terraform/internal/terraform/node_resource_plan_instance.go

369 lines
12 KiB
Go

package terraform
import (
"fmt"
"log"
"sort"
"github.com/hashicorp/terraform/internal/plans"
"github.com/hashicorp/terraform/internal/states"
"github.com/hashicorp/terraform/internal/tfdiags"
"github.com/hashicorp/terraform/internal/addrs"
)
// NodePlannableResourceInstance represents a _single_ resource
// instance that is plannable. This means this represents a single
// count index, for example.
type NodePlannableResourceInstance struct {
*NodeAbstractResourceInstance
ForceCreateBeforeDestroy bool
// skipRefresh indicates that we should skip refreshing individual instances
skipRefresh bool
// skipPlanChanges indicates we should skip trying to plan change actions
// for any instances.
skipPlanChanges bool
// forceReplace are resource instance addresses where the user wants to
// force generating a replace action. This set isn't pre-filtered, so
// it might contain addresses that have nothing to do with the resource
// that this node represents, which the node itself must therefore ignore.
forceReplace []addrs.AbsResourceInstance
}
var (
_ GraphNodeModuleInstance = (*NodePlannableResourceInstance)(nil)
_ GraphNodeReferenceable = (*NodePlannableResourceInstance)(nil)
_ GraphNodeReferencer = (*NodePlannableResourceInstance)(nil)
_ GraphNodeConfigResource = (*NodePlannableResourceInstance)(nil)
_ GraphNodeResourceInstance = (*NodePlannableResourceInstance)(nil)
_ GraphNodeAttachResourceConfig = (*NodePlannableResourceInstance)(nil)
_ GraphNodeAttachResourceState = (*NodePlannableResourceInstance)(nil)
_ GraphNodeExecutable = (*NodePlannableResourceInstance)(nil)
)
// GraphNodeEvalable
func (n *NodePlannableResourceInstance) Execute(ctx EvalContext, op walkOperation) tfdiags.Diagnostics {
addr := n.ResourceInstanceAddr()
// Eval info is different depending on what kind of resource this is
switch addr.Resource.Resource.Mode {
case addrs.ManagedResourceMode:
return n.managedResourceExecute(ctx)
case addrs.DataResourceMode:
return n.dataResourceExecute(ctx)
default:
panic(fmt.Errorf("unsupported resource mode %s", n.Config.Mode))
}
}
func (n *NodePlannableResourceInstance) dataResourceExecute(ctx EvalContext) (diags tfdiags.Diagnostics) {
config := n.Config
addr := n.ResourceInstanceAddr()
var change *plans.ResourceInstanceChange
_, providerSchema, err := getProvider(ctx, n.ResolvedProvider)
diags = diags.Append(err)
if diags.HasErrors() {
return diags
}
state, readDiags := n.readResourceInstanceState(ctx, addr)
diags = diags.Append(readDiags)
if diags.HasErrors() {
return diags
}
// We'll save a snapshot of what we just read from the state into the
// prevRunState which will capture the result read in the previous
// run, possibly tweaked by any upgrade steps that
// readResourceInstanceState might've made.
// However, note that we don't have any explicit mechanism for upgrading
// data resource results as we do for managed resources, and so the
// prevRunState might not conform to the current schema if the
// previous run was with a different provider version.
diags = diags.Append(n.writeResourceInstanceState(ctx, state, prevRunState))
if diags.HasErrors() {
return diags
}
diags = diags.Append(validateSelfRef(addr.Resource, config.Config, providerSchema))
if diags.HasErrors() {
return diags
}
checkRuleSeverity := tfdiags.Error
if n.skipPlanChanges {
checkRuleSeverity = tfdiags.Warning
}
change, state, repeatData, planDiags := n.planDataSource(ctx, state, checkRuleSeverity)
diags = diags.Append(planDiags)
if diags.HasErrors() {
return diags
}
// write the data source into both the refresh state and the
// working state
diags = diags.Append(n.writeResourceInstanceState(ctx, state, refreshState))
if diags.HasErrors() {
return diags
}
diags = diags.Append(n.writeResourceInstanceState(ctx, state, workingState))
if diags.HasErrors() {
return diags
}
diags = diags.Append(n.writeChange(ctx, change, ""))
// Post-conditions might block further progress. We intentionally do this
// _after_ writing the state/diff because we want to check against
// the result of the operation, and to fail on future operations
// until the user makes the condition succeed.
