terraform/command/jsonplan/plan.go

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package jsonplan
import (
"encoding/json"
"fmt"
"sort"
"github.com/zclconf/go-cty/cty"
ctyjson "github.com/zclconf/go-cty/cty/json"
"github.com/hashicorp/terraform/addrs"
"github.com/hashicorp/terraform/command/jsonconfig"
"github.com/hashicorp/terraform/command/jsonstate"
"github.com/hashicorp/terraform/configs"
"github.com/hashicorp/terraform/plans"
"github.com/hashicorp/terraform/states"
"github.com/hashicorp/terraform/states/statefile"
"github.com/hashicorp/terraform/terraform"
"github.com/hashicorp/terraform/version"
)
// FormatVersion represents the version of the json format and will be
// incremented for any change to this format that requires changes to a
// consuming parser.
const FormatVersion = "0.1"
// Plan is the top-level representation of the json format of a plan. It includes
// the complete config and current state.
type plan struct {
FormatVersion string `json:"format_version,omitempty"`
TerraformVersion string `json:"terraform_version,omitempty"`
Variables variables `json:"variables,omitempty"`
PlannedValues stateValues `json:"planned_values,omitempty"`
// ResourceDrift and ResourceChanges are sorted in a user-friendly order
// that is undefined at this time, but consistent.
ResourceDrift []resourceChange `json:"resource_drift,omitempty"`
ResourceChanges []resourceChange `json:"resource_changes,omitempty"`
OutputChanges map[string]change `json:"output_changes,omitempty"`
PriorState json.RawMessage `json:"prior_state,omitempty"`
Config json.RawMessage `json:"configuration,omitempty"`
}
func newPlan() *plan {
return &plan{
FormatVersion: FormatVersion,
}
}
// Change is the representation of a proposed change for an object.
type change struct {
// Actions are the actions that will be taken on the object selected by the
// properties below. Valid actions values are:
// ["no-op"]
// ["create"]
// ["read"]
// ["update"]
// ["delete", "create"]
// ["create", "delete"]
// ["delete"]
// The two "replace" actions are represented in this way to allow callers to
// e.g. just scan the list for "delete" to recognize all three situations
// where the object will be deleted, allowing for any new deletion
// combinations that might be added in future.
Actions []string `json:"actions,omitempty"`
// Before and After are representations of the object value both before and
// after the action. For ["create"] and ["delete"] actions, either "before"
// or "after" is unset (respectively). For ["no-op"], the before and after
// values are identical. The "after" value will be incomplete if there are
// values within it that won't be known until after apply.
Before json.RawMessage `json:"before,omitempty"`
After json.RawMessage `json:"after,omitempty"`
// AfterUnknown is an object value with similar structure to After, but
// with all unknown leaf values replaced with true, and all known leaf
// values omitted. This can be combined with After to reconstruct a full
// value after the action, including values which will only be known after
// apply.
AfterUnknown json.RawMessage `json:"after_unknown,omitempty"`
// BeforeSensitive and AfterSensitive are object values with similar
// structure to Before and After, but with all sensitive leaf values
// replaced with true, and all non-sensitive leaf values omitted. These
// objects should be combined with Before and After to prevent accidental
// display of sensitive values in user interfaces.
BeforeSensitive json.RawMessage `json:"before_sensitive,omitempty"`
AfterSensitive json.RawMessage `json:"after_sensitive,omitempty"`
// ReplacePaths is an array of arrays representing a set of paths into the
// object value which resulted in the action being "replace". This will be
// omitted if the action is not replace, or if no paths caused the
// replacement (for example, if the resource was tainted). Each path
// consists of one or more steps, each of which will be a number or a
// string.
ReplacePaths json.RawMessage `json:"replace_paths,omitempty"`
}
type output struct {
Sensitive bool `json:"sensitive"`
Value json.RawMessage `json:"value,omitempty"`
}
// variables is the JSON representation of the variables provided to the current
// plan.
type variables map[string]*variable
type variable struct {
Value json.RawMessage `json:"value,omitempty"`
}
// Marshal returns the json encoding of a terraform plan.
func Marshal(
config *configs.Config,
p *plans.Plan,
sf *statefile.File,
schemas *terraform.Schemas,
) ([]byte, error) {
output := newPlan()
output.TerraformVersion = version.String()
err := output.marshalPlanVariables(p.VariableValues, schemas)
if err != nil {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("error in marshalPlanVariables: %s", err)
}
// output.PlannedValues
err = output.marshalPlannedValues(p.Changes, schemas)
if err != nil {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("error in marshalPlannedValues: %s", err)
}
// output.ResourceDrift
err = output.marshalResourceDrift(p.PrevRunState, p.PriorState, schemas)
if err != nil {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("error in marshalResourceDrift: %s", err)
}
// output.ResourceChanges
err = output.marshalResourceChanges(p.Changes, schemas)
if err != nil {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("error in marshalResourceChanges: %s", err)
}
// output.OutputChanges
err = output.marshalOutputChanges(p.Changes)
if err != nil {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("error in marshaling output changes: %s", err)
}
// output.PriorState
if sf != nil && !sf.State.Empty() {
output.PriorState, err = jsonstate.Marshal(sf, schemas)
if err != nil {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("error marshaling prior state: %s", err)
}
}
// output.Config
output.Config, err = jsonconfig.Marshal(config, schemas)
if err != nil {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("error marshaling config: %s", err)
}
ret, err := json.Marshal(output)
return ret, err
}
func (p *plan) marshalPlanVariables(vars map[string]plans.DynamicValue, schemas *terraform.Schemas) error {
if len(vars) == 0 {
return nil
}
p.Variables = make(variables, len(vars))
for k, v := range vars {
val, err := v.Decode(cty.DynamicPseudoType)
if err != nil {
return err
}
valJSON, err := ctyjson.Marshal(val, val.Type())
if err != nil {
return err
}
p.Variables[k] = &variable{
Value: valJSON,
}
}
return nil
}
func (p *plan) marshalResourceDrift(oldState, newState *states.State, schemas *terraform.Schemas) error {
// Our goal here is to build a data structure of the same shape as we use
// to describe planned resource changes, but in this case we'll be
// taking the old and new values from different state snapshots rather
// than from a real "Changes" object.
//
// In doing this we make an assumption that drift detection can only
// ever show objects as updated or removed, and will never show anything
// as created because we only refresh objects we were already tracking
// after the previous run. This means we can use oldState as our baseline
// for what resource instances we might include, and check for each item
// whether it's present in newState. If we ever have some mechanism to
// detect "additive drift" later then we'll need to take a different
// approach here, but we have no plans for that at the time of writing.
//
// We also assume that both states have had all managed resource objects
// upgraded to match the current schemas given in schemas, so we shouldn't
// need to contend with oldState having old-shaped objects even if the
// user changed provider versions since the last run.
if newState.ManagedResourcesEqual(oldState) {
// Nothing to do, because we only detect and report drift for managed
// resource instances.
