package getproviders import ( "fmt" "runtime" "sort" "strings" "github.com/apparentlymart/go-versions/versions" "github.com/apparentlymart/go-versions/versions/constraints" "github.com/hashicorp/terraform/internal/addrs" ) // Version represents a particular single version of a provider. type Version = versions.Version // UnspecifiedVersion is the zero value of Version, representing the absense // of a version number. var UnspecifiedVersion Version = versions.Unspecified // VersionList represents a list of versions. It is a []Version with some // extra methods for convenient filtering. type VersionList = versions.List // VersionSet represents a set of versions, usually describing the acceptable // versions that can be selected under a particular version constraint provided // by the end-user. type VersionSet = versions.Set // VersionConstraints represents a set of version constraints, which can // define the membership of a VersionSet by exclusion. type VersionConstraints = constraints.IntersectionSpec // Warnings represents a list of warnings returned by a Registry source. type Warnings = []string // Requirements gathers together requirements for many different providers // into a single data structure, as a convenient way to represent the full // set of requirements for a particular configuration or state or both. // // If an entry in a Requirements has a zero-length VersionConstraints then // that indicates that the provider is required but that any version is // acceptable. That's different than a provider being absent from the map // altogether, which means that it is not required at all. type Requirements map[addrs.Provider]VersionConstraints // Merge takes the requirements in the receiever and the requirements in the // other given value and produces a new set of requirements that combines // all of the requirements of both. // // The resulting requirements will permit only selections that both of the // source requirements would've allowed. func (r Requirements) Merge(other Requirements) Requirements { ret := make(Requirements) for addr, constraints := range r { ret[addr] = constraints } for addr, constraints := range other { ret[addr] = append(ret[addr], constraints...) } return ret } // Selections gathers together version selections for many different providers. // // This is the result of provider installation: a specific version selected // for each provider given in the requested Requirements, selected based on // the given version constraints. type Selections map[addrs.Provider]Version // ParseVersion parses a "semver"-style version string into a Version value, // which is the version syntax we use for provider versions. func ParseVersion(str string) (Version, error) { return versions.ParseVersion(str) } // MustParseVersion is a variant of ParseVersion that panics if it encounters // an error while parsing. func MustParseVersion(str string) Version { ret, err := ParseVersion(str) if err != nil { panic(err) } return ret } // ParseVersionConstraints parses a "Ruby-like" version constraint string // into a VersionConstraints value. func ParseVersionConstraints(str string) (VersionConstraints, error) { return constraints.ParseRubyStyleMulti(str) } // MustParseVersionConstraints is a variant of ParseVersionConstraints that // panics if it encounters an error while parsing. func MustParseVersionConstraints(str string) VersionConstraints { ret, err := ParseVersionConstraints(str) if err != nil { panic(err) } return ret } // MeetingConstraints returns a version set that contains all of the versions // that meet the given constraints, specified using the Spec type from the // constraints package. func MeetingConstraints(vc VersionConstraints) VersionSet { return versions.MeetingConstraints(vc) } // Platform represents a target platform that a provider is or might be // available for. type Platform struct { OS, Arch string } func (p Platform) String() string { return p.OS + "_" + p.Arch } // LessThan returns true if the receiver should sort before the other given // Platform in an ordered list of platforms. // // The ordering is lexical first by OS and then by Architecture. // This ordering is primarily just to ensure that results of // functions in this package will be deterministic. The ordering is not // intended to have any semantic meaning and is subject to change in future. func (p Platform) LessThan(other Platform) bool { switch { case p.OS != other.OS: return p.OS < other.OS default: return p.Arch < other.Arch } } // ParsePlatform parses a string representation of a platform, like // "linux_amd64", or returns an error if the string is not valid. func ParsePlatform(str string) (Platform, error) { parts := strings.Split(str, "_") if len(parts) != 2 { return Platform{}, fmt.Errorf("must be two words separated by an underscore") } os, arch := parts[0], parts[1] if strings.ContainsAny(os, " \t\n\r") { return Platform{}, fmt.Errorf("OS portion must not contain whitespace") } if strings.ContainsAny(arch, " \t\n\r") { return Platform{}, fmt.Errorf("architecture portion must not contain whitespace") } return Platform{ OS: os, Arch: arch, }, nil } // CurrentPlatform is the platform where the current program is