Commit Graph

36 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
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 f2adfb6e2a core: Treat deposed objects the same as orphaned current objects
In many ways a deposed object is equivalent to an orphaned current object
in that the only action we can take with it is to destroy it. However, we
do still need to take some preparation steps in both cases: first, we must
ensure we track the upgraded version of the existing object so that we'll
be able to successfully render our plan, and secondly we must refresh the
existing object to make sure it still exists in the remote system.

We were previously doing these extra steps for orphan objects but not for
deposed ones, which meant that the behavior for deposed objects would be
subtly different and violate the invariants our callers expect in order
to display a plan. This also created the risk that a deposed object
already deleted in the remote system would become "stuck" because
Terraform would still plan to destroy it, which might cause the provider
to return an error when it tries to delete an already-absent object.

This also makes the deposed object planning take into account the
"skipPlanChanges" flag, which is important to get a correct result in
the "refresh only" planning mode.

It's a shame that we have almost identical code handling both the orphan
and deposed situations, but they differ in that the latter must call
different functions to interact with the deposed rather than the current
objects in the state. Perhaps a later change can improve on this with some
more refactoring, but this commit is already a little more disruptive than
I'd like and so I'm intentionally deferring that for another day.
2021-05-13 09:05:06 -07:00
Martin Atkins 3c8a4e6e05 command+backend/local: -refresh-only and drift detection
This is a light revamp of our plan output to make use of Terraform core's
new ability to report both the previous run state and the refreshed state,
allowing us to explicitly report changes made outside of Terraform.

Because whether a plan has "changes" or not is no longer such a
straightforward matter, this now merges views.Operation.Plan with
views.Operation.PlanNoChanges to produce a single function that knows how
to report all of the various permutations. This was also an opportunity
to fill some holes in our previous logic which caused it to produce some
confusing messages, including a new tailored message for when
"terraform destroy" detects that nothing needs to be destroyed.

This also allows users to request the refresh-only planning mode using a
new -refresh-only command line option. In that case, Terraform _only_
performs drift detection, and so applying a refresh-only plan only
involves writing a new state snapshot, without changing any real
infrastructure objects.
2021-05-13 09:05:06 -07:00
Martin Atkins ce69c3903f command/views: Show refresh-detected changes as part of a plan
We've always had a mechanism to synchronize the Terraform state with
remote objects before creating a plan, but we previously kept the result
of that to ourselves, and so it would sometimes lead to Terraform
generating a planned action to undo some upstream drift, but Terraform
would give no context as to why that action was planned even though the
relevant part of the configuration hadn't changed.

Now we'll detect any differences between the previous run state and the
refreshed state and, if any managed resources now look different, show
an additional note about it as extra context for the planned changes that
follow.

This appears as an optional extra block of information before the normal
plan output. It'll appear the same way in all of the contexts where we
render plans, including "terraform show" for saved plans.
2021-05-13 09:05:06 -07:00
Martin Atkins b402fd9d3a command/views: Remove command-specific runningInAutomation
We now have RunningInAutomation has a general concern in views.View, so
we no longer need to specify it for each command-specific constructor
separately.

For this initial change I focused only on changing the exported interface
of the views package and let the command-specific views go on having their
own unexported fields containing a copy of the flag because it made this
change less invasive and I wasn't feeling sure yet about whether we
ought to have code within command-specific views directly access the
internals of views.View. However, maybe we'll simplify this further in
a later commit if we conclude that these copies of the flag are
burdensome.

The general version of this gets set directly inside the main package,
which might at some future point allow us to make the command package
itself unaware of this "running in automation" idea and thus reinforce
that it's intended as a presentation-only thing rather than as a
behavioral thing, but we'll save more invasive refactoring for another
day.
2021-05-10 10:50:05 -07:00
Martin Atkins bf396b5f1b command/views: main View type aware if it's running in automation
This "running in automation" idea is a best effort thing where we try to
avoid printing out specific suggestions of commands to run in the main
workflow when the user is running Terraform inside a wrapper script or
other automation, because they probably don't want to bypass that
automation.

This just makes that information available to the main views.View type,
so we can then make use of it in the implementation of more specialized
view types that embed views.View.

