terraform/addrs/provider.go

465 lines
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package addrs
import (
"fmt"
"strings"
addrs: Stronger validation and normalization of provider namespace/type The provider FQN is becoming our primary identifier for a provider, so it's important that we are clear about the equality rules for these addresses and what characters are valid within them. We previously had a basic regex permitting ASCII letters and digits for validation and no normalization at all. We need to do at least case folding and UTF-8 normalization because these names will appear in file and directory names in case-insensitive filesystems and in repository names such as on GitHub. Since we're already using DNS-style normalization and validation rules for the hostname part, rather than defining an entirely new set of rules here we'll just treat the provider namespace and type as if they were single labels in a DNS name. Aside from some internal consistency, that also works out nicely because systems like GitHub use organization and repository names as part of hostnames (e.g. with GitHub Pages) and so tend to apply comparable constraints themselves. This introduces the possibility of names containing letters from alphabets other than the latin alphabet, and for latin letters with diacritics. That's consistent with our introduction of similar support for identifiers in the language in Terraform 0.12, and is intended to be more friendly to Terraform users throughout the world that might prefer to name their products using a different alphabet. This is also a further justification for using the DNS normalization rules: modern companies tend to choose product names that make good domain names, and now such names will be usable as Terraform provider names too.
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"golang.org/x/net/idna"
"github.com/hashicorp/hcl/v2"
svchost "github.com/hashicorp/terraform-svchost"
"github.com/hashicorp/terraform/internal/tfdiags"
)
// Provider encapsulates a single provider type. In the future this will be
// extended to include additional fields including Namespace and SourceHost
type Provider struct {
Type string
Namespace string
Hostname svchost.Hostname
}
addrs: Stronger validation and normalization of provider namespace/type The provider FQN is becoming our primary identifier for a provider, so it's important that we are clear about the equality rules for these addresses and what characters are valid within them. We previously had a basic regex permitting ASCII letters and digits for validation and no normalization at all. We need to do at least case folding and UTF-8 normalization because these names will appear in file and directory names in case-insensitive filesystems and in repository names such as on GitHub. Since we're already using DNS-style normalization and validation rules for the hostname part, rather than defining an entirely new set of rules here we'll just treat the provider namespace and type as if they were single labels in a DNS name. Aside from some internal consistency, that also works out nicely because systems like GitHub use organization and repository names as part of hostnames (e.g. with GitHub Pages) and so tend to apply comparable constraints themselves. This introduces the possibility of names containing letters from alphabets other than the latin alphabet, and for latin letters with diacritics. That's consistent with our introduction of similar support for identifiers in the language in Terraform 0.12, and is intended to be more friendly to Terraform users throughout the world that might prefer to name their products using a different alphabet. This is also a further justification for using the DNS normalization rules: modern companies tend to choose product names that make good domain names, and now such names will be usable as Terraform provider names too.
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// DefaultRegistryHost is the hostname used for provider addresses that do
// not have an explicit hostname.
const DefaultRegistryHost = svchost.Hostname("registry.terraform.io")
// BuiltInProviderHost is the pseudo-hostname used for the "built-in" provider
// namespace. Built-in provider addresses must also have their namespace set
// to BuiltInProviderNamespace in order to be considered as built-in.
const BuiltInProviderHost = svchost.Hostname("terraform.io")
// BuiltInProviderNamespace is the provider namespace used for "built-in"
// providers. Built-in provider addresses must also have their hostname
// set to BuiltInProviderHost in order to be considered as built-in.
//
// The this namespace is literally named "builtin", in the hope that users
// who see FQNs containing this will be able to infer the way in which they are
// special, even if they haven't encountered the concept formally yet.
const BuiltInProviderNamespace = "builtin"
addrs: Stronger validation and normalization of provider namespace/type The provider FQN is becoming our primary identifier for a provider, so it's important that we are clear about the equality rules for these addresses and what characters are valid within them. We previously had a basic regex permitting ASCII letters and digits for validation and no normalization at all. We need to do at least case folding and UTF-8 normalization because these names will appear in file and directory names in case-insensitive filesystems and in repository names such as on GitHub. Since we're already using DNS-style normalization and validation rules for the hostname part, rather than defining an entirely new set of rules here we'll just treat the provider namespace and type as if they were single labels in a DNS name. Aside from some internal consistency, that also works out nicely because systems like GitHub use organization and repository names as part of hostnames (e.g. with GitHub Pages) and so tend to apply comparable constraints themselves. This introduces the possibility of names containing letters from alphabets other than the latin alphabet, and for latin letters with diacritics. That's consistent with our introduction of similar support for identifiers in the language in Terraform 0.12, and is intended to be more friendly to Terraform users throughout the world that might prefer to name their products using a different alphabet. This is also a further justification for using the DNS normalization rules: modern companies tend to choose product names that make good domain names, and now such names will be usable as Terraform provider names too.
