The flatmapped representation of state prior to this commit encoded maps
and lists (and therefore by extension, sets) with a key corresponding to
the number of elements, or the unknown variable indicator under a .# key
and then individual items. For example, the list ["a", "b", "c"] would
have been encoded as:
listname.# = 3
listname.0 = "a"
listname.1 = "b"
listname.2 = "c"
And the map {"key1": "value1", "key2", "value2"} would have been encoded
as:
mapname.# = 2
mapname.key1 = "value1"
mapname.key2 = "value2"
Sets use the hash code as the key - for example a set with a (fictional)
hashcode calculation may look like:
setname.# = 2
setname.12312512 = "value1"
setname.56345233 = "value2"
Prior to the work done to extend the type system, this was sufficient
since the internal representation of these was effectively the same.
However, following the separation of maps and lists into distinct
first-class types, this encoding presents a problem: given a state file,
it is impossible to tell the encoding of an empty list and an empty map
apart. This presents problems for the type checker during interpolation,
as many interpolation functions will operate on only one of these two
structures.
This commit therefore changes the representation in state of maps to use
a "%" as the key for the number of elements. Consequently the map above
will now be encoded as:
mapname.% = 2
mapname.key1 = "value1"
mapname.key2 = "value2"
This has the effect of an empty list (or set) now being encoded as:
listname.# = 0
And an empty map now being encoded as:
mapname.% = 0
Therefore we can eliminate some nasty guessing logic from the resource
variable supplier for interpolation, at the cost of having to migrate
state up front (to follow in a subsequent commit).
In order to reduce the number of potential situations in which resources
would be "forced new", we continue to accept "#" as the count key when
reading maps via helper/schema. There is no situation under which we can
allow "#" as an actual map key in any case, as it would not be
distinguishable from a list or set in state.
The region returned by the API is always lowercase therefore when you specify a region uppercase in your config file it forces the droplet to be regenerated on every ```terraform apply``` (even when it is not needed).
Since the custom_configuration_parameters can't take dots, we cannot
set 'disk.EnableUUID'. This adds a parameter for this options that gets
added to a configSpec. This option causes the vm to mount disks by uuid
on the guest OS.
Fixed the problem where the root_block_device could cause an apply error
by reading back an "encrypted" parameter that was meant for an
ebs_block_device. "encrypted" is not part of the root_block_device
schema, since it can't be set explicitly.
Added a check in Create to fail when the root device is incorrectly
specified as an ebs_block_device, as this causes continual refreshing
due to mismatched state between root_block_device and ebs_block_device.
"encrypted" and "snapshot_id" should be guarded with ConflictsWith, but
that doesn't appear to work on nested resources despite #1926.
The mapstructure library has a regrettable backward compatibility
concern whereby a WeakDecode of []interface{}{} into a target of
map[string]interface{} yields an empty map rather than an error. One
possibility is to switch to using Decode instead of WeakDecode, but this
loses the nice handling of type conversion, requiring a large volume of
code to be added to Terraform or HIL in order to retain that behaviour.
Instead we add a DecodeHook to our usage of the mapstructure library
which checks for decoding []interface{}{} or []string{} into a map and
returns an error instead.
This has the effect of defeating the code added to retain backwards
compatibility in mapstructure, giving us the correct (for our
circumstances) behaviour of Decode for empty structures and the type
conversion of WeakDecode.
The code is identical to that in the HIL library, and packaged into a
helper.
This removes support for the V0 binary state format which was present in
Terraform prior to 0.3. We still check for the file type and present an
error message explaining to the user that they can upgrade it using a
prior version of Terraform.
Fixes#7062
make testacc TEST=./builtin/providers/aws TESTARGS='-run=TestAccAWSElasticacheSubnetGroup'
==> Checking that code complies with gofmt requirements...
go generate $(go list ./... | grep -v /vendor/)
TF_ACC=1 go test ./builtin/providers/aws -v -run=TestAccAWSElasticacheSubnetGroup -timeout 120m
=== RUN TestAccAWSElasticacheSubnetGroup_basic
--- PASS: TestAccAWSElasticacheSubnetGroup_basic (44.62s)
=== RUN TestAccAWSElasticacheSubnetGroup_update
--- PASS: TestAccAWSElasticacheSubnetGroup_update (73.74s)
PASS
ok github.com/hashicorp/terraform/builtin/providers/aws 118.379s