Commit Graph

784 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
James Bardin 18d354223e objchange: fix ProposedNew from null objects
The codepath for AllAttributesNull was not correct for any nested object
types with collections, and should create single null values for the
correct NestingMode rather than a single object with null attributes.

Since there is no reason to descend into nested object types to create
nullv alues, we can drop the AllAttributesNull function altogether and
create null values as needed during ProposedNew.

The corresponding AllBlockAttributesNull was only called internally in 1
location, and simply delegated to schema.EmptyValue. We can reduce the
package surface area by dropping that function too and calling
EmptyValue directly.
2021-10-04 15:03:25 -04:00
James Bardin c68422d125
Merge pull request #29682 from hashicorp/jbardin/less-data-depends_on
Refine data depends_on dependency checks
2021-10-04 11:39:21 -04:00
Martin Atkins df578afd7e backend/local: Check dependency lock consistency before any operations
In historical versions of Terraform the responsibility to check this was
inside the terraform.NewContext function, along with various other
assorted concerns that made that function particularly complicated.

More recently, we reduced the responsibility of the "terraform" package
only to instantiating particular named plugins, assuming that its caller
is responsible for selecting appropriate versions of any providers that
_are_ external. However, until this commit we were just assuming that
"terraform init" had correctly selected appropriate plugins and recorded
them in the lock file, and so nothing was dealing with the problem of
ensuring that there haven't been any changes to the lock file or config
since the most recent "terraform init" which would cause us to need to
re-evaluate those decisions.

Part of the game here is to slightly extend the role of the dependency
locks object to also carry information about a subset of provider
addresses whose lock entries we're intentionally disregarding as part of
the various little edge-case features we have for overridding providers:
dev_overrides, "unmanaged providers", and the testing overrides in our
own unit tests. This is an in-memory-only annotation, never included in
the serialized plan files on disk.

I had originally intended to create a new package to encapsulate all of
this plugin-selection logic, including both the version constraint
checking here and also the handling of the provider factory functions, but
as an interim step I've just made version constraint consistency checks
the responsibility of the backend/local package, which means that we'll
always catch problems as part of preparing for local operations, while
not imposing these additional checks on commands that _don't_ run local
operations, such as "terraform apply" when in remote operations mode.
2021-10-01 14:43:58 -07:00
Martin Atkins 702413702c plans/planfile: Include dependency locks in saved plan files
We recently removed the legacy way we used to track the SHA256 hashes of
individual provider executables as part of a plans.Plan, because these
days we want to track the checksums of entire provider packages rather
than just the executable.

In order to achieve that new goal, we can save a copy of the dependency
lock information inside the plan file. This follows our existing precedent
of using exactly the same serialization formats we'd normally use for
this information, and thus we can reuse the existing models and
serializers and be confident we won't lose any detail in the round-trip.

As of this commit there's not yet anything actually making use of this
mechanism. In a subsequent commit we'll teach the main callers that write
and read plan files to include and expect (respectively) dependency
information, verifying that the available providers still match by the
time we're applying the plan.
2021-10-01 14:43:58 -07:00
Martin Atkins 3f85591998 depsfile: SaveLocksToBytes function
In a future commit we'll use this to include dependency lock information
in full fidelity inside a saved plan file.
2021-10-01 14:43:58 -07:00
Martin Atkins 6a98e4720c plans/planfile: Create takes most arguments via a struct type
Previously the planfile.Create function had accumulated probably already
too many positional arguments, and I'm intending to add another one in
a subsequent commit and so this is preparation to make the callsites more
readable (subjectively) and make it clearer how we can extend this
function's arguments to include further components in a plan file.

There's no difference in observable functionality here. This is just
passing the same set of arguments in a slightly different way.
2021-10-01 14:43:58 -07:00
Martin Atkins 8d193ad268 core: Simplify and centralize plugin availability checks
Historically the responsibility for making sure that all of the available
providers are of suitable versions and match the appropriate checksums has
been split rather inexplicably over multiple different layers, with some
of the checks happening as late as creating a terraform.Context.

We're gradually iterating towards making that all be handled in one place,
but in this step we're just cleaning up some old remnants from the
main "terraform" package, which is now no longer responsible for any
version or checksum verification and instead just assumes it's been
provided with suitable factory functions by its caller.

We do still have a pre-check here to make sure that we at least have a
factory function for each plugin the configuration seems to depend on,
because if we don't do that up front then it ends up getting caught
instead deep inside the Terraform runtime, often inside a concurrent
graph walk and thus it's not deterministic which codepath will happen to
catch it on a particular run.

As of this commit, this actually does leave some holes in our checks: the
command package is using the dependency lock file to make sure we have
exactly the provider packages we expect (exact versions and checksums),
which is the most crucial part, but we don't yet have any spot where
we make sure that the lock file is consistent with the current
configuration, and we are no longer preserving the provider checksums as
part of a saved plan.

Both of those will come in subsequent commits. While it's unusual to have
a series of commits that briefly subtracts functionality and then adds
back in equivalent functionality later, the lock file checking is the only
part that's crucial for security reasons, with everything else mainly just
being to give better feedback when folks seem to be using Terraform
incorrectly. The other bits are therefore mostly cosmetic and okay to be
absent briefly as we work towards a better design that is clearer about
where that responsibility belongs.
2021-10-01 14:43:58 -07:00
James Bardin 618e9cf8ec test for unexpected data reads 2021-09-30 17:13:33 -04:00
James Bardin 016463ea9c don't check all ancestors for data depends_on
Only depends_on ancestors for transitive dependencies when we're not
pointed directly at a resource. We can't be much more precise here,
since in order to maintain our guarantee that data sources will wait for
explicit dependencies, if those dependencies happen to be a module,
output, or variable, we have to find some upstream managed resource in
order to check for a planned change.
2021-09-30 16:43:09 -04:00
James Bardin fe671206cc Add detail about the protocol deprecation
Make sure it's clear that the deprecated fields serve no purpose, and
should be ignored.
2021-09-29 16:45:29 -04:00
Zach Whaley c9a5fdb366
cliconfig: Fix error message about invalid credentials helper type 2021-09-29 13:36:59 -07:00
James Bardin f93f16824c
Merge pull request #29665 from hashicorp/jbardin/required_version
Check required_version as early as possible
2021-09-29 08:18:20 -04:00
James Bardin ab0322e406 remove debugging println 2021-09-28 17:58:40 -04:00
James Bardin c2e0d265cf LoadModule now always returns the module
We don't need to load the configuration twice, since configload can
return the module for us.
2021-09-28 17:58:40 -04:00
James Bardin a53faf43f6 return partial config from LoadConfig with errors
LoadConfig should return any parsed configuration in order for the
caller to verify `required_version`.
2021-09-28 13:30:03 -04:00
James Bardin 625e768678 make sure required_version is checked before diags
We must ensure that the terraform required_version is checked as early
as possible, so that new configuration constructs don't cause init to
fail without indicating the version is incompatible.

The loadConfig call before the earlyconfig parsing seems to be unneeded,
and we can delay that to de-tangle it from installing the modules which
may have their own constraints.

TODO: it seems that loadConfig should be able to handle returning the
version constraints in the same manner as loadSingleModule.
2021-09-28 13:30:03 -04:00
Martin Atkins f60d55d6ad core: Emit only one warning for move collisions in destroy-plan mode
Our current implementation of destroy planning includes secretly running a
normal plan first, in order to get its effect of refreshing the state.

Previously our warning about colliding moves would betray that
implementation detail because we'd return it from both of our planning
operations here and thus show the message twice. That would also have
happened in theory for any other warnings emitted by both plan operations,
but it's the move collision warning that made it immediately visible.

We'll now only return warnings from the initial plan if we're also
returning errors from that plan, and thus the warnings of both plans can
never mix together into the same diags and thus we'll avoid duplicating
any warnings.

This does mean that we'd lose any warnings which might hypothetically
emerge only from the hidden normal plan and not from the subsequent
destroy plan, but we'll accept that as an okay tradeoff here because those
warnings are likely to not be super relevant to the destroy case anyway,
or else we'd emit them from the destroy-plan walk too.
2021-09-27 15:46:36 -07:00
James Bardin 372814e49a
Merge pull request #29659 from hashicorp/jbardin/really-nested-within
refactoring: exhaustive NestedWithin checks
2021-09-27 12:55:04 -04:00
James Bardin cac1f5c264 refactoring: exhaustive NestedWithin checks
When checking dependencies between statements, we need to check all
combinations of To and From addresses.
2021-09-27 12:48:17 -04:00
Alisdair McDiarmid a742d7ee88
Merge pull request #29649 from hashicorp/alisdair/json-ui-exhaustiveness
json-output: Add change reasons to explain deletes
2021-09-24 14:02:19 -04:00
Alisdair McDiarmid b699391d04 json-output: Add change reasons to explain deletes
The extra feedback information for why resource instance deletion is
planned is now included in the streaming JSON UI output.

We also add an explicit case for no-op actions to switch statements in
this package to ensure exhaustiveness, for future linting.
2021-09-24 13:17:49 -04:00
James Bardin 8ce2254ad6
Merge pull request #29647 from hashicorp/jbardin/test-temp-cleanup
temp path clean for some backend tests
2021-09-24 12:27:53 -04:00
James Bardin 9847eaa9cf remove usage of MinItems/MaxItems
MinItems and MaxItems are not used on nested types in the protocol, so
remove their usage in Terraform to prevent future confusion.
2021-09-24 12:26:00 -04:00
James Bardin 24a2bd6301 tfproto version 6.1
Minor version increase to deprecate min_items and max_items in nested
types.

Nested types have MinItems and MaxItems fields that were inherited from
the block implementation, but were never validated by Terraform, and are
not supported by the HCL decoder validations. Mark these fields as
deprecated, indicating that the SDK should handle the required
validation.
2021-09-24 11:14:57 -04:00
James Bardin c8cd0b1e74
Merge pull request #29624 from hashicorp/jbardin/no-block-to-attr
skip FixUpBlockAttrs when we can detect types from a new SDK
2021-09-24 11:01:53 -04:00
Alisdair McDiarmid 57318ef561 backend/remote: Support interop from 0.14 to 1.1
The previous conservative guarantee that we would not make backwards
incompatible changes to the state file format until at least Terraform
1.1 can now be extended. Terraform 0.14 through 1.1 will be able to
interoperably use state files, so we can update the remote backend
version compatibility check accordingly.
2021-09-24 09:26:09 -04:00
Alisdair McDiarmid f1e9d88ddc
Merge pull request #29640 from hashicorp/alisdair/fix-refresh-only-with-orphans
core: Fix refresh-only interaction with orphans
2021-09-24 09:25:46 -04:00
Martin Atkins d97ef10bb8 core: Don't return other errors if move statements are invalid
Because our validation rules depend on some dynamic results produced by
actually running the plan, we deal with moves in a "backwards" order where
we try to apply them first -- ignoring anything strange we might find --
and then validate the original statements only after planning.

An unfortunate consequence of that approach is that when the move
statements are invalid it's likely that move execution will not fully
complete, and so the generated plan is likely to be incorrect and might
well include errors resulting from the unresolved moves.

To mitigate that, here we let any move validation errors supersede all
other diagnostics that the plan phase might've generated, in the hope that
it'll help the user focus on fixing the incorrect move statements without
creating confusing by reporting errors that only appeared as a quick of
how Terraform worked around the invalid move statements earlier.
2021-09-23 14:37:08 -07:00
Martin Atkins 1bff623fd9 core: Report a warning if any moves get blocked
In most cases Terraform will be able to automatically fully resolve all
of the pending move statements before creating a plan, but there are some
edge cases where we can end up wanting to move one object to a location
where another object is already declared.

One relatively-obvious example is if someone uses "terraform state mv" in
order to create a set of resource instance bindings that could never have
arising in normal Terraform use.

A less obvious example arises from the interactions between moves at
different levels of granularity. If we are both moving a module to a new
address and moving a resource into an instance of the new module at the
same time, the old module might well have already had a resource of the
same name and so the resource move will be unresolvable.

In these situations Terraform will move the objects as far as possible,
but because it's never valid for a move "from" address to still be
declared in the configuration Terraform will inevitably always plan to
destroy the objects that didn't find a final home. To give some additional
explanation for that result, here we'll add a warning which describes
what happened.

This is not a particularly actionable warning because we don't really
have enough information to guess what the user intended, but we do at
least prompt that they might be able to use the "terraform state" family
of subcommands to repair the ambiguous situation before planning, if they
want a different result than what Terraform proposed.
2021-09-23 14:37:08 -07:00
Martin Atkins 04f9e7148c command/format: Include deletion reasons in plan report
The core runtime is now able to specify a reason for some situations when
Terraform plans to delete a resource instance.

This commit makes that information visible in the human-oriented UI. A
previous commit already made the underlying data informing these new hints
visible as part of the machine-oriented (JSON) plan output.

This also removes the bold formatting from the existing "has moved to"
hints, because subjectively it seemed like the result was emphasizing too
many parts of the output and thus somewhat defeating the benefit of the
emphasis in trying to create additional visual hierarchy for sighted users
running Terraform in a terminal. Now only the first line containing the
main action statement will be in bold, and all of the parenthesized
follow-up notes will be unformatted.
2021-09-23 14:37:08 -07:00
Martin Atkins a1a713cf28 core: Report ActionReasons when we plan to delete "orphans"
There are a few different reasons why a resource instance tracked in the
prior state might be considered an "orphan", but previously we reported
them all identically in the planned changes.

In order to help users understand the reason for a surprising planned
delete, we'll now try to specify an additional reason for the planned
deletion, covering all of the main reasons why that could happen.

This commit only introduces the new detail to the plans.Changes result,
though it also incidentally exposes it as part of the JSON plan result
in order to keep that working without returning errors in these new
cases. We'll expose this information in the human-oriented UI output in
a subsequent commit.
2021-09-23 14:37:08 -07:00
Martin Atkins 7b99861b1c refactoring: Don't implicitly move for resources with for_each
Our previous rule for implicitly moving from IntKey(0) to NoKey would
apply that move even when the current resource configuration uses
for_each, because we were only considering whether "count" were set.

Previously this was relatively harmless because the resource instance in
question would end up planned for deletion anyway: neither an IntKey nor
a NoKey are valid keys for for_each.

Now that we're going to be announcing these moves explicitly in the UI,
it would be confusing to see Terraform report that IntKey moved to NoKey
in a situation where the config changed from count to for_each, so to
address that we'll only generate the implied statement if neither
repetition argument is set.
2021-09-23 14:37:08 -07:00
James Bardin 9c078c27cf temp path clean for some backend tests 2021-09-23 17:16:33 -04:00
Alisdair McDiarmid ceb580ec40 core: Fix refresh-only interaction with orphans
When planning in refresh-only mode, we must not remove orphaned
resources due to changed count or for_each values from the planned
state. This was previously happening because we failed to pass through
the plan's skip-plan-changes flag to the instance orphan node.
2021-09-23 16:38:08 -04:00
Chris Arcand 171cdbbf93 command: Clean up testInputResponseMap before failing on unused answers
If you don't, the unused answers will persist in the package-level var
and bleed in to other tests.
2021-09-22 16:03:11 -05:00
Chris Arcand 60bc7aa05d command: Auto-select single workspace if necessary
When initializing a backend, if the currently selected workspace does
not exist, the user is prompted to select from the list of workspaces
the backend provides.

Instead, we should automatically select the only workspace available
_if_ that's all that's there.

Although with being a nice bit of polish, this enables future
improvments with Terraform Cloud in potentially removing the implicit
depenency on always using the 'default' workspace when the current
configuration is mapped to a single TFC workspace.
2021-09-22 16:03:11 -05:00
James Bardin 8706a18c4b refine the skipFixup heuristic
We can also rule out some attribute types as indicating something other
than the legacy SDK.

- Tuple types were not generated at all.
- There were no single objects types, the convention was to use a block
  list or set of length 1.
- Maps of objects were not possible to generate, since named blocks were
  not implemented.
- Nested collections were not supported, but when they were generated they
  would have primitive types.
2021-09-22 16:29:50 -04:00
James Bardin 6b4e73af48 skip the blocktoattr fixup with nested types
If structural types are being used, we can be assured that the legacy
SDK SchemaConfigModeAttr is not being used, and the fixup is not needed.

This prevents inadvertent mapping of blocks to structural attributes,
and allows us to skip the fixup overhead when possible.
2021-09-22 12:17:20 -04:00
Martin Atkins 83f0376673 refactoring: ApplyMoves new return type
When we originally stubbed ApplyMoves we didn't know yet how exactly we'd
be using the result, so we made it a double-indexed map allowing looking
up moves in both directions.

However, in practice we only actually need to look up old addresses by new
addresses, and so this commit first removes the double indexing so that
each move is only represented by one element in the map.

We also need to describe situations where a move was blocked, because in
a future commit we'll generate some warnings in those cases. Therefore
ApplyMoves now returns a MoveResults object which contains both a map of
changes and a map of blocks. The map of blocks isn't used yet as of this
commit, but we'll use it in a later commit to produce warnings within
the "terraform" package.
2021-09-22 09:01:10 -07:00
Martin Atkins d054102d38 addrs: AbsResource.UniqueKey distinct from AbsResourceInstance.UniqueKey
The whole point of UniqueKey is to deal with the fact that we have some
distinct address types which have an identical string representation, but
unfortunately that fact caused us to not notice that we'd incorrectly
made AbsResource.UniqueKey return a no-key instance UniqueKey instead of
its own distinct unique key type.
2021-09-22 09:01:10 -07:00
Chris Arcand 08a86b6c13
Merge pull request #29621 from hashicorp/error-on-unused-test-answers
command: Ensure all answers were used in command.testInputResponseMap
2021-09-22 09:42:21 -05:00
Chris Arcand 8684a85e26 command: Ensure all answers were used in command.testInputResponseMap
Remove answers from testInputResponse as they are given, and raise an
error during cleanup if any answers remain unused.