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// LegacyProviderNamespace is the special string used in the Namespace field
// of type Provider to mark a legacy provider address. This special namespace
// value would normally be invalid, and can be used only when the hostname is
// DefaultRegistryHost because that host owns the mapping from legacy name to
// FQN.
const LegacyProviderNamespace = "-"
// String returns an FQN string, indended for use in machine-readable output.
func (pt Provider) String() string {
addrs: Stronger validation and normalization of provider namespace/type The provider FQN is becoming our primary identifier for a provider, so it's important that we are clear about the equality rules for these addresses and what characters are valid within them. We previously had a basic regex permitting ASCII letters and digits for validation and no normalization at all. We need to do at least case folding and UTF-8 normalization because these names will appear in file and directory names in case-insensitive filesystems and in repository names such as on GitHub. Since we're already using DNS-style normalization and validation rules for the hostname part, rather than defining an entirely new set of rules here we'll just treat the provider namespace and type as if they were single labels in a DNS name. Aside from some internal consistency, that also works out nicely because systems like GitHub use organization and repository names as part of hostnames (e.g. with GitHub Pages) and so tend to apply comparable constraints themselves. This introduces the possibility of names containing letters from alphabets other than the latin alphabet, and for latin letters with diacritics. That's consistent with our introduction of similar support for identifiers in the language in Terraform 0.12, and is intended to be more friendly to Terraform users throughout the world that might prefer to name their products using a different alphabet. This is also a further justification for using the DNS normalization rules: modern companies tend to choose product names that make good domain names, and now such names will be usable as Terraform provider names too.
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if pt.IsZero() {
panic("called String on zero-value addrs.Provider")
}
return pt.Hostname.ForDisplay() + "/" + pt.Namespace + "/" + pt.Type
}
// ForDisplay returns a user-friendly FQN string, simplified for readability. If
// the provider is using the default hostname, the hostname is omitted.
func (pt Provider) ForDisplay() string {
if pt.IsZero() {
panic("called ForDisplay on zero-value addrs.Provider")
}
if pt.Hostname == DefaultRegistryHost {
return pt.Namespace + "/" + pt.Type
}
return pt.Hostname.ForDisplay() + "/" + pt.Namespace + "/" + pt.Type
}
addrs: Stronger validation and normalization of provider namespace/type The provider FQN is becoming our primary identifier for a provider, so it's important that we are clear about the equality rules for these addresses and what characters are valid within them. We previously had a basic regex permitting ASCII letters and digits for validation and no normalization at all. We need to do at least case folding and UTF-8 normalization because these names will appear in file and directory names in case-insensitive filesystems and in repository names such as on GitHub. Since we're already using DNS-style normalization and validation rules for the hostname part, rather than defining an entirely new set of rules here we'll just treat the provider namespace and type as if they were single labels in a DNS name. Aside from some internal consistency, that also works out nicely because systems like GitHub use organization and repository names as part of hostnames (e.g. with GitHub Pages) and so tend to apply comparable constraints themselves. This introduces the possibility of names containing letters from alphabets other than the latin alphabet, and for latin letters with diacritics. That's consistent with our introduction of similar support for identifiers in the language in Terraform 0.12, and is intended to be more friendly to Terraform users throughout the world that might prefer to name their products using a different alphabet. This is also a further justification for using the DNS normalization rules: modern companies tend to choose product names that make good domain names, and now such names will be usable as Terraform provider names too.
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// NewProvider constructs a provider address from its parts, and normalizes
// the namespace and type parts to lowercase using unicode case folding rules
// so that resulting addrs.Provider values can be compared using standard
// Go equality rules (==).
//
// The hostname is given as a svchost.Hostname, which is required by the
// contract of that type to have already been normalized for equality testing.
//
// This function will panic if the given namespace or type name are not valid.
