Commit Graph

15 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Martin Atkins 135121562e helper/plugin: Implement Schema.SkipCoreTypeCheck
The previous commit added this flag but did not implement it. Here we
implement it by adjusting the shape of schema we return to Terraform Core
to mark the attribute as untyped and then ensure that gets handled
correctly on the SDK side.
2019-03-21 15:19:59 -07:00
Martin Atkins 4de0b33097 helper/schema: Honor ConfigMode when building core schema
This makes some slight adjustments to the shape of the schema we
present to Terraform Core without affecting how it is consumed by the
SDK and thus the provider. This mechanism is designed specifically to
avoid changing how the schema is interpreted by the SDK itself or by the
provider, so that prior behavior can be preserved in Terraform v0.11 mode.

This also includes a new rule that Computed-only (i.e. not also Optional)
schemas _always_ map to attributes, because that is a better mapping of
the intent: they are object values to be used in expressions. Nested
blocks conceptually represent nested objects that are in some sense
independent of what they are embedded in, and so they cannot themselves be
computed.
2019-03-11 17:02:05 -07:00
Martin Atkins ae0be75ae0 helper/schema: TypeMap of Resource is actually of TypeString
Historically helper/schema did not support non-primitive map attributes
because they cannot be represented unambiguously in flatmap. When we
initially implemented CoreConfigSchema here we mapped that situation to
a nested block of mode NestingMap, even though that'd never worked until
now, assuming that it'd be harmless because providers wouldn't be using
it.

It turns out that some providers are, in fact, incorrectly populating
a TypeMap schema with Elem: &schema.Resource, apparently under the false
assumption that it would constrain the keys allowed in the map. In
practice, helper/schema has just been ignoring this and treating such
attributes as map of string. (#20076)

In order to preserve the behavior of these existing incorrectly-specified
attribute definitions, here we mimic the helper/schema behavior by
presenting as an attribute of type map(string).

These attributes have also been shown in some documentation as nested
blocks (with no equals sign), so that'll need to be fixed in user
configurations as they upgrade to Terraform 0.12. However, the existing
upgrade tool rules will take care of that as a natural consequence of the
name being indicated as an attribute in the schema, rather than as a block
type.

This fixes #20076.
2019-01-25 14:12:58 -08:00
Martin Atkins 3d54af9c09 helper/schema: Better mimic some undocumented behaviors in Core schema
Since the SDK's schema system conflates attributes and nested blocks, it's
possible to state some nonsensical schema situations such as:

- A nested block is both optional but has MinItems > 0
- A nested block is entirely computed but has MinItems or MaxItems set

Both of these weird situations are handled here in the same way that the
existing helper/schema validation code would've handled them: by
effectively disabling the MinItems/MaxItems checks where they would've
been ignored before.

the MinItems/MaxItems
2018-11-26 17:11:34 -08:00
Martin Atkins 37da625ee9 helper/schema: Tell Core attribute is optional if set conditionally
The SDK has a mechanism that effectively makes it possible to declare an
attribute as being _conditionally_ required, which is not a concept that
Terraform Core is aware of.

Since this mechanism is in practice only used for a small UX improvement
in prompting for these values interactively when the environment variable
is not set, we avoid here introducing all of this complexity into the
plugin protocol by just having the provider selectively modify its schema
if it detects that such an attribute might be set dynamically.

This then prevents Terraform Core from validating the presence of the
argument or prompting for a new value for it, allowing the null value to
pass through into the provider so that the default value can be generated
again dynamically.

This is a kinda-kludgey solution which we're accepting here because the
alternative would be a much-more-complex two-pass decode operation within
Core itself, and that doesn't seem worth it.

This fixes #19139.
2018-11-26 17:11:34 -08:00
James Bardin b88410984b legacy provider needs to handle StateUpgraders
In order to not require state migrations to be supported in both
MigrateState and StateUpgraders, the legacy provider codepath needs to
handle the StateUpgraders transparently during Refresh.
2018-10-16 18:56:50 -07:00
James Bardin 0120d53baf only add "id" to top-level resources
Make sure we only add "id" to the top-level resource, since Resource is
also used for nested blocks.
2018-10-16 18:53:51 -07:00
James Bardin 15ccf2dda5 use a custom comparer for cty.Type
Make sure we also compare cty.Types in `cmp.Equal`, even though they
contain unexported fields.
2018-10-16 18:50:57 -07:00
James Bardin befa81c74f add implicit "id" to resource attribute schemas
When converting a legacy schemaMap to a configschema, we need to add
"id" as a required attribute to top-level resources if it's not
declared.

The "id" field will be required to interoperate with the legacy helper
schema, since the presence of an id was used to indicate the existence
of a resource.
2018-10-16 18:50:57 -07:00
Martin Atkins 479c6b2466 move "configschema" from "config" to "configs"
The "config" package is no longer used and will be removed as part
of the 0.12 release cleanup. Since configschema is part of the
"new world" of configuration modelling, it makes more sense for
it to live as a subdirectory of the newer "configs" package.
2018-10-16 18:50:29 -07:00
Martin Atkins 3c10a3b213 helper/schema: Tolerate incorrectly-specified collection elems
We historically tolerated this, so we need to tolerate it here too in
order to work correctly with existing provider code.
2018-10-16 18:49:20 -07:00
Martin Atkins d6c6f8852c configschema: include description in schema
We will need access to this information in order to render interactive
input prompts, and it will also be useful in returning schema information
to external tools such as text editors that have autocomplete-like
functionality.
2018-10-16 18:24:47 -07:00
Martin Atkins 183833affc core: terraform.ResourceProvider.GetSchema method
In order to parse provider, resource and data source configuration from
HCL2 config files, we need to know the relevant configuration schema.
This new method allows Terraform Core to request these from a provider.

This is a breaking change to this interface, so all of its implementers
in this package are updated too. This includes concrete implementations
of the new method in helper/schema that use the schema conversion code
added in an earlier commit to produce a configschema.Block automatically.

Plugins compiled against prior versions of helper/schema will not have
support for this method, and so calls to them will fail. Callers of
this new method will therefore need to sniff for support using the
SchemaAvailable field added to both ResourceType and DataSource.

This careful handling will need to persist until next time we increment
the plugin protocol version, at which point we can make the breaking
change of requiring this information to be available.
2017-10-17 07:23:41 -07:00
Martin Atkins b91bd62747 config/configschema: Sensitive flag for attributes
We don't currently have any need for this information, but we're
propagating it out of helper/schema here pre-emptively so that once we
later have a use for it we will not need to rebuild the providers to gain
access to it.

The long-term expected use-case for this is to have Terraform Core use
static analysis techniques to trace the path of sensitive data through
interpolations so that intermediate results can be flagged as sensitive
too, but we have a lot more work to do before such a thing would actually
be possible.
2017-10-04 16:35:11 -07:00
Martin Atkins 69650b0bbc helper/schema: conversion of Schema to configschema.Block
As part of moving to the next-generation HCL implementation,
Terraform Core is getting its own representation of configuration schema
that is tailored for configuration-processing use-cases. The capabilities
of this are a subset of the helper/schema model primarily concerned with
the configuration structure and value types, leaving detailed validation
and defaults for helper/schema to still solve.

These new methods allow mechanical creation of a schema in the new Core
schema model from a schema expressed in the helper/schema model. This is
not yet used as of this commit, but will be used later to implement some
new ResourceProvider methods that will allow core to obtain the schema
for provider, resource and data source configuration while remaining
source-compatible with existing provider implementations.
2017-10-04 16:35:11 -07:00