This enables tests to ensure that the expected mock answers are actually
used in a test; previously, an entire branch of code including an input
sequence could be omitted and the test(s) would not fail.

The only test that had unused answers in this map is one leftover from
legacy state migrations, a prompt that was removed in
7c93b2e5e6
2021-09-21 22:26:16 -05:00
Alisdair McDiarmid b59b057591 json-output: Config-driven move support in JSON UI
Add previous address information to the `planned_change` and
`resource_drift` messages for the streaming JSON UI output of plan and
apply operations.

Here we also add a "move" action value to the `change` object of these
messages, to represent a move-only operation.

As part of this work we also simplify this code to use the plan's
DriftedResources values instead of recomputing the drift from state.
2021-09-20 15:25:23 -04:00
Alisdair McDiarmid 78c4a8c461 json-output: Previous address for resource changes
Configuration-driven moves are represented in the plan file by setting
the resource's `PrevRunAddr` to a different value than its `Addr`. For
JSON plan output, we here add a new field to resource changes,
`previous_address`, which is present and non-empty only if the resource
is planned to be moved.

Like the CLI UI, refresh-only plans will include move-only changes in
the resource drift JSON output. In normal plan mode, these are elided to
avoid redundancy with planned changes.
2021-09-20 15:25:23 -04:00
Martin Atkins f0034beb33 core: refactoring.ImpliedMoveStatements replaces NodeCountBoundary
Going back a long time we've had a special magic behavior which tries to
recognize a situation where a module author either added or removed the
"count" argument from a resource that already has instances, and to
silently rename the zeroth or no-key instance so that we don't plan to
destroy and recreate the associated object.

Now we have a more general idea of "move statements", and specifically
the idea of "implied" move statements which replicates the same heuristic
we used to use for this behavior, we can treat this magic renaming rule as
just another "move statement", special only in that Terraform generates it
automatically rather than it being written out explicitly in the
configuration.

In return for wiring that in, we can now remove altogether the
NodeCountBoundary graph node type and its associated graph transformer,
CountBoundaryTransformer. We handle moves as a preprocessing step before
building the plan graph, so we no longer need to include any special nodes
in the graph to deal with that situation.

The test updates here are mainly for the graph builders themselves, to
acknowledge that indeed we're no longer inserting the NodeCountBoundary
vertices. The vertices that NodeCountBoundary previously depended on now
become dependencies of the special "root" vertex, although in many cases
here we don't see that explicitly because of the transitive reduction
algorithm, which notices when there's already an equivalent indirect
dependency chain and removes the redundant edge.

We already have plenty of test coverage for these "count boundary" cases
in the context tests whose names start with TestContext2Plan_count and
TestContext2Apply_resourceCount, all of which continued to pass here
without any modification and so are not visible in the diff. The test
functions particularly relevant to this situation are:
 - TestContext2Plan_countIncreaseFromNotSet
 - TestContext2Plan_countDecreaseToOne
 - TestContext2Plan_countOneIndex
 - TestContext2Apply_countDecreaseToOneCorrupted

The last of those in particular deals with the situation where we have
both a no-key instance _and_ a zero-key instance in the prior state, which
is interesting here because to exercises an intentional interaction
between refactoring.ImpliedMoveStatements and refactoring.ApplyMoves,
where we intentionally generate an implied move statement that produces
a collision and then expect ApplyMoves to deal with it in the same way as
it would deal with all other collisions, and thus ensure we handle both
the explicit and implied collisions in the same way.

This does affect some UI-level tests, because a nice side-effect of this
new treatment of this old feature is that we can now report explicitly
in the UI that we're assigning new addresses to these objects, whereas
before we just said nothing and hoped the user would just guess what had
happened and why they therefore weren't seeing a diff.

The backend/local plan tests actually had a pre-existing bug where they
were using a state with a different instance key than the config called
for but getting away with it because we'd previously silently fix it up.
That's still fixed up, but now done with an explicit mention in the UI
and so I made the state consistent with the configuration here so that the
tests would be able to recognize _real_ differences where present, as
opposed to the errant difference caused by that inconsistency.
2021-09-20 09:06:22 -07:00
Martin Atkins ee9e346039 refactoring: ApplyMoves skips moving when destination address occupied
Per our rule that the content of the state can never make a move statement
invalid, our behavior for two objects trying to occupy the same address
will be to just ignore that and let the object already at the address
take priority.

For the moment this is silent from an end-user perspective and appears
only in our internal logs. However, I'm hoping that our future planned
adjustment to the interface of this function will include some way to
allow reporting these collisions in some end-user-visible way, either as
a separate warning per collision or as a single warning that collects
together all of the collisions into a single message somehow.

This situation can arise both because the previous run state already
contained an object at the target address of a move and because more than
one move ends up trying to target the same location. In the latter case,
which one "wins" is decided by our depth-first traversal order, which is
in turn derived from our chaining and nesting rules and is therefore
arbitrary but deterministic.
2021-09-20 09:06:22 -07:00
Martin Atkins ef5a1c9cfe refactoring: ImpliedMoveStatements function
This new function complements the existing function FindMoveStatements
by potentially generating additional "implied" move statements that aren't
written explicit in the configuration but that we'll infer by comparing
the configuration and te previous run state.

The goal here is to infer only enough to replicate the effect of the
"count boundary fixup" graph node (terraform.NodeCountBoundary) that we
currently use to deal with this concern of preserving the zero-instance
when switching between "count" and not "count".

This is just dead code for now. A subsequent commit will introduce this
into the "terraform" package while also removing
terraform.NodeCountBoundary, thus achieving the same effect as before but
in a way that'll get reported in the UI as a move, using the same language
that we'd use for an explicit move statement.
2021-09-20 09:06:22 -07:00
Martin Atkins 7f99a8802e addrs: MoveEndpointInModule.SelectsResource
This is similar to the existing SelectsModule method, returning true if
the reciever selects either a particular resource as a whole or any of the
instances of that resource.

We don't need this test in the normal case, but we will need it in a
subsequent commit when we'll be possibly generating _implied_ move
statements between instances of resources, but only if there aren't
explicit move statements mentioning those resources already.
2021-09-20 09:06:22 -07:00
Alisdair McDiarmid 638784b195 cli: Omit move-only drift, except for refresh-only
The set of drifted resources now includes move-only changes, where the
object value is identical but a move has been executed. In normal
operation, we previousl displayed these moves twice: once as part of
drift output, and once as part of planned changes.

As of this commit we omit move-only changes from drift display, except
for refresh-only plans. This fixes the redundant output.
2021-09-17 14:47:00 -04:00
Alisdair McDiarmid 61b2d8e3fe core: Plan drift includes move-only changes
Previously, drifted resources included only updates and deletes. To
correctly display the full changes which would result as part of a
refresh-only apply, the drifted resources must also include move-only
changes.
2021-09-17 14:47:00 -04:00
Alisdair McDiarmid 9a7bbdab6f Fix terraform add test failure due to bad merge 2021-09-17 14:46:44 -04:00
Alisdair McDiarmid d425c26d77
Merge pull request #29589 from hashicorp/alisdair/planfile-drifted-resources
core: Compute resource drift during plan phase, store in plan file
2021-09-17 14:23:04 -04:00
Alisdair McDiarmid 1f57b7a8bd
Merge pull request #29235 from magodo/terraform_add_output_append
`terraform add`: `-out` option append to existing config & optionally check resource existance
2021-09-17 11:19:55 -04:00
James Bardin 1bd5987a8c
Merge pull request #29573 from hashicorp/renamed-typo
Correct terraform.env deprecation message typo
2021-09-16 17:02:20 -04:00
Alisdair McDiarmid d5b5407ccc format: Fix incorrect nesting of Color/Sprintf
Colorizing the result of an interpolated string can result in
incorrect output, if the values used to generate the string happen to
include color codes such as `[red]` or `[bold]`. Instead we should
always colorize the format string before calling functions like
`Sprintf`. This commit fixes all instances in this file.
2021-09-16 15:22:37 -04:00
Alisdair McDiarmid f0cf4235f9 cli: Refactor resource drift rendering 2021-09-16 15:22:37 -04:00
Alisdair McDiarmid c4688345a1 plans: Add resource drift to the plan file format 2021-09-16 15:22:37 -04:00
Alisdair McDiarmid bebf1ad23a core: Compute resource drift after plan walk
Rather than delaying resource drift detection until it is ready to be
presented, here we perform that computation after the plan walk has
completed. The resulting drift is represented like planned resource
changes, using a slice of ResourceInstanceChangeSrc values.
2021-09-16 15:22:37 -04:00
Martin Atkins e6a76d8ba0 core: Fail if a moved resource instance is excluded by -target
Because "moved" blocks produce changes that span across more than one
resource instance address at the same time, we need to take extra care
with them during planning.

The -target option allows for restricting Terraform's attention only to
a subset of resources when planning, as an escape hatch to recover from
bugs and mistakes.

However, we need to avoid any situation where only one "side" of a move
would be considered in a particular plan, because that'd create a new
situation that would be otherwise unreachable and would be difficult to
recover from.

As a compromise then, we'll reject an attempt to create a targeted plan if
the plan involves resolving a pending move and if the source address of
that move is not included in the targets.

Our error message offers the user two possible resolutions: to create an
untargeted plan, thus allowing everything to resolve, or to add additional
-target options to include just the existing resource instances that have
pending moves to resolve.

This compromise recognizes that it is possible -- though hopefully rare --
that a user could potentially both be recovering from a bug or mistake at
the same time as processing a move, if e.g. the bug was fixed by upgrading
a module and the new version includes a new "moved" block. In that edge
case, it might be necessary to just add the one additional address to
the targets rather than removing the targets altogether, if creating a
normal untargeted plan is impossible due to whatever bug they're trying to
recover from.
2021-09-16 08:57:59 -07:00
Martin Atkins b4594551f7 refactoring: TestValidateMoves/cyclic_chain can now pass
When originally filling out these test cases we didn't yet have the logic
in place to detect chained moves and so this test couldn't succeed in
spite of being correct.

We now have chain-detection implemented and so consequently we can also
detect cyclic chains. This commit largely just enables the original test
unchanged, although it does include the text of the final error message
for reporting cyclic move chains which wasn't yet finalized when we were
stubbing out this test case originally.
2021-09-15 08:46:12 -07:00
James Bardin 331dc8b14c handle empty containers in ProposedNew NestedTypes
Empty containers of NestedTypes were not handled in ProposedNew, causing
plans to be submitted with null values where there was configuration
present.
2021-09-15 08:33:25 -04:00
James Bardin 9029870613 handle NestedTypes in Block.CoerceValue
The CoerceValue code was not updated to handle NestedTypes, and while
none of the new codepaths make use of this method, there are still some
internal uses.
2021-09-14 16:02:50 -04:00
Martin Atkins 332ea1f233 backend/local: TestLocal_plan_context_error to fail terraform.NewContext
The original intent of this test was to verify that we properly release
the state lock if terraform.NewContext fails. This was in response to a
bug in an earlier version of Terraform where that wasn't true.

In the recent refactoring that made terraform.NewContext no longer
responsible for provider constraint/checksum verification, this test began
testing a failed plan operation instead, which left the error return path
from terraform.NewContext untested.

An invalid parallelism value is the one remaining case where
terraform.NewContext can return an error, so as a localized fix for this
test I've switched it to just intentionally set an invalid parallelism
value. This is still not ideal because it's still testing an
implementation detail, but I've at least left a comment inline to try to
be clearer about what the goal is here so that we can respond in a more
appropriate way if future changes cause this test to fail again.

In the long run I'd like to move this last remaining check out to be the
responsibility of the CLI layer, with terraform.NewContext either just
assuming the value correct or panicking when it isn't, but the handling
of this CLI option is currently rather awkwardly spread across the
command and backend packages so we'll save that refactoring for a later
date.
2021-09-14 10:35:08 -07:00
Martin Atkins 718fa3895f backend: Remove Operation.Parallelism field
The presence of this field was confusing because in practice the local
backend doesn't use it for anything and the remote backend was using it
only to return an error if it's set to anything other than the default,
under the assumption that it would always match ContextOpts.Parallelism.

The "command" package is the one actually responsible for handling this
option, and it does so by placing it into the partial ContextOpts which it
passes into the backend when preparing for a local operation. To make that
clearer, here we remove Operation.Parallelism and change the few uses of
it to refer to ContextOpts.Parallelism instead, so that everyone is
reading and writing this value from the same place.
2021-09-14 10:35:08 -07:00
Chris Arcand 172200808b Correct terraform.env deprecation message typo 2021-09-13 14:21:26 -05:00
James Bardin d0993b0e80 fix temp directory handling in some tests
Cleanup some more test fixtures to use t.TempDir

Use EvalSymlinks with temp dir paths to help with MacOS errors from
various terraform components.
2021-09-13 13:45:04 -04:00
James Bardin 8ed9a270e5
Merge pull request #29559 from hashicorp/jbardin/optional-attrs
Prevent `ObjectWithOptionalAttrs` from escaping
2021-09-13 08:58:11 -04:00
James Bardin 7f26531d4f variable types should always be populated 2021-09-13 08:51:32 -04:00
James Bardin 53a73a8ab6 configs: add ConstraintType to config.Variable
In order to handle optional attributes, the Variable type needs to keep
track of the type constraint for decoding and conversion, as well as the
concrete type for creating values and type comparison.

Since the Type field is referenced throughout the codebase, and for
future refactoring if the handling of optional attributes changes
significantly, the constraint is now loaded into an entirely new field
called ConstraintType. This prevents types containing
ObjectWithOptionalAttrs from escaping the decode/conversion codepaths
into the rest of the codebase.
2021-09-13 08:51:32 -04:00
James Bardin 43123d284e optional attrs should not be in ProposedNew 2021-09-13 08:51:32 -04:00
James Bardin af4f4540a9 configschema: do not expose optional attributes
Objects with optional attributes are only used for the decoding of
HCL, and those types should never be exposed elsewhere within
terraform.

Separate the external ImpliedType method from the cty.Type generated
internally for the decoder spec. This unfortunately causes our
ImpliedType method to return a different type than the
hcldec.ImpliedType function, but the former is only used within
terraform for concrete values, while the latter is used to decode
HCL. Renaming the ImpliedType methods could be done to further
differentiate them, but that does cause fairly large diff in the
codebase that does not seem worth the effort at this time.
2021-09-13 08:51:32 -04:00
Martin Atkins 65e0c448a0 workdir: Start of a new package for working directory state management
Thus far our various interactions with the bits of state we keep
associated with a working directory have all been implemented directly
inside the "command" package -- often in the huge command.Meta type -- and
not managed collectively via a single component.

There's too many little codepaths reading and writing from the working
directory and data directory to refactor it all in one step, but this is
an attempt at a first step towards a future where everything that reads
and writes from the current working directory would do so via an object
that encapsulates the implementation details and offers a high-level API
to read and write all of these session-persistent settings.

The design here continues our gradual path towards using a dependency
injection style where "package main" is solely responsible for directly
interacting with the OS command line, the OS environment, the OS working
directory, the stdio streams, and the CLI configuration, and then
communicating the resulting information to the rest of Terraform by wiring
together objects. It seems likely that eventually we'll have enough wiring
code in package main to justify a more explicit organization of that code,
but for this commit the new "workdir.Dir" object is just wired directly in
place of its predecessors, without any significant change of code
organization at that top layer.

This first commit focuses on the main files and directories we use to
find provider plugins, because a subsequent commit will lightly reorganize
the separation of concerns for plugin launching with a similar goal of
collecting all of the relevant logic together into one spot.
2021-09-10 14:56:49 -07:00
Martin Atkins 343279110a core: Graph walk loads plugin schemas opportunistically
Previously our graph walker expected to recieve a data structure
containing schemas for all of the provider and provisioner plugins used in
the configuration and state. That made sense back when
terraform.NewContext was responsible for loading all of the schemas before
taking any other action, but it no longer has that responsiblity.

Instead, we'll now make sure that the "contextPlugins" object reaches all
of the locations where we need schema -- many of which already had access
to that object anyway -- and then load the needed schemas just in time.

The contextPlugins object memoizes schema lookups, so we can safely call
it many times with the same provider address or provisioner type name and
know that it'll still only load each distinct plugin once per Context
object.

As of this commit, the Context.Schemas method is now a public interface
only and not used by logic in the "terraform" package at all. However,
that does leave us in a rather tenuous situation of relying on the fact
that all practical users of terraform.Context end up calling "Schemas" at
some point in order to verify that we have all of the expected versions
of plugins. That's a non-obvious implicit dependency, and so in subsequent
commits we'll gradually move all responsibility for verifying plugin
versions into the caller of terraform.NewContext, which'll heal a
long-standing architectural wart whereby the caller is responsible for
installing and locating the plugin executables but not for verifying that
what's installed is conforming to the current configuration and dependency
lock file.
2021-09-10 14:56:49 -07:00
Martin Atkins 38ec730b0e core: Opportunistic schema loading during graph construction
Previously the graph builders all expected to be given a full manifest
of all of the plugin component schemas that they could need during their
analysis work. That made sense when terraform.NewContext would always
proactively load all of the schemas before doing any other work, but we
now have a load-as-needed strategy for schemas.