checkDiags := evalCheckRules(
checkResourcePostcondition,
n.Config.Postconditions,
ctx, addr.Resource, repeatData,
checkRuleSeverity,
)
diags = diags.Append(checkDiags)
return diags
}
func (n *NodePlannableResourceInstance) managedResourceExecute(ctx EvalContext) (diags tfdiags.Diagnostics) {
config := n.Config
addr := n.ResourceInstanceAddr()
var change *plans.ResourceInstanceChange
var instanceRefreshState *states.ResourceInstanceObject
_, providerSchema, err := getProvider(ctx, n.ResolvedProvider)
diags = diags.Append(err)
if diags.HasErrors() {
return diags
}
diags = diags.Append(validateSelfRef(addr.Resource, config.Config, providerSchema))
if diags.HasErrors() {
return diags
}
instanceRefreshState, readDiags := n.readResourceInstanceState(ctx, addr)
diags = diags.Append(readDiags)
if diags.HasErrors() {
return diags
}
// We'll save a snapshot of what we just read from the state into the
// prevRunState before we do anything else, since this will capture the
// result of any schema upgrading that readResourceInstanceState just did,
// but not include any out-of-band changes we might detect in in the
// refresh step below.
diags = diags.Append(n.writeResourceInstanceState(ctx, instanceRefreshState, prevRunState))
if diags.HasErrors() {
return diags
}
// Also the refreshState, because that should still reflect schema upgrades
// even if it doesn't reflect upstream changes.
diags = diags.Append(n.writeResourceInstanceState(ctx, instanceRefreshState, refreshState))
if diags.HasErrors() {
return diags
}
// In 0.13 we could be refreshing a resource with no config.
// We should be operating on managed resource, but check here to be certain
if n.Config == nil || n.Config.Managed == nil {
log.Printf("[WARN] managedResourceExecute: no Managed config value found in instance state for %q", n.Addr)
} else {
if instanceRefreshState != nil {
instanceRefreshState.CreateBeforeDestroy = n.Config.Managed.CreateBeforeDestroy || n.ForceCreateBeforeDestroy
}
}
// Refresh, maybe
if !n.skipRefresh {
s, refreshDiags := n.refresh(ctx, states.NotDeposed, instanceRefreshState)
diags = diags.Append(refreshDiags)
if diags.HasErrors() {
return diags
}
instanceRefreshState = s
if instanceRefreshState != nil {
// When refreshing we start by merging the stored dependencies and
// the configured dependencies. The configured dependencies will be
// stored to state once the changes are applied. If the plan
// results in no changes, we will re-write these dependencies
// below.
instanceRefreshState.Dependencies = mergeDeps(n.Dependencies, instanceRefreshState.Dependencies)
}
diags = diags.Append(n.writeResourceInstanceState(ctx, instanceRefreshState, refreshState))
if diags.HasErrors() {
return diags
}
}
// Plan the instance, unless we're in the refresh-only mode
if !n.skipPlanChanges {
change, instancePlanState, repeatData, planDiags := n.plan(
ctx, change, instanceRefreshState, n.ForceCreateBeforeDestroy, n.forceReplace,
)
diags = diags.Append(planDiags)
if diags.HasErrors() {
return diags
}
diags = diags.Append(n.checkPreventDestroy(change))
if diags.HasErrors() {
return diags
}
// FIXME: it is currently important that we write resource changes to
// the plan (n.writeChange) before we write the corresponding state
// (n.writeResourceInstanceState).
//
// This is because the planned resource state will normally have the
// status of states.ObjectPlanned, which causes later logic to refer to
// the contents of the plan to retrieve the resource data. Because
// there is no shared lock between these two data structures, reversing
// the order of these writes will cause a brief window of inconsistency
// which can lead to a failed safety check.
