Now that init can take a directory for configuration, the old behavior
of writing the .terraform data directory into the target path no longer
makes sense. Don't change the dataDir field during init, and write to
the default location.
Clean up all references to Meta.dataDir, and only use the getter method
in case we chose to dynamically override this at some point.
Move the Swift State from a legacy remote state to an official backend.
Add `container` and `archive_container` configuration variables, and deprecate `path` and `archive_path` variables.
Future improvements: Add support for locking and environments.
Now when -upgrade is provided to "terraform init" (and plugin installation
isn't disabled) it will:
- ignore the contents of the auto-install plugin directory when deciding
what is "available", thus causing anything there to be reinstalled,
possibly at a newer version.
- if installation completes successfully, purge from the auto-install
plugin directory any plugin-looking files that aren't in the set of
chosen plugins.
As before, plugins outside of the auto-install directory are able to
take precedence over the auto-install ones, and these will never be
upgraded nor purged.
The thinking here is that the auto-install directory is an implementation
detail directly managed by Terraform, and so it's Terraform's
responsibility to automatically keep it clean as plugins are upgraded.
We don't yet have the -plugin-dir option implemented, but once it is it
should circumvent all of this behavior and just expect providers to be
already available in the given directory, meaning that nothing will be
auto-installed, -upgraded or -purged.
Previously we had a "getProvider" function type used to implement plugin
fetching. Here we replace that with an interface type, initially with
just a "Get" function.
For now this just simplifies the interface by allowing the target
directory and protocol version to be members of the struct rather than
passed as arguments.
A later change will extend this interface to also include a method to
purge unused plugins, so that upgrading frequently doesn't leave behind
a trail of unused executable files.
As of this commit this just upgrades modules, but this option will also
later upgrade plugins and indeed anything else that's being downloaded and
installed as part of the init.
* initial commit - 101-vm-from-user-image
* changed branch name
* not deploying - storage problems
* provisions vm but image not properly prepared
* storage not correct
* provisions properly
* changed main.tf to azuredeploy.tf
* added tfvars and info for README
* tfvars ignored and corrected file ext
* added CI config; added sane defaults for variables; updated deployment script, added mac specific deployment for local testing
* deploy.sh to be executable
* executable deploy files
* added CI files; changed vars
* prep for PR
* removal of old folder
* prep for PR
* wrong args for travis
* more PR prep
* updated README
* commented out variables in terraform.tfvars
* Topic 101 vm from user image (#2)
* initial commit - 101-vm-from-user-image
* added tfvars and info for README
* added CI config; added sane defaults for variables; updated deployment script, added mac specific deployment for local testing
* prep for PR
* added new template
* oops, left off master
* prep for PR
* correct repository for destination
* renamed scripts to be more intuitive; added check for docker
* merge vm simple; vm from image
* initial commit
* deploys locally
* updated deploy
* consolidated deploy and after_deploy into a single script; simplified ci process; added os_profile_linux_config
* added terraform show
* changed to allow http & https (like ARM tmplt)
* changed host_name & host_name variable desc
* added az cli check
* on this branch, only build test_dir; master will aggregate all the examples
* merge master
* added new constructs/naming for deploy scripts, etc.
* suppress az login output
* suppress az login output
* forgot about line breaks
* breaking build as an example
* fixing broken build example
* merge of CI config
* fixed grammar in readme
* prep for PR
* took out armviz button and minor README changes
* changed host_name
* fixed merge conflicts
* changed host_name variable
* updating Hashicorp's changes to merged simple linux branch
* updating files to merge w/master and prep for Hashicorp pr
* Revert "updating files to merge w/master and prep for Hashicorp pr"
This reverts commit b850cd5d2a858eff073fc5a1097a6813d0f8b362.
* Revert "updating Hashicorp's changes to merged simple linux branch"
This reverts commit dbaf8d14a9cdfcef0281919671357f6171ebd4e6.
* removing vm from user image example from this branch
* removed old branch
* azure-2-vms-loadbalancer-lbrules (#13)
* initial commit
* need to change lb_rule & nic
* deploys locally
* updated README
* updated travis and deploy scripts for Hari's repo
* renamed deploy script
* clean up
* prep for PR
* updated readme
* fixing conflict in .travis.yml
* initial commit; in progress
* in progress
* in progress; encryption fails
* in progress
* deploys successfully locally
* clean up; deploy typo fixed
* merging hashi master into this branch
* troubleshooting deploy
* added missing vars to deploy script
* updated README, outputs, and added graph
* simplified outputs
* provisions locally
* cleaned up vars
* fixed chart on README
* prepping for pr
* fixed merge conflict
* initial commit
* provisions locally; but azuremysql.sh script fails
* commented out provider
* commenting out provider vars
* tf fmt / uncommented Ext - will fail
* testing other examples
* changed os version for script compatability; changed command
* removed ssh from output (no nsg)
* changed travis to test only this topic's dir
* added nsg
* testing encrypt-running-linux
* fixed IPs and validation
* cleanup merge conflicts
* updated validation cmd; reverted non-topic ci changes
* reverting to Hashicorp's .travis.yml
* removing return line
* returned return lines to travis.yml
* return lines
* return lines
* travis
Since there is little left that isn't core, remove the distinction for
now to reduce confusion, since a "core" binary will mostly work except
for provisioners.
All providers moved to new repos.
Added README, which also serves to preserve the directory in git in
cacse we want to add select providers back into core (e.g. null,
template, test)
* Update ISSUE_TEMPLATE
Update ISSUE_TEMPLATE to direct people to new split providers
* Create ISSUE_TEMPLATE.md
More loud
* Update ISSUE_TEMPLATE.md
* Create ISSUE_TEMPLATE.md
* Create ISSUE_TEMPLATE.md
moved to the top
Some initial notes on the core/provider split for those following along with commits.
More elaborate documentation will follow as the 0.10 release gets closer.
We are replacing this terminology. The old command continues to work for
compatibility, but is deprecated. The docs should reflect the
currently-recommended form.
We're shifting terminology from "environment" to "workspace". This takes
care of some of the main internal API surface that was using the old
terminology, though is not intended to be entirely comprehensive and is
mainly just to minimize the amount of confusion for maintainers as we
continue moving towards eliminating the old terminology.
We are moving away from using the term "environment" to describe separate
named states for a single config, using "workspace" instead. The old
attribute name remains supported for backward compatibility, but is
marked as deprecated.
As part of our terminology shift, the interpolation variable for the name
of the current workspace changes to terraform.workspace. The old name
continues to be supported for compatibility.
We can't generate a deprecation warning from here so for now we'll just
silently accept terraform.env as an alias, but not mention it at all in
the error message in the hope that its use phases out over time before we
actually remove it.
Previously we just silently ignored warnings from validating the backend
config, but now that we have a deprecated argument it's important to print
these out so users can respond to the deprecation warning.
Feedback after 0.9 was that the term "environment" was confusing due to
it colliding with several other concepts, such as OS environment
variables, a non-aligned Terraform Enterprise concept, and differing ideas
of "environment" within various organizations.
This new term "workspace" is intended to ease some of that confusion. This
term is not used anywhere else in Terraform today, and we expect it to not
be used in a manner that would be confusing within user organizations.
This begins a deprecation cycle for the "terraform env" family of commands,
instead moving to an equivalent set of "terraform workspace" commands.
There are some remaining references to the old "environment" concept in
the code, which will be cleaned up in a separate change. This change is
instead focused on text visible in the UI and wording within code comments
for the benefit of human maintainers of the code.