We'll now have the graph builders use the contextPlugins object they each
already hold to retrieve individual schemas when needed. This avoids the
need to prepare a redundant data structure to pass alongside the
contextPlugins object, and leans on the memoization behavior inside
contextPlugins to preserve the old behavior of loading each provider's
schema only once.
2021-09-10 14:56:49 -07:00
Martin Atkins a59c2fe1b9 core: EvalContextBuiltin no longer has a "Schemas"
By tolerating ProviderSchema and ProvisionerSchema potentially returning
errors, we can slightly simplify EvalContextBuiltin by having it retrieve
individual schemas when needed directly from the "Plugins" object.

EvalContextBuiltin already needs to be holding a contextPlugins instance
for other reasons anyway, so this allows us to get the same result with
fewer moving parts.
2021-09-10 14:56:49 -07:00
Martin Atkins 2bf1de1f5d core: Context.Schemas in terms of contextPlugins methods
The responsibility for actually instantiating a single plugin and reading
out its schema now belongs to the contextPlugins type, which memoizes the
results by each plugin's unique identifier so that we can avoid retrieving
the same schemas multiple times when working with the same context.

This doesn't change the API of Context.Schemas but it does restore the
spirit of an earlier version of terraform.Context which did all of the
schema loading proactively inside terraform.NewContext. In an earlier
commit we reduced the scope of terraform.NewContext, making schema loading
a separate step, but in the process of doing that removed the effective
memoization of the schema results that terraform.NewContext was providing.

The memoization here will play out in a different way than before, because
we'll be treating each plugin call as separate rather than proactively
loading them all up front, but this is effectively the same because all
of our operation methods on Context call Context.Schemas early in their
work and thus end up forcing all of the necessary schemas to load up
front nonetheless.
2021-09-10 14:56:49 -07:00
Martin Atkins 80b3fcf93e core: Replace contextComponentFactory with contextPlugins
In the v0.12 timeframe we made contextComponentFactory an interface with
the expectation that we'd write mocks of it for tests, but in practice we
ended up just always using the same "basicComponentFactory" implementation
throughout.

In the interests of simplification then, here we replace that interface
and its sole implementation with a new concrete struct type
contextPlugins.

Along with the general benefit that this removes an unneeded indirection,
this also means that we can add additional methods to the struct type
without the usual restriction that interface types prefer to be small.
In particular, in a future commit I'm planning to add methods for loading
provider and provisioner schemas, working with the currently-unused new
fields this commit has included in contextPlugins, as compared to its
predecessor basicComponentFactory.
2021-09-10 14:56:49 -07:00
Martin Atkins dcfa077adf core: contextComponentFactory doesn't need to enumerate components
In earlier Terraform versions we used the set of all available plugins of
each type to make graph-building decisions, but in modern Terraform we
make those decisions based entirely on the configuration.

Consequently, we no longer need the methods which can enumerate all of the
known plugin components of a given type. Instead, we just try to
instantiate each of the plugins that the configuration refers to and then
handle the error when that fails, which typically means that the user
needs to run "terraform init" to install some new plugins.
2021-09-10 14:56:49 -07:00
Martin Atkins d51921f085 core: Provider transformers don't use the set of all available providers
In earlier incarnations of these transformers we used the set of all
available providers for tasks such as generating implied provider
configuration nodes.

However, in modern Terraform we can extract all of the information we need
from the configuration itself, and so these transformers weren't actually
using this set of provider addresses.

These also ended up getting left behind as sets of string rather than sets
of addrs.Provider in our earlier refactoring work, which didn't really
matter because the result wasn't used anywhere anyway.

Rather than updating these to use addrs.Provider instead, I've just
removed the unused arguments entirely in the hope of making it easier to
see what inputs these transformers use to make their decisions.
2021-09-10 14:56:49 -07:00
Martin Atkins feb219a9c4 core: Un-export the LoadSchemas function
The public interface for loading schemas is Context.Schemas, which can
take into account the context's records of which plugin versions and
checksums we're expecting. loadSchemas is an implementation detail of
that, representing the part we run only after we've verified all of the
plugins.
2021-09-10 14:56:49 -07:00
James Bardin 782132da33 remove incorrect computed check
The config is already validated, and does not need to be checked in
AssertPlanValid. Add some more coverage for plan validation.
2021-09-10 14:44:07 -04:00
Alisdair McDiarmid cd29c3e5fd
Revert "json-output: Release format version 1.0" 2021-09-09 11:25:35 -04:00
Laura Pacilio a819d7db3a
Merge pull request #29502 from hashicorp/alisdair/json-format-version
json-output: Release format version 1.0
2021-09-09 11:06:58 -04:00
Alisdair McDiarmid 7f3a29b46e
Merge pull request #29523 from hashicorp/alisdair/moved-ui
command: Render "moved" annotations in plan UI
2021-09-07 14:28:11 -04:00
James Bardin 1ad0421e15
Merge pull request #29522 from hashicorp/jbardin/json-blocktoattr
allow json output to marshal ConfigModeAttr blocks
2021-09-07 11:32:21 -04:00
Alisdair McDiarmid 29999c1d6f command: Render "moved" annotations in plan UI
For resources which are planned to move, render the previous run address
as additional information in the plan UI. For the case of a move-only
resource (which otherwise is unchanged), we also render that as a
planned change, but without any corresponding action symbol.

If all changes in the plan are moves without changes, the plan is no
longer considered "empty". In this case, we skip rendering the action
symbols in the UI.
2021-09-03 17:44:07 -04:00
James Bardin ac2a870ea0 allow json output to marshal ConfigModeAttr blocks
In order to marshal config blocks using ConfigModeAttr, we need to
insert the fixup body to map hcl blocks to the attribute in the schema.
2021-09-03 13:53:52 -04:00
Alisdair McDiarmid 06956773dc configs: Disable experiment warnings at link time
This package level variable can be overridden at link time to allow
temporarily disabling the UI warning when experimental features are
enabled. This makes it easier to understand how UI will render when the
feature is no longer experimental.

This change is only for those developing Terraform.
2021-09-03 12:11:06 -04:00
Alisdair McDiarmid b60f201eed json-output: Release format version 1.0 2021-09-01 15:15:18 -04:00
James Bardin 863963e7a6 de-linting 2021-09-01 11:36:21 -04:00
James Bardin 7c02ef6220
Merge pull request #29482 from hashicorp/jbardin/computed-obj-attrs
Computed values within nested object types in `AssertPlanValid`
2021-08-31 11:26:52 -04:00
James Bardin f195ce7fd4 remove temp test 2021-08-31 11:17:32 -04:00
Martin Atkins 7803f69d42 core: Enable TestContext2Plan_movedResourceBasic
This is the first test exercising the basic functionality of config-driven
move. We previously had it skipped because Terraform's previous design
of treating all three of the state artifacts as mutable attributes of
terraform.Context meant that it was too late during planning to deal with
the move operations, and thus this test was failing.

Thanks to the previous commit, which changes the terraform.Context API
such that we can defer creating the three state artifacts until we're
already doing planning, this test now works and shows Terraform correctly
handling a resource that was formerly called "a" and is now called "b",
with a "moved" block recording that renaming.
2021-08-30 13:59:14 -07:00
Martin Atkins 89b05050ec core: Functional-style API for terraform.Context
Previously terraform.Context was built in an unfortunate way where all of
the data was provided up front in terraform.NewContext and then mutated
directly by subsequent operations. That made the data flow hard to follow,
commonly leading to bugs, and also meant that we were forced to take
various actions too early in terraform.NewContext, rather than waiting
until a more appropriate time during an operation.

This (enormous) commit changes terraform.Context so that its fields are
broadly just unchanging data about the execution context (current
workspace name, available plugins, etc) whereas the main data Terraform
works with arrives via individual method arguments and is returned in
return values.

Specifically, this means that terraform.Context no longer "has-a" config,
state, and "planned changes", instead holding on to those only temporarily
during an operation. The caller is responsible for propagating the outcome
of one step into the next step so that the data flow between operations is
actually visible.

However, since that's a change to the main entry points in the "terraform"
package, this commit also touches every file in the codebase which
interacted with those APIs. Most of the noise here is in updating tests
to take the same actions using the new API style, but this also affects
the main-code callers in the backends and in the command package.

My goal here was to refactor without changing observable behavior, but in
practice there are a couple externally-visible behavior variations here
that seemed okay in service of the broader goal:
 - The "terraform graph" command is no longer hooked directly into the
   core graph builders, because that's no longer part of the public API.
   However, I did include a couple new Context functions whose contract
   is to produce a UI-oriented graph, and _for now_ those continue to
   return the physical graph we use for those operations. There's no
   exported API for generating the "validate" and "eval" graphs, because
   neither is particularly interesting in its own right, and so
   "terraform graph" no longer supports those graph types.
 - terraform.NewContext no longer has the responsibility for collecting
   all of the provider schemas up front. Instead, we wait until we need
   them. However, that means that some of our error messages now have a
   slightly different shape due to unwinding through a differently-shaped
   call stack. As of this commit we also end up reloading the schemas
   multiple times in some cases, which is functionally acceptable but
   likely represents a performance regression. I intend to rework this to
   use caching, but I'm saving that for a later commit because this one is
   big enough already.

The proximal reason for this change is to resolve the chicken/egg problem
whereby there was previously no single point where we could apply "moved"
statements to the previous run state before creating a plan. With this
change in place, we can now do that as part of Context.Plan, prior to
forking the input state into the three separate state artifacts we use
during planning.

However, this is at least the third project in a row where the previous
API design led to piling more functionality into terraform.NewContext and
then working around the incorrect order of operations that produces, so
I intend that by paying the cost/risk of this large diff now we can in
turn reduce the cost/risk of future projects that relate to our main
workflow actions.
2021-08-30 13:59:14 -07:00
Martin Atkins 4faac6ee43 core: Record move result information in the plan
Here we wire through the "move results" into the graph walk data
structures so that all of the the nodes which produce
plans.ResourceInstanceChange values can capture the "PrevRunAddr" for
each resource instance.

This doesn't actually quite work yet, because the logic in Context.Plan
isn't actually correct and so the updated state from
refactoring.ApplyMoves isn't actually visible as the "previous run state".
For that reason, the context test in this commit is currently skipped,
with the intent of re-enabling it once the updated state is properly
propagating into the plan graph walk and thus we can actually react to
the result of the move while choosing actions for those addresses.
2021-08-30 13:59:14 -07:00
Martin Atkins 22b36d1f4c Field for the previous address of each resource instance in the plan
In order to expose the effect of any relevant "moved" statements we dealt
with prior to creating the plan, we'll record with each
ResourceInstanceChange both is current address and the address it was
tracked at for the previous run.

To save consumers of these objects from having to special-case the
situation where there _was_ no previous run (e.g. because this is a Create
change), we'll just pretend the previous run address was the same as the
current address in that case, the same as for an update without any
renaming in effect.

This includes a breaking change to the plan file format, but one that
doesn't require a version number increment because there is no ambiguity
between the two formats and so mismatched parsers will already fail with
an error message.

As of this commit we've just added the new field but not yet populated it
with any useful information: it always just matches Addr. A future commit
will wire this up to the result of applying the moves so that we can
populate it correctly. We also don't yet expose this new information
anywhere in the UI layer.
2021-08-30 13:59:14 -07:00
James Bardin ea68d79ea2 nested object values can be computed
While blocks were not allowed to be computed by the provider, nested
objects can be. Remove the errors regarding blocks and verify unknown
values are valid.
2021-08-30 14:30:07 -04:00
James Bardin 903797084a objects vs maps in nested object types
When using NestedMap objects, unify the codepath for both maps and
objects as they may be interchangeable.
2021-08-30 14:30:02 -04:00
James Bardin 7ca6be8285 correctly verify planned nested object values
The validation for nested object types with computed attributes was
using the incorrect function call.
2021-08-30 14:29:15 -04:00
Martin Atkins ce96d82de0 build: Centralize our protobuf compilation steps
We have a few different .proto files in this repository that all need to
get recompiled into .pb.go files each time we change them, but we were
previously handling that with some scripts that just assumed that protoc
and the relevant plugins were already installed on the system somewhere,
at the right versions.

In practice we've been constantly flopping between different versions of
these tools due to folks having different versions installed in their
development environments. In particular, the state of the .pb.go files
in the prior commit wasn't reproducible by any single version of the tools
because they've all slightly diverged from one another.

In the interests of being more consistent here and avoiding accidental
inconsistencies, we'll now centralize the protocol buffer compile steps
all into a single tool that knows how to fetch and install the expected
versions of the various tools we need and then run those tools with the
right options to get a stable result.

If we want to upgrade to either a newer protoc or a newer protoc-gen-go
in future then we'll do that in a central location and update all of the
.pb.go files at the same time, so that we're always consistently tracking
the same version of protocol buffers everywhere.

While doing this I attempted to keep as close as possible to the toolchain
we'd most recently used, but since they were not consistent with each
other they've now all changed which version numbers they record at minimum,
and the planproto stub in particular now also has a slightly different
descriptor serialization but is otherwise offering the same API.
2021-08-20 16:18:48 -07:00
James Bardin 249e05f827
Merge pull request #29437 from hashicorp/jbardin/move
refactoring: complete CanChainFrom and NestedWithin
2021-08-20 17:54:27 -04:00
Alisdair McDiarmid 40dd4292b8
Merge pull request #29438 from hashicorp/alisdair/init-force-copy-multiple-workspaces
command: Suppress prompt for init -force-copy
2021-08-20 15:21:43 -04:00
James Bardin 30afb492ab fix ApplyMove test with nested modules working
The addrs package can now correctly handle the combinations of nested
module endpoints, which fixes these 2 tests.
2021-08-20 15:17:06 -04:00
James Bardin bc60f7aae4 Extend CanChainFrom to handle relative modules
CanChainFrom needs to be able to handle move statements from different
relative modules, re-implementing with addrs.anyKey

Add the anyKey InstanceKey value to the addrs package to simplify module
path comparison. This allows all combinations of module path
representation to be normalized into a ModuleInstance which can be
compared directly, rather than dealing with multiple levels of different
prefix types.
2021-08-20 15:17:06 -04:00
Alisdair McDiarmid 2762a940c0 command: Suppress prompt for init -force-copy
The -force-copy flag to init should automatically migrate state.
Previously this was not applied to one case: when migrating from
a backend with multiple workspaces to another backend supporting
multiple workspaces. I believe this was an oversight so this commit
fixes that.
2021-08-20 14:46:09 -04:00
Alisdair McDiarmid 70a4f7a6b6 command: Fix stale lock after running add 2021-08-20 13:22:11 -04:00
James Bardin 11561b22cd
Merge pull request #29330 from hashicorp/jbardin/move
refactoring: CanChainFrom and NestedWithin
2021-08-19 12:34:38 -04:00
Martin Atkins 43d753e727 command: "terraform add" is experimental
We're aware of several quirks of this command's current design, which
result from some existing architectural limitations that we can't address
immediately.

However, we do still want to make this command available in its current
capacity as an incremental improvement, so as a compromise we'll document
it as experimental. Our intent here is to exclude it from the
Terraform 1.0 Compatibility Promises so that we can have the space to
continue to improve the design as other parts of the overall Terraform
system gain new capabilities.

We don't currently have any concrete plan for this command to be
stabilized and subject to compatibility promises. That decision will
follow from ongoing discussions with other teams whose systems may need to
change in order to support the final design of "terraform add".
2021-08-19 09:27:30 -07:00
James Bardin 553d6525d2 more move tests 2021-08-19 12:05:53 -04:00
James Bardin 2dff0481c8 missed relMatch for AbsModuleCall in SelectsModule 2021-08-19 12:05:53 -04:00
James Bardin 58aabb54ca
Merge pull request #29410 from hashicorp/jbardin/format-empty-nested-attrs
handle null and unknown values in attr diffs
2021-08-18 14:54:27 -04:00
James Bardin 68ed50616e handle null and unknown values in attr diffs
The code adopted from block diffs was not set to handle null and unknown
values, as those are not allowed for blocks.

We also revert the change to formatting nested object types as single
attributes, because the attribute formatter cannot handle sensitive
values from the schema. This presents some awkward syntax for diffs for
now, but should suffice until the entire formatter can be refactored to
better handle these new nested types.
2021-08-18 14:12:01 -04:00
James Bardin da007517b0 handle null NestingSingle values
Null NestingSingle attributes were not being handled in ProposedNew
2021-08-18 13:52:18 -04:00
Martin Atkins c23a7fce4e lang/funcs: Preserve IP address leading zero behavior from Go 1.16
Go 1.17 includes a breaking change to both net.ParseIP and net.ParseCIDR
functions to reject IPv4 address octets written with leading zeros.

Our use of these functions as part of the various CIDR functions in the
Terraform language doesn't have the same security concerns that the Go
team had in evaluating this change to the standard library, and so we
can't justify an exception to our v1.0 compatibility promises on the same
sort of security grounds that the Go team used to justify their
compatibility exception.

For that reason, we'll now use our own fork of the Go library functions
which has the new check disabled in order to preserve the prior behavior.
We're taking this path, rather than pre-normalizing the IP address before
calling into the standard library, because an additional normalization
layer would be entirely new code and additional complexity, whereas this
fork is relatively minor in terms of code size and avoids any significant
changes to our own calls to these functions.