return nil
}
for _, ms := range oldState.Modules {
for _, rs := range ms.Resources {
if rs.Addr.Resource.Mode != addrs.ManagedResourceMode {
// Drift reporting is only for managed resources
continue
}
provider := rs.ProviderConfig.Provider
for key, oldIS := range rs.Instances {
if oldIS.Current == nil {
// Not interested in instances that only have deposed objects
continue
}
addr := rs.Addr.Instance(key)
newIS := newState.ResourceInstance(addr)
schema, _ := schemas.ResourceTypeConfig(
provider,
addr.Resource.Resource.Mode,
addr.Resource.Resource.Type,
)
if schema == nil {
return fmt.Errorf("no schema found for %s (in provider %s)", addr, provider)
}
ty := schema.ImpliedType()
oldObj, err := oldIS.Current.Decode(ty)
if err != nil {
return fmt.Errorf("failed to decode previous run data for %s: %s", addr, err)
}
var newObj *states.ResourceInstanceObject
if newIS != nil && newIS.Current != nil {
newObj, err = newIS.Current.Decode(ty)
if err != nil {
return fmt.Errorf("failed to decode refreshed data for %s: %s", addr, err)
}
}
var oldVal, newVal cty.Value
oldVal = oldObj.Value
if newObj != nil {
newVal = newObj.Value
} else {
newVal = cty.NullVal(ty)
}
oldSensitive := sensitiveAsBool(oldVal)
newSensitive := sensitiveAsBool(newVal)
oldVal, _ = oldVal.UnmarkDeep()
newVal, _ = newVal.UnmarkDeep()
var before, after []byte
var beforeSensitive, afterSensitive []byte
before, err = ctyjson.Marshal(oldVal, oldVal.Type())
if err != nil {
return fmt.Errorf("failed to encode previous run data for %s as JSON: %s", addr, err)
}
after, err = ctyjson.Marshal(newVal, oldVal.Type())
if err != nil {
return fmt.Errorf("failed to encode refreshed data for %s as JSON: %s", addr, err)
}
beforeSensitive, err = ctyjson.Marshal(oldSensitive, oldSensitive.Type())
if err != nil {
return fmt.Errorf("failed to encode previous run data sensitivity for %s as JSON: %s", addr, err)
}
afterSensitive, err = ctyjson.Marshal(newSensitive, newSensitive.Type())
if err != nil {
return fmt.Errorf("failed to encode refreshed data sensitivity for %s as JSON: %s", addr, err)
}
// We can only detect updates and deletes as drift.
action := plans.Update
if newVal.IsNull() {
action = plans.Delete
}
change := resourceChange{
ModuleAddress: addr.Module.String(),
Mode: "managed", // drift reporting is only for managed resources
Name: addr.Resource.Resource.Name,
Type: addr.Resource.Resource.Type,
ProviderName: provider.String(),
Change: change{
Actions: actionString(action.String()),
Before: json.RawMessage(before),
BeforeSensitive: json.RawMessage(beforeSensitive),
After: json.RawMessage(after),
AfterSensitive: json.RawMessage(afterSensitive),
// AfterUnknown is never populated here because
// values in a state are always fully known.
},
}
p.ResourceDrift = append(p.ResourceDrift, change)
}
}
}
sort.Slice(p.ResourceChanges, func(i, j int) bool {
return p.ResourceChanges[i].Address < p.ResourceChanges[j].Address
})
return nil
}
func (p *plan) marshalResourceChanges(changes *plans.Changes, schemas *terraform.Schemas) error {
if changes == nil {
// Nothing to do!
return nil
}
for _, rc := range changes.Resources {
var r resourceChange
addr := rc.Addr
r.Address = addr.String()
dataSource := addr.Resource.Resource.Mode == addrs.DataResourceMode
// We create "delete" actions for data resources so we can clean up
// their entries in state, but this is an implementation detail that
// users shouldn't see.
if dataSource && rc.Action == plans.Delete {
continue
}
schema, _ := schemas.ResourceTypeConfig(
rc.ProviderAddr.Provider,
addr.Resource.Resource.Mode,
addr.Resource.Resource.Type,
)
if schema == nil {
return fmt.Errorf("no schema found for %s (in provider %s)", r.Address, rc.ProviderAddr.Provider)
}
changeV, err := rc.Decode(schema.ImpliedType())
if err != nil {
return err
}
// We drop the marks from the change, as decoding is only an
// intermediate step to re-encode the values as json
changeV.Before, _ = changeV.Before.UnmarkDeep()
changeV.After, _ = changeV.After.UnmarkDeep()
var before, after []byte
var beforeSensitive, afterSensitive []byte
mildwonkey/b-show-state (#20032) * command/show: properly marshal attribute values to json marshalAttributeValues in jsonstate and jsonplan packages was returning a cty.Value, which json/encoding could not marshal. These functions now convert those cty.Values into json.RawMessages. * command/jsonplan: planned values should include resources that are not changing * command/jsonplan: return a filtered list of proposed 'after' attributes Previously, proposed 'after' attributes were not being shown if the attributes were not WhollyKnown. jsonplan now iterates through all the `after` attributes, omitting those which are not wholly known. The same was roughly true for after_unknown, and that structure is now correctly populated. In the future we may choose to filter the after_unknown structure to _only_ display unknown attributes, instead of all attributes. * command/jsonconfig: use a unique key for providers so that aliased providers don't get munged together This now uses the same "provider" key from configs.Module, e.g. `providername.provideralias`. * command/jsonplan: unknownAsBool needs to iterate through objects that are not wholly known * command/jsonplan: properly display actions as strings according to the RFC, instead of a plans.Action string. For example: a plans.Action string DeleteThenCreate should be displayed as ["delete", "create"] Tests have been updated to reflect this. * command/jsonplan: return "null" for unknown list items. The length of a list could be meaningful on its own, so we will turn unknowns into "null". The same is less likely true for maps and objects, so we will continue to omit unknown values from those.
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var afterUnknown cty.Value
if changeV.Before != cty.NilVal {
before, err = ctyjson.Marshal(changeV.Before, changeV.Before.Type())
if err != nil {
return err
}
marks := rc.BeforeValMarks
if schema.ContainsSensitive() {
marks = append(marks, schema.ValueMarks(changeV.Before, nil)...)
}
bs := sensitiveAsBool(changeV.Before.MarkWithPaths(marks))
beforeSensitive, err = ctyjson.Marshal(bs, bs.Type())
if err != nil {
return err
}
}
if changeV.After != cty.NilVal {
if changeV.After.IsWhollyKnown() {
after, err = ctyjson.Marshal(changeV.After, changeV.After.Type())
if err != nil {
return err
}
afterUnknown = cty.EmptyObjectVal
mildwonkey/b-show-state (#20032) * command/show: properly marshal attribute values to json marshalAttributeValues in jsonstate and jsonplan packages was returning a cty.Value, which json/encoding could not marshal. These functions now convert those cty.Values into json.RawMessages. * command/jsonplan: planned values should include resources that are not changing * command/jsonplan: return a filtered list of proposed 'after' attributes Previously, proposed 'after' attributes were not being shown if the attributes were not WhollyKnown. jsonplan now iterates through all the `after` attributes, omitting those which are not wholly known. The same was roughly true for after_unknown, and that structure is now correctly populated. In the future we may choose to filter the after_unknown structure to _only_ display unknown attributes, instead of all attributes. * command/jsonconfig: use a unique key for providers so that aliased providers don't get munged together This now uses the same "provider" key from configs.Module, e.g. `providername.provideralias`. * command/jsonplan: unknownAsBool needs to iterate through objects that are not wholly known * command/jsonplan: properly display actions as strings according to the RFC, instead of a plans.Action string. For example: a plans.Action string DeleteThenCreate should be displayed as ["delete", "create"] Tests have been updated to reflect this. * command/jsonplan: return "null" for unknown list items. The length of a list could be meaningful on its own, so we will turn unknowns into "null". The same is less likely true for maps and objects, so we will continue to omit unknown values from those.
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} else {
filteredAfter := omitUnknowns(changeV.After)
if filteredAfter.IsNull() {
after = nil
} else {
after, err = ctyjson.Marshal(filteredAfter, filteredAfter.Type())
if err != nil {
return err
}
mildwonkey/b-show-state (#20032) * command/show: properly marshal attribute values to json marshalAttributeValues in jsonstate and jsonplan packages was returning a cty.Value, which json/encoding could not marshal. These functions now convert those cty.Values into json.RawMessages. * command/jsonplan: planned values should include resources that are not changing * command/jsonplan: return a filtered list of proposed 'after' attributes Previously, proposed 'after' attributes were not being shown if the attributes were not WhollyKnown. jsonplan now iterates through all the `after` attributes, omitting those which are not wholly known. The same was roughly true for after_unknown, and that structure is now correctly populated. In the future we may choose to filter the after_unknown structure to _only_ display unknown attributes, instead of all attributes. * command/jsonconfig: use a unique key for providers so that aliased providers don't get munged together This now uses the same "provider" key from configs.Module, e.g. `providername.provideralias`. * command/jsonplan: unknownAsBool needs to iterate through objects that are not wholly known * command/jsonplan: properly display actions as strings according to the RFC, instead of a plans.Action string. For example: a plans.Action string DeleteThenCreate should be displayed as ["delete", "create"] Tests have been updated to reflect this. * command/jsonplan: return "null" for unknown list items. The length of a list could be meaningful on its own, so we will turn unknowns into "null". The same is less likely true for maps and objects, so we will continue to omit unknown values from those.