// When accepting namespace or type values from outside the program, use
// ParseProviderPart first to check that the given value is valid.
func NewProvider(hostname svchost.Hostname, namespace, typeName string) Provider {
if namespace == LegacyProviderNamespace {
// Legacy provider addresses must always be created via
// NewLegacyProvider so that we can use static analysis to find
// codepaths still working with those.
panic("attempt to create legacy provider address using NewProvider; use NewLegacyProvider instead")
}
return Provider{
Type: MustParseProviderPart(typeName),
Namespace: MustParseProviderPart(namespace),
Hostname: hostname,
}
}
// ImpliedProviderForUnqualifiedType represents the rules for inferring what
// provider FQN a user intended when only a naked type name is available.
//
// For all except the type name "terraform" this returns a so-called "default"
// provider, which is under the registry.terraform.io/hashicorp/ namespace.
//
// As a special case, the string "terraform" maps to
// "terraform.io/builtin/terraform" because that is the more likely user
// intent than the now-unmaintained "registry.terraform.io/hashicorp/terraform"
// which remains only for compatibility with older Terraform versions.
func ImpliedProviderForUnqualifiedType(typeName string) Provider {
switch typeName {
case "terraform":
// Note for future maintainers: any additional strings we add here
// as implied to be builtin must never also be use as provider names
// in the registry.terraform.io/hashicorp/... namespace, because
// otherwise older versions of Terraform could implicitly select
// the registry name instead of the internal one.
return NewBuiltInProvider(typeName)
default:
return NewDefaultProvider(typeName)
}
}
// NewDefaultProvider returns the default address of a HashiCorp-maintained,
// Registry-hosted provider.
func NewDefaultProvider(name string) Provider {
return Provider{
addrs: Stronger validation and normalization of provider namespace/type The provider FQN is becoming our primary identifier for a provider, so it's important that we are clear about the equality rules for these addresses and what characters are valid within them. We previously had a basic regex permitting ASCII letters and digits for validation and no normalization at all. We need to do at least case folding and UTF-8 normalization because these names will appear in file and directory names in case-insensitive filesystems and in repository names such as on GitHub. Since we're already using DNS-style normalization and validation rules for the hostname part, rather than defining an entirely new set of rules here we'll just treat the provider namespace and type as if they were single labels in a DNS name. Aside from some internal consistency, that also works out nicely because systems like GitHub use organization and repository names as part of hostnames (e.g. with GitHub Pages) and so tend to apply comparable constraints themselves. This introduces the possibility of names containing letters from alphabets other than the latin alphabet, and for latin letters with diacritics. That's consistent with our introduction of similar support for identifiers in the language in Terraform 0.12, and is intended to be more friendly to Terraform users throughout the world that might prefer to name their products using a different alphabet. This is also a further justification for using the DNS normalization rules: modern companies tend to choose product names that make good domain names, and now such names will be usable as Terraform provider names too.
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Type: MustParseProviderPart(name),
Namespace: "hashicorp",
Hostname: DefaultRegistryHost,
}
}
// NewBuiltInProvider returns the address of a "built-in" provider. See
// the docs for Provider.IsBuiltIn for more information.
func NewBuiltInProvider(name string) Provider {
return Provider{
Type: MustParseProviderPart(name),
Namespace: BuiltInProviderNamespace,
Hostname: BuiltInProviderHost,
}
}
// NewLegacyProvider returns a mock address for a provider.
// This will be removed when ProviderType is fully integrated.
func NewLegacyProvider(name string) Provider {
return Provider{
addrs: Stronger validation and normalization of provider namespace/type The provider FQN is becoming our primary identifier for a provider, so it's important that we are clear about the equality rules for these addresses and what characters are valid within them. We previously had a basic regex permitting ASCII letters and digits for validation and no normalization at all. We need to do at least case folding and UTF-8 normalization because these names will appear in file and directory names in case-insensitive filesystems and in repository names such as on GitHub. Since we're already using DNS-style normalization and validation rules for the hostname part, rather than defining an entirely new set of rules here we'll just treat the provider namespace and type as if they were single labels in a DNS name. Aside from some internal consistency, that also works out nicely because systems like GitHub use organization and repository names as part of hostnames (e.g. with GitHub Pages) and so tend to apply comparable constraints themselves. This introduces the possibility of names containing letters from alphabets other than the latin alphabet, and for latin letters with diacritics. That's consistent with our introduction of similar support for identifiers in the language in Terraform 0.12, and is intended to be more friendly to Terraform users throughout the world that might prefer to name their products using a different alphabet. This is also a further justification for using the DNS normalization rules: modern companies tend to choose product names that make good domain names, and now such names will be usable as Terraform provider names too.
