In c244e5a6 this resource was converted to a data source, but that was
a mistake since data sources are expected to produce stable results on
each run, and yet certificate requests contain a random nonce as part of
the signature.
Additionally, using the data source as a managed resource through the
provided compatibility shim was not actually working, since "Read" was
trying to parse the private key out of a SHA1 hash of the key, which is
what we place in state due to the StateFunc on that attribute.
By restoring this we restore Terraform's ability to produce all of the
parts of a basic PKI/CA, which is useful for creating dev environments
and bootstrapping PKI for production environments.
This resource (unlike the others in this provider) isn't stateful, so it
is a good candidate to be a data source.
The old resource form is preserved via the standard shim in helper/schema,
which will generate a deprecation warning but will still allow the
resource to be used.
This commit forward ports the changes made for 0.6.17, in order to store
the type and sensitive flag against outputs.
It also refactors the logic of the import for V0 to V1 state, and
fixes up the call sites of the new format for outputs in V2 state.
Finally we fix up tests which did not previously set a state version
where one is required.
This commit adds the groundwork for supporting module outputs of types
other than string. In order to do so, the state version is increased
from 1 to 2 (though the "public-facing" state version is actually as the
first state file was binary).
Tests are added to ensure that V2 (1) state is upgraded to V3 (2) state,
though no separate read path is required since the V2 JSON will
unmarshal correctly into the V3 structure.
Outputs in a ModuleState are now of type map[string]interface{}, and a
test covers round-tripping string, []string and map[string]string, which
should cover all of the types in question.
Type switches have been added where necessary to deal with the
interface{} value, but they currently default to panicking when the input
is not a string.
In most cases private keys are used to produce certs and cert requests,
but there are some less-common cases where the PEM-formatted keypair is
used alone. The public_key_pem attribute supports such cases.
This also includes a public_key_openssh attribute, which allows this
resource to be used to generate temporary OpenSSH credentials, so that
e.g. a Terraform configuration could generate its own keypair to use
with the aws_key_pair resource. This has the same caveats as all cases
where we generate private keys in Terraform, but could be useful for
temporary/throwaway environments where the state either doesn't live for
long or is stored securely.
This builds on work started by Simarpreet Singh in #4441 .
As of this commit this provider has only logical resources that allow
the creation of private keys, self-signed certs and certificate requests.
These can be useful when creating other resources that use TLS
certificates, such as AWS Elastic Load Balancers.
Later it could grow to include support for real certificate provision from
CAs using the LetsEncrypt ACME protocol, once it is stable.