running. // // If attempting to install providers for use on the same system where the // installation process is running, this is the right platform to use. var CurrentPlatform = Platform{ OS: runtime.GOOS, Arch: runtime.GOARCH, } // PackageMeta represents the metadata related to a particular downloadable // provider package targeting a single platform. // // Package findproviders does no signature verification or protocol version // compatibility checking of its own. A caller receving a PackageMeta must // verify that it has a correct signature and supports a protocol version // accepted by the current version of Terraform before trying to use the // described package. type PackageMeta struct { Provider addrs.Provider Version Version ProtocolVersions VersionList TargetPlatform Platform Filename string Location PackageLocation // Authentication, if non-nil, is a request from the source that produced // this meta for verification of the target package after it has been // retrieved from the indicated Location. // // Different sources will support different authentication strategies -- // or possibly no strategies at all -- depending on what metadata they // have available to them, such as checksums provided out-of-band by the // original package author, expected signing keys, etc. // // If Authentication is non-nil then no authentication is requested. // This is likely appropriate only for packages that are already available // on the local system. Authentication PackageAuthentication } // LessThan returns true if the receiver should sort before the given other // PackageMeta in a sorted list of PackageMeta. // // Sorting preference is given first to the provider address, then to the // taget platform, and the to the version number (using semver precedence). // Packages that differ only in semver build metadata have no defined // precedence and so will always return false. // // This ordering is primarily just to maximize the chance that results of // functions in this package will be deterministic. The ordering is not // intended to have any semantic meaning and is subject to change in future. func (m PackageMeta) LessThan(other PackageMeta) bool { switch { case m.Provider != other.Provider: return m.Provider.LessThan(other.Provider) case m.TargetPlatform != other.TargetPlatform: return m.TargetPlatform.LessThan(other.TargetPlatform) case m.Version != other.Version: return m.Version.LessThan(other.Version) default: return false } } // UnpackedDirectoryPath determines the path under the given base // directory where SearchLocalDirectory or the FilesystemMirrorSource would // expect to find an unpacked copy of the receiving PackageMeta. // // The result always uses forward slashes as path separator, even on Windows, // to produce a consistent result on all platforms. Windows accepts both // direction of slash as long as each individual path string is self-consistent. func (m PackageMeta) UnpackedDirectoryPath(baseDir string) string { return UnpackedDirectoryPathForPackage(baseDir, m.Provider, m.Version, m.TargetPlatform) } // PackedFilePath determines the path under the given base // directory where SearchLocalDirectory or the FilesystemMirrorSource would // expect to find packed copy (a .zip archive) of the receiving PackageMeta. // // The result always uses forward slashes as path separator, even on Windows, // to produce a consistent result on all platforms. Windows accepts both // direction of slash as long as each individual path string is self-consistent. func (m PackageMeta) PackedFilePath(baseDir string) string { return PackedFilePathForPackage(baseDir, m.Provider, m.Version, m.TargetPlatform) } // AcceptableHashes returns a set of hashes that could be recorded for // comparison to future results for the same provider version, to implement a // "trust on first use" scheme. // // The AcceptableHashes result is a platform-agnostic set of hashes, with the // intent that in most cases it will be used as an additional cross-check in // addition to a platform-specific hash check made during installation. However, // there are some situations (such as verifying an already-installed package // that's on local disk) where Terraform would check only against the results // of this function, meaning that it would in principle accept another // platform's package as a substitute for the correct platform. That's a // pragmatic compromise to allow lock files derived from the result of this // method to be portable across platforms. // // Callers of this method should typically also verify the package using the // object in the Authentication field, and consider how much trust to give // the result of this method depending on the authentication result: an // unauthenticated result or one that only verified a checksum could be // considered less trustworthy than one that checked the package against // a signature provided by the origin registry. // // The AcceptableHashes result is actually provided by the object in the // Authentication field. AcceptableHashes therefore returns an empty result // for a PackageMeta that has no authentication object, or has one that does // not make use of hashes. func (m PackageMeta) AcceptableHashes() []Hash { auth, ok := m.Authentication.