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// We intentionally don't normalize and validate the legacy names,
// because existing code expects legacy provider names to pass through
// verbatim, even if not compliant with our new naming rules.
Type: name,
addrs: Stronger validation and normalization of provider namespace/type The provider FQN is becoming our primary identifier for a provider, so it's important that we are clear about the equality rules for these addresses and what characters are valid within them. We previously had a basic regex permitting ASCII letters and digits for validation and no normalization at all. We need to do at least case folding and UTF-8 normalization because these names will appear in file and directory names in case-insensitive filesystems and in repository names such as on GitHub. Since we're already using DNS-style normalization and validation rules for the hostname part, rather than defining an entirely new set of rules here we'll just treat the provider namespace and type as if they were single labels in a DNS name. Aside from some internal consistency, that also works out nicely because systems like GitHub use organization and repository names as part of hostnames (e.g. with GitHub Pages) and so tend to apply comparable constraints themselves. This introduces the possibility of names containing letters from alphabets other than the latin alphabet, and for latin letters with diacritics. That's consistent with our introduction of similar support for identifiers in the language in Terraform 0.12, and is intended to be more friendly to Terraform users throughout the world that might prefer to name their products using a different alphabet. This is also a further justification for using the DNS normalization rules: modern companies tend to choose product names that make good domain names, and now such names will be usable as Terraform provider names too.
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Namespace: LegacyProviderNamespace,
Hostname: DefaultRegistryHost,
}
}
// LegacyString returns the provider type, which is frequently used
// interchangeably with provider name. This function can and should be removed
// when provider type is fully integrated. As a safeguard for future
// refactoring, this function panics if the Provider is not a legacy provider.
func (pt Provider) LegacyString() string {
addrs: Stronger validation and normalization of provider namespace/type The provider FQN is becoming our primary identifier for a provider, so it's important that we are clear about the equality rules for these addresses and what characters are valid within them. We previously had a basic regex permitting ASCII letters and digits for validation and no normalization at all. We need to do at least case folding and UTF-8 normalization because these names will appear in file and directory names in case-insensitive filesystems and in repository names such as on GitHub. Since we're already using DNS-style normalization and validation rules for the hostname part, rather than defining an entirely new set of rules here we'll just treat the provider namespace and type as if they were single labels in a DNS name. Aside from some internal consistency, that also works out nicely because systems like GitHub use organization and repository names as part of hostnames (e.g. with GitHub Pages) and so tend to apply comparable constraints themselves. This introduces the possibility of names containing letters from alphabets other than the latin alphabet, and for latin letters with diacritics. That's consistent with our introduction of similar support for identifiers in the language in Terraform 0.12, and is intended to be more friendly to Terraform users throughout the world that might prefer to name their products using a different alphabet. This is also a further justification for using the DNS normalization rules: modern companies tend to choose product names that make good domain names, and now such names will be usable as Terraform provider names too.
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if pt.IsZero() {
panic("called LegacyString on zero-value addrs.Provider")
}
if pt.Namespace != LegacyProviderNamespace && pt.Namespace != BuiltInProviderNamespace {
panic(pt.String() + " cannot be represented as a legacy string")
}
return pt.Type
}
addrs: Stronger validation and normalization of provider namespace/type The provider FQN is becoming our primary identifier for a provider, so it's important that we are clear about the equality rules for these addresses and what characters are valid within them. We previously had a basic regex permitting ASCII letters and digits for validation and no normalization at all. We need to do at least case folding and UTF-8 normalization because these names will appear in file and directory names in case-insensitive filesystems and in repository names such as on GitHub. Since we're already using DNS-style normalization and validation rules for the hostname part, rather than defining an entirely new set of rules here we'll just treat the provider namespace and type as if they were single labels in a DNS name. Aside from some internal consistency, that also works out nicely because systems like GitHub use organization and repository names as part of hostnames (e.g. with GitHub Pages) and so tend to apply comparable constraints themselves. This introduces the possibility of names containing letters from alphabets other than the latin alphabet, and for latin letters with diacritics. That's consistent with our introduction of similar support for identifiers in the language in Terraform 0.12, and is intended to be more friendly to Terraform users throughout the world that might prefer to name their products using a different alphabet. This is also a further justification for using the DNS normalization rules: modern companies tend to choose product names that make good domain names, and now such names will be usable as Terraform provider names too.
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// IsZero returns true if the receiver is the zero value of addrs.Provider.