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}
afterUnknown = unknownAsBool(changeV.After)
}
marks := rc.AfterValMarks
if schema.ContainsSensitive() {
marks = append(marks, schema.ValueMarks(changeV.After, nil)...)
}
as := sensitiveAsBool(changeV.After.MarkWithPaths(marks))
afterSensitive, err = ctyjson.Marshal(as, as.Type())
if err != nil {
return err
}
mildwonkey/b-show-state (#20032) * command/show: properly marshal attribute values to json marshalAttributeValues in jsonstate and jsonplan packages was returning a cty.Value, which json/encoding could not marshal. These functions now convert those cty.Values into json.RawMessages. * command/jsonplan: planned values should include resources that are not changing * command/jsonplan: return a filtered list of proposed 'after' attributes Previously, proposed 'after' attributes were not being shown if the attributes were not WhollyKnown. jsonplan now iterates through all the `after` attributes, omitting those which are not wholly known. The same was roughly true for after_unknown, and that structure is now correctly populated. In the future we may choose to filter the after_unknown structure to _only_ display unknown attributes, instead of all attributes. * command/jsonconfig: use a unique key for providers so that aliased providers don't get munged together This now uses the same "provider" key from configs.Module, e.g. `providername.provideralias`. * command/jsonplan: unknownAsBool needs to iterate through objects that are not wholly known * command/jsonplan: properly display actions as strings according to the RFC, instead of a plans.Action string. For example: a plans.Action string DeleteThenCreate should be displayed as ["delete", "create"] Tests have been updated to reflect this. * command/jsonplan: return "null" for unknown list items. The length of a list could be meaningful on its own, so we will turn unknowns into "null". The same is less likely true for maps and objects, so we will continue to omit unknown values from those.
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}
mildwonkey/b-show-state (#20032) * command/show: properly marshal attribute values to json marshalAttributeValues in jsonstate and jsonplan packages was returning a cty.Value, which json/encoding could not marshal. These functions now convert those cty.Values into json.RawMessages. * command/jsonplan: planned values should include resources that are not changing * command/jsonplan: return a filtered list of proposed 'after' attributes Previously, proposed 'after' attributes were not being shown if the attributes were not WhollyKnown. jsonplan now iterates through all the `after` attributes, omitting those which are not wholly known. The same was roughly true for after_unknown, and that structure is now correctly populated. In the future we may choose to filter the after_unknown structure to _only_ display unknown attributes, instead of all attributes. * command/jsonconfig: use a unique key for providers so that aliased providers don't get munged together This now uses the same "provider" key from configs.Module, e.g. `providername.provideralias`. * command/jsonplan: unknownAsBool needs to iterate through objects that are not wholly known * command/jsonplan: properly display actions as strings according to the RFC, instead of a plans.Action string. For example: a plans.Action string DeleteThenCreate should be displayed as ["delete", "create"] Tests have been updated to reflect this. * command/jsonplan: return "null" for unknown list items. The length of a list could be meaningful on its own, so we will turn unknowns into "null". The same is less likely true for maps and objects, so we will continue to omit unknown values from those.
2019-01-23 20:46:53 +01:00
a, err := ctyjson.Marshal(afterUnknown, afterUnknown.Type())
if err != nil {
return err
}
replacePaths, err := encodePaths(rc.RequiredReplace)
if err != nil {
return err
}
r.Change = change{
Actions: actionString(rc.Action.String()),
Before: json.RawMessage(before),
After: json.RawMessage(after),
AfterUnknown: a,
BeforeSensitive: json.RawMessage(beforeSensitive),
AfterSensitive: json.RawMessage(afterSensitive),
ReplacePaths: replacePaths,
}
if rc.DeposedKey != states.NotDeposed {
r.Deposed = rc.DeposedKey.String()
}
key := addr.Resource.Key
if key != nil {
r.Index = key
}
switch addr.Resource.Resource.Mode {
case addrs.ManagedResourceMode:
r.Mode = "managed"
case addrs.DataResourceMode:
r.Mode = "data"
default:
return fmt.Errorf("resource %s has an unsupported mode %s", r.Address, addr.Resource.Resource.Mode.String())
}
r.ModuleAddress = addr.Module.String()
r.Name = addr.Resource.Resource.Name
r.Type = addr.Resource.Resource.Type
r.ProviderName = rc.ProviderAddr.Provider.String()
switch rc.ActionReason {
case plans.ResourceInstanceChangeNoReason:
r.ActionReason = "" // will be omitted in output
case plans.ResourceInstanceReplaceBecauseCannotUpdate:
r.ActionReason = "replace_because_cannot_update"
case plans.ResourceInstanceReplaceBecauseTainted:
r.ActionReason = "replace_because_tainted"
case plans.ResourceInstanceReplaceByRequest:
r.ActionReason = "replace_by_request"
default:
return fmt.Errorf("resource %s has an unsupported action reason %s", r.Address, rc.ActionReason)
}
p.ResourceChanges = append(p.ResourceChanges, r)
}
sort.Slice(p.ResourceChanges, func(i, j int) bool {
return p.ResourceChanges[i].Address < p.ResourceChanges[j].Address
})
return nil
}
func (p *plan) marshalOutputChanges(changes *plans.Changes) error {
if changes == nil {
// Nothing to do!
return nil
}
p.OutputChanges = make(map[string]change, len(changes.Outputs))
for _, oc := range changes.Outputs {
changeV, err := oc.Decode()
if err != nil {
return err
}
// We drop the marks from the change, as decoding is only an
// intermediate step to re-encode the values as json
changeV.Before, _ = changeV.Before.UnmarkDeep()
changeV.After, _ = changeV.After.UnmarkDeep()
var before, after []byte
afterUnknown := cty.False
if changeV.Before != cty.NilVal {
before, err = ctyjson.Marshal(changeV.Before, changeV.Before.Type())
if err != nil {
return err
}
}
if changeV.After != cty.NilVal {
if changeV.After.IsWhollyKnown() {
after, err = ctyjson.Marshal(changeV.After, changeV.After.Type())
if err != nil {
return err
}
} else {
afterUnknown = cty.True
}
}
// The only information we have in the plan about output sensitivity is
// a boolean which is true if the output was or is marked sensitive. As
// a result, BeforeSensitive and AfterSensitive will be identical, and
// either false or true.
outputSensitive := cty.False
if oc.Sensitive {
outputSensitive = cty.True
}
sensitive, err := ctyjson.Marshal(outputSensitive, outputSensitive.Type())
if err != nil {
return err
}
a, _ := ctyjson.Marshal(afterUnknown, afterUnknown.Type())
c := change{
Actions: actionString(oc.Action.String()),
Before: json.RawMessage(before),
After: json.RawMessage(after),
AfterUnknown: a,
BeforeSensitive: json.RawMessage(sensitive),
AfterSensitive: json.RawMessage(sensitive),
}
p.OutputChanges[oc.Addr.OutputValue.Name] = c
}
return nil
}
func (p *plan) marshalPlannedValues(changes *plans.Changes, schemas *terraform.Schemas) error {
// marshal the planned changes into a module
plan, err := marshalPlannedValues(changes, schemas)
if err != nil {
return err
}
p.PlannedValues.RootModule = plan
// marshalPlannedOutputs
outputs, err := marshalPlannedOutputs(changes)
if err != nil {
return err
}
p.PlannedValues.Outputs = outputs
return nil
}
mildwonkey/b-show-state (#20032) * command/show: properly marshal attribute values to json marshalAttributeValues in jsonstate and jsonplan packages was returning a cty.Value, which json/encoding could not marshal. These functions now convert those cty.Values into json.RawMessages. * command/jsonplan: planned values should include resources that are not changing * command/jsonplan: return a filtered list of proposed 'after' attributes Previously, proposed 'after' attributes were not being shown if the attributes were not WhollyKnown. jsonplan now iterates through all the `after` attributes, omitting those which are not wholly known. The same was roughly true for after_unknown, and that structure is now correctly populated. In the future we may choose to filter the after_unknown structure to _only_ display unknown attributes, instead of all attributes. * command/jsonconfig: use a unique key for providers so that aliased providers don't get munged together This now uses the same "provider" key from configs.Module, e.g. `providername.provideralias`. * command/jsonplan: unknownAsBool needs to iterate through objects that are not wholly known * command/jsonplan: properly display actions as strings according to the RFC, instead of a plans.Action string. For example: a plans.Action string DeleteThenCreate should be displayed as ["delete", "create"] Tests have been updated to reflect this. * command/jsonplan: return "null" for unknown list items. The length of a list could be meaningful on its own, so we will turn unknowns into "null". The same is less likely true for maps and objects, so we will continue to omit unknown values from those.