(PackageAuthenticationHashes) if !ok { return nil } return auth.AcceptableHashes() } // PackageLocation represents a location where a provider distribution package // can be obtained. A value of this type contains one of the following // concrete types: PackageLocalArchive, PackageLocalDir, or PackageHTTPURL. type PackageLocation interface { packageLocation() String() string } // PackageLocalArchive is the location of a provider distribution archive file // in the local filesystem. Its value is a local filesystem path using the // syntax understood by Go's standard path/filepath package on the operating // system where Terraform is running. type PackageLocalArchive string func (p PackageLocalArchive) packageLocation() {} func (p PackageLocalArchive) String() string { return string(p) } // PackageLocalDir is the location of a directory containing an unpacked // provider distribution archive in the local filesystem. Its value is a local // filesystem path using the syntax understood by Go's standard path/filepath // package on the operating system where Terraform is running. type PackageLocalDir string func (p PackageLocalDir) packageLocation() {} func (p PackageLocalDir) String() string { return string(p) } // PackageHTTPURL is a provider package location accessible via HTTP. // Its value is a URL string using either the http: scheme or the https: scheme. type PackageHTTPURL string func (p PackageHTTPURL) packageLocation() {} func (p PackageHTTPURL) String() string { return string(p) } // PackageMetaList is a list of PackageMeta. It's just []PackageMeta with // some methods for convenient sorting and filtering. type PackageMetaList []PackageMeta func (l PackageMetaList) Len() int { return len(l) } func (l PackageMetaList) Less(i, j int) bool { return l[i].LessThan(l[j]) } func (l PackageMetaList) Swap(i, j int) { l[i], l[j] = l[j], l[i] } // Sort performs an in-place, stable sort on the contents of the list, using // the ordering given by method Less. This ordering is primarily to help // encourage deterministic results from functions and does not have any // semantic meaning. func (l PackageMetaList) Sort() { sort.Stable(l) } // FilterPlatform constructs a new PackageMetaList that contains only the // elements of the receiver that are for the given target platform. // // Pass CurrentPlatform to filter only for packages targeting the platform // where this code is running. func (l PackageMetaList) FilterPlatform(target Platform) PackageMetaList { var ret PackageMetaList for _, m := range l { if m.TargetPlatform == target { ret = append(ret, m) } } return ret } // FilterProviderExactVersion constructs a new PackageMetaList that contains // only the elements of the receiver that relate to the given provider address // and exact version. // // The version matching for this function is exact, including matching on // semver build metadata, because it's intended for handling a single exact // version selected by the caller from a set of available versions. func (l PackageMetaList) FilterProviderExactVersion(provider addrs.Provider, version Version) PackageMetaList { var ret PackageMetaList for _, m := range l { if m.Provider == provider && m.Version == version { ret = append(ret, m) } } return ret } // FilterProviderPlatformExactVersion is a combination of both // FilterPlatform and FilterProviderExactVersion that filters by all three // criteria at once. func (l PackageMetaList) FilterProviderPlatformExactVersion(provider addrs.Provider, platform Platform, version Version) PackageMetaList { var ret PackageMetaList for _, m := range l { if m.Provider == provider && m.Version == version && m.TargetPlatform == platform { ret = append(ret, m) } } return ret } // VersionConstraintsString returns a canonical string representation of // a VersionConstraints value. func VersionConstraintsString(spec VersionConstraints) string { // (we have our own function for this because the upstream versions // library prefers to use npm/cargo-style constraint syntax, but // Terraform prefers Ruby-like. Maybe we can upstream a "RubyLikeString") // function to do this later, but having this in here avoids blocking on // that and this is the sort of thing that is unlikely to need ongoing // maintenance because the version constraint syntax is unlikely to change.) // // ParseVersionConstraints allows some variations for convenience, but the // return value from this function serves as the normalized form of a // particular version constraint, which is the form we require in dependency // lock files. Therefore the canonical forms produced here are a compatibility // constraint for the dependency lock file parser. if len(spec) == 0 { return "" } // VersionConstraints values are typically assembled by combining together // the version constraints from many separate declarations throughout // a configuration, across many modules. As a consequence, they typically // contain duplicates and the terms inside are in no particular order. // For our canonical representation we'll both deduplicate the items // and sort them into a consistent order. sels := make(map[constraints.SelectionSpec]struct{}) for _, sel := range spec { // The parser allows writing abbreviated version (such as 2) which // end up being represented in memory with trailing unconstrained parts // (for example 2.