//
// The zero value is not a valid addrs.Provider and calling other methods on
// such a value is likely to either panic or otherwise misbehave.
func (pt Provider) IsZero() bool {
return pt == Provider{}
}
// IsBuiltIn returns true if the receiver is the address of a "built-in"
// provider. That is, a provider under terraform.io/builtin/ which is
// included as part of the Terraform binary itself rather than one to be
// installed from elsewhere.
//
// These are ignored by the provider installer because they are assumed to
// already be available without any further installation.
func (pt Provider) IsBuiltIn() bool {
return pt.Hostname == BuiltInProviderHost && pt.Namespace == BuiltInProviderNamespace
}
// LessThan returns true if the receiver should sort before the other given
// address in an ordered list of provider addresses.
//
// This ordering is an arbitrary one just to allow deterministic results from
// functions that would otherwise have no natural ordering. It's subject
// to change in future.
func (pt Provider) LessThan(other Provider) bool {
switch {
case pt.Hostname != other.Hostname:
return pt.Hostname < other.Hostname
case pt.Namespace != other.Namespace:
return pt.Namespace < other.Namespace
default:
return pt.Type < other.Type
}
}
// IsLegacy returns true if the provider is a legacy-style provider
func (pt Provider) IsLegacy() bool {
if pt.IsZero() {
panic("called IsLegacy() on zero-value addrs.Provider")
}
return pt.Hostname == DefaultRegistryHost && pt.Namespace == LegacyProviderNamespace
}
// IsDefault returns true if the provider is a default hashicorp provider
func (pt Provider) IsDefault() bool {
if pt.IsZero() {
panic("called IsDefault() on zero-value addrs.Provider")
}
return pt.Hostname == DefaultRegistryHost && pt.Namespace == "hashicorp"
}
// Equals returns true if the receiver and other provider have the same attributes.
func (pt Provider) Equals(other Provider) bool {
return pt == other
}
// ParseProviderSourceString parses the source attribute and returns a provider.
// This is intended primarily to parse the FQN-like strings returned by
// terraform-config-inspect.
//
// The following are valid source string formats:
// name
// namespace/name
// hostname/namespace/name
func ParseProviderSourceString(str string) (Provider, tfdiags.Diagnostics) {
var ret Provider
var diags tfdiags.Diagnostics
// split the source string into individual components
parts := strings.Split(str, "/")
if len(parts) == 0 || len(parts) > 3 {
diags = diags.Append(&hcl.Diagnostic{
Severity: hcl.DiagError,
Summary: "Invalid provider source string",
Detail: `The "source" attribute must be in the format "[hostname/][namespace/]name"`,
})
return ret, diags
}
// check for an invalid empty string in any part
for i := range parts {
if parts[i] == "" {
diags = diags.Append(&hcl.Diagnostic{
Severity: hcl.DiagError,
Summary: "Invalid provider source string",
Detail: `The "source" attribute must be in the format "[hostname/][namespace/]name"`,
})
return ret, diags
}
}
// check the 'name' portion, which is always the last part
addrs: Stronger validation and normalization of provider namespace/type The provider FQN is becoming our primary identifier for a provider, so it's important that we are clear about the equality rules for these addresses and what characters are valid within them. We previously had a basic regex permitting ASCII letters and digits for validation and no normalization at all. We need to do at least case folding and UTF-8 normalization because these names will appear in file and directory names in case-insensitive filesystems and in repository names such as on GitHub. Since we're already using DNS-style normalization and validation rules for the hostname part, rather than defining an entirely new set of rules here we'll just treat the provider namespace and type as if they were single labels in a DNS name. Aside from some internal consistency, that also works out nicely because systems like GitHub use organization and repository names as part of hostnames (e.g. with GitHub Pages) and so tend to apply comparable constraints themselves. This introduces the possibility of names containing letters from alphabets other than the latin alphabet, and for latin letters with diacritics. That's consistent with our introduction of similar support for identifiers in the language in Terraform 0.12, and is intended to be more friendly to Terraform users throughout the world that might prefer to name their products using a different alphabet. This is also a further justification for using the DNS normalization rules: modern companies tend to choose product names that make good domain names, and now such names will be usable as Terraform provider names too.