However, nothing is using it as of this commit. We'll use it in later
commits.
2021-05-10 10:50:05 -07:00
Martin Atkins b38f3301d1 command/views: Remove baseState argument from plan-rendering views
In practice the current implementation isn't actually using this, and if
we need access to states in future we can access them in either the
plan.PriorState or plan.PrevRunState fields, depending on which stage we
want a state snapshot of.
2021-05-10 09:25:30 -07:00
Alisdair McDiarmid 3a9b369b43 views/json: Fix diag crash with invalid highlight
Some diagnostic sources (I'm looking at you, HCL) fail to set the end of
the subject range. This is a bug in those code paths, but we can ensure
that we generate valid JSON diagnostics by checking for it here.

By doing so before the range normalization, we ensure that we generate a
unit width highlight whenever possible, so that at least something
useful is displayed.
2021-05-04 08:35:42 -04:00
Alisdair McDiarmid e9c9092c40 Fix missing trailing newline 2021-05-04 08:31:39 -04:00
Alisdair McDiarmid 7b23fa7877 command/views: Add reason to JSON planned change
Now that we have extra information about the reason for a given resource
action, include that in the JSON log output for planned changes.
2021-05-03 06:49:42 -04:00
Alisdair McDiarmid f72730a02b cli: Add JSON logs for operations commands 2021-04-30 11:37:36 -04:00
Martin Atkins b802237e03 plans: Track an optional extra "reason" for some planned actions
Previously we were repeating some logic in the UI layer in order to
recover relevant additional context about a change to report to a user.
In order to help keep things consistent, and to have a clearer path for
adding more such things in the future, here we capture this user-facing
idea of an "action reason" within the plan model, and then use that
directly in order to decide how to describe the change to the user.

For the moment the "tainted" situation is the only one that gets a special
message, matching what we had before, but we can expand on this in future
in order to give better feedback about the other replace situations too.

This also preemptively includes the "replacing by request" reason, which
is currently not reachable but will be used in the near future as part of
implementing the -replace=... plan command line option to allow forcing
a particular object to be replaced.

So far we don't have any special reasons for anything other than replacing,
which makes sense because replacing is the only one that is in a sense
a special case of another action (Update), but this could expand to
other kinds of reasons in the future, such as explaining which of the
few different reasons a data source read might be deferred until the
apply step.
2021-04-29 17:50:46 -07:00
Martin Atkins 89f986ded6 command+backend: generalized "plan mode"
So far we've only had "normal mode" and "destroy mode", where the latter
is activated either by "terraform plan -destroy" or "terraform destroy".

In preparation for introducing a third mode "refresh only" this
generalizes how we handle modes so we can potentially deal with an
arbitrary number of modes, although for now we only intend to have three.

Mostly this is just a different implementation of the same old behavior,
but there is one small user-visible difference here: the "terraform apply"
command now accepts a -destroy option, mirroring the option of the same
name on "terraform plan", which in turn makes "terraform destroy"
effectively a shorthand for "terraform apply -destroy".

This is intended to make us consistent that "terraform apply" without a
plan file argument accepts all of the same plan-customization options that
"terraform plan" does, which will in turn avoid us having to add a new
alias of "terraform plan" for each new plan mode we might add. The -help
output is changed in that vein here, although we'll wait for subsequent
commit to make a similar change to the website documentation just so we
can deal with the "refresh only mode" docs at the same time.
2021-04-27 08:23:54 -07:00
Martin Atkins 8f233cde4c cli: Diagnostics can include collections with sensitive elements
We previously had a shallow IsMarked call in compactValueStr's caller but
then a more-conservative deep ContainsMarked call inside compactValueStr
with a different resulting message. As well as causing an inconsistency
in messages, this was also a bit confusing because it made it seem like
a non-sensitive collection containing a sensitive element value was wholly
sensitive, making the debug information in the diagnostic messages not
trustworthy for debugging certain varieties of problem.

I originally considered just removing the redundant check in
compactValueStr here, but ultimately I decided to keep it as a sort of
defense in depth in case a future refactoring disconnects these two
checks. This should also serve as a prompt to someone making later changes
to compactValueStr to think about the implications of sensitive values
in there, which otherwise wouldn't be mentioned at all.

