There were two problems with this test as originally written:
- Its ApplyFn was handling a destroy diff by returning a new object, and
thus not actually destroying the object in question at all.
- It was treating unknown values in the diff as invalid during apply, but
these are in fact now expected as a way for the provider to distinguish
whether an optional+computed attribute is set in config.
With those changes in mind, this test isn't really testing anything
special anymore, but is still a straightforward test of a simple
plan+apply running to completion without error.
This test's original outcome was invalid because it didn't actually
configure a mock apply function, and so _any_ apply operation would appear
to have destroyed the object it was given. This was visible in the fact
that the configuration contains aws_instance.bar but yet it was not
present in the expected state string.
Now we use the standard testApplyFn, and update the expected output to
include the aws_instance.bar object that is created by a Create change.
When applying a diff to a value we verify that the "old" value in diff is
consistent with the given prior value, as a safety check.
The mock must comply with this or else any tests that produce diffs with
computed new values will not pass the safety check.
This change is verified by the now-passing TestContext2Apply_taintDep .
These tests were relying on the full InstanceInfo we used to give to
providers, but the new API doesn't do that and so we will instead lean on
the ID from the state to recognize the apply ordering.
Previously testDiffFn was just assuming that the prior value for "type"
was always the empty string, but that doesn't hold if a mocked object is
updated in-place with a previously-populated value for type.
This wasn't a problem before because the old values in the diff were
largely just for presentation to the user, but we do now verify that the
old values match what we're applying to as an extra safety check and so
we must populate the old value properly.
This fix is verified by TestContext2Apply_Provisioner_Diff.
Now that we're marking errored creates as tainted in the state, the
object created by this test will get marked as tainted due to the error
about it containing an unknown value even after apply.
Since this test sets its own special schema for aws_instance, its expected
output must now be adjusted to only expect values that conform to that
schema. The extraneous attributes like "type" which testDiffFn produces
are no longer visible unless declared in schema.
We also need to now declare "id" as a computed attribute in order for our
state stringer shim to properly populate the formerly-special "ID".
We can't use diff attributes to differentiate instances during destroy
because destroy diffs don't have any attributes set in the old API.
Also, our new state management code correctly prunes out the empty
module.child before returning, so our expected output is updated to not
expect that to still be present.
When we re-run EvalDiff during apply, we may have already completed the
destroy leg of a replace operation, leaving us in a different situation
than we were when we made the original planned change.
Therefore as a special case we will allow a create to turn back into a
replace if there was an earlier diff that requested that.
If the prior object is tainted, we behave as if it doesn't exist at all
for most of our logic here but then at the end turn it into a synthetic
replace operation going from the old object to the new object, similarly
to how we'd behave if given an argument change that "requires
replacement".
We can be more relaxed about our rules that a create musn't return null
or a destroy must return null if the provider also itself indicated an
error. In that case, it's expected that the return value is describing a
partial result, and so we'll just store it and move on.
The mechanism for a provider to pre-populate parts of the connection
config for subsequent provisioners is no longer present in the new
protocol, since it was rarely used, poorly documented, and for many
resource types had no obvious good defaults.
Although we have a special case where a result of the wrong type will bail
early, we must keep that set of diagnostics separate so that we can still
run to completion when there are _already_ diagnostics present (from the
provider's response) but the return value _is_ type-conforming.
This fix is verified by TestContext2Apply_provisionerCreateFail.
Our previous mechanism for dealing with tainting relied on directly
mutating the InstanceState object to mark it as such. In our new state
models we consider the instance objects to be immutable by convention, and
so we frequently copy them. As a result, the taint flagging was no longer
making it all the way through the apply evaluation process.
Here we now implement tainting as a separate step in the evaluation
process, creating a copy of the object with a tainted status if there were
any errors during creation.
This introduces a new behavior where any provider-level errors during
creation will also cause an instance to be marked as tainted if any object
is returned at all. Create-time errors _normally_ result in no object at
all, but the provider might return an object if the failure occurred at
a subsequent step of a multi-step creation process and so left behind a
remote object that needs to be cleaned up on a future run.