Thanks to the Kubernetes team for their prior work on carving out a subset
of the "net" package for their similar backward-compatibility concern.
Our "ipaddr" package here is a lightly-modified fork of their fork, with
only the comments changed to talk about Terraform instead of Kubernetes.

This fork is not intended for use in any other future feature
implementations, because they wouldn't be subject to the same
compatibility constraints as our existing functions. We will use these
forked implementations for new callers only if consistency with the
behavior of the existing functions is a key requirement.
2021-08-17 15:20:05 -07:00
Martin Atkins 383bbdeebc Upgrade to Go 1.17
This includes the addition of the new "//go:build" comment form in addition
to the legacy "// +build" notation, as produced by gofmt to ensure
consistent behavior between Go versions. The new directives are all
equivalent to what was present before, so there's no change in behavior.

Go 1.17 continues to use the Unicode 13 tables as in Go 1.16, so this
upgrade does not require also upgrading our Unicode-related dependencies.

This upgrade includes the following breaking changes which will also
appear as breaking changes for Terraform users, but that are consistent
with the Terraform v1.0 compatibility promises.

- On MacOS, Terraform now requires macOS 10.13 High Sierra or later.

This upgrade also includes the following breaking changes which will
appear as breaking changes for Terraform users that are inconsistent with
our compatibility promises, but have justified exceptions as follows:

- cidrsubnet, cidrhost, and cidrnetmask will now reject IPv4 CIDR
  addresses whose decimal components have leading zeros, where previously
  they would just silently ignore those leading zeros.

  This is a security-motivated exception to our compatibility promises,
  because some external systems interpret zero-prefixed octets as octal
  numbers rather than decimal, and thus the previous lenient parsing could
  lead to a different interpretation of the address between systems, and
  thus potentially allow bypassing policy when configuring firewall rules
  etc.

This upgrade also includes the following breaking changes which could
_potentially_ appear as breaking changes for Terraform users, but that do
not in practice for the reasons given:

- The Go net/url package no longer allows query strings with pairs
  separated by semicolons instead of ampersands. This primarily affects
  HTTP servers written in Go, and Terraform includes a special temporary
  HTTP server as part of its implementation of OAuth for "terraform login",
  but that server only needs to accept URLs created by Terraform itself
  and Terraform does not generate any URLs that would be rejected.
2021-08-17 15:20:05 -07:00
James Bardin a94155d0ca
Merge pull request #29397 from hashicorp/jbardin/format-id-name-marks
unmark object ID or Name for formatting
2021-08-17 14:58:56 -04:00
James Bardin a48b024c0a unmark object ID or Name for formatting 2021-08-17 12:24:43 -04:00
James Bardin 296a757ab4 check for null sets in diff rendering 2021-08-16 18:25:16 -04:00
James Bardin fbfb14142e render empty nested containers as attributes
Don't try to break down containers that are empty to render the diff, so
we can avoid having to check for empty vs null in all cases.
2021-08-16 18:13:55 -04:00
Radek Simko 2496bc2b1e
internal/registry: Add URL to error message for clarity (#29298) 2021-08-10 15:20:40 +01:00
James Bardin 6087b1bdb9 CanChainFrom and NestedWithin
Add implementations of CanChainFrom and NestedWithin for
MoveEndpointInModule.

CanChainFrom allows the linking of move statements of the same address,
which means the prior destination address must equal the following
source address. If the destination and source addresses are of different
types, they must be covered by NestedWithin rather than CanChainFrom.

NestedWithin checks if the destination contains the source address. Any
matching types would be covered by CanChainFrom.
2021-08-10 10:13:21 -04:00
James Bardin 493ec4e6c5 correct the direction and walk order of the graph 2021-08-10 10:12:39 -04:00
James Bardin 88ad938cc6 Equal methods for move AbsMoveable
Make sure all the types are comparable
2021-08-10 10:12:17 -04:00
James Bardin 08edb02270 MoveStatement.Name()
makes the graph printable for debugging
2021-08-10 10:11:57 -04:00
James Bardin 789317dc05 additional test 2021-08-10 10:11:57 -04:00
James Bardin 6401022bc8 don't take the address of a range variable 2021-08-10 10:11:57 -04:00
Alisdair McDiarmid 3b33dc1105 json-output: Add output changes to plan logs
Extend the outputs JSON log message to support an `action` field (and
make the `type` and `value` fields optional). This allows us to emit a
useful output change summary as part of the plan, bringing the JSON log
output into parity with the text output.

While we do have access to the before/after values in the output
changes, attempting to wedge those into a structured log message is not
appropriate. That level of detail can be extracted from the JSON plan
output from `terraform show -json`.
2021-08-05 15:32:26 -04:00
Alex Khaerov 9d5f1752c8
oss backend: flattern assume_role block 2021-08-03 14:26:15 +08:00
James Bardin 09ab952683 fix ApplyMoves tests
Add empty result value, since ApplyMoves does not return nil.
Fix the desired addresses for moves.
2021-08-02 17:23:35 -04:00
James Bardin 97a2694528
Merge pull request #28838 from remilapeyre/consul-size-limit
Fix handling large states in the Consul backend
2021-07-30 14:18:34 -04:00
Martin Atkins aa414f3ab3 refactoring: First round of ValidateMoves rules
This is a first pass at implementing refactoring.ValidateMoves, covering
the main validation rules.

This is not yet complete. A couple situations not yet covered are
represented by commented test cases in TestValidateMoves, although that
isn't necessarily comprehensive. We'll do a further pass of filling this
out with any other subtleties before we ship this feature.
2021-07-29 12:29:36 -07:00
Martin Atkins ae2c93f255 addrs: All AbsMovable implementations implement UniqueKeyer 2021-07-29 12:29:36 -07:00
Martin Atkins f76a3467dc core: Call into refactoring.ValidateMoves after creating a plan
As of this commit, refactoring.ValidateMoves doesn't actually do anything
yet (always returns nil) but the goal here is to wire in the set of all
declared instances so that refactoring.ValidateMoves will then have all
of the information it needs to encapsulate our validation rules.

The actual implementation of refactoring.ValidateMoves will follow in
subsequent commits.
2021-07-28 13:54:10 -07:00
Martin Atkins 51346f0d87 instances: Expander.AllInstances
In order to precisely implement the validation rules for "moved"
statements we need to be able to test whether particular instances were
declared in the configuration.

The instance expander is the source of record for which instances we
decided while creating a plan, but it's API is far more involved than what
our validation rules need, so this new AllInstances method returns a
wrapper object with a more straightforward API that provides read-only
access to just the question of whether particular instances got registered
in the expander already.

This API covers all three of the kinds of objects that move statements can
refer to. It includes module calls and resources, even though they aren't
_themselves_ "instances" in the sense we usually mean, because the module
instance addresses they are contained within _are_ instances and so we
need to take their dynamic instance keys into account when answering these
queries.
2021-07-28 13:54:10 -07:00
Martin Atkins 57d36c1d9d addrs: ModuleInstance.ChildCall method
This allows us to concisely construct AbsModuleCall address values by
method chaining from module instance addresses.
2021-07-28 13:54:10 -07:00
Martin Atkins 5a6d11e375 addrs: Factor out MoveEndpointInModule module prefix matching
All of our MoveDestination methods have the common problem of deciding
whether the receiver is even potentially in the scope of a particular
MoveEndpointInModule, which requires that the receiver belong to an
instance of the module where the move statement was found.

Previously we had this logic inline in all three cases, but now we'll
factor it out into a shared helper function.

At first it seemed like there ought to be more factoring possible for
the AbsResource vs. AbsResourceInstance implementations, since textually
they look very similar, but in practice they only look similar because
those two types have a lot of method names in common, but the Go compiler
sees them as completely distinct and thus we must write the same logic
out twice. I did try some further refactoring to address that but it
made the resulting code significantly more complicated and, by my
judgement, harder to follow. Consequently I decided that a little
duplication was okay and warranted here because this logic is already
quite fiddly to read through and isn't likely to change significantly once
released (due to backward-compatibility promises).
2021-07-28 13:33:26 -07:00
Martin Atkins 45d16b4a2b addrs: MoveDestination for AbsResourceInstance-based move endpoints
Previously our MoveDestination methods only honored move statements whose
endpoints were module calls, module instances, or resources.

Now we'll additionally handle when the endpoints are individual resource
instances. This situation only applies to
AbsResourceInstance.MoveDestination because no other objects can be
contained inside of a resource instance.

This completes all of the MoveDestination cases for all supported move
statement types and moveable object types.
2021-07-28 13:33:26 -07:00
Martin Atkins 5e86bab159 addrs: MoveDestination for AbsResource-based move endpoints
Previously our MoveDestination methods only honored move statements whose
endpoints were module calls or module instances.

Now we'll additionally handle when the endpoints are whole resource
addresses. This includes both renaming resource blocks and moving resource
blocks into or out of child modules.

This doesn't yet include endpoints that are specific resource _instances_,
which will follow in a subsequent commit. For the moment that situation
will always indicate a non-match.
2021-07-28 13:33:26 -07:00
Rémi Lapeyre da6717761e Merge remote-tracking branch 'origin/main' into update-consul 2021-07-28 12:18:01 +02:00
Martin Atkins 994ee23c06 addrs: Module move support for AbsResource and AbsResourceInstance
This is a subset of the MoveDestination behavior for AbsResource and
AbsResourceInstance which deals with source and destination addresses that
refer to module calls or module instances.

They both work by delegating to ModuleInstance.MoveDestination and then
applying the same resource or resource instance address to the
newly-chosen module instance address, thus ensuring that when we move
a module we also move all of the resources inside that module in the same
way.

This doesn't yet include support for moving between specific resource or
resource instance addresses; that'll follow later. This commit should have
enough logic to support moving between module names and module instance
keys, including any module calls or resources nested within.
2021-07-27 09:13:01 -07:00
Martin Atkins 4d733b4d2d addrs: Implement ModuleInstance.MoveDestination
This method encapsulates the move-processing rules for applying move
statements to ModuleInstance addresses. It honors both module call moves
and module instance moves by trying to find a subsequence of the input
that matches the "from" endpoint and then, if found, replacing it with
the "to" endpoint while preserving the prefix and suffix around the match,
if any.
2021-07-27 09:13:01 -07:00
magodo 90e6a3dffb
modify test case 2021-07-26 11:25:47 +08:00
magodo 67afee693b
target resource in module check only when `-out` points to a module 2021-07-24 12:03:32 +08:00
magodo dea645797a
`terraform add -out` append to existing config 2021-07-24 11:35:15 +08:00
Kristin Laemmert 0729e9fdd7
configs/configschema: extend block.AttributeByPath to descend into Objects (#29222)
* configs/configschema: extend block.AttributeByPath to descend into Objects

This commit adds a recursive Object.AttributeByPath function which will step through Attributes with NestedTypes. If an Attribute without a NestedType is encountered while there is still more to the path, it will return nil.
2021-07-22 09:45:33 -04:00
James Bardin b12502679f
Merge pull request #29208 from hashicorp/jbardin/update-hcl
update hcl v2.10.1
2021-07-21 13:51:02 -04:00
James Bardin aaf03d3251 update test error for hclv2.10.1 2021-07-21 09:09:30 -04:00
James Bardin 6fa04091f5
Merge pull request #29193 from hashicorp/jbardin/ignore-changes-marks
Handle marks on ignore_changes values
2021-07-21 09:05:50 -04:00
Kristin Laemmert 0b827ab6b6
format/diff: fix panic with null map in NestedType attrs (#29206) 2021-07-21 08:51:35 -04:00
James Bardin 07ee689eff update comment and extend test 2021-07-20 16:09:46 -04:00
James Bardin 570b70b02f
Merge pull request #28078 from jasons42/configure-etcdv3-client-max-request-size
Expose etcd client MaxCallSendMsgSize config
2021-07-20 15:49:14 -04:00
James Bardin 8dd722ece0
Merge pull request #29167 from xiaozhu36/xiaozhu
backend/oss: Changes the DescribeEndpoint to DescribeEndpoints to fixes the unsupported sts bug
2021-07-20 15:12:31 -04:00
James Bardin 431aa0280e
Merge pull request #29157 from remilapeyre/unique-constraint
Add uniqueness constraint on workspaces name for the pg backend
2021-07-20 15:11:35 -04:00
Jason Smith d1608d7a7f Expose etcd client MaxCallSendMsgSize config
The etcdv3 client has a default request send limit of 2.0 MiB. This change
exposes the configuration option to increase that limit enabling larger
state using the etcdv3 backend.

This also requires that the corresponding --max-request-bytes flag be
increased on the server side. The default there is 1.5 MiB.

Fixes https://github.com/hashicorp/terraform/issues/25745
2021-07-20 14:04:45 -05:00
James Bardin dd330e5194
Merge pull request #29200 from hashicorp/jbardin/rebase-25554
manual rebase of #25554
2021-07-20 14:29:56 -04:00
Kevin Burke c047958b57 go.mod,backend: update coreos/etcd dependency to release-3.4 branch
etcd rewrote its import path from coreos/etcd to go.etcd.io/etcd.
Changed the imports path in this commit, which also updates the code
version.

This lets us remove the github.com/ugorji/go/codec dependency, which
was pinned to a fairly old version. The net change is a loss of 30,000
lines of code in the vendor directory. (I first noticed this problem
because the outdated go/codec dependency was causing a dependency
failure when I tried to put Terraform and another project in the same
vendor directory.)

Note the version shows up funkily in go.mod, but I verified
visually it's the same commit as the "release-3.4" tag in
github.com/coreos/etcd. The etcd team plans to fix the release version
tagging in v3.5, which should be released soon.
2021-07-20 12:27:22 -04:00
James Bardin 9c20ed6185 StateMgr must be able to return with locked state
The current usage of internal remote state backends requires that
`StateMgr` be able to return an instance of `statemgr.Full` even if the
state is currently locked.
2021-07-20 12:10:34 -04:00
James Bardin 66a5950acb ignored value in this test should not be marked 2021-07-19 16:42:26 -04:00
James Bardin e574f73f61 test with marked, unknown, planned values 2021-07-19 16:42:26 -04:00
James Bardin ea077cbd90 handle marks within ignore_changes
Up until now marks were not considered by `ignore_changes`, that however
means changes to sensitivity within a configuration cannot ignored, even
though they are planned as changes.

Rather than separating the marks and tracking their paths, we can easily
update the processIgnoreChanges routine to handle the marked values
directly. Moving the `processIgnoreChanges` call also cleans up some of
the variable naming, making it more consistent through the body of the
function.
2021-07-19 16:42:26 -04:00
Alisdair McDiarmid a456d030db Fix flapping JSON output test properly
This commit makes the output order of the resource drift messages
stable, by building a slice of changes and sorting it by address.
2021-07-15 13:30:11 -04:00
Kristin Laemmert 0d80a74539
configs/configschema: fix missing "computed" attributes from NestedObject's ImpliedType (#29172)
* configs/configschema: fix missing "computed" attributes from NestedObject's ImpliedType

listOptionalAttrsFromObject was not including "computed" attributes in the list of optional object attributes. This is now fixed. I've also added some tests and fixed some panics and otherwise bad behavior when bad input is given. One natable change is in ImpliedType, which was panicking on an invalid nesting mode. The comment expressly states that it will return a result even when the schema is inconsistent, so I removed the panic and instead return an empty object.
2021-07-15 13:00:07 -04:00
Paddy 8bdea502ab
Add support for protocol 6 providers during init. (#29153)
Update the version constraints for what providers will be downloaded
from the registry, allowing protocol 6 providers to be downloaded from
the registry.
2021-07-15 09:39:40 -07:00
Alisdair McDiarmid c51112a30c Fix flapping JSON output test
This test would previously fail randomly due to the use of multiple
resource instances. Instance keys are iterated over as a map for
presentation, which has intentionally inconsistent ordering.

To fix this, I changed the test to use different resource addresses for
the three drift cases. I also extracted them to a separate test, and
tweaked the test helper functions to reduce the number of fatal exit
points, to make failed test debugging easier.
2021-07-15 12:03:01 -04:00
xiaozhu36 c495caafeb backend/oss: Changes the DescribeEndpoint to DescribeEndpoints to fixes the unsupported sts bug 2021-07-15 16:07:18 +08:00
Martin Atkins 3e5bfa7364 refactoring: Stubbing of the logic for handling moves
This is a whole lot of nothing right now, just stubbing out some control
flow that ultimately just leads to TODOs that cause it to do nothing at
all.

My intent here is to get this cross-cutting skeleton in place and thus
make it easier for us to collaborate on adding the meat to it, so that
it's more likely we can work on different parts separately and still get
a result that tessellates.
2021-07-14 17:37:48 -07:00
Martin Atkins 22eee529e3 addrs: MoveEndpointInModule
We previously built out addrs.UnifyMoveEndpoints with a different
implementation strategy in mind, but that design turns out to not be
viable because it forces us to move to AbsMoveable addresses too soon,
before we've done the analysis required to identify chained and nested
moves.

