.x.outputs.foo unless "foo" is a real
// attribute in the object type implied by the remote state schema.
if len(parts) < 4 {
return parts
}
if parts[0] != "data" || parts[1] != "terraform_remote_state" {
return parts
}
attrIdx := 3
if parts[attrIdx] == "*" {
attrIdx = 4 // data.terraform_remote_state.x.*.foo
} else if _, err := strconv.Atoi(parts[attrIdx]); err == nil {
attrIdx = 4 // data.terraform_remote_state.x.1.foo
}
if attrIdx >= len(parts) {
return parts
}
attrName := parts[attrIdx]
// Now we'll use the schema of data.terraform_remote_state to decide if
// the user intended this to be an output, or whether it's one of the real
// attributes of this data source.
var schema *configschema.Block
if providerSchema := an.ProviderSchemas["terraform"]; providerSchema != nil {
schema, _ = providerSchema.SchemaForResourceType(addrs.DataResourceMode, "terraform_remote_state")
}
// Schema should be available in all reasonable cases, but might be nil
// if input configuration contains a reference to a remote state data resource
// without actually defining that data resource. In that weird edge case,
// we'll just assume all attributes are outputs.
if schema != nil && schema.ImpliedType().HasAttribute(attrName) {
// User is accessing one of the real attributes, then, and we have
// no need to rewrite it.
return parts
}
// If we get down here then our task is to produce a new parts slice
// that has the fixed additional attribute name "outputs" inserted at
// attrIdx, retaining all other parts.
newParts := make([]string, len(parts)+1)
copy(newParts, parts[:attrIdx])
newParts[attrIdx] = "outputs"
copy(newParts[attrIdx+1:], parts[attrIdx:])
return newParts
}
configs/configupgrade: Remove redundant list brackets In early versions of Terraform where the interpolation language didn't have any real list support, list brackets around a single string was the signal to split the string on a special uuid separator to produce a list just in time for processing, giving expressions like this: foo = ["${test_instance.foo.*.id}"] Logically this is weird because it looks like it should produce a list of lists of strings. When we added real list support in Terraform 0.7 we retained support for this behavior by trimming off extra levels of list during evaluation, and inadvertently continued relying on this notation for correct type checking. During the Terraform 0.10 line we fixed the type checker bugs (a few remaining issues notwithstanding) so that it was finally possible to use the more intuitive form: foo = "${test_instance.foo.*.id}" ...but we continued trimming off extra levels of list for backward compatibility. Terraform 0.12 finally removes that compatibility shim, causing redundant list brackets to be interpreted as a list of lists. This upgrade rule attempts to identify situations that are relying on the old compatibility behavior and trim off the redundant extra brackets. It's not possible to do this fully-generally using only static analysis, but we can gather enough information through or partial type inference mechanism here to deal with the most common situations automatically and produce a TF-UPGRADE-TODO comment for more complex scenarios where the user intent isn't decidable with only static analysis. In particular, this handles by far the most common situation of wrapping list brackets around a splat expression like the first example above. After this and the other upgrade rules are applied, the first example above will become: foo = test_instance.foo.*.id
2018-12-06 20:56:43 +01:00
func typeIsSettableFromTupleCons(ty cty.Type) bool {
return ty.IsListType() || ty.IsTupleType() || ty.IsSetType()
}