Since StateReferences was implemented on NodeAbstractResource rather than
NodeAbstractResourceInstance it wasn't properly detecting references to
the same instance as self-references.
Now that we are using "seen" to filter out duplicates we can also simplify
how we handle these self-references by just pretending we saw them before
we even start the loop.
This change is confirmed by
TestContext2Apply_provisionerMultiSelfRefSingle
The error handling here is a bit tricky due to the ability for users to
opt out of aborting on error. It's important that we keep straight the
distinction between applyDiags and diags so we can tell the difference
between the errors from _this_ provisioner and the errors for the entire
run so far.
In our old world we always used 1-based indices into a slice of deposed
objects. The new models instead use a map keyed by pseudorandom strings,
so that deposed objects will have a consistent identity across multiple
operations.
However, having that pseudo-random string in our test comparison output
is not helpful, since such strings can never match hard-coded expectation
strings. Therefore for the purposes of generating this test comparison
output we'll revert back to using 1-based indexes.
This should avoid problems for tests that only create one deposed object
per instance, but those which create more than one will need to do some
more work since the _ordering_ of these objects in the output is still
pseudorandom as a result of it coming from a map rather than a slice.
The expected output string for this test is assuming a couple computed
attributes that were not declared in schema. This didn't matter before
because the provider output was not previously subject to schema-based
interpretation, but now our shims to the old provider API rely on the
schema to convert the returned data and so any unexpected attributes are
filtered.
The diffs created by testDiffFn use the flatmap package directly, rather
than running the diff-generation logic in helper/schema. It turns out that
flatmap itself can generate the k+".#" keys used to indicate the length
of a list, but only helper/schema itself knew how to generate the
corresponding k+".%" keys used for maps.
Rather than modifying the now-deprecated flatmap code directly (and risk
breaking assumptions in shims elsewhere), here we just synthesize the
extra required map element within the testDiffFn implementation, which
then in turn allows the MockProvider diffFn shim to correctly recognize
it as a map and convert it into a real cty.Map value to return.
As previously mentioned in a comment here, versions of Terraform prior to
0.12 would store references to module outputs as just references to the
module as a whole in the state. It's not really clear why, but we wanted
to preserve this behavior for 0.12.
The previous implementation actually failed to do so, in spite of the
comment, so this commit fixes it to actually do what the comment
originally claimed.
In a later release we might remove this special case and just depend
directly on outputs where possible, since that'd allow us to produce a
more precise dependency graph for destroy actions, but when we do that
we'll first need to confirm that there isn't a good reason for the
original exception here.
The state only deals in wholly-known values, so here we null out any
unknowns for storage in state. This is okay because we subsequently write
the original, possibly-unknown value into the plan and the expression
evaluator will prefer to use this if present, allowing the unknown values
to properly propagate into other expressions in the calling module.
These need their output strings updated for the new behavior that all
resource instances recorded in state have a provider configuration
associated, whereas before we only did it for non-default ones.
Only the count and for_each expressions are evaluated by this node type,
so it doesn't need to declare dependencies for any other refs in the
configuration body. Using this more refined set of dependencies means
we can avoid graph cycles in the case where one instance of a resource
refers to another instance of the same resource.
We'll still get cycles if count or for_each self-reference, but that's
forbidden anyway (caught during validate) and makes sense because those
two are whole-resource-level config rather than per-instance config.
The underlying References function includes duplicates and returns refs
in the order they appeared in source (approximately), but after we reduce
to just the raw addresses it's better to dedupe and return in a
predictable order.
An earlier update to make this not use info.HumanId selected the wrong
fake "ami" name in the branch here.
Also, the error message for this failure was terrible. :(
This is computed in the special case where compute = "unknown" in order
to force inclusion of an unknown value into the ultimate result, which
is invalid.
This fixes TestContext2Apply_unknownAttribute, which is intending to test
this error handling behavior.