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// omitUnknowns recursively walks the src cty.Value and returns a new cty.Value,
// omitting any unknowns.
command/jsonplan: Don't panic with mixtures of known/unknown/empty The omitUnknowns and unknownAsBool functions were previously trying hard to preserve the same collection types in the output as they had in the input, by attempting to keep everything matched up so that the results would be valid. Unfortunately, this turns out to be a harder problem than we originally thought: it was possible for a collection value going in to produce inconsistent element types out (and thus a panic) in the following situations: - when a collection with mixed known and unknown values was passed in to omitUnknowns. - when a collection of collections where the inner collections are a mixture of empty and not empty in unknownAsNull. The results of these functions are only used to marshal to JSON anyway, and JSON serialization can't distinguish between the three sequence types or the two mapping types, so in practice we can just standardize on converting all sequences to tuple and all mappings to object here and not change the resulting output at all, and then we don't have to worry about making sure all of the inner types get preserved exactly. A nice consequence of that relaxation is that we can now do what we originally wanted to do with unknownAsBool, and omit map keys and object attributes altogether if their values would've been false, producing a much more compact result. This is easiest to do now when there's only one known user of this JSON plan output, and we know that user will treat both false and omitted as the same here.
2019-05-25 01:30:58 +02:00
//
// The result also normalizes some types: all sequence types are turned into
// tuple types and all mapping types are converted to object types, since we
// assume the result of this is just going to be serialized as JSON (and thus
// lose those distinctions) anyway.
mildwonkey/b-show-state (#20032) * command/show: properly marshal attribute values to json marshalAttributeValues in jsonstate and jsonplan packages was returning a cty.Value, which json/encoding could not marshal. These functions now convert those cty.Values into json.RawMessages. * command/jsonplan: planned values should include resources that are not changing * command/jsonplan: return a filtered list of proposed 'after' attributes Previously, proposed 'after' attributes were not being shown if the attributes were not WhollyKnown. jsonplan now iterates through all the `after` attributes, omitting those which are not wholly known. The same was roughly true for after_unknown, and that structure is now correctly populated. In the future we may choose to filter the after_unknown structure to _only_ display unknown attributes, instead of all attributes. * command/jsonconfig: use a unique key for providers so that aliased providers don't get munged together This now uses the same "provider" key from configs.Module, e.g. `providername.provideralias`. * command/jsonplan: unknownAsBool needs to iterate through objects that are not wholly known * command/jsonplan: properly display actions as strings according to the RFC, instead of a plans.Action string. For example: a plans.Action string DeleteThenCreate should be displayed as ["delete", "create"] Tests have been updated to reflect this. * command/jsonplan: return "null" for unknown list items. The length of a list could be meaningful on its own, so we will turn unknowns into "null". The same is less likely true for maps and objects, so we will continue to omit unknown values from those.
2019-01-23 20:46:53 +01:00
func omitUnknowns(val cty.Value) cty.Value {
ty := val.Type()
switch {
case val.IsNull():
return val
case !val.IsKnown():
return cty.NilVal
command/jsonplan: Don't panic with mixtures of known/unknown/empty The omitUnknowns and unknownAsBool functions were previously trying hard to preserve the same collection types in the output as they had in the input, by attempting to keep everything matched up so that the results would be valid. Unfortunately, this turns out to be a harder problem than we originally thought: it was possible for a collection value going in to produce inconsistent element types out (and thus a panic) in the following situations: - when a collection with mixed known and unknown values was passed in to omitUnknowns. - when a collection of collections where the inner collections are a mixture of empty and not empty in unknownAsNull. The results of these functions are only used to marshal to JSON anyway, and JSON serialization can't distinguish between the three sequence types or the two mapping types, so in practice we can just standardize on converting all sequences to tuple and all mappings to object here and not change the resulting output at all, and then we don't have to worry about making sure all of the inner types get preserved exactly. A nice consequence of that relaxation is that we can now do what we originally wanted to do with unknownAsBool, and omit map keys and object attributes altogether if their values would've been false, producing a much more compact result. This is easiest to do now when there's only one known user of this JSON plan output, and we know that user will treat both false and omitted as the same here.
2019-05-25 01:30:58 +02:00
case ty.IsPrimitiveType():
return val
mildwonkey/b-show-state (#20032) * command/show: properly marshal attribute values to json marshalAttributeValues in jsonstate and jsonplan packages was returning a cty.Value, which json/encoding could not marshal. These functions now convert those cty.Values into json.RawMessages. * command/jsonplan: planned values should include resources that are not changing * command/jsonplan: return a filtered list of proposed 'after' attributes Previously, proposed 'after' attributes were not being shown if the attributes were not WhollyKnown. jsonplan now iterates through all the `after` attributes, omitting those which are not wholly known. The same was roughly true for after_unknown, and that structure is now correctly populated. In the future we may choose to filter the after_unknown structure to _only_ display unknown attributes, instead of all attributes. * command/jsonconfig: use a unique key for providers so that aliased providers don't get munged together This now uses the same "provider" key from configs.Module, e.g. `providername.provideralias`. * command/jsonplan: unknownAsBool needs to iterate through objects that are not wholly known * command/jsonplan: properly display actions as strings according to the RFC, instead of a plans.Action string. For example: a plans.Action string DeleteThenCreate should be displayed as ["delete", "create"] Tests have been updated to reflect this. * command/jsonplan: return "null" for unknown list items. The length of a list could be meaningful on its own, so we will turn unknowns into "null". The same is less likely true for maps and objects, so we will continue to omit unknown values from those.
2019-01-23 20:46:53 +01:00
case ty.IsListType() || ty.IsTupleType() || ty.IsSetType():
var vals []cty.Value
it := val.ElementIterator()
for it.Next() {
_, v := it.Element()
newVal := omitUnknowns(v)
if newVal != cty.NilVal {
vals = append(vals, newVal)
} else if newVal == cty.NilVal && ty.IsListType() {
// list length may be significant, so we will turn unknowns into nulls
vals = append(vals, cty.NullVal(v.Type()))
}
}
command/jsonplan: Don't panic with mixtures of known/unknown/empty The omitUnknowns and unknownAsBool functions were previously trying hard to preserve the same collection types in the output as they had in the input, by attempting to keep everything matched up so that the results would be valid. Unfortunately, this turns out to be a harder problem than we originally thought: it was possible for a collection value going in to produce inconsistent element types out (and thus a panic) in the following situations: - when a collection with mixed known and unknown values was passed in to omitUnknowns. - when a collection of collections where the inner collections are a mixture of empty and not empty in unknownAsNull. The results of these functions are only used to marshal to JSON anyway, and JSON serialization can't distinguish between the three sequence types or the two mapping types, so in practice we can just standardize on converting all sequences to tuple and all mappings to object here and not change the resulting output at all, and then we don't have to worry about making sure all of the inner types get preserved exactly. A nice consequence of that relaxation is that we can now do what we originally wanted to do with unknownAsBool, and omit map keys and object attributes altogether if their values would've been false, producing a much more compact result. This is easiest to do now when there's only one known user of this JSON plan output, and we know that user will treat both false and omitted as the same here.