//
// Future work should adjust these APIs such that it is impossible to
// update these two data structures incorrectly through any objects
// reachable via the terraform.EvalContext API.
diags = diags.Append(n.writeChange(ctx, change, ""))
diags = diags.Append(n.writeResourceInstanceState(ctx, instancePlanState, workingState))
if diags.HasErrors() {
return diags
}
// If this plan resulted in a NoOp, then apply won't have a chance to make
// any changes to the stored dependencies. Since this is a NoOp we know
// that the stored dependencies will have no effect during apply, and we can
// write them out now.
if change.Action == plans.NoOp && !depsEqual(instanceRefreshState.Dependencies, n.Dependencies) {
// the refresh state will be the final state for this resource, so
// finalize the dependencies here if they need to be updated.
instanceRefreshState.Dependencies = n.Dependencies
diags = diags.Append(n.writeResourceInstanceState(ctx, instanceRefreshState, refreshState))
if diags.HasErrors() {
return diags
}
}
// Post-conditions might block completion. We intentionally do this
// _after_ writing the state/diff because we want to check against
// the result of the operation, and to fail on future operations
// until the user makes the condition succeed.
// (Note that some preconditions will end up being skipped during
// planning, because their conditions depend on values not yet known.)
checkDiags := evalCheckRules(
checkResourcePostcondition,
n.Config.Postconditions,
ctx, addr.Resource, repeatData,
tfdiags.Error,
)
diags = diags.Append(checkDiags)
} else {
// In refresh-only mode we need to evaluate the for-each expression in
// order to supply the value to the pre- and post-condition check
// blocks. This has the unfortunate edge case of a refresh-only plan
// executing with a for-each map which has the same keys but different
// values, which could result in a post-condition check relying on that
// value being inaccurate. Unless we decide to store the value of the
// for-each expression in state, this is unavoidable.
forEach, _ := evaluateForEachExpression(n.Config.ForEach, ctx)
repeatData := EvalDataForInstanceKey(n.ResourceInstanceAddr().Resource.Key, forEach)
checkDiags := evalCheckRules(
checkResourcePrecondition,
n.Config.Preconditions,
ctx, nil, repeatData,
tfdiags.Warning,
)
diags = diags.Append(checkDiags)
// Even if we don't plan changes, we do still need to at least update
// the working state to reflect the refresh result. If not, then e.g.
// any output values refering to this will not react to the drift.
// (Even if we didn't actually refresh above, this will still save
// the result of any schema upgrading we did in readResourceInstanceState.)
diags = diags.Append(n.writeResourceInstanceState(ctx, instanceRefreshState, workingState))
if diags.HasErrors() {
return diags
}
// Here we also evaluate post-conditions after updating the working
// state, because we want to check against the result of the refresh.
// Unlike in normal planning mode, these checks are still evaluated
// even if pre-conditions generated diagnostics, because we have no
// planned changes to block.
checkDiags = evalCheckRules(
checkResourcePostcondition,
n.Config.Postconditions,
ctx, addr.Resource, repeatData,
tfdiags.Warning,
)
diags = diags.Append(checkDiags)
}
return diags
}
// mergeDeps returns the union of 2 sets of dependencies
func mergeDeps(a, b []addrs.ConfigResource) []addrs.ConfigResource {
switch {
case len(a) == 0:
return b
case len(b) == 0:
return a
}
set := make(map[string]addrs.ConfigResource)
for _, dep := range a {
set[dep.String()] = dep
}
for _, dep := range b {
set[dep.String()] = dep
}
newDeps := make([]addrs.ConfigResource, 0, len(set))
for _, dep := range set {
newDeps = append(newDeps, dep)
}
return newDeps
}
func depsEqual(a, b []addrs.ConfigResource) bool {
if len(a) != len(b) {
return false
}
less := func(s []addrs.ConfigResource) func(i, j int) bool {
return func(i, j int) bool {
return s[i].String() < s[j].String()
}
}
sort.Slice(a, less(a))
sort.Slice(b, less(b))
for i := range a {
if !a[i].Equal(b[i]) {
return false
}
}
return true
}