Instead, UnifyMoveEndpoints will return a new type MoveEndpointInModule
which conceptually represents a matching pattern which either matches or
doesn't match a particular AbsMoveable. It does this by just binding the
unified relative address from the MoveEndpoint to the module where it
was declared, and thus allows us to distinguish between the part of the
module path which applies to any instances of the given modules vs. the
user-specified part which must identify particular module instances.
2021-07-14 17:37:48 -07:00
Martin Atkins cd06572c4f addrs: ModuleInstance and AbsResourceInstance are UniqueKeyers
Since these address types are not directly comparable themselves, we use
an unexported named type around the string representation, whereby the
special type can avoid any ambiguity between string representations of
different types and thus each type only needs to worry about possible
ambiguity of its _own_ string representation.
2021-07-14 17:37:48 -07:00
Martin Atkins f3a57db293 addrs: UniqueKey and UniqueKeyer
Many times now we've seen situations where we need to use addresses
as map keys, but not all of our address types are comparable and thus
we tend to end up using string representations as keys instead.

That's problematic because conversion to string uses type information
and some of the address types have string representations that are
ambiguous with one another.

UniqueKey therefore represents an opaque key that is unique for each
functionally-distinct address across all types that implement
UniqueKeyer.

For this initial commit I've implemented UniqueKeyer only for the
Referenceable family of types. These are an easy case because they
were all already comparable (intentionally) anyway. Later commits
can implement UniqueKeyer for other types that are not naturally
comparable, such as any which include a ModuleInstance.

This also includes a new type addrs.Set which wraps a map as a set
of addresses, using the unique keys to ensure that there can be only
one element for each distinct address.
2021-07-14 17:37:48 -07:00
Rémi Lapeyre 3c34e15d40 Update the Consul API client
Some users would want to use Consul namespaces when using the Consul
backend but the version of the Consul API client we use is too old and
don't support them. In preparation for this change this patch just update
it the client and replace testutil.NewTestServerConfig() by
testutil.NewTestServerConfigT() in the tests.
2021-07-14 14:49:13 +02:00
Rémi Lapeyre b8e0d6f418 Add UNIQUE constraint in the states table for the pg backend 2021-07-14 11:59:14 +02:00
Rémi Lapeyre 3bf053a5fc Add a test to ensure that workspaces must have a unique name in pg backend 2021-07-14 11:57:28 +02:00
Kristin Laemmert 43f698dc9d
states: new `Move` funcs for Resource, ResourceInstance, and ModuleInstances (#29068)
* states: add MoveAbsResource and MoveAbsResourceInstance state functions and corresponding syncState wrapper functions.

* states: add MoveModuleInstance and MaybeMoveModuleInstance

* addrs: adding a new function, ModuleInstance.IsDeclaredByCall, which returns true if the receiver is an instance of the given AbsModuleCall.
2021-07-13 16:10:46 -04:00
Alisdair McDiarmid 5a34825fc1
Merge pull request #29131 from hashicorp/alisdair/sequence-diff-commentary
Add comments explaining how ctySequenceDiff works
2021-07-13 16:05:05 -04:00
Alisdair McDiarmid 72a7c95353
Merge pull request #29072 from hashicorp/alisdair/json-ui-resource-drift
json-output: Add resource drift to machine readable UI
2021-07-12 09:54:42 -04:00
Alisdair McDiarmid ef0181cfbd Add comments explaining how ctySequenceDiff works
The logic behind this code took me a while to understand, so I wrote
down what I understand to be the reasoning behind how it works. The
trickiest part is rendering changing objects as updates. I think the
other pieces are fairly common to LCS sequence diff rendering, so I
didn't explain those in detail.
2021-07-09 13:14:20 -04:00
Martin Atkins 6b8e103d6a configs: Include "moved" blocks when merging multiple files into a module
An earlier commit added logic to decode "moved" blocks and do static
validation of them. Here we now include that result also in modules
produced from those files, which we can then use in Terraform Core to
actually implement the moves.

This also places the feature behind an active experiment keyword called
config_driven_move. For now activating this doesn't actually achieve
anything except let you include moved blocks that Terraform will summarily
ignore, but we'll expand the scope of this in later commits to eventually
reach the point where it's really usable.
2021-07-01 08:28:02 -07:00
Martin Atkins d92b5e5f5e configs: valid-modules test ignores experimental features warning
A common source of churn when we're running experiments is that a module
that would otherwise be valid ends up generating a warning merely because
the experiment is active. That means we end up needing to shuffle the
test files around if the feature ultimately graduates to stable.

To reduce that churn in simple cases, we'll make an exception to disregard
the "Experiment is active" warning for any experiment that a module has
intentionally opted into, because those warnings are always expected and
not a cause for concern.

It's still possible to test those warnings explicitly using the
testdata/warning-files directory, if needed.
2021-07-01 08:28:02 -07:00
Martin Atkins 708003b035 configs: For Moved blocks, use addrs.MoveEndpoint instead of addrs.Target
Although addrs.Target can in principle capture the information we need to
represent move endpoints, it's semantically confusing because
addrs.Targetable uses addrs.Abs... types which are typically for absolute
addresses, but we were using them for relative addresses here.

We now have specialized address types for representing moves and probably
other things which have similar requirements later on. These types
largely communicate the same information in the end, but aim to do so in
a way that's explicit about which addresses are relative and which are
absolute, to make it less likely that we'd inadvertently misuse these
addresses.
2021-07-01 08:28:02 -07:00
Martin Atkins 4cbe6cabfc addrs: AbsMoveable, ConfigMoveable, and MoveableEndpoint
These three types represent the three different address representations we
need to represent different stages of analysis for "moved" blocks in the
configuration.

The goal here is to encapsulate all of the static address wrangling inside
these types so that users of these types elsewhere would have to work
pretty hard to use them incorrectly.

In particular, the MovableEndpoint type intentionally fully encapsulates
the weird relative addresses we use in configuration so that code
elsewhere in Terraform can never end up holding an address of a type that
suggests absolute when it's actually relative. That situation only occurs
in the internals of MoveableEndpoint where we use not-really-absolute
AbsMoveable address types to represent the not-yet-resolved relative
addresses.

This only takes care of the static address wrangling. There's lots of
other rules for what makes a "moved" block valid which will need to be
checked elsewhere because they require more context than just the content
of the address itself.
2021-07-01 08:28:02 -07:00
Martin Atkins 3212f6f367 addrs: AbsModuleCall type
Our documentation for ModuleCall originally asserted that we didn't need
AbsModuleCall because ModuleInstance captured the same information, but
when we added count and for_each for modules we introduced
ModuleCallInstance to represent a reference to an instance of a local
module call, and now _that_ is the type whose absolute equivalent is
ModuleInstance.

We previously had no absolute representation of the call itself, without
any particular instance. That's what AbsModuleCall now represents,
allowing us to be explicit about when we're talking about the module block
vs. instances it declares, which is the same distinction represented by
AbsResource vs. AbsResourceInstance.

Just like with AbsResource and AbsResourceInstance though, there is
syntactic ambiguity between a no-key call instance and a whole module call,
and so some codepaths might accept both to start and then use other
context to dynamically choose a particular interpretation, in which case
this distinction becomes meaningful in representing the result of that
decision.
2021-07-01 08:28:02 -07:00
Martin Atkins ab350289ab addrs: Rename AbsModuleCallOutput to ModuleCallInstanceOutput
The previous name didn't fit with the naming scheme for addrs types:
The "Abs" prefix typically means that it's an addrs.ModuleInstance
combined with whatever type name appears after "Abs", but this is instead
a ModuleCallOutput combined with an InstanceKey, albeit structured the
other way around for convenience, and so the expected name for this would
be the suffix "Instance".

We don't have an "Abs" type corresponding with this one because it would
represent no additional information than AbsOutputValue.
2021-07-01 08:28:02 -07:00
Alisdair McDiarmid 71a067242d json-output: Add resource drift to machine readable UI 2021-06-30 14:57:55 -04:00
Kristin Laemmert 35c19d7c9f
command/jsonstate: remove redundant remarking of resource instance (#29049)
* command/jsonstate: remove redundant remarking of resource instance

ResourceInstanceObjectSrc.Decode already handles marking values with any marks stored in ri.Current.AttrSensitivePaths, so re-applying those marks is not necessary.

We've gotten reports of panics coming from this line of code, though I have yet to reproduce the panic in a test.

* Implement test to reproduce panic on #29042

Co-authored-by: David Alger <davidmalger@gmail.com>
2021-06-29 10:59:20 -04:00
Martin Atkins 70bc432f85 command/views/json: Never generate invalid diagnostic snippet offsets
Because our snippet generator is trying to select whole lines to include
in the snippet, it has some edge cases for odd situations where the
relevant source range starts or ends directly at a newline, which were
previously causing this logic to return out-of-bounds offsets into the
code snippet string.

Although arguably it'd be better for the original diagnostics to report
more reasonable source ranges, it's better for us to report a
slightly-inaccurate snippet than to crash altogether, and so we'll extend
our existing range checks to check both bounds of the string and thus
avoid downstreams having to deal with out-of-bounds indices.

For completeness here I also added some similar logic to the
human-oriented diagnostic formatter, which consumes the result of the
JSON diagnostic builder. That's not really needed with the additional
checks in the JSON diagnostic builder, but it's nice to reinforce that
this code can't panic (in this way, at least) even if its input isn't
valid.
2021-06-28 13:42:28 -07:00
James Bardin c687ebeaf1
Merge pull request #29039 from hashicorp/jbardin/sensitive
New marks.Sensitive type, and audit of sensitive marks usage
2021-06-25 17:11:59 -04:00
James Bardin 80ef795cbf add marks.Raw 2021-06-25 14:27:43 -04:00
James Bardin 55ebb2708c remove IsMarked and ContainsMarked calls
Make sure sensitivity checks are looking for specific marks rather than
any marks at all.
2021-06-25 14:17:06 -04:00
James Bardin cdf7469efd marks.Has and marks.Contains 2021-06-25 14:17:03 -04:00
James Bardin d9dfd451ea update to use typed sensitive marks 2021-06-25 12:49:07 -04:00
James Bardin 2c493e38c7 marks package
marks.Sensitive
2021-06-25 12:35:51 -04:00
Kristin Laemmert 096010600d
terraform: use hcl.MergeBodies instead of configs.MergeBodies for pro… (#29000)
* terraform: use hcl.MergeBodies instead of configs.MergeBodies for provider configuration

Previously, Terraform would return an error if the user supplied provider configuration via interactive input iff the configuration provided on the command line was missing any required attributes - even if those attributes were already set in config.

That error came from configs.MergeBody, which was designed for overriding valid configuration. It expects that the first ("base") body has all required attributes. However in the case of interactive input for provider configuration, it is perfectly valid if either or both bodies are missing required attributes, as long as the final body has all required attributes. hcl.MergeBodies works very similarly to configs.MergeBodies, with a key difference being that it only checks that all required attributes are present after the two bodies are merged.

I've updated the existing test to use interactive input vars and a schema with all required attributes. This test failed before switching from configs.MergeBodies to hcl.MergeBodies.

* add a command package test that shows that we can still have providers with dynamic configuration + required + interactive input merging

This test failed when buildProviderConfig still used configs.MergeBodies instead of hcl.MergeBodies
2021-06-25 08:48:47 -04:00
Kristin Laemmert 3acb5e2841
configs: add decodeMovedBlock behind a locked gate. (#28973)
This PR adds decoding for the upcoming "moved" blocks in configuration. This code is gated behind an experiment called EverythingIsAPlan, but the experiment is not registered as an active experiment, so it will never run (there is a test in place which will fail if the experiment is ever registered).

This also adds a new function to the Targetable interface, AddrType, to simplifying comparing two addrs.Targetable.

There is some validation missing still: this does not (yet) descend into resources to see if the actual resource types are the same (I've put this off in part because we will eventually need the provider schema to verify aliased resources, so I suspect this validation will have to happen later on).
2021-06-21 10:53:16 -04:00
Alisdair McDiarmid 5611da8eb5
Merge pull request #28975 from hashicorp/alisdair/jsonplan-drift
json-output: Omit unchanged resource_drift entries
2021-06-18 11:37:49 -04:00
James Bardin 6a495c8d42 fixupBody missing MissingItemRange
When blocktoattr.fixupBody returned its content, the value for
`MissingItemRange` was omitted, losing the diagnostic Subject.
2021-06-18 09:05:56 -04:00
Alisdair McDiarmid 3326ab7dae json-output: Omit unchanged resource_drift entries
Previously, if any resources were found to have drifted, the JSON plan
output would include a drift entry for every resource in state. This
commit aligns the JSON plan output with the CLI UI, and only includes
those resources where the old value does not equal the new value---i.e.
drift has been detected.

Also fixes a bug where the "address" field was missing from the drift
output, and adds some test coverage.
2021-06-17 15:09:16 -04:00
Kristin Laemmert 583859e510
commands: `terraform add` (#28874)
* command: new command, terraform add, generates resource templates

terraform add ADDRESS generates a resource configuration template with all required (and optionally optional) attributes set to null. This can optionally also pre-populate nonsesitive attributes with values from an existing resource of the same type in state (sensitive vals will be populated with null and a comment indicating sensitivity)

* website: terraform add documentation
2021-06-17 12:08:37 -04:00
Bryan Eastes 714632206c
Quoting filesystem path in scp command argument (#28626)
* Quoting filesystem path in scp command argument

* Adding proper shell quoting for scp commands

* Running go fmt

* Using a library for quoting shell commands

* Don't export quoteShell function
2021-06-15 10:04:01 -07:00
James Bardin 2ecdf44918
Merge pull request #28941 from hashicorp/jbardin/objchange-unknown-blocks
handle unexpected changes to unknown block
2021-06-14 10:31:31 -04:00
Kristin Laemmert 329585d07d
jsonconfig: properly unwind and enumerate references (#28884)
The "references" included in the expression representation now properly unwrap for each traversal step, to match what was documented.
2021-06-14 09:22:22 -04:00
Kristin Laemmert ac03d35997
jsonplan and jsonstate: include sensitive_values in state representations (#28889)
* jsonplan and jsonstate: include sensitive_values in state representations

A sensitive_values field has been added to the resource in state and planned values which is a map of all sensitive attributes with the values set to true.

It wasn't entirely clear to me if the values in state would suffice, or if we also need to consult the schema - I believe that this is sufficient for state files written since v0.15, and if that's incorrect or insufficient, I'll add in the provider schema check as well.

I also updated the documentation, and, since we've considered this before, bumped the FormatVersions for both jsonstate and jsonplan.
2021-06-14 09:19:13 -04:00
James Bardin b7f8ef4dc6 handle unexpected changes to unknown block
An unknown block represents a dynamic configuration block with an
unknown for_each value. We were not catching the case where a provider
modified this value unexpectedly, which would crash with block of type
NestingList blocks where the config value has no length for comparison.
2021-06-11 13:13:40 -04:00
James Bardin 09c33fa449 account for noop deposed instances in json plan
When rendering a json plan, we need to account for deposed instances
that have become a noop rather than a destroy.
2021-06-09 17:57:14 -04:00
Nick Fagerlund ab70879b9b Remote backend: Stop setting message when creating runs
Historically, we've used TFC's default run messages as a sort of dumping
ground for metadata about the run. We've recently decided to mostly stop
doing that, in favor of:

- Only specifying the run's source in the default message.
- Letting TFC itself handle the default messages.

Today, the remote backend explicitly sets a run message, overriding
any default that TFC might set. This commit removes that explicit message
so we can allow TFC to sort it out.

This shouldn't have any bad effect on TFE out in the wild, because it's
known how to set a default message for remote backend runs since late 2018.
2021-06-09 11:07:39 -07:00
Alisdair McDiarmid 24ace6ae7d
Merge pull request #28864 from hashicorp/alisdair/fix-remote-backend-multi-workspace-state-migration
Fix remote backend multi workspace state migration
2021-06-08 10:10:58 -04:00
Kristin Laemmert 5a48530f47
tools: remove terraform-bundle. (#28876)
* tools: remove terraform-bundle.

terraform-bundle is no longer supported in the main branch of terraform. Users can build terraform-bundle from terraform tagged v0.15 and older.

* add a README pointing users to the v0.15 branch
2021-06-03 14:08:04 -04:00
Martin Atkins 51b0aee36c addrs: ModuleRegistryPackage for representing module registry packages
Previously we had a separation between ModuleSourceRemote and
ModulePackage as a way to represent within the type system that there's an
important difference between a module source address and a package address,
because module packages often contain multiple modules and so a
ModuleSourceRemote combines a ModulePackage with a subdirectory to
represent one specific module.

This commit applies that same strategy to ModuleSourceRegistry, creating
a new type ModuleRegistryPackage to represent the different sort of
package that we use for registry modules. Again, the main goal here is
to try to reflect the conceptual modelling more directly in the type
system so that we can more easily verify that uses of these different
address types are correct.

To make use of that, I've also lightly reworked initwd's module installer
to use addrs.ModuleRegistryPackage directly, instead of a string
representation thereof. This was in response to some earlier commits where
I found myself accidentally mixing up package addresses and source
addresses in the installRegistryModule method; with this new organization
those bugs would've been caught at compile time, rather than only at
unit and integration testing time.

While in the area anyway, I also took this opportunity to fix some
historical confusing names of fields in initwd.ModuleInstaller, to be
clearer that they are only for registry packages and not for all module
source address types.
2021-06-03 08:50:34 -07:00
Martin Atkins 7b2a0284e0 initwd: Fix registry acceptance tests for upstream registry changes
We have some tests in this package that install real modules from the real
registry at registry.terraform.io. Those tests were written at an earlier
time when the registry's behavior was to return the URL of a .tar.gz
archive generated automatically by GitHub, which included an extra level
of subdirectory that would then be reflected in the paths to the local
copies of these modules.