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givenName := parts[len(parts)-1]
name, err := ParseProviderPart(givenName)
if err != nil {
diags = diags.Append(&hcl.Diagnostic{
Severity: hcl.DiagError,
Summary: "Invalid provider type",
Detail: fmt.Sprintf(`Invalid provider type %q in source %q: %s"`, givenName, str, err),
})
return ret, diags
}
ret.Type = name
ret.Hostname = DefaultRegistryHost
if len(parts) == 1 {
return NewDefaultProvider(parts[0]), diags
}
if len(parts) >= 2 {
// the namespace is always the second-to-last part
addrs: Stronger validation and normalization of provider namespace/type The provider FQN is becoming our primary identifier for a provider, so it's important that we are clear about the equality rules for these addresses and what characters are valid within them. We previously had a basic regex permitting ASCII letters and digits for validation and no normalization at all. We need to do at least case folding and UTF-8 normalization because these names will appear in file and directory names in case-insensitive filesystems and in repository names such as on GitHub. Since we're already using DNS-style normalization and validation rules for the hostname part, rather than defining an entirely new set of rules here we'll just treat the provider namespace and type as if they were single labels in a DNS name. Aside from some internal consistency, that also works out nicely because systems like GitHub use organization and repository names as part of hostnames (e.g. with GitHub Pages) and so tend to apply comparable constraints themselves. This introduces the possibility of names containing letters from alphabets other than the latin alphabet, and for latin letters with diacritics. That's consistent with our introduction of similar support for identifiers in the language in Terraform 0.12, and is intended to be more friendly to Terraform users throughout the world that might prefer to name their products using a different alphabet. This is also a further justification for using the DNS normalization rules: modern companies tend to choose product names that make good domain names, and now such names will be usable as Terraform provider names too.
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givenNamespace := parts[len(parts)-2]
if givenNamespace == LegacyProviderNamespace {
// For now we're tolerating legacy provider addresses until we've
// finished updating the rest of the codebase to no longer use them,
// or else we'd get errors round-tripping through legacy subsystems.
ret.Namespace = LegacyProviderNamespace
} else {
namespace, err := ParseProviderPart(givenNamespace)
if err != nil {
diags = diags.Append(&hcl.Diagnostic{
Severity: hcl.DiagError,
Summary: "Invalid provider namespace",
Detail: fmt.Sprintf(`Invalid provider namespace %q in source %q: %s"`, namespace, str, err),
})
return Provider{}, diags
}
ret.Namespace = namespace
}
}
// Final Case: 3 parts
if len(parts) == 3 {
// the namespace is always the first part in a three-part source string
hn, err := svchost.ForComparison(parts[0])
if err != nil {
diags = diags.Append(&hcl.Diagnostic{
Severity: hcl.DiagError,
Summary: "Invalid provider source hostname",
addrs: Stronger validation and normalization of provider namespace/type The provider FQN is becoming our primary identifier for a provider, so it's important that we are clear about the equality rules for these addresses and what characters are valid within them. We previously had a basic regex permitting ASCII letters and digits for validation and no normalization at all. We need to do at least case folding and UTF-8 normalization because these names will appear in file and directory names in case-insensitive filesystems and in repository names such as on GitHub. Since we're already using DNS-style normalization and validation rules for the hostname part, rather than defining an entirely new set of rules here we'll just treat the provider namespace and type as if they were single labels in a DNS name. Aside from some internal consistency, that also works out nicely because systems like GitHub use organization and repository names as part of hostnames (e.g. with GitHub Pages) and so tend to apply comparable constraints themselves. This introduces the possibility of names containing letters from alphabets other than the latin alphabet, and for latin letters with diacritics. That's consistent with our introduction of similar support for identifiers in the language in Terraform 0.12, and is intended to be more friendly to Terraform users throughout the world that might prefer to name their products using a different alphabet. This is also a further justification for using the DNS normalization rules: modern companies tend to choose product names that make good domain names, and now such names will be usable as Terraform provider names too.
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Detail: fmt.Sprintf(`Invalid provider source hostname namespace %q in source %q: %s"`, hn, str, err),
})
return Provider{}, diags
}
ret.Hostname = hn
}
addrs: Stronger validation and normalization of provider namespace/type The provider FQN is becoming our primary identifier for a provider, so it's important that we are clear about the equality rules for these addresses and what characters are valid within them. We previously had a basic regex permitting ASCII letters and digits for validation and no normalization at all. We need to do at least case folding and UTF-8 normalization because these names will appear in file and directory names in case-insensitive filesystems and in repository names such as on GitHub. Since we're already using DNS-style normalization and validation rules for the hostname part, rather than defining an entirely new set of rules here we'll just treat the provider namespace and type as if they were single labels in a DNS name. Aside from some internal consistency, that also works out nicely because systems like GitHub use organization and repository names as part of hostnames (e.g. with GitHub Pages) and so tend to apply comparable constraints themselves. This introduces the possibility of names containing letters from alphabets other than the latin alphabet, and for latin letters with diacritics. That's consistent with our introduction of similar support for identifiers in the language in Terraform 0.12, and is intended to be more friendly to Terraform users throughout the world that might prefer to name their products using a different alphabet. This is also a further justification for using the DNS normalization rules: modern companies tend to choose product names that make good domain names, and now such names will be usable as Terraform provider names too.