*.*). For the purpose of serialization with Ruby // style syntax, these unconstrained parts can all be represented as 0 // with no loss of meaning, so we make that conversion here. Doing so // allows us to deduplicate equivalent constraints, such as >= 2.0 and // >= 2.0.0. normalizedSel := constraints.SelectionSpec{ Operator: sel.Operator, Boundary: sel.Boundary.ConstrainToZero(), } sels[normalizedSel] = struct{}{} } selsOrder := make([]constraints.SelectionSpec, 0, len(sels)) for sel := range sels { selsOrder = append(selsOrder, sel) } sort.Slice(selsOrder, func(i, j int) bool { is, js := selsOrder[i], selsOrder[j] boundaryCmp := versionSelectionBoundaryCompare(is.Boundary, js.Boundary) if boundaryCmp == 0 { // The operator is the decider, then. return versionSelectionOperatorLess(is.Operator, js.Operator) } return boundaryCmp < 0 }) var b strings.Builder for i, sel := range selsOrder { if i > 0 { b.WriteString(", ") } switch sel.Operator { case constraints.OpGreaterThan: b.WriteString("> ") case constraints.OpLessThan: b.WriteString("< ") case constraints.OpGreaterThanOrEqual: b.WriteString(">= ") case constraints.OpGreaterThanOrEqualPatchOnly, constraints.OpGreaterThanOrEqualMinorOnly: // These two differ in how the version is written, not in the symbol. b.WriteString("~> ") case constraints.OpLessThanOrEqual: b.WriteString("<= ") case constraints.OpEqual: b.WriteString("") case constraints.OpNotEqual: b.WriteString("!= ") default: // The above covers all of the operators we support during // parsing, so we should not get here. b.WriteString("??? ") } // We use a different constraint operator to distinguish between the // two types of pessimistic constraint: minor-only and patch-only. For // minor-only constraints, we always want to display only the major and // minor version components, so we special-case that operator below. // // One final edge case is a minor-only constraint specified with only // the major version, such as ~> 2. We treat this the same as ~> 2.0, // because a major-only pessimistic constraint does not exist: it is // logically identical to >= 2.0.0. if sel.Operator == constraints.OpGreaterThanOrEqualMinorOnly { // The minor-pessimistic syntax uses only two version components. fmt.Fprintf(&b, "%s.%s", sel.Boundary.Major, sel.Boundary.Minor) } else { fmt.Fprintf(&b, "%s.%s.%s", sel.Boundary.Major, sel.Boundary.Minor, sel.Boundary.Patch) } if sel.Boundary.Prerelease != "" { b.WriteString("-" + sel.Boundary.Prerelease) } if sel.Boundary.Metadata != "" { b.WriteString("+" + sel.Boundary.Metadata) } } return b.String() } // Our sort for selection operators is somewhat arbitrary and mainly motivated // by consistency rather than meaning, but this ordering does at least try // to make it so "simple" constraint sets will appear how a human might // typically write them, with the lower bounds first and the upper bounds // last. Weird mixtures of different sorts of constraints will likely seem // less intuitive, but they'd be unintuitive no matter the ordering. var versionSelectionsBoundaryPriority = map[constraints.SelectionOp]int{ // We skip zero here so that if we end up seeing an invalid // operator (which the string function would render as "???") // then it will have index zero and thus appear first. constraints.OpGreaterThan: 1, constraints.OpGreaterThanOrEqual: 2, constraints.OpEqual: 3, constraints.OpGreaterThanOrEqualPatchOnly: 4, constraints.OpGreaterThanOrEqualMinorOnly: 5, constraints.OpLessThanOrEqual: 6, constraints.OpLessThan: 7, constraints.OpNotEqual: 8, } func versionSelectionOperatorLess(i, j constraints.SelectionOp) bool { iPrio := versionSelectionsBoundaryPriority[i] jPrio := versionSelectionsBoundaryPriority[j] return iPrio < jPrio } func versionSelectionBoundaryCompare(i, j constraints.VersionSpec) int { // In the Ruby-style constraint syntax, unconstrained parts appear // only for omitted portions of a version string, like writing // "2" instead of "2.0.0". For sorting purposes we'll just // consider those as zero, which also matches how we serialize them // to strings. i, j = i.ConstrainToZero(), j.ConstrainToZero() // Once we've removed any unconstrained parts, we can safely // convert to our main Version type so we can use its ordering. iv := Version{ Major: i.Major.Num, Minor: i.Minor.Num, Patch: i.Patch.Num, Prerelease: versions.VersionExtra(i.Prerelease), Metadata: versions.VersionExtra(i.Metadata), } jv := Version{ Major: j.Major.Num, Minor: j.Minor.Num, Patch: j.Patch.Num, Prerelease: versions.VersionExtra(j.Prerelease), Metadata: versions.VersionExtra(j.Metadata), } if iv.Same(jv) { // Although build metadata doesn't normally weigh in to // precedence choices, we'll use it for our visual // ordering just because we need to pick _some_ order. switch { case iv.Metadata.Raw() == jv.Metadata.Raw(): return 0 case iv.Metadata.LessThan(jv.Metadata): return -1 default: return 1 // greater, by elimination } } switch { case iv.LessThan(jv): return -1 default: return 1 // greater, by elimination } }