GitHub started rate limiting those tar archives in a way that Terraform's
module installer couldn't authenticate to, and so the registry switched
to returning direct git repository URLs instead, which don't have that
extra subdirectory and so the local paths on disk now end up being a
little different, because the actual module directories are at a different
subdirectory of the package.
2021-06-03 08:50:34 -07:00
Martin Atkins 17b766c3ea configs: EntersNewPackage methods for descendant modules
Now that we (in the previous commit) refactored how we deal with module
sources to do the parsing at config loading time rather than at module
installation time, we can expose a method to centralize the determination
for whether a particular module call (and its resulting Config object)
enters a new external package.

We don't use this for anything yet, but in later commits we will use this
for some cross-module features that are available only for modules
belonging to the same package, because we assume that modules grouped
together in a package can change together and thus it's okay to permit a
little more coupling of internal details in that case, which would not
be appropriate between modules that are versioned separately.
2021-06-03 08:50:34 -07:00
Martin Atkins 1a8da65314 Refactoring of module source addresses and module installation
It's been a long while since we gave close attention to the codepaths for
module source address parsing and external module package installation.
Due to their age, these codepaths often diverged from our modern practices
such as representing address types in the addrs package, and encapsulating
package installation details only in a particular location.

In particular, this refactor makes source address parsing a separate step
from module installation, which therefore makes the result of that parsing
available to other Terraform subsystems which work with the configuration
representation objects.

This also presented the opportunity to better encapsulate our use of
go-getter into a new package "getmodules" (echoing "getproviders"), which
is intended to be the only part of Terraform that directly interacts with
go-getter.

This is largely just a refactor of the existing functionality into a new
code organization, but there is one notable change in behavior here: the
source address parsing now happens during configuration loading rather
than module installation, which may cause errors about invalid addresses
to be returned in different situations than before. That counts as
backward compatible because we only promise to remain compatible with
configurations that are _valid_, which means that they can be initialized,
planned, and applied without any errors. This doesn't introduce any new
error cases, and instead just makes a pre-existing error case be detected
earlier.

Our module registry client is still using its own special module address
type from registry/regsrc for now, with a small shim from the new
addrs.ModuleSourceRegistry type. Hopefully in a later commit we'll also
rework the registry client to work with the new address type, but this
commit is already big enough as it is.
2021-06-03 08:50:34 -07:00
Martin Atkins 2e7db64968 addrs: Representation of module source addresses
We've previously had the syntax and representation of module source
addresses pretty sprawled around the codebase and intermingled with other
systems such as the module installer.

I've created a factored-out implementation here with the intention of
enabling some later refactoring to centralize the address parsing as part
of configuration decoding, and thus in turn allow the parsing result to
be seen by other parts of Terraform that interact with configuration
objects, so that they can more robustly handle differences between local
and remote modules, and can present module addresses consistently in the
UI.
2021-06-03 08:50:34 -07:00
Martin Atkins f25935649a getmodules: Beginnings of a new package about Terraform module packages
This new package aims to encapsulate all of our interactions with
go-getter to fetch remote module packages, to ensure that the rest of
Terraform will only use the small subset of go-getter functionality that
our modern module installer uses.

In older versions of Terraform, go-getter was the entire implementation
of module installation, but along the way we found that several aspects of
its design are poor fit for Terraform's needs, and so now we're using it
as just an implementation detail of Terraform's handling of remote module
packages only, hiding it behind this wrapper API which exposes only
the services that our module installer needs.

This new package isn't actually used yet, but in a later commit we will
change all of the other callers to go-getter to only work indirectly
through this package, so that this will be the only package that actually
imports the go-getter packages.
2021-06-03 08:50:34 -07:00
Martin Atkins e5f52e56f8 addrs: Rename DefaultRegistryHost to DefaultProviderRegistryHost
As the comment notes, this hostname is the default for provide source
addresses. We'll shortly be adding some address types to represent module
source addresses too, and so we'll also have DefaultModuleRegistryHost
for that situation.

(They'll actually both contain the the same hostname, but that's a
coincidence rather than a requirement.)
2021-06-03 08:50:34 -07:00
Alisdair McDiarmid 3f0c6a2217 cli: Add -ignore-remote-version flag for init
When performing state migration to a remote backend target, Terraform
may fail due to mismatched remote and local Terraform versions. Here we
add the `-ignore-remote-version` flag to allow users to ignore this
version check when necessary.
2021-06-02 15:30:05 -04:00
Alisdair McDiarmid 6692336541 cli: Fix state migration version check
When migrating multiple local workspaces to a remote backend target
using the `prefix` argument, we need to perform the version check
against all existing workspaces returned by the `Workspaces` method.
Failing to do so will result in a version check error.
2021-06-02 15:23:56 -04:00
Rémi Lapeyre 5f444a6862 Fix handling large states in the Consul backend 2021-05-28 21:31:07 +02:00
Rémi Lapeyre e5fb84a01a Add test for storing state just under the size limit of the Consul backend
Storing a state just a bit smaller than the limit of the KV API fails
because we are using the Transaction API which has an overhead.
2021-05-28 21:30:56 +02:00
Martin Atkins 4e74a7a4f1 initwd: Error message for local paths escaping module packages
Our module installer has a somewhat-informal idea of a "module package",
which is some external thing we can go fetch in order to add one or more
modules to the current configuration. Our documentation doesn't talk much
about it because most users seem to have found the distinction between
external and local modules pretty intuitive without us throwing a lot of
funny terminology at them, but there are some situations where the
distinction between a module and a module package are material to the
end-user.

One such situation is when using an absolute rather than relative
filesystem path: we treat that as an external package in order to make the
resulting working directory theoretically "portable" (although users can
do various other things to defeat that), and so Terraform will copy the
directory into .terraform/modules in the same way as it would download and
extract a remote archive package or clone a git repository.

A consequence of this, though, is that any relative paths called from
inside a module loaded from an absolute path will fail if they try to
traverse upward into the parent directory, because at runtime we're
actually running from a copy of the directory that's been taking out of
its original context.

A similar sort of situation can occur in a truly remote module package if
the author accidentally writes a "../" source path that traverses up out
of the package root, and so this commit introduces a special error message
for both situations that tries to be a bit clearer about there being a
package boundary and use that to explain why installation failed.

We would ideally have made escaping local references like that illegal in
the first place, but sadly we did not and so when we rebuilt the module
installer for Terraform v0.12 we ended up keeping the previous behavior of
just trying it and letting it succeed if there happened to somehow be a
matching directory at the given path, in order to remain compatible with
situations that had worked by coincidence rather than intention. For that
same reason, I've implemented this as a replacement error message we will
return only if local module installation was going to fail anyway, and
thus it only modifies the error message for some existing error situations
rather than introducing new error situations.

This also includes some light updates to the documentation to say a little
more about how Terraform treats absolute paths, though aiming not to get
too much into the weeds about module packages since it's something that
most users can get away with never knowing.
2021-05-27 11:00:43 -07:00
CJ Horton 2f980f1dfe
Merge pull request #28820 from hashicorp/radditude/refresh-error-message
backend/remote: point refresh users towards -refresh-only
2021-05-27 07:21:37 -07:00
CJ Horton 314d322b59 backend/remote: encourage use of -refresh-only 2021-05-26 23:08:39 -07:00
Alisdair McDiarmid a3b1764fd7 backend/local: Fix lock when applying stale plan
When returning from the context method, a deferred function call checked
for error diagnostics in the `diags` variable, and unlocked the state if
any exist. This means that we need to be extra careful to mutate that
variable when returning errors, rather than returning a different set of
diags in the same position.

Previously this would result in an invalid plan file causing a lock to
become stuck.
2021-05-26 16:05:58 -04:00
Alisdair McDiarmid 52591ba5e9
Merge pull request #28806 from hashicorp/alisdair/remove-json-drift-summary
command/views: Remove unused drift summary message
2021-05-26 11:50:56 -04:00
James Bardin 99d0266585 return error for invalid resource import
Most legacy provider resources do not implement any import functionality
other than returning an empty object with the given ID, relying on core
to later read that resource and obtain the complete state. Because of
this, we need to check the response from ReadResource for a null value,
and use that as an indication the import id was invalid.
2021-05-25 17:13:49 -04:00
Alisdair McDiarmid 953738c128 command/views: Remove unused drift summary message
This was dead code, and there is no clear way to retrieve this
information, as we currently only derive the drift information as part
of the rendering process.
2021-05-25 15:54:57 -04:00
James Bardin 3bf498422c typo 2021-05-25 08:32:44 -04:00
James Bardin 45b5c289a0 no drift with only deposed changes
Changes to deposed instances should not triggers any drift to be
rendered, as they will have nothing to display.
2021-05-24 17:17:52 -04:00
James Bardin 57aa7c6025 skip drift rendering for deposed resources
Deposed instances have no current state and are only scheduled for
deletion, so there is no reason to try and render drift on these
instances.
2021-05-24 15:48:05 -04:00
James Bardin aae642fb07 fix schemas and add deposed test
The schemas for provider and the resources didn't match, so the changes
were not going to be rendered at all.

Add a test which contains a deposed resource.
2021-05-24 15:38:58 -04:00
James Bardin 95e788f13b deposed instances should not be counted as orphans
Do not add orphan nodes for resources that only contain deposed
instances.
2021-05-20 09:36:45 -04:00
James Bardin aaaeeffa81 a noop change with no state has no private data
There is no change here to use the private data, and currentState may be
nil.
2021-05-20 09:34:25 -04:00
CJ Horton 94ab6d7504
Merge pull request #28746 from hashicorp/remote-backend-refresh-replace 2021-05-19 10:33:19 -07:00
Kristin Laemmert 649095c602
providers subcommand tests (#28744)
* getproviders ParsePlatform: add check for invalid platform strings with too many parts

The existing logic would not catch things like a platform string containing multiple underscores. I've added an explicit check for exactly 2 parts and some basic tests to prove it.

* command/providers-lock: add tests

This commit adds some simple tests for the providers lock command. While adding this test I noticed that there was a mis-copied error message, so I replaced that with a more specific message. I also added .terraform.lock.hcl to our gitignore for hopefully obvious reasons.

getproviders.ParsePlatform: use parts in place of slice range, since it's available

* command: Providers mirror tests

The providers mirror command is already well tested in e2e tests, so this includes only the most absolutely basic test case.
2021-05-19 12:56:16 -04:00
James Bardin bafa44b958 return diagnostics from provisioners
Do not convert provisioner diagnostics to errors so that users can get
context from provisioner failures.

Return diagnostics from the builtin provisioners that can be annotated
with configuration context and instance addresses.
2021-05-19 11:24:54 -04:00
CJ Horton ab5fec9aec backend/remote: test new options and modes
Tests for -refresh=false, -refresh-only, and -replace,
as well as tests to ensure we error appropriately on
mismatched API versions.
2021-05-18 15:35:37 -07:00
CJ Horton eb1f113693 backend/remote: validate API version for refresh and replace 2021-05-18 15:35:37 -07:00
Kristin Laemmert 4928e1dd01
terraform: use ProtocolVersion from unmanaged providers' reattachConfig to chose the correct PluginClient (#28190)
* add/use ProtocolVersion with unmanaged providers reattach config
2021-05-18 10:59:14 -04:00
Alisdair McDiarmid 5fc3ba37a6 cli: Improve sensitivity change warning output
When an attribute value changes in sensitivity, we previously rendered
this in the diff with a `~` update action and a note about the
consequence of the sensitivity change. Since we also suppress the
attribute value, this made it impossible to know if the underlying value
was changing, too, which has significant consequences on the meaning of
the plan.

This commit adds an equality check of the old/new underlying values. If
these are unchanged, we add a note to the sensitivity warning to clarify
that only sensitivity is changing.
2021-05-18 10:33:25 -04:00
Chris Arcand 2171f8a1a6 backend/remote: Support replacements in plans 2021-05-17 16:31:34 -07:00
Chris Arcand a436c7fa2f backend/remote: Support refresh-only plans 2021-05-17 16:31:33 -07:00
Chris Arcand cb49a4c8d6 backend/remote: Remove the -refresh=false restriction 2021-05-17 16:31:32 -07:00
James Bardin 4d55e2604f save apply diagnostics on backend failure
Make sure to collect apply diagnostics before persisting the backend
state so runtime errors are not lost.
2021-05-17 17:22:04 -04:00
Martin Atkins d35bc05312 Update various non-code references to renamed Go packages
Previous commits have moved all of our Go packages under "internal", so
this is a retroactive update of non-Go references to those same packages.
2021-05-17 14:09:07 -07:00
Martin Atkins 36d0a50427 Move terraform/ to internal/terraform/
This is part of a general effort to move all of Terraform's non-library
package surface under internal in order to reinforce that these are for
internal use within Terraform only.

If you were previously importing packages under this prefix into an
external codebase, you could pin to an earlier release tag as an interim
solution until you've make a plan to achieve the same functionality some
other way.
2021-05-17 14:09:07 -07:00
Martin Atkins f40800b3a4 Move states/ to internal/states/
This is part of a general effort to move all of Terraform's non-library
package surface under internal in order to reinforce that these are for
internal use within Terraform only.

If you were previously importing packages under this prefix into an
external codebase, you could pin to an earlier release tag as an interim
solution until you've make a plan to achieve the same functionality some
other way.
2021-05-17 14:09:07 -07:00
Martin Atkins b40a4fb741 Move plugin/ and plugin6/ to internal/plugin{,6}/
This is part of a general effort to move all of Terraform's non-library
package surface under internal in order to reinforce that these are for
internal use within Terraform only.

If you were previously importing packages under this prefix into an
external codebase, you could pin to an earlier release tag as an interim
solution until you've make a plan to achieve the same functionality some
other way.
2021-05-17 14:09:07 -07:00
Martin Atkins 034e944070 Move plans/ to internal/plans/
This is part of a general effort to move all of Terraform's non-library
package surface under internal in order to reinforce that these are for
internal use within Terraform only.

If you were previously importing packages under this prefix into an
external codebase, you could pin to an earlier release tag as an interim
solution until you've make a plan to achieve the same functionality some
other way.
2021-05-17 14:09:07 -07:00
Martin Atkins cdd9464f9a Move lang/ to internal/lang/
This is part of a general effort to move all of Terraform's non-library
package surface under internal in order to reinforce that these are for
internal use within Terraform only.

If you were previously importing packages under this prefix into an
external codebase, you could pin to an earlier release tag as an interim
solution until you've make a plan to achieve the same functionality some
other way.
2021-05-17 14:09:07 -07:00
Martin Atkins 31349a9c3a Move configs/ to internal/configs/
This is part of a general effort to move all of Terraform's non-library
package surface under internal in order to reinforce that these are for
internal use within Terraform only.

If you were previously importing packages under this prefix into an
external codebase, you could pin to an earlier release tag as an interim
solution until you've make a plan to achieve the same functionality some
other way.
2021-05-17 14:09:07 -07:00
Martin Atkins ffe056bacb Move command/ to internal/command/
This is part of a general effort to move all of Terraform's non-library
package surface under internal in order to reinforce that these are for
internal use within Terraform only.

If you were previously importing packages under this prefix into an
external codebase, you could pin to an earlier release tag as an interim
solution until you've make a plan to achieve the same functionality some
other way.
2021-05-17 14:09:07 -07:00
Martin Atkins b9a93a0fe7 Move addrs/ to internal/addrs/
This is part of a general effort to move all of Terraform's non-library
package surface under internal in order to reinforce that these are for
internal use within Terraform only.

If you were previously importing packages under this prefix into an
external codebase, you could pin to an earlier release tag as an interim
solution until you've make a plan to achieve the same functionality some
other way.
2021-05-17 14:09:07 -07:00
Martin Atkins 26e5320a78 Move experiments/ to internal/experiments/
This is part of a general effort to move all of Terraform's non-library
package surface under internal in order to reinforce that these are for
internal use within Terraform only.

If you were previously importing packages under this prefix into an
external codebase, you could pin to an earlier release tag as an interim
solution until you've make a plan to achieve the same functionality some
other way.
2021-05-17 14:09:07 -07:00
Martin Atkins a6b8c8ba22 Move moduledeps/ to internal/moduledeps/
This is part of a general effort to move all of Terraform's non-library
package surface under internal in order to reinforce that these are for
internal use within Terraform only.

If you were previously importing packages under this prefix into an
external codebase, you could pin to an earlier release tag as an interim
solution until you've make a plan to achieve the same functionality some
other way.
2021-05-17 14:09:07 -07:00
Martin Atkins e81162c4e1 Move provisioners/ to internal/provisioners/
This is part of a general effort to move all of Terraform's non-library
package surface under internal in order to reinforce that these are for
internal use within Terraform only.

If you were previously importing packages under this prefix into an
external codebase, you could pin to an earlier release tag as an interim
solution until you've make a plan to achieve the same functionality some
other way.
2021-05-17 14:09:07 -07:00
Martin Atkins 1409f30f9c Move providers/ to internal/providers/
This is part of a general effort to move all of Terraform's non-library
package surface under internal in order to reinforce that these are for
internal use within Terraform only.

If you were previously importing packages under this prefix into an
external codebase, you could pin to an earlier release tag as an interim
solution until you've make a plan to achieve the same functionality some
other way.
2021-05-17 14:09:07 -07:00
Martin Atkins bc31dbc179 Move instances/ to internal/instances/
This is part of a general effort to move all of Terraform's non-library
package surface under internal in order to reinforce that these are for
internal use within Terraform only.