Disclosing information about a collection containing sensitive values is
safe here because compactValueStr only discloses information about the
value's type and element keys, and neither of those can be sensitive in
isolation. (Constructing a map with sensitive keys reduces to a sensitive
overall map.)
2021-04-19 11:58:49 -07:00
James Bardin 406ac97965 add the address field to the view diagnostics 2021-04-06 15:15:52 -04:00
Alisdair McDiarmid 841cced6c9
Merge pull request #28138 from hashicorp/alisdair/command-views-validate
cli: Migrate validate command to views
2021-03-23 13:13:06 -04:00
Alisdair McDiarmid 7242d9af2b Fix typo in plan no changes output message 2021-03-22 16:39:53 -04:00
Alisdair McDiarmid dd380d0b58 cli: Migrate validate command to views 2021-03-18 15:56:28 -04:00
Alisdair McDiarmid d9d88b9243 cli: Add comprehensive JSON diagnostic structure
This commit adds a comprehensive JSON format for diagnostics, which
ensures that all current diagnostic output can be semantically
represented in a machine-readable format. The diagnostic formatter
interface remains unchanged, but it first transforms its input via the
JSON format to ensure that there is only one code path for creating the
diagnostic data.

The JSON diagnostic renderer extracts the non-presentational logic from
the format package, and returns a structure which can either be
marshaled into JSON or rendered as text. The resulting text diagnostic
output is unchanged for all cases covered by unit tests and my own
manual testing.

Included in this commit are a number of golden reference files for the
marshaled JSON output of a diagnostic. This format should change rarely
if at all, and these are in place to ensure that any changes to the
format are intentional and considered.
2021-03-12 13:12:37 -05:00
Alisdair McDiarmid 86495f93cb views: Fix missing source in diagnostic output
The previous implementation of views was copying and embedding the base
View struct in each individual view. While this allowed for easy access
to the interface of that struct (both in the view and externally), it more
importantly completely broke the ability of the diagnostic printer to
output source code snippets.

This is because the `configSources` field on the base view is lazily set
after the config loader is initialized. In the commands ported to use
views, this happens after the base View struct is copied, so we are
updating the wrong copy of the struct.

This commit fixes this with a simple mechanical refactor: keep a pointer
to the base View struct instead, and update all of the individual views
to explicitly refer to that struct to access its fields and methods.

This is not a particularly satisfying solution, but I can't find
anything clearly better. It might be worth exploring the alternative
approach in the view for the new test command, which explicitly pulls
its dependencies out of the base view, rather than retaining a full
reference. Maybe there's a third way which is better still.
2021-02-26 16:43:03 -05:00
Alisdair McDiarmid 3737ee5081 views: Remove outdated comment 2021-02-25 09:34:32 -05:00
Alisdair McDiarmid 8d9a08e3a1 cli: Migrate plan to command views 2021-02-23 10:09:25 -05:00
Alisdair McDiarmid eeb5dfbf76
Merge pull request #27865 from hashicorp/alisdair/command-views-refresh
cli: Migrate refresh to command views
2021-02-23 09:27:33 -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
Alisdair McDiarmid 50d58b592a cli: Migrate refresh to command views 2021-02-22 11:58:52 -05:00
Alisdair McDiarmid 43028c4912 cli: Migrate apply to command views 2021-02-22 11:47:40 -05:00
Alisdair McDiarmid 68558ccd54 backend/local: Replace CLI with view instance
This commit extracts the remaining UI logic from the local backend,
and removes access to the direct CLI output. This is replaced with an
instance of a `views.Operation` interface, which codifies the current
requirements for the local backend to interact with the user.

The exception to this at present is interactivity: approving a plan
still depends on the `UIIn` field for the backend. This is out of scope
for this commit and can be revisited separately, at which time the
`UIOut` field can also be removed.

Changes in support of this:

- Some instances of direct error output have been replaced with
  diagnostics, most notably in the emergency state backup handler. This
  requires reformatting the error messages to allow the diagnostic
  renderer to line-wrap them;
- The "in-automation" logic has moved out of the backend and into the
  view implementation;
- The plan, apply, refresh, and import commands instantiate a view and
  set it on the `backend.Operation` struct, as these are the only code
  paths which call the `local.Operation()` method that requires it;
- The show command requires the plan rendering code which is now in the
  views package, so there is a stub implementation of a `views.Show`
  interface there.

Other refactoring work in support of migrating these commands to the
common views code structure will come in follow-up PRs, at which point
we will be able to remove the UI instances from the unit tests for those
commands.
2021-02-18 12:08:08 -05:00
Alisdair McDiarmid 6375c6ce6b
Merge pull request #27787 from hashicorp/alisdair/command-views-state-locker
clistate: Update clistate.Locker for command views
2021-02-16 17:37:18 -05:00
Alisdair McDiarmid 0aa227e0e3 cli: Fix misapplied terminal colors on run logs
Due to calling the Colorize function with the full string instead of the
format string, plan/apply logs which include resource instance keys or
IDs which happen to match color formatting would be rendered
incorrectly.