2019-05-25 01:30:58 +02:00
// We use tuple types always here, because the work we did above
// may have caused the individual elements to have different types,
// and we're doing this work to produce JSON anyway and JSON marshalling
// represents all of these sequence types as an array.
return cty.TupleVal(vals)
mildwonkey/b-show-state (#20032) * command/show: properly marshal attribute values to json marshalAttributeValues in jsonstate and jsonplan packages was returning a cty.Value, which json/encoding could not marshal. These functions now convert those cty.Values into json.RawMessages. * command/jsonplan: planned values should include resources that are not changing * command/jsonplan: return a filtered list of proposed 'after' attributes Previously, proposed 'after' attributes were not being shown if the attributes were not WhollyKnown. jsonplan now iterates through all the `after` attributes, omitting those which are not wholly known. The same was roughly true for after_unknown, and that structure is now correctly populated. In the future we may choose to filter the after_unknown structure to _only_ display unknown attributes, instead of all attributes. * command/jsonconfig: use a unique key for providers so that aliased providers don't get munged together This now uses the same "provider" key from configs.Module, e.g. `providername.provideralias`. * command/jsonplan: unknownAsBool needs to iterate through objects that are not wholly known * command/jsonplan: properly display actions as strings according to the RFC, instead of a plans.Action string. For example: a plans.Action string DeleteThenCreate should be displayed as ["delete", "create"] Tests have been updated to reflect this. * command/jsonplan: return "null" for unknown list items. The length of a list could be meaningful on its own, so we will turn unknowns into "null". The same is less likely true for maps and objects, so we will continue to omit unknown values from those.
2019-01-23 20:46:53 +01:00
case ty.IsMapType() || ty.IsObjectType():
vals := make(map[string]cty.Value)
it := val.ElementIterator()
for it.Next() {
k, v := it.Element()
newVal := omitUnknowns(v)
if newVal != cty.NilVal {
vals[k.AsString()] = newVal
}
}
command/jsonplan: Don't panic with mixtures of known/unknown/empty The omitUnknowns and unknownAsBool functions were previously trying hard to preserve the same collection types in the output as they had in the input, by attempting to keep everything matched up so that the results would be valid. Unfortunately, this turns out to be a harder problem than we originally thought: it was possible for a collection value going in to produce inconsistent element types out (and thus a panic) in the following situations: - when a collection with mixed known and unknown values was passed in to omitUnknowns. - when a collection of collections where the inner collections are a mixture of empty and not empty in unknownAsNull. The results of these functions are only used to marshal to JSON anyway, and JSON serialization can't distinguish between the three sequence types or the two mapping types, so in practice we can just standardize on converting all sequences to tuple and all mappings to object here and not change the resulting output at all, and then we don't have to worry about making sure all of the inner types get preserved exactly. A nice consequence of that relaxation is that we can now do what we originally wanted to do with unknownAsBool, and omit map keys and object attributes altogether if their values would've been false, producing a much more compact result. This is easiest to do now when there's only one known user of this JSON plan output, and we know that user will treat both false and omitted as the same here.
2019-05-25 01:30:58 +02:00
// We use object types always here, because the work we did above
// may have caused the individual elements to have different types,
// and we're doing this work to produce JSON anyway and JSON marshalling
// represents both of these mapping types as an object.
return cty.ObjectVal(vals)
default:
// Should never happen, since the above should cover all types
panic(fmt.Sprintf("omitUnknowns cannot handle %#v", val))
mildwonkey/b-show-state (#20032) * command/show: properly marshal attribute values to json marshalAttributeValues in jsonstate and jsonplan packages was returning a cty.Value, which json/encoding could not marshal. These functions now convert those cty.Values into json.RawMessages. * command/jsonplan: planned values should include resources that are not changing * command/jsonplan: return a filtered list of proposed 'after' attributes Previously, proposed 'after' attributes were not being shown if the attributes were not WhollyKnown. jsonplan now iterates through all the `after` attributes, omitting those which are not wholly known. The same was roughly true for after_unknown, and that structure is now correctly populated. In the future we may choose to filter the after_unknown structure to _only_ display unknown attributes, instead of all attributes. * command/jsonconfig: use a unique key for providers so that aliased providers don't get munged together This now uses the same "provider" key from configs.Module, e.g. `providername.provideralias`. * command/jsonplan: unknownAsBool needs to iterate through objects that are not wholly known * command/jsonplan: properly display actions as strings according to the RFC, instead of a plans.Action string. For example: a plans.Action string DeleteThenCreate should be displayed as ["delete", "create"] Tests have been updated to reflect this. * command/jsonplan: return "null" for unknown list items. The length of a list could be meaningful on its own, so we will turn unknowns into "null". The same is less likely true for maps and objects, so we will continue to omit unknown values from those.
2019-01-23 20:46:53 +01:00
}
}
command/jsonplan: Don't panic with mixtures of known/unknown/empty The omitUnknowns and unknownAsBool functions were previously trying hard to preserve the same collection types in the output as they had in the input, by attempting to keep everything matched up so that the results would be valid. Unfortunately, this turns out to be a harder problem than we originally thought: it was possible for a collection value going in to produce inconsistent element types out (and thus a panic) in the following situations: - when a collection with mixed known and unknown values was passed in to omitUnknowns. - when a collection of collections where the inner collections are a mixture of empty and not empty in unknownAsNull. The results of these functions are only used to marshal to JSON anyway, and JSON serialization can't distinguish between the three sequence types or the two mapping types, so in practice we can just standardize on converting all sequences to tuple and all mappings to object here and not change the resulting output at all, and then we don't have to worry about making sure all of the inner types get preserved exactly. A nice consequence of that relaxation is that we can now do what we originally wanted to do with unknownAsBool, and omit map keys and object attributes altogether if their values would've been false, producing a much more compact result. This is easiest to do now when there's only one known user of this JSON plan output, and we know that user will treat both false and omitted as the same here.
2019-05-25 01:30:58 +02:00
// recursively iterate through a cty.Value, replacing unknown values (including
// null) with cty.True and known values with cty.False.
mildwonkey/b-show-state (#20032) * command/show: properly marshal attribute values to json marshalAttributeValues in jsonstate and jsonplan packages was returning a cty.Value, which json/encoding could not marshal. These functions now convert those cty.Values into json.RawMessages. * command/jsonplan: planned values should include resources that are not changing * command/jsonplan: return a filtered list of proposed 'after' attributes Previously, proposed 'after' attributes were not being shown if the attributes were not WhollyKnown. jsonplan now iterates through all the `after` attributes, omitting those which are not wholly known. The same was roughly true for after_unknown, and that structure is now correctly populated. In the future we may choose to filter the after_unknown structure to _only_ display unknown attributes, instead of all attributes. * command/jsonconfig: use a unique key for providers so that aliased providers don't get munged together This now uses the same "provider" key from configs.Module, e.g. `providername.provideralias`. * command/jsonplan: unknownAsBool needs to iterate through objects that are not wholly known * command/jsonplan: properly display actions as strings according to the RFC, instead of a plans.Action string. For example: a plans.Action string DeleteThenCreate should be displayed as ["delete", "create"] Tests have been updated to reflect this. * command/jsonplan: return "null" for unknown list items. The length of a list could be meaningful on its own, so we will turn unknowns into "null". The same is less likely true for maps and objects, so we will continue to omit unknown values from those.
