Commit Graph

28 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Pam Selle 2e5a8c0f6e Update when ignore_changes are evaluated, to impact customizediff 2019-09-09 09:35:10 -04:00
James Bardin a0338df4d4 update ignore_changes to use cty.Path.Equals
Remove reflect.DeepEqual from path comparisons to get reliable results.

The equality issues were only noticed going the grpc interface, so add a
corresponding test to the test provider.
2019-07-10 14:49:37 -04:00
James Bardin 0d2363a058 add tests to preserve existing Set nil behavior
While it may not be intuitive, providers expect that setting a `nil`
value will appear as an empty string in state.
2019-06-28 12:09:50 -04:00
James Bardin 75602df5ef Revert "Remove removed attribute from applied state"
This reverts commit 2e2a363052.
2019-06-28 11:51:52 -04:00
James Bardin 2e2a363052 Remove removed attribute from applied state
When a Diff contains a NewRemoved attribute (which would have been null
in the planned state), the final value is often the "zero" value string
for the type, which the provider itself still applies to the state.
Rather than risking a change of behavior in helper/schema by fixing the
inconsistency, we'll remove the NewRemoved attributes after apply to
prevent further issues resulting from the change in planned value.
2019-06-13 17:29:25 -04:00
James Bardin 6bc36d3321 validate integers when using protoV5
The new type system only has a Number type, but helper schema
differentiates between Int and Float values. Verify that a new config
value is an integer during Validate, because the existing WeakDecode
validation will decode a float value into an integer while the config
FieldReader will attempt to parse the float exactly.

Since we're limiting this to protoV5, we can be certain that any valid
config value will be converted to an `int` type by the shims. The only
case where an integral float value will appear is if the integer is out
of range for the systems `int` type, but we also need to prevent that
anyway since it would fail to read in the same manner.
2019-05-11 09:34:28 -04:00
James Bardin 7075bc9a4d restrict the ComputedKeys usage to containers
Computed primitive values must see the UnknownConfigValue or they are
assumed to be unchanged. Restrict the usage of the protov5 ComputedKeys
to containers.
2019-05-06 19:19:10 -04:00
James Bardin 67395306e1 delete unknown values from apply config altogether
removeConfigUnknowns need to remove the value completely from the config
map. Removing this value allows GetOk and GetOkExists to indicate if the
value was set in the config in the case of an Optional+Computed
attribute.
2019-04-22 18:06:26 -04:00
James Bardin f52a6630f5 create a downstream failure from a computed value
These are the largest source of the old "diffs didn't match after apply"
errors. It's almost always an upstream dependency that caused the final
error.
2019-04-03 17:36:08 -04:00
James Bardin 8b9fa6d05f add test provider coverage around unknown vals 2019-03-29 13:56:42 -04:00
James Bardin 4006c0fc84 add test for set value drift
The changed value for the set attribute should be correctly read from
the provider.
2019-03-13 19:17:38 -04:00
James Bardin 1ca7531cc7 allow implicit empty strings in lists
The helper/schema handling of lists loses empty string values, but
retains the correct count. Only re-count the values if the count is
missing entirely, and allow our shims to re-populate the zero values.
2019-02-11 19:24:14 -05:00
James Bardin 1bfc27817e process state even after provider.Apply errors
Terraform core expects a sane state even when the provider returns an
error. Make sure at the prior state is always the default value to
return, and then alway attempt to process any state returned by
provider.Apply.
2019-02-11 15:41:07 -05:00
James Bardin 7dd0acc46b don't count empty containers in diff.Apply
If there were no matching keys, and there was no diff at all, don't set
a zero count for the container. Normally Providers can't reliably detect
empty vs unset here, but there are some cases that worked.
2019-01-23 19:34:11 -05:00
James Bardin 7455bf2a55 provider tests for empty values
Add tests to make limited use of empty container values and empty
strings.
2019-01-08 16:26:22 -05:00
James Bardin c70be3c328 failing tests when using resources with count
Two different tests failing around resourced with count
2018-12-17 12:15:43 -05:00
James Bardin 622f5cc6fb add test for computed map value
This ensures that a computed map can be correctly applied.
2018-11-27 08:54:15 -05:00
James Bardin 8212a6a9d0 add provider tests for force-new with a map
Adding and removing a single map that requires a new resource can cause
empty diffs, relying on the core proposed state values for destruction.
2018-10-31 13:42:28 -04:00
James Bardin 5303137b8c udpate test configs to work with hcl2
The last 2 broken tests will be hanlded later
2018-10-16 19:14:54 -07:00
Martin Atkins d11dd20bf3 builtin/providers/test: use new API for root module address
terraform.RootModulePath is no longer present, but
addrs.RootModuleInstance is equivalent to it.
2018-10-16 19:14:11 -07:00
James Bardin d1d6907640 Add a provider test for a list of maps
Interpolation of a map from a list of maps was not working. Add a
provider example test to cover this.
2016-12-16 10:36:26 -05:00
James Bardin 68ba2d6ff0 ResourceConfig.get should never return (nil, true)
Fixes a case where ResourceConfig.get inadvertently returns a nil value.

