Previously the provisioner did not wait until the Salt operation had completed before returning, causing some operations not to be applied, and causing the output to get swallowed.
Now we wait until the remote work is complete, and copy output into the Terraform log in a similar way as is done for other provisioners.
The "terraform" provider was previously split out into its own repository,
but that turned out to be a mistake due to how tightly it depends on
aspects of Terraform Core.
Here we prepare to bring it back into the core repository by reorganizing
the directory layout to conform with what's expected there.
Added a list SetNew test to try and reproduce issues testing diff
customization with the Nomad provider. We are running into "diffs didn't
match during apply", with the plan diff exhibiting a strange
off-by-one-type error in a list diff:
datacenters.#: "1" => "2"
datacenters.0: "dc1" => "dc2"
datacenters.1: "" => "dc3"
datacenters.2: "" => "dc3"
The test here does not reproduce that issue, unfortunately, but should
help pinpoint the root cause through elimination.
Restoring the naming of this field in the resource back to
CustomizeDiff, as this is generally more descriptive of the process
that's happening, despite the lengthy name.
To keep with the current convention of most other schema.Resource
functional fields being fairly short, CustomizeDiff has been changed to
"Review". It would be "Diff", however it is already used by existing
functions in schema.Provider and schema.Resource.
It's alive! CustomizeDiff logic now has been inserted into the diff
process. The test_resource_with_custom_diff resource provides some basic
testing and a reference implementation.
There should now be plenty of test coverage for this feature via the
tests added for ResourceDiff, and the basic test added to the
schemaMap.Diff test, and the test resource, but more can be added to
test any specific case that comes up otherwise.
Fixes#15921
When terraform re-creates an existing node/client with chef provisioner,
the already existing client (which has old keys) must be removed from
the vault items. Afterwards, the chef-vault will be updated with the
newly created client (which has the new keys). Therefore, the recreated
client will be able to decrypt the vault items properly.
In #15870 we got good feedback that it'd be more useful to have the
various filename-accepting arguments on this provisioner instead accept
strings that represent the contents of such files, so that they can be
generated from elsewhere in the Terraform config.
This change does not achieve that, but it does make room for doing this
later by renaming "minion_config" to "minion_config_file" so that we
can later add a "minion_config" option alongside that takes the file
content, and deprecate "minion_config_file".
Ideally we'd just implement the requested change immediately, but
unfortunately the release schedule doesn't have time for this so this is
a pragmatic change to allow us to make the full requested change at a
later date without backward incompatibilities.
This change is safe because the salt-masterless provisioner has not yet
been included in a release at the time of this commit.
The code here was previously assuming that d.State() was equivalent to
the schema.ProvRawStateKey due to them both being of type InstanceState,
but that is in fact not true since a state object contains some transient
information that is _not_ part of the persisted state, including the
connection information we need here.
Calling ResourceData.State() constructs a _new_ state based on its stored
values, so the constructed object is lacking this transient information.
We need to use the specific state object provided by the caller in order
to get access to the transient connection configuration.
Unfortunately there is no automated test coverage for this because we have
no good story for testing provisioners that use "communicator". While such
tests could potentially be written, we'd like to get this in somewhat
quickly to unblock a release, rather than delaying to design and implement
some sort of mocking system for this.
TestResourceProvider_stop uses a goroutine, which means that any function with *testing.T as its receiver within that goroutine will silently fail.
Now the test to accepts that an error that occurs within the goroutine is lost. It also adds some more verbose logs to explain what is happening.
It turns out that `d.GetOk` also returns `false` when the user _did_ actually supply a value for it in the config, but the value itself needs to be evaluated before it can be used.
So instead of passing a `ResourceData` we now pass a `ResourceConfig`
which makes much more sense for doing the validation anyway.
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)
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.
* Data Source support for Resource Group
* Better message for mismatching locations.
* Reuse existing read code
* Adds documentation
* Adds test
* Adds a function for composing ID strings
* Change location to computed.
* Move to v2 client in vendor directory
* Move to v2 api and project IDs for environments
* add host label support to registration command
* Update go-rancher/catalog
* Allow go-rancher to handle URL versioning
* provider/openstack: Optimize the printing of request/response headers when debugging Openstack HTTP requests
* provider/openstack: Log the response code aswell
This is a separate resource that serves a similar purpose to the
propagating_vgws argument on aws_route_table, but allows route
propagations to be created independently of the route table, which in
turn allows the VPN gateway to be created after the route table it will
contribute to, possibly in a separate Terraform module.
To make this work, propagating_vgws on aws_route_table is now marked
as Computed, meaning that it won't try to delete any existing propagation
edges if there is no setting for it in configuration at all. This allows
the user to choose whether to use the argument or the separate resource,
though using both together will not work, as explained in the docs.
* provider/aws: Add Sweeper setup, Sweepers for DB Option Group, Key Pair
* provider/google: Add sweeper for any leaked databases
* more recursion and added LC sweeper, to test out the Dependency path
* implement a dependency example
* implement sweep-run flag to filter runs
* stub a test for TestMain
* test for multiple -sweep-run list
* Updated google_compute_autoscaler tests so that update fails as expected.
* Changed google_compute_autoscaler's Update function from using Patch to Update.
* Made resource_compute_health_check_test perform updates.
* Made resource_compute_http_health_check_test perform updates.
* Made resource_compute_https_health_check_test perform updates.