2019-01-23 20:46:53 +01:00
//
command/jsonplan: Don't panic with mixtures of known/unknown/empty The omitUnknowns and unknownAsBool functions were previously trying hard to preserve the same collection types in the output as they had in the input, by attempting to keep everything matched up so that the results would be valid. Unfortunately, this turns out to be a harder problem than we originally thought: it was possible for a collection value going in to produce inconsistent element types out (and thus a panic) in the following situations: - when a collection with mixed known and unknown values was passed in to omitUnknowns. - when a collection of collections where the inner collections are a mixture of empty and not empty in unknownAsNull. The results of these functions are only used to marshal to JSON anyway, and JSON serialization can't distinguish between the three sequence types or the two mapping types, so in practice we can just standardize on converting all sequences to tuple and all mappings to object here and not change the resulting output at all, and then we don't have to worry about making sure all of the inner types get preserved exactly. A nice consequence of that relaxation is that we can now do what we originally wanted to do with unknownAsBool, and omit map keys and object attributes altogether if their values would've been false, producing a much more compact result. This is easiest to do now when there's only one known user of this JSON plan output, and we know that user will treat both false and omitted as the same here.
2019-05-25 01:30:58 +02:00
// The result also normalizes some types: all sequence types are turned into
// tuple types and all mapping types are converted to object types, since we
// assume the result of this is just going to be serialized as JSON (and thus
// lose those distinctions) anyway.
//
// For map/object values, all known attribute values will be omitted instead of
// returning false, as this results in a more compact serialization.
mildwonkey/b-show-state (#20032) * command/show: properly marshal attribute values to json marshalAttributeValues in jsonstate and jsonplan packages was returning a cty.Value, which json/encoding could not marshal. These functions now convert those cty.Values into json.RawMessages. * command/jsonplan: planned values should include resources that are not changing * command/jsonplan: return a filtered list of proposed 'after' attributes Previously, proposed 'after' attributes were not being shown if the attributes were not WhollyKnown. jsonplan now iterates through all the `after` attributes, omitting those which are not wholly known. The same was roughly true for after_unknown, and that structure is now correctly populated. In the future we may choose to filter the after_unknown structure to _only_ display unknown attributes, instead of all attributes. * command/jsonconfig: use a unique key for providers so that aliased providers don't get munged together This now uses the same "provider" key from configs.Module, e.g. `providername.provideralias`. * command/jsonplan: unknownAsBool needs to iterate through objects that are not wholly known * command/jsonplan: properly display actions as strings according to the RFC, instead of a plans.Action string. For example: a plans.Action string DeleteThenCreate should be displayed as ["delete", "create"] Tests have been updated to reflect this. * command/jsonplan: return "null" for unknown list items. The length of a list could be meaningful on its own, so we will turn unknowns into "null". The same is less likely true for maps and objects, so we will continue to omit unknown values from those.
2019-01-23 20:46:53 +01:00
func unknownAsBool(val cty.Value) cty.Value {
ty := val.Type()
switch {
case val.IsNull():
return cty.False
case !val.IsKnown():
if ty.IsPrimitiveType() || ty.Equals(cty.DynamicPseudoType) {
return cty.True
}
fallthrough
case ty.IsPrimitiveType():
return cty.BoolVal(!val.IsKnown())
case ty.IsListType() || ty.IsTupleType() || ty.IsSetType():
length := val.LengthInt()
if length == 0 {
// If there are no elements then we can't have unknowns
command/jsonplan: Don't panic with mixtures of known/unknown/empty The omitUnknowns and unknownAsBool functions were previously trying hard to preserve the same collection types in the output as they had in the input, by attempting to keep everything matched up so that the results would be valid. Unfortunately, this turns out to be a harder problem than we originally thought: it was possible for a collection value going in to produce inconsistent element types out (and thus a panic) in the following situations: - when a collection with mixed known and unknown values was passed in to omitUnknowns. - when a collection of collections where the inner collections are a mixture of empty and not empty in unknownAsNull. The results of these functions are only used to marshal to JSON anyway, and JSON serialization can't distinguish between the three sequence types or the two mapping types, so in practice we can just standardize on converting all sequences to tuple and all mappings to object here and not change the resulting output at all, and then we don't have to worry about making sure all of the inner types get preserved exactly. A nice consequence of that relaxation is that we can now do what we originally wanted to do with unknownAsBool, and omit map keys and object attributes altogether if their values would've been false, producing a much more compact result. This is easiest to do now when there's only one known user of this JSON plan output, and we know that user will treat both false and omitted as the same here.
2019-05-25 01:30:58 +02:00
return cty.EmptyTupleVal
mildwonkey/b-show-state (#20032) * command/show: properly marshal attribute values to json marshalAttributeValues in jsonstate and jsonplan packages was returning a cty.Value, which json/encoding could not marshal. These functions now convert those cty.Values into json.RawMessages. * command/jsonplan: planned values should include resources that are not changing * command/jsonplan: return a filtered list of proposed 'after' attributes Previously, proposed 'after' attributes were not being shown if the attributes were not WhollyKnown. jsonplan now iterates through all the `after` attributes, omitting those which are not wholly known. The same was roughly true for after_unknown, and that structure is now correctly populated. In the future we may choose to filter the after_unknown structure to _only_ display unknown attributes, instead of all attributes. * command/jsonconfig: use a unique key for providers so that aliased providers don't get munged together This now uses the same "provider" key from configs.Module, e.g. `providername.provideralias`. * command/jsonplan: unknownAsBool needs to iterate through objects that are not wholly known * command/jsonplan: properly display actions as strings according to the RFC, instead of a plans.Action string. For example: a plans.Action string DeleteThenCreate should be displayed as ["delete", "create"] Tests have been updated to reflect this. * command/jsonplan: return "null" for unknown list items. The length of a list could be meaningful on its own, so we will turn unknowns into "null". The same is less likely true for maps and objects, so we will continue to omit unknown values from those.
2019-01-23 20:46:53 +01:00
}
vals := make([]cty.Value, 0, length)
it := val.ElementIterator()
for it.Next() {
_, v := it.Element()
vals = append(vals, unknownAsBool(v))
}
command/jsonplan: Don't panic with mixtures of known/unknown/empty The omitUnknowns and unknownAsBool functions were previously trying hard to preserve the same collection types in the output as they had in the input, by attempting to keep everything matched up so that the results would be valid. Unfortunately, this turns out to be a harder problem than we originally thought: it was possible for a collection value going in to produce inconsistent element types out (and thus a panic) in the following situations: - when a collection with mixed known and unknown values was passed in to omitUnknowns. - when a collection of collections where the inner collections are a mixture of empty and not empty in unknownAsNull. The results of these functions are only used to marshal to JSON anyway, and JSON serialization can't distinguish between the three sequence types or the two mapping types, so in practice we can just standardize on converting all sequences to tuple and all mappings to object here and not change the resulting output at all, and then we don't have to worry about making sure all of the inner types get preserved exactly. A nice consequence of that relaxation is that we can now do what we originally wanted to do with unknownAsBool, and omit map keys and object attributes altogether if their values would've been false, producing a much more compact result. This is easiest to do now when there's only one known user of this JSON plan output, and we know that user will treat both false and omitted as the same here.
2019-05-25 01:30:58 +02:00
// The above transform may have changed the types of some of the
// elements, so we'll always use a tuple here in case we've now made
// different elements have different types. Our ultimate goal is to
// marshal to JSON anyway, and all of these sequence types are
// indistinguishable in JSON.
return cty.TupleVal(vals)
mildwonkey/b-show-state (#20032) * command/show: properly marshal attribute values to json marshalAttributeValues in jsonstate and jsonplan packages was returning a cty.Value, which json/encoding could not marshal. These functions now convert those cty.Values into json.RawMessages. * command/jsonplan: planned values should include resources that are not changing * command/jsonplan: return a filtered list of proposed 'after' attributes Previously, proposed 'after' attributes were not being shown if the attributes were not WhollyKnown. jsonplan now iterates through all the `after` attributes, omitting those which are not wholly known. The same was roughly true for after_unknown, and that structure is now correctly populated. In the future we may choose to filter the after_unknown structure to _only_ display unknown attributes, instead of all attributes. * command/jsonconfig: use a unique key for providers so that aliased providers don't get munged together This now uses the same "provider" key from configs.Module, e.g. `providername.provideralias`. * command/jsonplan: unknownAsBool needs to iterate through objects that are not wholly known * command/jsonplan: properly display actions as strings according to the RFC, instead of a plans.Action string. For example: a plans.Action string DeleteThenCreate should be displayed as ["delete", "create"] Tests have been updated to reflect this. * command/jsonplan: return "null" for unknown list items. The length of a list could be meaningful on its own, so we will turn unknowns into "null". The same is less likely true for maps and objects, so we will continue to omit unknown values from those.