Add an integration test where assigning a map to a list via
interpolation would panic.
2016-11-18 16:24:40 -05:00
Paul Hinze 14cea95e86
terraform: another set of ignore_changes fixes
This set of changes addresses two bug scenarios:

(1) When an ignored change canceled a resource replacement, any
downstream resources referencing computer attributes on that resource
would get "diffs didn't match" errors. This happened because the
`EvalDiff` implementation was calling `state.MergeDiff(diff)` on the
unfiltered diff. Generally this is what you want, so that downstream
references catch the "incoming" values. When there's a potential for the
diff to change, thought, this results in problems w/ references.

Here we solve this by doing away with the separate `EvalNode` for
`ignore_changes` processing and integrating it into `EvalDiff`. This
allows us to only call `MergeDiff` with the final, filtered diff.

(2) When a resource had an ignored change but was still being replaced
anyways, the diff was being improperly filtered. This would cause
problems during apply when not all attributes were available to perform
the replacement.

We solve that by deferring actual attribute removal until after we've
decided that we do not have to replace the resource.
2016-07-08 16:48:23 -05:00
Paul Hinze 4a1b36ac0d
core: rerun resource validation before plan and apply
In #7170 we found two scenarios where the type checking done during the
`context.Validate()` graph walk was circumvented, and the subsequent
assumption of type safety in the provider's `Diff()` implementation
caused panics.

Both scenarios have to do with interpolations that reference Computed
values. The sentinel we use to indicate that a value is Computed does
not carry any type information with it yet.

That means that an incorrect reference to a list or a map in a string
attribute can "sneak through" validation only to crop up...

 1. ...during Plan for Data Source References
 2. ...during Apply for Resource references

In order to address this, we:

 * add high-level tests for each of these two scenarios in `provider/test`
 * add context-level tests for the same two scenarios in `terraform`
   (these tests proved _really_ tricky to write!)
 * place an `EvalValidateResource` just before `EvalDiff` and `EvalApply` to
   catch these errors
 * add some plumbing to `Plan()` and `Apply()` to return validation
   errors, which were previously only generated during `Validate()`
 * wrap unit-tests around `EvalValidateResource`
 * add an `IgnoreWarnings` option to `EvalValidateResource` to prevent
   active warnings from halting execution on the second-pass validation

Eventually, we might be able to attach type information to Computed
values, which would allow for these errors to be caught earlier. For
now, this solution keeps us safe from panics and raises the proper
errors to the user.

Fixes #7170
2016-07-01 13:12:57 -05:00
James Nugent 75ef7ab636 provider/test: Add more variants of maps
This commit adds a binary for the test provider, and adds a variety of
different types of map to the schema.
2016-06-09 10:49:49 +01:00
Paul Hinze b4df304b47
helper/schema: Normalize bools to "true"/"false" in diffs
For a long time now, the diff logic has relied on the behavior of
`mapstructure.WeakDecode` to determine how various primitives are
converted into strings.  The `schema.DiffString` function is used for
all primitive field types: TypeBool, TypeInt, TypeFloat, and TypeString.

The `mapstructure` library's string representation of booleans is "0"
and "1", which differs from `strconv.FormatBool`'s "false" and "true"
(which is used in writing out boolean fields to the state).

Because of this difference, diffs have long had the potential for
cosmetically odd but semantically neutral output like:

    "true" => "1"
    "false" => "0"

So long as `mapstructure.Decode` or `strconv.ParseBool` are used to
interpret these strings, there's no functional problem.

We had our first clear functional problem with #6005 and friends, where
users noticed diffs like the above showing up unexpectedly and causing
troubles when `ignore_changes` was in play.

This particular bug occurs down in Terraform core's EvalIgnoreChanges.
There, the diff is modified to account for ignored attributes, and
special logic attempts to handle properly the situation where the
ignored attribute was going to trigger a resource replacement. That
logic relies on the string representations of the Old and New fields in
the diff to be the same so that it filters properly.

So therefore, we now get a bug when a diff includes `Old: "0", New:
"false"` since the strings do not match, and `ignore_changes` is not
properly handled.

Here, we introduce `TypeBool`-specific normalizing into `finalizeDiff`.
I spiked out a full `diffBool` function, but figuring out which pieces
of `diffString` to duplicate there got hairy. This seemed like a simpler
and more direct solution.

Fixes #6005 (and potentially others!)
2016-05-05 09:00:58 -05:00
Paul Hinze f480ae3430 core: Fix issues with ignore_changes
The ignore_changes diff filter was stripping out attributes on Create
but the diff was still making it down to the provider, so Create would
end up missing attributes, causing a full failure if any required
attributes were being ignored.

In addition, any changes that required a replacement of the resource
were causing problems with `ignore_chages`, which didn't properly filter
out the replacement when the triggering attributes were filtered out.

Refs #5627
2016-03-21 14:20:36 -05:00
Paul Hinze c3e27b3e0a provider/test: a test provider
Here we also introduce a `test` provider meant as an aid to exposing
via automated tests issues involving interactions between
`helper/schema` and Terraform core.

This has been helpful so far in diagnosing `ignore_changes` problems,
and I imagine it will be helpful in other contexts as well.

We'll have to be careful to prevent the `test` provider from becoming a
dumping ground for poorly specified tests that have a clear home
elsewhere. But for bug exposure I think it's useful to have.
2016-03-21 08:59:54 -05:00