If you were previously importing packages under this prefix into an
external codebase, you could pin to an earlier release tag as an interim
solution until you've make a plan to achieve the same functionality some
other way.
2021-05-17 14:09:07 -07:00
Martin Atkins 05caff2ca3 Move tfdiags/ to internal/tfdiags/
This is part of a general effort to move all of Terraform's non-library
package surface under internal in order to reinforce that these are for
internal use within Terraform only.

If you were previously importing packages under this prefix into an
external codebase, you could pin to an earlier release tag as an interim
solution until you've make a plan to achieve the same functionality some
other way.
2021-05-17 14:09:07 -07:00
Martin Atkins ec85fb1960 Move communicator/ to internal/communicator/
This is part of a general effort to move all of Terraform's non-library
package surface under internal in order to reinforce that these are for
internal use within Terraform only.

If you were previously importing packages under this prefix into an
external codebase, you could pin to an earlier release tag as an interim
solution until you've make a plan to achieve the same functionality some
other way.
2021-05-17 14:09:07 -07:00
Martin Atkins 4c254cc2be Move httpclient/ to internal/httpclient/
This is part of a general effort to move all of Terraform's non-library
package surface under internal in order to reinforce that these are for
internal use within Terraform only.

If you were previously importing packages under this prefix into an
external codebase, you could pin to an earlier release tag as an interim
solution until you've make a plan to achieve the same functionality some
other way.
2021-05-17 14:09:07 -07:00
Martin Atkins 415ab31db8 Move e2e/ to internal/e2e/
This is part of a general effort to move all of Terraform's non-library
package surface under internal in order to reinforce that these are for
internal use within Terraform only.

If you were previously importing packages under this prefix into an
external codebase, you could pin to an earlier release tag as an interim
solution until you've make a plan to achieve the same functionality some
other way.
2021-05-17 14:09:07 -07:00
Martin Atkins 4c5b866dea Move registry/ to internal/registry/
This is part of a general effort to move all of Terraform's non-library
package surface under internal in order to reinforce that these are for
internal use within Terraform only.

If you were previously importing packages under this prefix into an
external codebase, you could pin to an earlier release tag as an interim
solution until you've make a plan to achieve the same functionality some
other way.
2021-05-17 14:09:07 -07:00
Martin Atkins 2bd2568ad8 Move repl/ to internal/repl/
This is part of a general effort to move all of Terraform's non-library
package surface under internal in order to reinforce that these are for
internal use within Terraform only.

If you were previously importing packages under this prefix into an
external codebase, you could pin to an earlier release tag as an interim
solution until you've make a plan to achieve the same functionality some
other way.
2021-05-17 14:09:07 -07:00
Martin Atkins 70eebe3521 Move dag/ to internal/dag/
This is part of a general effort to move all of Terraform's non-library
package surface under internal in order to reinforce that these are for
internal use within Terraform only.

If you were previously importing packages under this prefix into an
external codebase, you could pin to an earlier release tag as an interim
solution until you've make a plan to achieve the same functionality some
other way.
2021-05-17 14:09:07 -07:00
Martin Atkins cf93aa8046 Move builtin/ to internal/builtin/
This is part of a general effort to move all of Terraform's non-library
package surface under internal in order to reinforce that these are for
internal use within Terraform only.

If you were previously importing packages under this prefix into an
external codebase, you could pin to an earlier release tag as an interim
solution until you've make a plan to achieve the same functionality some
other way.
2021-05-17 14:09:07 -07:00
Martin Atkins 73dda868cc Move backend/ to internal/backend/
This is part of a general effort to move all of Terraform's non-library
package surface under internal in order to reinforce that these are for
internal use within Terraform only.

If you were previously importing packages under this prefix into an
external codebase, you could pin to an earlier release tag as an interim
solution until you've make a plan to achieve the same functionality some
other way.
2021-05-17 14:09:07 -07:00
James Bardin feb7622846 monitor plugin std outputs for unexpected data
Once a plugin process is started, go-plugin will redirect the stdout and
stderr stream through a grpc service and provide those streams to the
client. This is rarely used, as it is prone to failing with races
because those same file descriptors are needed for the initial handshake
and logging setup, but data may be accidentally sent to these
nonetheless.

The usual culprits are stray `fmt.Print` usage where logging was
intended, or the configuration of a logger after the os.Stderr file
descriptor was replaced by go-plugin. These situations are very hard for
provider developers to debug since the data is discarded entirely.

While there may be improvements to be made in the go-plugin package to
configure this behavior, in the meantime we can add a simple monitoring
io.Writer to the streams which will surface th data as warnings in the
logs instead of writing it to `io.Discard`
2021-05-13 16:57:36 -04:00
James Bardin a4a6b40bee update getproviders tests for new key 2021-04-23 11:18:58 -04:00
James Bardin e1d790be61 update HC PublicKey 2021-04-23 11:18:58 -04:00
Paddy 0b5c4a6a2c
Accept TF_LOG=json to enable TRACE logs in JSON format
This is not currently a supported interface, but we plan to release
tool(s) that consume parts of it that are more dependable later,
separately from Terraform CLI itself.
2021-03-16 14:59:15 -07:00
Pam Selle 242f319638
Give suggestions & remind users to use required_providers when provider not in registry (#28014)
* Add helper suggestion when failed registry err

When someone has a failed registry error on init, remind them that
they should have required_providers in every module

* Give suggestion for a provider based on reqs

Suggest another provider on a registry error, from the list of
requirements we have on init. This skips the legacy lookup
process if there is a similar provider existing in requirements.
2021-03-11 08:54:18 -05:00
Masayuki Morita 31a5aa1878
command/init: Add a new flag `-lockfile=readonly` (#27630)
Fixes #27506

Add a new flag `-lockfile=readonly` to `terraform init`.
It would be useful to allow us to suppress dependency lockfile changes
explicitly.

The type of the `-lockfile` flag is string rather than bool, leaving
room for future extensions to other behavior variants.

The readonly mode suppresses lockfile changes, but should verify
checksums against the information already recorded. It should conflict
with the `-upgrade` flag.

Note: In the original use-case described in #27506, I would like to
suppress adding zh hashes, but a test code here suppresses adding h1
hashes because it's easy for testing.

Co-authored-by: Alisdair McDiarmid <alisdair@users.noreply.github.com>
2021-03-09 11:12:00 -05:00
Kristin Laemmert 106bcd3bf0
update to match new default branch name (#27909) 2021-02-24 13:36:47 -05:00
Kristin Laemmert e5a7586559
moduletest: update provider to match recent provider interface changes (#27904)
this fixes a bad merge on my part
2021-02-24 12:29:45 -05:00
Kristin Laemmert ff05362d51
providers.Interface: rename ValidateDataSourceConfig to ValidateDataResourceConfig (#27874)
* providers.Interface: rename ValidateDataSourceConfig to
ValidateDataResourceConfig

This PR came about after renaming ValidateResourceTypeConfig to
ValidateResourceConfig: I now understand that we'd called it the former
instead of the latter to indicate that the function wasn't necessarily
operating on a resource that actually exists. A possibly-more-accurate
renaming of both functions might then be ValidateManagedResourceConfig
and ValidateDataResourceConfig.

The next commit will update the protocol (v6 only) as well; these are in
separate commits for reviewers and will get squashed together before
merging.

* extend renaming to protov6
2021-02-24 12:04:28 -05:00
Martin Atkins 7f78342953 command: Experimental "terraform test" command
This is just a prototype to gather some feedback in our ongoing research
on integration testing of Terraform modules. The hope is that by having a
command integrated into Terraform itself it'll be easier for interested
module authors to give it a try, and also easier for us to iterate quickly
based on feedback without having to coordinate across multiple codebases.

Everything about this is subject to change even in future patch releases.
Since it's a CLI command rather than a configuration language feature it's
not using the language experiments mechanism, but generates a warning
similar to the one language experiments generate in order to be clear that
backward compatibility is not guaranteed.
2021-02-22 14:21:45 -08:00
Martin Atkins 8330f8e991 internal/moduletest: Experimental module testing helpers
As part of ongoing research into Terraform testing we'd like to use an
experimental feature to validate our current understanding that expressing
tests as part of the Terraform language, as opposed to in some other
language run alongside, is a good and viable way to write practical
module integration tests.

This initial experimental incarnation of that idea is implemented as a
provider, just because that's an easier extension point for research
purposes than a first-class language feature would be. Whether this would
ultimately emerge as a provider similar to this or as custom language
constructs will be a matter for future research, if this first
experiment confirms that tests written in the Terraform language are the
best direction to take.

The previous incarnation of this experiment was an externally-developed
provider apparentlymart/testing, listed on the Terraform Registry. That
helped with showing that there are some useful tests that we can write
in the Terraform language, but integrating such a provider into Terraform
will allow us to make use of it in the also-experimental "terraform test"
command, which will follow in subsequent commits, to see how this might
fit into a development workflow.
2021-02-22 14:21:45 -08:00
Kristin Laemmert 7b7273e3aa
Add support for plugin protocol v6 (#27826)
* Add support for plugin protocol v6

This PR turns on support for plugin protocol v6. A provider can
advertise itself as supporting protocol version 6 and terraform will
use the correct client.

Todo:

The "unmanaged" providers functionality does not support protocol
version, so at the moment terraform will continue to assume that
"unmanaged" providers are on protocol v5. This will require some
upstream work on go-plugin (I believe).

I would like to convert the builtin providers to use protocol v6 in a
future PR; however it is not necessary until we remove protocol v6.

* add e2e test for using both plugin protocol versions

- copied grpcwrap and made a version that returns protocol v6 provider
- copied the test provider, provider-simple, and made a version that's
  using protocol v6 with the above fun
- added an e2etest
2021-02-22 10:22:45 -05:00
James Bardin 3da5d2bdf6
Merge pull request #27692 from alexwlchan/abolish-the-heirarchy
Correct the spelling of heirarchy/hierarchy throughout
2021-02-18 16:34:28 -05:00
Pam Selle e1c25337c7 Delete readme, add doc.go to helper/schema
Remove the README that had old user-facing information, replacing
it with a doc.go that describes the package and points to the
plugin SDK for external consumers.
2021-02-18 12:30:10 -05:00
Kristin Laemmert f6505870cc
Mildwonkey/providers interface renaming (#27805)
* providers.Interface: huge renamification

This commit renames a handful of functions in the providers.Interface to
match changes made in protocol v6. The following commit implements this
change across the rest of the codebase; I put this in a separate commit
for ease of reviewing and will squash these together when merging.

One noteworthy detail: protocol v6 removes the config from the
ValidateProviderConfigResponse, since it's never been used. I chose to
leave that in place in the interface until we deprecate support for
protocol v5 entirely.

Note that none of these changes impact current providers using protocol
v5; the protocol is unchanged. Only the translation layer between the
proto and terraform have changed.
2021-02-18 10:13:43 -05:00
Kristin Laemmert 7943312ebd
Merge pull request #27699 from hashicorp/mildwonkey/protocolv6
Mildwonkey/protocolv6
2021-02-16 14:51:53 -05:00
Martin Atkins f91a3b87c1 terminal: Helpers for doing fmt-ish operations on the streams
It's pretty common to want to apply the various fmt.Fprint... functions
to our two output streams, and so to make that much less noisy at the
callsite here we have a small number of very thin wrappers around the
underlying fmt package functionality.

Although we're aiming to not have too much abstraction in this "terminal"
package, this seems justified in that it is only a very thin wrapper
around functionality that most Go programmers are already familiar with,
and so the risk of this causing any surprises is low and the improvement
to readability of callers seems worth it.
2021-02-12 11:24:13 -08:00
Martin Atkins ffba8064ed terminal: StreamsForTesting helper
This is to allow convenient testing of functions that are designed to work
directly with *terminal.Streams or the individual stream objects inside.

Because the InputStream and OutputStream APIs expose directly an *os.File,
this does some extra work to set up OS-level pipes so we can capture the
output into local buffers to make test assertions against. The idea here
is to keep the tricky stuff we need for testing confined to the test
codepaths, so that the "real" codepaths don't end up needing to work
around abstractions that are otherwise unnecessary.
2021-02-10 11:51:56 -08:00
Pam Selle aa24bfec47 Emit ProviderAlreadyInstalled when provider installed
Emit the ProviderAlreadyInstalled event when we successfully verify
that we've already installed this provider and are skipping
installation
2021-02-09 11:08:49 -05:00
Kristin Laemmert f3a057eb35 plugin-protocol v6
This is the first commit for plugin protocol v6. This is currently
unused (dead) code; future commits will add the necessary conversion
packages, extend configschema, and modify the providers.Interface.

The new plugin protocol includes the following changes:

- A new field has been added to Attribute: NestedType. This will be the
  key new feature in plugin protocol v6
- Several massages were renamed for consistency with the verb-noun
  pattern seen in _most_ messages.
- The prepared_config has been removed from PrepareProviderConfig
  (renamed ValidateProviderConfig), as it has never been used.
- The provisioner service has been removed entirely. This has no impact
  on built-in provisioners. 3rd party provisioners are not supported by
  the SDK and are not included in this protocol at all.
2021-02-05 13:19:55 -05:00
Alex Chan 4ec80fa18d Correct the spelling of heirarchy/hierarchy throughout 2021-02-05 15:07:04 +00:00
Jonathan Hall 49ee3d3ef8 Grammar nit: "setup" as a verb should be spelled "set up" 2021-01-26 20:39:11 +01:00
Pam Selle aedca597dd Reuse installed target dir providers in init
In init, we can check to see if the target dir already has the
provider we are seeking and skip further querying/installing of
that provider.
2021-01-25 11:13:57 -05:00
Nick Fagerlund a60120477c Update links to CLI docs in code comments, messages, and readme 2021-01-22 12:22:21 -08:00
Pam Selle 084cec6346
Merge pull request #27447 from Filirom1/fix-27445
Providers: Fix init with broken link in plugin_cache_dir
2021-01-22 10:30:55 -05:00
James Bardin 9f2a6d33be move remaining helper packages to internal 2021-01-20 13:54:00 -05:00
Martin Atkins 17728c8fe8 internal/terminal: Interrogate and initialize the terminal, if any
This is a helper package that creates a very thin abstraction over
terminal setup, with the main goal being to deal with all of the extra
setup we need to do in order to get a UTF-8-supporting virtual terminal
on a Windows system.
2021-01-13 15:37:04 -08:00
Kristin Laemmert 86a63e8e39
remove unused legacy plugin package (#27493) 2021-01-13 16:13:08 -05:00
Romain Philibert 5ae5c99ba0 fix: do not fail when provider symlink is broken. Only print a warning.
fix https://github.com/hashicorp/terraform/issues/27445
2021-01-08 12:51:09 +01:00
Anthony Sottile 8cd72e51cb
fix file mode on lock file (#27205)
Signed-off-by: Anthony Sottile <asottile@umich.edu>
2020-12-18 11:51:59 -05:00
Martin Atkins 21d6fb5a37 depsfile: Don't panic when lock file is unreadable
Previously we were expecting that the *hcl.File would always be non-nil,
even in error cases. That isn't always true, so now we'll be more robust
about it and explicitly return an empty locks object in that case, along
with the error diagnostics.

In particular this avoids a panic in a strange situation where the user
created a directory where the lock file would normally go. There's no
meaning to such a directory, so it would always be a mistake and so now
we'll return an error message about it, rather than panicking as before.

The error message for the situation where the lock file is a directory is
currently not very specific, but since it's HCL responsible for generating
that message we can't really fix that at this layer. Perhaps in future
we can change HCL to have a specialized error message for that particular
error situation, but for the sake of this commit the goal is only to
stop the panic and return a normal error message.
2020-12-15 17:00:35 -08:00
Martin Atkins 4b3e237668 command/init: Hint about providers in other namespaces
If a user forgets to specify the source address for a provider, Terraform
will assume they meant a provider in the registry.terraform.io/hashicorp/
namespace. If that ultimately doesn't exist, we'll now try to see if
there's some other provider source address recorded in the registry's
legacy provider lookup table, and suggest it if so.