2019-01-23 20:46:53 +01:00
case ty.IsMapType() || ty.IsObjectType():
var length int
switch {
case ty.IsMapType():
length = val.LengthInt()
default:
length = len(val.Type().AttributeTypes())
}
if length == 0 {
// If there are no elements then we can't have unknowns
command/jsonplan: Don't panic with mixtures of known/unknown/empty The omitUnknowns and unknownAsBool functions were previously trying hard to preserve the same collection types in the output as they had in the input, by attempting to keep everything matched up so that the results would be valid. Unfortunately, this turns out to be a harder problem than we originally thought: it was possible for a collection value going in to produce inconsistent element types out (and thus a panic) in the following situations: - when a collection with mixed known and unknown values was passed in to omitUnknowns. - when a collection of collections where the inner collections are a mixture of empty and not empty in unknownAsNull. The results of these functions are only used to marshal to JSON anyway, and JSON serialization can't distinguish between the three sequence types or the two mapping types, so in practice we can just standardize on converting all sequences to tuple and all mappings to object here and not change the resulting output at all, and then we don't have to worry about making sure all of the inner types get preserved exactly. A nice consequence of that relaxation is that we can now do what we originally wanted to do with unknownAsBool, and omit map keys and object attributes altogether if their values would've been false, producing a much more compact result. This is easiest to do now when there's only one known user of this JSON plan output, and we know that user will treat both false and omitted as the same here.
2019-05-25 01:30:58 +02:00
return cty.EmptyObjectVal
mildwonkey/b-show-state (#20032) * command/show: properly marshal attribute values to json marshalAttributeValues in jsonstate and jsonplan packages was returning a cty.Value, which json/encoding could not marshal. These functions now convert those cty.Values into json.RawMessages. * command/jsonplan: planned values should include resources that are not changing * command/jsonplan: return a filtered list of proposed 'after' attributes Previously, proposed 'after' attributes were not being shown if the attributes were not WhollyKnown. jsonplan now iterates through all the `after` attributes, omitting those which are not wholly known. The same was roughly true for after_unknown, and that structure is now correctly populated. In the future we may choose to filter the after_unknown structure to _only_ display unknown attributes, instead of all attributes. * command/jsonconfig: use a unique key for providers so that aliased providers don't get munged together This now uses the same "provider" key from configs.Module, e.g. `providername.provideralias`. * command/jsonplan: unknownAsBool needs to iterate through objects that are not wholly known * command/jsonplan: properly display actions as strings according to the RFC, instead of a plans.Action string. For example: a plans.Action string DeleteThenCreate should be displayed as ["delete", "create"] Tests have been updated to reflect this. * command/jsonplan: return "null" for unknown list items. The length of a list could be meaningful on its own, so we will turn unknowns into "null". The same is less likely true for maps and objects, so we will continue to omit unknown values from those.
2019-01-23 20:46:53 +01:00
}
vals := make(map[string]cty.Value)
it := val.ElementIterator()
for it.Next() {
k, v := it.Element()
command/jsonplan: Don't panic with mixtures of known/unknown/empty The omitUnknowns and unknownAsBool functions were previously trying hard to preserve the same collection types in the output as they had in the input, by attempting to keep everything matched up so that the results would be valid. Unfortunately, this turns out to be a harder problem than we originally thought: it was possible for a collection value going in to produce inconsistent element types out (and thus a panic) in the following situations: - when a collection with mixed known and unknown values was passed in to omitUnknowns. - when a collection of collections where the inner collections are a mixture of empty and not empty in unknownAsNull. The results of these functions are only used to marshal to JSON anyway, and JSON serialization can't distinguish between the three sequence types or the two mapping types, so in practice we can just standardize on converting all sequences to tuple and all mappings to object here and not change the resulting output at all, and then we don't have to worry about making sure all of the inner types get preserved exactly. A nice consequence of that relaxation is that we can now do what we originally wanted to do with unknownAsBool, and omit map keys and object attributes altogether if their values would've been false, producing a much more compact result. This is easiest to do now when there's only one known user of this JSON plan output, and we know that user will treat both false and omitted as the same here.
2019-05-25 01:30:58 +02:00
vAsBool := unknownAsBool(v)
// Omit all of the "false"s for known values for more compact
// serialization
if !vAsBool.RawEquals(cty.False) {
command/jsonplan: Don't panic with mixtures of known/unknown/empty The omitUnknowns and unknownAsBool functions were previously trying hard to preserve the same collection types in the output as they had in the input, by attempting to keep everything matched up so that the results would be valid. Unfortunately, this turns out to be a harder problem than we originally thought: it was possible for a collection value going in to produce inconsistent element types out (and thus a panic) in the following situations: - when a collection with mixed known and unknown values was passed in to omitUnknowns. - when a collection of collections where the inner collections are a mixture of empty and not empty in unknownAsNull. The results of these functions are only used to marshal to JSON anyway, and JSON serialization can't distinguish between the three sequence types or the two mapping types, so in practice we can just standardize on converting all sequences to tuple and all mappings to object here and not change the resulting output at all, and then we don't have to worry about making sure all of the inner types get preserved exactly. A nice consequence of that relaxation is that we can now do what we originally wanted to do with unknownAsBool, and omit map keys and object attributes altogether if their values would've been false, producing a much more compact result. This is easiest to do now when there's only one known user of this JSON plan output, and we know that user will treat both false and omitted as the same here.
2019-05-25 01:30:58 +02:00
vals[k.AsString()] = unknownAsBool(v)
}
mildwonkey/b-show-state (#20032) * command/show: properly marshal attribute values to json marshalAttributeValues in jsonstate and jsonplan packages was returning a cty.Value, which json/encoding could not marshal. These functions now convert those cty.Values into json.RawMessages. * command/jsonplan: planned values should include resources that are not changing * command/jsonplan: return a filtered list of proposed 'after' attributes Previously, proposed 'after' attributes were not being shown if the attributes were not WhollyKnown. jsonplan now iterates through all the `after` attributes, omitting those which are not wholly known. The same was roughly true for after_unknown, and that structure is now correctly populated. In the future we may choose to filter the after_unknown structure to _only_ display unknown attributes, instead of all attributes. * command/jsonconfig: use a unique key for providers so that aliased providers don't get munged together This now uses the same "provider" key from configs.Module, e.g. `providername.provideralias`. * command/jsonplan: unknownAsBool needs to iterate through objects that are not wholly known * command/jsonplan: properly display actions as strings according to the RFC, instead of a plans.Action string. For example: a plans.Action string DeleteThenCreate should be displayed as ["delete", "create"] Tests have been updated to reflect this. * command/jsonplan: return "null" for unknown list items. The length of a list could be meaningful on its own, so we will turn unknowns into "null". The same is less likely true for maps and objects, so we will continue to omit unknown values from those.
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}
command/jsonplan: Don't panic with mixtures of known/unknown/empty The omitUnknowns and unknownAsBool functions were previously trying hard to preserve the same collection types in the output as they had in the input, by attempting to keep everything matched up so that the results would be valid. Unfortunately, this turns out to be a harder problem than we originally thought: it was possible for a collection value going in to produce inconsistent element types out (and thus a panic) in the following situations: - when a collection with mixed known and unknown values was passed in to omitUnknowns. - when a collection of collections where the inner collections are a mixture of empty and not empty in unknownAsNull. The results of these functions are only used to marshal to JSON anyway, and JSON serialization can't distinguish between the three sequence types or the two mapping types, so in practice we can just standardize on converting all sequences to tuple and all mappings to object here and not change the resulting output at all, and then we don't have to worry about making sure all of the inner types get preserved exactly. A nice consequence of that relaxation is that we can now do what we originally wanted to do with unknownAsBool, and omit map keys and object attributes altogether if their values would've been false, producing a much more compact result. This is easiest to do now when there's only one known user of this JSON plan output, and we know that user will treat both false and omitted as the same here.
