terraform/internal/refactoring/move_statement.go

187 lines
7.0 KiB
Go

package refactoring
import (
"fmt"
"github.com/hashicorp/terraform/internal/addrs"
"github.com/hashicorp/terraform/internal/configs"
"github.com/hashicorp/terraform/internal/states"
"github.com/hashicorp/terraform/internal/tfdiags"
)
type MoveStatement struct {
From, To *addrs.MoveEndpointInModule
DeclRange tfdiags.SourceRange
// Implied is true for statements produced by ImpliedMoveStatements, and
// false for statements produced by FindMoveStatements.
//
// An "implied" statement is one that has no explicit "moved" block in
// the configuration and was instead generated automatically based on a
// comparison between current configuration and previous run state.
// For implied statements, the DeclRange field contains the source location
// of something in the source code that implied the statement, in which
// case it would probably be confusing to show that source range to the
// user, e.g. in an error message, without clearly mentioning that it's
// related to an implied move statement.
Implied bool
}
// FindMoveStatements recurses through the modules of the given configuration
// and returns a flat set of all "moved" blocks defined within, in a
// deterministic but undefined order.
func FindMoveStatements(rootCfg *configs.Config) []MoveStatement {
return findMoveStatements(rootCfg, nil)
}
func findMoveStatements(cfg *configs.Config, into []MoveStatement) []MoveStatement {
modAddr := cfg.Path
for _, mc := range cfg.Module.Moved {
fromAddr, toAddr := addrs.UnifyMoveEndpoints(modAddr, mc.From, mc.To)
if fromAddr == nil || toAddr == nil {
// Invalid combination should've been caught during original
// configuration decoding, in the configs package.
panic(fmt.Sprintf("incompatible move endpoints in %s", mc.DeclRange))
}
into = append(into, MoveStatement{
From: fromAddr,
To: toAddr,
DeclRange: tfdiags.SourceRangeFromHCL(mc.DeclRange),
Implied: false,
})
}
for _, childCfg := range cfg.Children {
into = findMoveStatements(childCfg, into)
}
return into
}
// ImpliedMoveStatements compares addresses in the given state with addresses
// in the given configuration and potentially returns additional MoveStatement
// objects representing moves we infer automatically, even though they aren't
// explicitly recorded in the configuration.
//
// We do this primarily for backward compatibility with behaviors of Terraform
// versions prior to introducing explicit "moved" blocks. Specifically, this
// function aims to achieve the same result as the "NodeCountBoundary"
// heuristic from Terraform v1.0 and earlier, where adding or removing the
// "count" meta-argument from an already-created resource can automatically
// preserve the zeroth or the NoKey instance, depending on the direction of
// the change. We do this only for resources that aren't mentioned already
// in at least one explicit move statement.
//
// As with the previous-version heuristics it replaces, this is a best effort
// and doesn't handle all situations. An explicit move statement is always
// preferred, but our goal here is to match exactly the same cases that the
// old heuristic would've matched, to retain compatibility for existing modules.
//
// We should think very hard before adding any _new_ implication rules for
// moved statements.
func ImpliedMoveStatements(rootCfg *configs.Config, prevRunState *states.State, explicitStmts []MoveStatement) []MoveStatement {
return impliedMoveStatements(rootCfg, prevRunState, explicitStmts, nil)
}
func impliedMoveStatements(cfg *configs.Config, prevRunState *states.State, explicitStmts []MoveStatement, into []MoveStatement) []MoveStatement {
modAddr := cfg.Path
// There can be potentially many instances of the module, so we need
// to consider each of them separately.
for _, modState := range prevRunState.ModuleInstances(modAddr) {
// What we're looking for here is either a no-key resource instance
// where the configuration has count set or a zero-key resource
// instance where the configuration _doesn't_ have count set.
// If so, we'll generate a statement replacing no-key with zero-key or
// vice-versa.
for _, rState := range modState.Resources {
rAddr := rState.Addr
rCfg := cfg.Module.ResourceByAddr(rAddr.Resource)
if rCfg == nil {
// If there's no configuration at all then there can't be any
// automatic move fixup to do.
continue
}
approxSrcRange := tfdiags.SourceRangeFromHCL(rCfg.DeclRange)
// NOTE: We're intentionally not checking to see whether the
// "to" addresses in our implied statements already have
// instances recorded in state, because ApplyMoves should
// deal with such conflicts in a deterministic way for both
// explicit and implicit moves, and we'd rather have that
// handled all in one place.
var fromKey, toKey addrs.InstanceKey
switch {
case rCfg.Count != nil:
// If we have a count expression then we'll use _that_ as
// a slightly-more-precise approximate source range.
approxSrcRange = tfdiags.SourceRangeFromHCL(rCfg.Count.Range())
if riState := rState.Instances[addrs.NoKey]; riState != nil {
fromKey = addrs.NoKey
toKey = addrs.IntKey(0)
}
case rCfg.Count == nil && rCfg.ForEach == nil: // no repetition at all
if riState := rState.Instances[addrs.IntKey(0)]; riState != nil {
fromKey = addrs.IntKey(0)
toKey = addrs.NoKey
}
}
if fromKey != toKey {
// We mustn't generate an impied statement if the user already
// wrote an explicit statement referring to this resource,
// because they may wish to select an instance key other than
// zero as the one to retain.
if !haveMoveStatementForResource(rAddr, explicitStmts) {
into = append(into, MoveStatement{
From: addrs.ImpliedMoveStatementEndpoint(rAddr.Instance(fromKey), approxSrcRange),
To: addrs.ImpliedMoveStatementEndpoint(rAddr.Instance(toKey), approxSrcRange),
DeclRange: approxSrcRange,
Implied: true,
})
}
}
}
}
for _, childCfg := range cfg.Children {
into = impliedMoveStatements(childCfg, prevRunState, explicitStmts, into)
}
return into
}
func (s *MoveStatement) ObjectKind() addrs.MoveEndpointKind {
// addrs.UnifyMoveEndpoints guarantees that both of our addresses have
// the same kind, so we can just arbitrary use From and assume To will
// match it.
return s.From.ObjectKind()
}
// Name is used internally for displaying the statement graph
func (s *MoveStatement) Name() string {
return fmt.Sprintf("%s->%s", s.From, s.To)
}
func haveMoveStatementForResource(addr addrs.AbsResource, stmts []MoveStatement) bool {
// This is not a particularly optimal way to answer this question,
// particularly since our caller calls this function in a loop already,
// but we expect the total number of explicit statements to be small
// in any reasonable Terraform configuration and so a more complicated
// approach wouldn't be justified here.
for _, stmt := range stmts {
if stmt.From.SelectsResource(addr) {
return true
}
if stmt.To.SelectsResource(addr) {
return true
}
}
return false
}