The error message here is a terse one addressed primarily to folks who are
already somewhat familiar with provider source addresses and how to
specify them. Terraform v0.13 had a more elaborate version of this error
message which directed the user to try the v0.13 automatic upgrade tool,
but we no longer have that available in v0.14 and later so the user must
make the fix themselves.
2020-12-10 10:11:27 -08:00
James Bardin 6529659455 internal/providercache: staticcheck 2020-12-02 13:59:20 -05:00
James Bardin d22e08bd32 internal/earlyconfig: staticcheck 2020-12-02 13:59:19 -05:00
James Bardin f0c3ddf5a1 internal/getproviders: staticcheck 2020-12-02 13:59:19 -05:00
James Bardin 276dfe634f internal/providercache: staticcheck 2020-12-02 13:59:19 -05:00
James Bardin 1f359bab03 internal/typeexpr: staticcheck
diagnostics were appended to diags shadowing the intended value.
2020-12-02 13:59:19 -05:00
James Bardin 76cb40005a add grpcwrap.Provisioner
Rename grpcwrap.New() to grpcwrap.Provider()
Add a grpcwrap function to create a test proivisioner plugin.
2020-12-02 12:45:00 -05:00
James Bardin 03d11f988e remove old test provider 2020-12-02 12:45:00 -05:00
James Bardin eee581ae54 simple provider for internal testing
Simple is a minimal provider implementation using the grpcwrap package,
intended for use in internal tests.
2020-12-02 12:44:59 -05:00
James Bardin 65340f51be wrap the terraform provider for grpc tests 2020-12-02 12:44:59 -05:00
James Bardin b1c104834e grpcwrap: convert provider interface to grpcserver
grpcwrap wraps a core providers.Interface and converts it to a
tfplugin5.ProviderServer to allow for easier protocol testing.
2020-12-02 12:44:59 -05:00
James Bardin 811a3a81e9 add test provider bin for e2etest
One e2etest still requires the bin, so add that back temporarily.
2020-12-02 12:16:36 -05:00
James Bardin b32362da9d internal/legacy/builtin/providers/test
Move the test provider into the interal/legacy directory, until we can
factor it out of the e2e test.
2020-12-02 12:16:35 -05:00
James Bardin 5bbac72a85 internal/legacy/helper/plugin
This is used internally for testing
2020-12-02 12:16:35 -05:00
James Bardin e4edce22ca internal/legacy/helper/schema
moving helper/schema into the ineternal/legacy tree
2020-12-02 12:16:35 -05:00
James Bardin a49e7eee8b internal/legacy/terraform
This is a partial copy of the terraform package to preserve the legacy
types for internal use.
2020-12-02 12:16:35 -05:00
James Bardin ccf19fbf5e regenerate plugin proto with correct tooling
The proto file is structurally unchanged, though it now requires a go
import path option.
2020-12-01 14:06:49 -05:00
James Bardin 7eb491719f normalize temp dir paths in tests
The temporary directory on some systems (most notably MacOS) contains
symlinks, which would not be recorded by the installer. In order to make
these paths comparable in the tests we need to eval the symlinks in
the paths before giving them to the installer.
2020-11-20 16:35:31 -05:00
James Bardin d52e17e111 hide provider crashes from panicwrap when logging
When logging is turned on, panicwrap will still see provider crashes and
falsely report them as core crashes, hiding the formatted provider
error. We can trick panicwrap by slightly obfuscating the error line.
2020-11-05 10:54:21 -05:00
Alisdair McDiarmid fd43bc7847
Merge pull request #26783 from hashicorp/alisdair/normalize-version-constraints-before-deduplication
getproviders: Normalize versions before dedupe
2020-11-04 09:42:19 -05:00
Alisdair McDiarmid 90c4f11b61 go get github.com/hashicorp/go-getter@v1.5.0
Includes fix for breaking upstream API change.
2020-11-02 10:46:24 -05:00
Alisdair McDiarmid b1bc0e5d92 getproviders: Normalize versions before dedupe
When rendering a set of version constraints to a string, we normalize
partially-constrained versions. This means converting a version
like 2.68.* to 2.68.0.

Prior to this commit, this normalization was done after deduplication.
This could result in a version constraints string with duplicate
entries, if multiple partially-constrained versions are equivalent. This
commit fixes this by normalizing before deduplicating and sorting.
2020-11-02 10:45:45 -05:00
Martin Atkins e6e0b6ee46 providercache: verify locked hashes for local package dirs
Previously we were only verifying locked hashes for local archive zip
files, but if we have non-ziphash hashes available then we can and should
also verify that a local directory matches at least one of them.

This does mean that folks using filesystem mirrors but yet also running
Terraform across multiple platforms will need to take some extra care to
ensure the hashes pass on all relevant platforms, which could mean using
"terraform providers lock" to pre-seed their lock files with hashes across
all platforms, or could mean using the "packed" directory layout for the
filesystem mirror so that Terraform will end up in the install-from-archive
codepath instead of this install-from-directory codepath, and can thus
verify ziphash too.

(There's no additional documentation about the above here because there's
already general information about this in the lock file documentation
due to some similar -- though not identical -- situations with network
mirrors.)
2020-10-28 07:46:45 -07:00
Martin Atkins 24d32e9ca2 providercache: More exhaustive testing of the main installer
We previously had some tests for some happy paths and a few specific
failures into an empty directory with no existing locks, but we didn't
have tests for the installer respecting existing lock file entries.

This is a start on a more exhaustive set of tests for the installer,
aiming to visit as many of the possible codepaths as we can reasonably
test using this mocking strategy. (Some other codepaths require different
underlying source implementations, etc, so we'll have to visit those in
other tests separately.)
2020-10-28 07:46:45 -07:00
Martin Atkins fc5a41b5e5 depsfile: Allow loading locks from a byte array in memory
This won't be a typical usage pattern for normal code, but will be useful
for tests that need to work with locks as input so that they don't need to
write out a temporary file on disk just to read it back in immediately.
2020-10-28 07:46:45 -07:00
Martin Atkins 430318e262 getproviders: Consistent ordering of terms in VersionConstraintsString
An earlier commit made this remove duplicates, which set the precedent
that this function is trying to canonically represent the _meaning_ of
the version constraints rather than exactly how they were expressed in
the configuration.

Continuing in that vein, now we'll also apply a consistent (though perhaps
often rather arbitrary) ordering to the terms, so that it doesn't change
due to irrelevant details like declarations being written in a different
order in the configuration.

The ordering here is intended to be reasonably intuitive for simple cases,
but constraint strings with many different constraints are hard to
interpret no matter how we order them so the main goal is consistency,
so those watching how the constraints change over time (e.g. in logs of
Terraform output, or in the dependency log file) will see fewer noisy
changes that don't actually mean anything.
2020-10-26 12:44:15 -07:00
Alisdair McDiarmid 8eed942482
Merge pull request #26678 from hashicorp/alisdair/suppress-duplicate-version-constraints
internal: Suppress duplicate version constraints
2020-10-26 11:27:51 -04:00
James Bardin 3225d9ac11 record all plugin panics, and print on main exit
Create a logger that will record any apparent crash output for later
processing.

If the cli command returns with a non-zero exit status, check for any
recorded crashes and add those to the output.
2020-10-26 09:34:03 -04:00
James Bardin f8893785f0 separate core and provider loggers
Now that hclog can independently set levels on related loggers, we can
separate the log levels for different subsystems in terraform.

This adds the new environment variables, `TF_LOG_CORE` and
`TF_LOG_PROVIDER`, which each take the same set of log level arguments,
and only applies to logs from that subsystem. This means that setting
`TF_LOG_CORE=level` will not show logs from providers, and
`TF_LOG_PROVIDER=level` will not show logs from core. The behavior of
`TF_LOG` alone does not change.

While it is not necessarily needed since the default is to disable logs,
there is also a new level argument of `off`, which reflects the
associated level in hclog.
2020-10-23 12:46:32 -04:00
Alisdair McDiarmid fe9a9fadfb internal: Suppress duplicate version constraints
A set of version constraints can contain duplicates. This can happen if
multiple identical constraints are specified throughout a configuration.

When rendering the set, it is confusing to display redundant
constraints. This commit changes the string renderer to only show the
first instance of a given constraint, and adds unit tests for this
function to cover this change.

This also fixes a bug with the locks file generation: previously, a
configuration with redundant constraints would result in this error on
second init:

Error: Invalid provider version constraints

  on .terraform.lock.hcl line 6:
  (source code not available)

The recorded version constraints for provider
registry.terraform.io/hashicorp/random must be written in normalized form:
"3.0.0".
2020-10-22 12:08:00 -04:00
James Bardin bc1a841d65
Merge pull request #26665 from hashicorp/jbardin/logging
Restore "crash.log" behavior and remove prefixedio
2020-10-22 10:34:51 -04:00
James Bardin c2af5333e8 use a log sink to capture logs for panicwrap
Use a separate log sink to always capture trace logs for the panicwrap
handler to write out in a crash log.

This requires creating a log file in the outer process and passing that
path to the child process to log to.
2020-10-21 17:29:07 -04:00
James Bardin b61488a8ba write traceback to log crash log 2020-10-21 17:29:07 -04:00
James Bardin 1d9d82973b move panicwrap handler to logging package 2020-10-21 13:47:16 -04:00
Alisdair McDiarmid 7a31e56cb7
Merge pull request #26637 from hashicorp/alisdair/fix-locksfile-unconstrained-versions
internal: Fix lockfile constraint output for 1.2.*
2020-10-21 12:05:19 -04:00
Martin Atkins 1fe314b70b getproviders: Don't log if EvalSymlinks changes nothing
Previously this codepath was generating a confusing message in the absense
of any symlinks, because filepath.EvalSymlinks returns a successful result
if the target isn't a symlink.

Now we'll emit the log line only if filepath.EvalSymlinks returns a
result that's different in a way that isn't purely syntactic (which
filepath.Clean would "fix").

The new message is a little more generic because technically we've not
actually ensured that a difference here was caused by a symlink and so
we shouldn't over-promise and generate something potentially misleading.
2020-10-21 07:49:11 -07:00
Martin Atkins 2332a7ab47 replacefile: don't create the temporary file in TMPDIR
ioutil.TempFile has a special case where an empty string for its dir
argument is interpreted as a request to automatically look up the system
temporary directory, which is commonly /tmp .

We don't want that behavior here because we're specifically trying to
create the temporary file in the same directory as the file we're hoping
to replace. If the file gets created in /tmp then it might be on a
different device and thus the later atomic rename won't work.

Instead, we'll add our own special case to explicitly use "." when the
given filename is in the current working directory. That overrides the
special automatic behavior of ioutil.TempFile and thus forces the
behavior we need.

This hadn't previously mattered for earlier callers of this code because
they were creating files in subdirectories, but this codepath was failing
for the dependency lock file due to it always being created directly
in the current working directory.

Unfortunately since this is a picky implementation detail I couldn't find
a good way to write a unit test for it without considerable refactoring.
Instead, I verified manually that the temporary filename wasn't in /tmp on
my Linux system, and hope that the comment inline will explain this
situation well enough to avoid an accidental regression in future
maintenence.
2020-10-20 16:29:59 -07:00
Alisdair McDiarmid 9576a5b2d8 internal: Fix lockfile constraint output for 1.2.*
If a configuration requires a partial provider version (with some parts
unspecified), Terraform considers this as a constrained-to-zero version.
For example, a version constraint of 1.2 will result in an attempt to
install version 1.2.0, even if 1.2.1 is available.

When writing the dependency locks file, we previously would write 1.2.*,
as this is the in-memory representation of 1.2. This would then cause an
error on re-reading the locks file, as this is not a valid constraint
format.

Instead, we now explicitly convert the constraint to its zero-filled
representation before writing the locks file. This ensures that it
correctly round-trips.

Because this change is made in getproviders.VersionConstraintsString, it
also affects the output of the providers sub-command.
2020-10-20 10:14:03 -04:00
James Bardin a3a20e0396 remove LevelFilter
We want to always be using the hclogger to filter whenever possible
2020-10-19 14:31:05 -04:00
James Bardin 0b31ffa587 use a single log writer
Use a single log writer instance for all std library logging.

Setup the std log writer in the logging package, and remove boilerplate
from test packages.
2020-10-19 14:29:54 -04:00
James Bardin abf6b9b378 get properly configured hcloggers
make sure plugins get hcloggers configured to match core
2020-10-19 14:29:54 -04:00
James Bardin 211edf5d75 use hclog as the default logger
Inject hclog as the default logger in the main binary.
2020-10-19 14:29:54 -04:00
James Bardin 6ca477f042 move helper/logging to internal
remove a dead code file too
2020-10-19 14:27:53 -04:00
Martin Atkins 0009768c7f internal/depsfile: Update the dependency lock file atomically
In this case, "atomic" means that there will be no situation where the
file contains only part of the newContent data, and therefore other
software monitoring the file for changes (using a mechanism like inotify)
won't encounter a truncated file.

It does _not_ mean that there can't be existing filehandles open against
the old version of the file. On Windows systems the write will fail in
that case, but on Unix systems the write will typically succeed but leave
the existing filehandles still pointing at the old version of the file.
They'll need to reopen the file in order to see the new content.
2020-10-14 08:01:19 -07:00
Martin Atkins 55e6f64977 internal/depsfile: Factor out our atomic file replacement logic
This originated in the cliconfig code to write out credentials files. The
Windows implementation of this in particular was quite onerous to get
right because it needs a very specific sequence of operations to avoid
running into exclusive file locks, and so by factoring this out with
only cosmetic modification we can avoid repeating all of that engineering
effort for other atomic file writing use-cases.
2020-10-14 08:01:19 -07:00
Martin Atkins 0bbbb9c64b configs: Experimental support for optional object type attributes
This builds on an experimental feature in the underlying cty library which
allows marking specific attribtues of an object type constraint as
optional, which in turn modifies how the cty conversion package handles
missing attributes in a source value: it will silently substitute a null
value of the appropriate type rather than returning an error.

In order to implement the experiment this commit temporarily forks the
HCL typeexpr extension package into a local internal/typeexpr package,
where I've extended the type constraint syntax to allow annotating object
type attributes as being optional using the HCL function call syntax.
If the experiment is successful -- both at the Terraform layer and in
the underlying cty library -- we'll likely send these modifications to
upstream HCL so that other HCL-based languages can potentially benefit
from this new capability.

Because it's experimental, the optional attribute modifier is allowed only
with an explicit opt-in to the module_variable_optional_attrs experiment.
2020-10-12 10:12:28 -07:00
Martin Atkins e1cf0ac801 internal/depsfile: Control how the "hashes" value is formatted
Previously we were just letting hclwrite do its default formatting
behavior here. The current behavior there isn't ideal anyway -- it puts
big data structures all on one line -- but even ignoring that our goal
for this file format is to keep things in a highly-normalized shape so
that diffs against the file are clear and easy to read.

With that in mind, here we directly control how we write that value into
the file, which means that later changes to hclwrite's list/set
presentation won't affect it, regardless of what form they take.
2020-10-09 09:26:23 -07:00
Martin Atkins 2611e08430 command/init: Mention using the lock file for provider selection
This probably isn't the best UI we could do here, but it's a placeholder
for now just to avoid making it seem like we're ignoring the lock file
and checking for new versions anyway.
2020-10-09 09:26:23 -07:00
Martin Atkins b3f5c7f1e6 command/init: Read, respect, and update provider dependency locks
This changes the approach used by the provider installer to remember
between runs which selections it has previously made, using the lock file
format implemented in internal/depsfile.

This means that version constraints in the configuration are considered
only for providers we've not seen before or when -upgrade mode is active.
2020-10-09 09:26:23 -07:00
Martin Atkins 4a1b081afb depsfile: Locks.Equal and Locks.Empty methods
These are helper functions to give the installation UI some hints about
whether the lock file has changed so that it can in turn give the user
advice about it. The UI-layer callers of these will follow in a later
commit.
2020-10-09 09:26:23 -07:00
Kristin Laemmert 04be220f5f deprecate helper/copy
helper/copy CopyDir was used heavily in tests. It differes from
internal/copydir in a few ways, the main one being that it creates the
dst directory while the internal version expected the dst to exist
(there are other differences, which is why I did not just switch tests
to using internal's CopyDir).

I moved the CopyDir func from helper/copy into command_test.go; I could
also have moved it into internal/copy and named it something like
CreateDirAndCopy so if that seems like a better option please let me
know.

helper/copy/CopyFile was used in a couple of spots so I moved it into
internal, at which point I thought it made more sense to rename the
package copy (instead of copydir).

There's also a `go mod tidy` included.
2020-10-08 08:42:16 -04:00
Kristin Laemmert 3933cbd491
remove LegacyProvider (#26433) 2020-10-05 08:33:49 -04:00
Martin Atkins 593cf7b4d5 didyoumean: move from "helper" to "internal"
This new-ish package ended up under "helper" during the 0.12 cycle for
want of some other place to put it, but in retrospect that was an odd
choice because the "helper/" tree is otherwise a bunch of legacy code from
when the SDK lived in this repository.

Here we move it over into the "internal" directory just to distance it
from the guidance of not using "helper/" packages in new projects;
didyoumean is a package we actively use as part of error message hints.
2020-10-02 13:35:07 -07:00
Martin Atkins 59b116f7bf command/init: Remove support for legacy provider addresses
We no longer need to support 0.12-and-earlier-style provider addresses
because users should've upgraded their existing configurations and states
on Terraform 0.13 already.

For now this is only checked in the "init" command, because various test
shims are still relying on the idea of legacy providers the core layer.
However, rejecting these during init is sufficient grounds to avoid
supporting legacy provider addresses in the new dependency lock file
format, and thus sets the stage for a more severe removal of legacy
provider support in a later commit.
2020-09-30 08:54:57 -07:00
Martin Atkins 0b734a2803 command: Make provider installation interruptible
In earlier commits we started to make the installation codepath
context-aware so that it could be canceled in the event of a SIGINT, but
we didn't complete wiring that through the API of the getproviders
package.

Here we make the getproviders.Source interface methods, along with some
other functions that can make network requests, take a context.Context
argument and act appropriately if that context is cancelled.

The main providercache.Installer.EnsureProviderVersions method now also
has some context-awareness so that it can abort its work early if its
context reports any sort of error. That avoids waiting for the process
to wind through all of the remaining iterations of the various loops,
logging each request failure separately, and instead returns just
a single aggregate "canceled" error.

We can then set things up in the "terraform init" and
"terraform providers mirror" commands so that the context will be
cancelled if we get an interrupt signal, allowing provider installation
to abort early while still atomically completing any local-side effects
that may have started.
2020-09-29 10:00:35 -07:00