2019-05-25 01:30:58 +02:00
// The above transform may have changed the types of some of the
// elements, so we'll always use an object here in case we've now made
// different elements have different types. Our ultimate goal is to
// marshal to JSON anyway, and all of these mapping types are
// indistinguishable in JSON.
return cty.ObjectVal(vals)
default:
// Should never happen, since the above should cover all types
panic(fmt.Sprintf("unknownAsBool cannot handle %#v", val))
mildwonkey/b-show-state (#20032) * command/show: properly marshal attribute values to json marshalAttributeValues in jsonstate and jsonplan packages was returning a cty.Value, which json/encoding could not marshal. These functions now convert those cty.Values into json.RawMessages. * command/jsonplan: planned values should include resources that are not changing * command/jsonplan: return a filtered list of proposed 'after' attributes Previously, proposed 'after' attributes were not being shown if the attributes were not WhollyKnown. jsonplan now iterates through all the `after` attributes, omitting those which are not wholly known. The same was roughly true for after_unknown, and that structure is now correctly populated. In the future we may choose to filter the after_unknown structure to _only_ display unknown attributes, instead of all attributes. * command/jsonconfig: use a unique key for providers so that aliased providers don't get munged together This now uses the same "provider" key from configs.Module, e.g. `providername.provideralias`. * command/jsonplan: unknownAsBool needs to iterate through objects that are not wholly known * command/jsonplan: properly display actions as strings according to the RFC, instead of a plans.Action string. For example: a plans.Action string DeleteThenCreate should be displayed as ["delete", "create"] Tests have been updated to reflect this. * command/jsonplan: return "null" for unknown list items. The length of a list could be meaningful on its own, so we will turn unknowns into "null". The same is less likely true for maps and objects, so we will continue to omit unknown values from those.
2019-01-23 20:46:53 +01:00
}
}
// recursively iterate through a marked cty.Value, replacing sensitive values
// with cty.True and non-sensitive values with cty.False.
//
// The result also normalizes some types: all sequence types are turned into
// tuple types and all mapping types are converted to object types, since we
// assume the result of this is just going to be serialized as JSON (and thus
// lose those distinctions) anyway.
//
// For map/object values, all non-sensitive attribute values will be omitted
// instead of returning false, as this results in a more compact serialization.
func sensitiveAsBool(val cty.Value) cty.Value {
if val.HasMark("sensitive") {
return cty.True
}
ty := val.Type()
switch {
case val.IsNull(), ty.IsPrimitiveType(), ty.Equals(cty.DynamicPseudoType):
return cty.False
case ty.IsListType() || ty.IsTupleType() || ty.IsSetType():
if !val.IsKnown() {
// If the collection is unknown we can't say anything about the
// sensitivity of its contents
return cty.EmptyTupleVal
}
length := val.LengthInt()
if length == 0 {
// If there are no elements then we can't have sensitive values
return cty.EmptyTupleVal
}
vals := make([]cty.Value, 0, length)
it := val.ElementIterator()
for it.Next() {
_, v := it.Element()
vals = append(vals, sensitiveAsBool(v))
}
// The above transform may have changed the types of some of the
// elements, so we'll always use a tuple here in case we've now made
// different elements have different types. Our ultimate goal is to
// marshal to JSON anyway, and all of these sequence types are
// indistinguishable in JSON.
return cty.TupleVal(vals)
case ty.IsMapType() || ty.IsObjectType():
if !val.IsKnown() {
// If the map/object is unknown we can't say anything about the
// sensitivity of its attributes
return cty.EmptyObjectVal
}
var length int
switch {
case ty.IsMapType():
length = val.LengthInt()
default:
length = len(val.Type().AttributeTypes())
}
if length == 0 {
// If there are no elements then we can't have sensitive values
return cty.EmptyObjectVal
}
vals := make(map[string]cty.Value)
it := val.ElementIterator()
for it.Next() {
k, v := it.Element()
s := sensitiveAsBool(v)
// Omit all of the "false"s for non-sensitive values for more
// compact serialization
if !s.RawEquals(cty.False) {
vals[k.AsString()] = s
}
}
// The above transform may have changed the types of some of the
// elements, so we'll always use an object here in case we've now made
// different elements have different types. Our ultimate goal is to
// marshal to JSON anyway, and all of these mapping types are
// indistinguishable in JSON.
return cty.ObjectVal(vals)
default:
// Should never happen, since the above should cover all types
panic(fmt.Sprintf("sensitiveAsBool cannot handle %#v", val))
}
}
mildwonkey/b-show-state (#20032) * command/show: properly marshal attribute values to json marshalAttributeValues in jsonstate and jsonplan packages was returning a cty.Value, which json/encoding could not marshal. These functions now convert those cty.Values into json.RawMessages. * command/jsonplan: planned values should include resources that are not changing * command/jsonplan: return a filtered list of proposed 'after' attributes Previously, proposed 'after' attributes were not being shown if the attributes were not WhollyKnown. jsonplan now iterates through all the `after` attributes, omitting those which are not wholly known. The same was roughly true for after_unknown, and that structure is now correctly populated. In the future we may choose to filter the after_unknown structure to _only_ display unknown attributes, instead of all attributes. * command/jsonconfig: use a unique key for providers so that aliased providers don't get munged together This now uses the same "provider" key from configs.Module, e.g. `providername.provideralias`. * command/jsonplan: unknownAsBool needs to iterate through objects that are not wholly known * command/jsonplan: properly display actions as strings according to the RFC, instead of a plans.Action string. For example: a plans.Action string DeleteThenCreate should be displayed as ["delete", "create"] Tests have been updated to reflect this. * command/jsonplan: return "null" for unknown list items. The length of a list could be meaningful on its own, so we will turn unknowns into "null". The same is less likely true for maps and objects, so we will continue to omit unknown values from those.
2019-01-23 20:46:53 +01:00
func actionString(action string) []string {
switch {
case action == "NoOp":
return []string{"no-op"}
case action == "Create":
return []string{"create"}
case action == "Delete":
return []string{"delete"}
case action == "Update":
return []string{"update"}
case action == "CreateThenDelete":
return []string{"create", "delete"}
case action == "Read":
return []string{"read"}
case action == "DeleteThenCreate":
return []string{"delete", "create"}
default:
return []string{action}
}
}
// encodePaths lossily encodes a cty.PathSet into an array of arrays of step
// values, such as:
//
// [["length"],["triggers",0,"value"]]
//
// The lossiness is that we cannot distinguish between an IndexStep with string
// key and a GetAttr step. This is fine with JSON output, because JSON's type
// system means that those two steps are equivalent anyway: both are object
// indexes.
//
// JavaScript (or similar dynamic language) consumers of these values can
// recursively apply the steps to a given object using an index operation for
// each step.
func encodePaths(pathSet cty.PathSet) (json.RawMessage, error) {
if pathSet.Empty() {
return nil, nil
}
pathList := pathSet.List()
jsonPaths := make([]json.RawMessage, 0, len(pathList))
for _, path := range pathList {
steps := make([]json.RawMessage, 0, len(path))
for _, step := range path {
switch s := step.(type) {
case cty.IndexStep:
key, err := ctyjson.Marshal(s.Key, s.Key.Type())
if err != nil {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("Failed to marshal index step key %#v: %s", s.Key, err)
}
steps = append(steps, key)
case cty.GetAttrStep:
name, err := json.Marshal(s.Name)
if err != nil {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("Failed to marshal get attr step name %#v: %s", s.Name, err)
}
steps = append(steps, name)
default:
return nil, fmt.Errorf("Unsupported path step %#v (%t)", step, step)
}
}
jsonPath, err := json.Marshal(steps)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
jsonPaths = append(jsonPaths, jsonPath)
}
return json.Marshal(jsonPaths)
}