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if ret.Namespace == LegacyProviderNamespace && ret.Hostname != DefaultRegistryHost {
// Legacy provider addresses must always be on the default registry
// host, because the default registry host decides what actual FQN
// each one maps to.
diags = diags.Append(&hcl.Diagnostic{
Severity: hcl.DiagError,
Summary: "Invalid provider namespace",
Detail: "The legacy provider namespace \"-\" can be used only with hostname " + DefaultRegistryHost.ForDisplay() + ".",
})
return Provider{}, diags
}
// Due to how plugin executables are named and provider git repositories
// are conventionally named, it's a reasonable and
// apparently-somewhat-common user error to incorrectly use the
// "terraform-provider-" prefix in a provider source address. There is
// no good reason for a provider to have the prefix "terraform-" anyway,
// so we've made that invalid from the start both so we can give feedback
// to provider developers about the terraform- prefix being redundant
// and give specialized feedback to folks who incorrectly use the full
// terraform-provider- prefix to help them self-correct.
const redundantPrefix = "terraform-"
const userErrorPrefix = "terraform-provider-"
if strings.HasPrefix(ret.Type, redundantPrefix) {
if strings.HasPrefix(ret.Type, userErrorPrefix) {
// Likely user error. We only return this specialized error if
// whatever is after the prefix would otherwise be a
// syntactically-valid provider type, so we don't end up advising
// the user to try something that would be invalid for another
// reason anyway.
// (This is mainly just for robustness, because the validation
// we already did above should've rejected most/all ways for
// the suggestedType to end up invalid here.)
suggestedType := ret.Type[len(userErrorPrefix):]
if _, err := ParseProviderPart(suggestedType); err == nil {
suggestedAddr := ret
suggestedAddr.Type = suggestedType
diags = diags.Append(tfdiags.Sourceless(
tfdiags.Error,
"Invalid provider type",
fmt.Sprintf("Provider source %q has a type with the prefix %q, which isn't valid. Although that prefix is often used in the names of version control repositories for Terraform providers, provider source strings should not include it.\n\nDid you mean %q?", ret.ForDisplay(), userErrorPrefix, suggestedAddr.ForDisplay()),
))
return Provider{}, diags
}
}
// Otherwise, probably instead an incorrectly-named provider, perhaps
// arising from a similar instinct to what causes there to be
// thousands of Python packages on PyPI with "python-"-prefixed
// names.
diags = diags.Append(tfdiags.Sourceless(
tfdiags.Error,
"Invalid provider type",
fmt.Sprintf("Provider source %q has a type with the prefix %q, which isn't allowed because it would be redundant to name a Terraform provider with that prefix. If you are the author of this provider, rename it to not include the prefix.", ret, redundantPrefix),
))
return Provider{}, diags
}
return ret, diags
}
addrs: Stronger validation and normalization of provider namespace/type The provider FQN is becoming our primary identifier for a provider, so it's important that we are clear about the equality rules for these addresses and what characters are valid within them. We previously had a basic regex permitting ASCII letters and digits for validation and no normalization at all. We need to do at least case folding and UTF-8 normalization because these names will appear in file and directory names in case-insensitive filesystems and in repository names such as on GitHub. Since we're already using DNS-style normalization and validation rules for the hostname part, rather than defining an entirely new set of rules here we'll just treat the provider namespace and type as if they were single labels in a DNS name. Aside from some internal consistency, that also works out nicely because systems like GitHub use organization and repository names as part of hostnames (e.g. with GitHub Pages) and so tend to apply comparable constraints themselves. This introduces the possibility of names containing letters from alphabets other than the latin alphabet, and for latin letters with diacritics. That's consistent with our introduction of similar support for identifiers in the language in Terraform 0.12, and is intended to be more friendly to Terraform users throughout the world that might prefer to name their products using a different alphabet. This is also a further justification for using the DNS normalization rules: modern companies tend to choose product names that make good domain names, and now such names will be usable as Terraform provider names too.