This commit fixes this by only colorizing the known-safe format string.
We also add full test coverage for the UI hook, although only one of the
hooks is tested for this color bugfix due to verbosity of the test.

We also add the bold coloring to the provisioner output prefix, which
seems to have been an oversight.
2021-02-16 15:05:22 -05:00
Alisdair McDiarmid 1ae3d30383
Merge pull request #27760 from hashicorp/alisdair/command-views-ui-hook
cli: Migrate Terraform UI hook to command views
2021-02-16 09:36:47 -05:00
Alisdair McDiarmid 96cf29111d views: Expand test coverage for views.Output
Now that the view code is separated, we can increase test coverage in
unit tests. This commit moves some tests from the command package which
were testing only view code, and adds more new test cases.
2021-02-16 08:48:31 -05:00
Alisdair McDiarmid 2d1976bbda clistate: Update clistate.Locker for command views
The clistate package includes a Locker interface which provides a simple
way for the local backend to lock and unlock state, while providing
feedback to the user if there is a delay while waiting for the lock.
Prior to this commit, the backend was responsible for initializing the
Locker, passing through direct access to the cli.Ui instance.

This structure prevented commands from implementing different
implementations of the state locker UI. In this commit, we:

- Move the responsibility of creating the appropriate Locker to the
  source of the Operation;
- Add the ability to set the context for a Locker via a WithContext
  method;
- Replace the Locker's cli.Ui and Colorize members with a StateLocker
  view;
- Implement views.StateLocker for human-readable UI;
- Update the Locker interface to return detailed diagnostics instead of
  errors, reducing its direct interactions with UI;
- Add a Timeout() method on Locker to allow the remote backend to
  continue to misuse the -lock-timeout flag to cancel pending runs.

When an Operation is created, the StateLocker field must now be
populated with an implementation of Locker. For situations where locking
is disabled, this can be a no-op locker.

This change has no significant effect on the operation of Terraform,
with the exception of slightly different formatting of errors when state
locking or unlocking fails.
2021-02-16 07:19:22 -05:00
Alisdair McDiarmid a7b7cd29fc cli: Migrate Terraform UI hook to command views
Move the code which renders Terraform hook callbacks as UI into the
views package, backed by a views.View instead of a cli.Ui. Update test
setup accordingly.

To allow commands to control this hook, we add a hooks member on the
backend Operation struct. This supersedes the hooks in the Terraform
context, which is not directly controlled by the command logic.

This commit should not change how Terraform works, and is refactoring in
preparation for more changes which move UI code out of the backend.
2021-02-16 07:18:22 -05:00
Alisdair McDiarmid 3cd086f46c views: Use new streams helper functions 2021-02-12 15:37:02 -05:00
Alisdair McDiarmid 57879bfb71 cli: Add global view arguments parser
Rather than modifying and relying on the existing Meta.process
argument extractor, we can more clearly handle global CLI flags using
a separate parser step. This allows us to explicitly configure the view
in the command.
2021-02-12 09:56:02 -05:00
Alisdair McDiarmid c5a6aa31d3 cli: Add initial command views abstraction
Terraform supports multiple output formats for several sub-commands.
The default format is user-readable text, but many sub-commands support
a `-json` flag to output a machine-readable format for the result. The
output command also supports a `-raw` flag for a simpler, scripting-
focused machine readable format.

This commit adds a "views" abstraction, intended to help ensure
consistency between the various output formats. This extracts the render
specific code from the command package, and moves it into a views
package. Each command is expected to create an interface for its view,
and one or more implementations of that interface.

By doing so, we separate the concerns of generating the sub-command
result from rendering the result in the specified output format. This
should make it easier to ensure that all output formats will be updated
together when changes occur in the result-generating phase.

There are some other consequences of this restructuring:

- Views now directly access the terminal streams, rather than the
  now-redundant cli.Ui instance;
- With the reorganization of commands, parsing CLI arguments is now the
  responsibility of a separate "arguments" package.

For now, views are added only for the output sub-command, as an example.
Because this command uses code which is shared with the apply and
refresh commands, those are also partially updated.
2021-02-11 15:06:39 -05:00