* Skip IAM/STS validation and metadata check
* Skip IAM/STS identity validation - For environments or other api
implementations where there are no IAM/STS endpoints available, this
option lets you opt out from that provider initialization step.
* Skip metdata api check - For environments in which you know ahead of
time there isn't going to be a metadta api endpoint, this option lets
you opt out from that check to save time.
* Allow iam/sts initialization even if skipping account/cred validation
(#7874)
* Split out skip of IAM validation into credentials and account id
(#7874)
We conditionally format version with VersionPrerelease in a number of
places. Add a package-level function where we can unify the version
format. Replace most of version formatting in terraform, but leave th
few instances set from the top-level package to make sure we don't break
anything before release.
Rearrange client setup, and remove the extraneous log lines we make per
connection. There's no need to log one line per API client - we're just
setting up structs for most of them.
Since this collapses the file down quite a bit, switch to alphabetized
client setup, since previously there wasn't much of an order to things.
* Add SES resource
* Detect ReceiptRule deletion outside of Terraform
* Handle order of rule actions
* Add position field to docs
* Fix hashes, add log messages, and other small cleanup
* Fix rebase issue
* Fix formatting
* CloudFront implementation v3
* Update tests
* Refactor - new resource: aws_cloudfront_distribution
* Includes a complete re-write of the old aws_cloudfront_web_distribution
resource to bring it to feature parity with API and CloudFormation.
* Also includes the aws_cloudfront_origin_access_identity resource to generate
origin access identities for use with S3.
This should be quite helpful in debugging aws-sdk-go operations.
Required some tweaking around the `helper/logging` functions to expose an
`IsDebugOrHigher()` helper for us to use.
This adds support for Elastic Beanstalk Applications, Configuration Templates,
and Environments.
This is a combined work of @catsby, @dharrisio, @Bowbaq, and @jen20
This allows specification of the profile for the shared credentials
provider for AWS to be specified in Terraform configuration. This is
useful if defining providers with aliases, or if you don't want to set
environment variables. Example:
$ aws configure --profile this_is_dog
... enter keys
$ cat main.tf
provider "aws" {
profile = "this_is_dog"
# Optionally also specify the path to the credentials file
shared_credentials_file = "/tmp/credentials"
}
This is equivalent to specifying AWS_PROFILE or
AWS_SHARED_CREDENTIALS_FILE in the environment.