2020-02-15 03:10:03 +01:00
// MustParseProviderSourceString is a wrapper around ParseProviderSourceString that panics if
// it returns an error.
func MustParseProviderSourceString(str string) Provider {
result, diags := ParseProviderSourceString(str)
if diags.HasErrors() {
panic(diags.Err().Error())
}
return result
}
addrs: Stronger validation and normalization of provider namespace/type The provider FQN is becoming our primary identifier for a provider, so it's important that we are clear about the equality rules for these addresses and what characters are valid within them. We previously had a basic regex permitting ASCII letters and digits for validation and no normalization at all. We need to do at least case folding and UTF-8 normalization because these names will appear in file and directory names in case-insensitive filesystems and in repository names such as on GitHub. Since we're already using DNS-style normalization and validation rules for the hostname part, rather than defining an entirely new set of rules here we'll just treat the provider namespace and type as if they were single labels in a DNS name. Aside from some internal consistency, that also works out nicely because systems like GitHub use organization and repository names as part of hostnames (e.g. with GitHub Pages) and so tend to apply comparable constraints themselves. This introduces the possibility of names containing letters from alphabets other than the latin alphabet, and for latin letters with diacritics. That's consistent with our introduction of similar support for identifiers in the language in Terraform 0.12, and is intended to be more friendly to Terraform users throughout the world that might prefer to name their products using a different alphabet. This is also a further justification for using the DNS normalization rules: modern companies tend to choose product names that make good domain names, and now such names will be usable as Terraform provider names too.
2020-02-15 03:10:03 +01:00
// ParseProviderPart processes an addrs.Provider namespace or type string
// provided by an end-user, producing a normalized version if possible or
// an error if the string contains invalid characters.
//
// A provider part is processed in the same way as an individual label in a DNS
// domain name: it is transformed to lowercase per the usual DNS case mapping
// and normalization rules and may contain only letters, digits, and dashes.
// Additionally, dashes may not appear at the start or end of the string.
//
// These restrictions are intended to allow these names to appear in fussy
// contexts such as directory/file names on case-insensitive filesystems,
// repository names on GitHub, etc. We're using the DNS rules in particular,
// rather than some similar rules defined locally, because the hostname part
// of an addrs.Provider is already a hostname and it's ideal to use exactly
// the same case folding and normalization rules for all of the parts.
//
// In practice a provider type string conventionally does not contain dashes
// either. Such names are permitted, but providers with such type names will be
// hard to use because their resource type names will not be able to contain
// the provider type name and thus each resource will need an explicit provider
// address specified. (A real-world example of such a provider is the
// "google-beta" variant of the GCP provider, which has resource types that
// start with the "google_" prefix instead.)
//
// It's valid to pass the result of this function as the argument to a
// subsequent call, in which case the result will be identical.
func ParseProviderPart(given string) (string, error) {
if len(given) == 0 {
return "", fmt.Errorf("must have at least one character")
}
// We're going to process the given name using the same "IDNA" library we
// use for the hostname portion, since it already implements the case
// folding rules we want.
//
// The idna library doesn't expose individual label parsing directly, but
// once we've verified it doesn't contain any dots we can just treat it
// like a top-level domain for this library's purposes.
if strings.ContainsRune(given, '.') {
return "", fmt.Errorf("dots are not allowed")
}
// We don't allow names containing multiple consecutive dashes, just as
// a matter of preference: they look weird, confusing, or incorrect.
// This also, as a side-effect, prevents the use of the "punycode"
// indicator prefix "xn--" that would cause the IDNA library to interpret
// the given name as punycode, because that would be weird and unexpected.
if strings.Contains(given, "--") {
return "", fmt.Errorf("cannot use multiple consecutive dashes")
}
result, err := idna.Lookup.ToUnicode(given)
if err != nil {
return "", fmt.Errorf("must contain only letters, digits, and dashes, and may not use leading or trailing dashes")
}
return result, nil
}
// MustParseProviderPart is a wrapper around ParseProviderPart that panics if
// it returns an error.
func MustParseProviderPart(given string) string {
result, err := ParseProviderPart(given)
if err != nil {
panic(err.Error())
}
return result
}
// IsProviderPartNormalized compares a given string to the result of ParseProviderPart(string)
func IsProviderPartNormalized(str string) (bool, error) {
normalized, err := ParseProviderPart(str)
if err != nil {
return false, err
}
if str == normalized {
return true, nil
}
return false, nil
}