Commit Graph

327 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
James Bardin 2c7b702d1f Merge pull request #7091 from hashicorp/jbardin/serialize
Serialization for hash panics on TypeMap
2016-06-09 16:16:41 -04:00
James Bardin bab031aac5 Add test for TypeMap in a Schema 2016-06-09 16:00:33 -04:00
James Bardin d8fbaa7924 Serialization for hash panics on TypeMap
The serializeCollectionMemberForHash helper can't be called for the
MapType values, because MapType doesn't have a schema.Elem. Instead, we
can write the key/value pairs directly to the buffer. This still doesn't
allow for nested maps or lists, but we need to define that use case
before committing to it here.
2016-06-09 13:37:58 -04:00
James Nugent 074545e536 core: Use .% instead of .# for maps in state
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.
2016-06-09 10:49:42 +01:00
James Nugent 91587a49f3 core: Remove unnecessary debug logging
Some unnecessary debug logging was introduced in 7b6df27e4, this commit
removes it so as not to clutter logs.
2016-06-08 18:38:41 +01:00
Chris Marchesi 9d7fb89114 core: Adding Sensitive attribute to resource schema
This an effort to address hashicorp/terraform#516.

Adding the Sensitive attribute to the resource schema, opening up the
ability for resource maintainers to mark some fields as sensitive.
Sensitive fields are hidden in the output, and, possibly in the future,
could be encrypted.
2016-05-29 22:18:44 -07:00
Sander van Harmelen 8560f50cbc
Change taint behaviour to act as a normal resource
This means it’s shown correctly in a plan and takes into account any
actions that are dependant on the tainted resource and, vice verse, any
actions that the tainted resource depends on.

So this changes the behaviour from saying this resource is tainted so
just forget about it and make sure it gets deleted in the background,
to saying I want that resource to be recreated (taking into account the
existing resource and it’s place in the graph).
2016-05-26 19:55:26 -05:00
Mitchell Hashimoto 55583baa7e
Merge branch 'f-aws-import' 2016-05-18 15:28:12 -06:00
Mitchell Hashimoto b7d4767dd6
helper/schema: pass through import state func 2016-05-16 10:03:57 -07:00
Martin Atkins 6cd22a4c9a helper/schema: emit warning when using data source resource shim
For backward compatibility we will continue to support using the data
sources that were formerly logical resources as resources for the moment,
but we want to warn the user about it since this support is likely to
be removed in future.

This is done by adding a new "deprecation message" feature to
schema.Resource, but for the moment this is done as an internal feature
(not usable directly by plugins) so that we can collect additional
use-cases and design a more general interface before creating a
compatibility constraint.
2016-05-14 08:26:36 -07:00
Martin Atkins fb262d0dbe helper/schema: shim for making data sources act like resources
Historically we've had some "read-only" and "logical" resources. With the
addition of the data source concept these will gradually become data
sources, but we need to retain backward compatibility with existing
configurations that use the now-deprecated resources.

This shim is intended to allow us to easily create a resource from a
data source implementation. It adjusts the schema as needed and adds
stub Create and Delete implementations.

This would ideally also produce a deprecation warning whenever such a
shimmed resource is used, but the schema system doesn't currently have
a mechanism for resource-specific validation, so that remains just a TODO
for the moment.
2016-05-14 08:26:36 -07:00
Martin Atkins 6a468dcd83 helper/schema: Resource can be writable or not
In the "schema" layer a Resource is just any "thing" that has a schema
and supports some or all of the CRUD operations. Data sources introduce
a new use of Resource to represent read-only resources, which require
some different InternalValidate logic.
2016-05-14 08:26:36 -07:00
Martin Atkins 0e0e3d73af core: New ResourceProvider methods for data resources
This is a breaking change to the ResourceProvider interface that adds the
new operations relating to data sources.

DataSources, ValidateDataSource, ReadDataDiff and ReadDataApply are the
data source equivalents of Resources, Validate, Diff and Apply (respectively)
for managed resources.

The diff/apply model seems at first glance a rather strange workflow for
read-only resources, but implementing data resources in this way allows them
to fit cleanly into the standard plan/apply lifecycle in cases where the
configuration contains computed arguments and thus the read must be deferred
until apply time.

Along with breaking the interface, we also fix up the plugin client/server
and helper/schema implementations of it, which are all of the callers
used when provider plugins use helper/schema. This would be a breaking
change for any provider plugin that directly implements the provider
interface, but no known plugins do this and it is not recommended.

At the helper/schema layer the implementer sees ReadDataApply as a "Read",
as opposed to "Create" or "Update" as in the managed resource Apply
implementation. The planning mechanics are handled entirely within
helper/schema, so that complexity is hidden from the provider implementation
itself.
2016-05-14 08:26:36 -07:00
Mitchell Hashimoto b728e55861
helper/schema: Resource.Data should set latest schema version 2016-05-11 13:02:36 -07:00
Mitchell Hashimoto c02c6c3f9c
helper/schema: default state func for import 2016-05-11 13:02:35 -07:00
Mitchell Hashimoto 2bb814e3de
helper/schema: adapt to ID being arg to ImportState 2016-05-11 13:02:35 -07:00
Mitchell Hashimoto 03931bfda9
helper/schema: ImportState must set ID on the resource data 2016-05-11 13:02:34 -07:00
Mitchell Hashimoto 445194ebdf
helper/schema: test ImportState 2016-05-11 13:02:33 -07:00
Mitchell Hashimoto 1685054a9a
helper/schema: cleaner way to store Ephemeral 2016-05-11 13:02:31 -07:00
Mitchell Hashimoto 84531a3fd5
helper/schema: sets Importable to true for resources that have importer 2016-05-11 13:02:30 -07:00
Mitchell Hashimoto 19609bde0e
helper/schema: can specify Importer on Resource, InternalValidate 2016-05-11 13:02:30 -07:00
Mitchell Hashimoto b8121ea63e
helper/schema: Resource.Data to return a ResourceData for a Resource 2016-05-11 13:02:30 -07:00
Mitchell Hashimoto 4e9877179c
helper/schema: start the resource importer 2016-05-11 13:02:29 -07:00
James Nugent 7b6df27e4a helper/schema: Read native maps from configuration
This adds a test and the support necessary to read from native maps
passed as variables via interpolation - for example:

```
resource ...... {
     mapValue = "${var.map}"
}
```

We also add support for interpolating maps from the flat-mapped resource
config, which is necessary to support assignment of computed maps, which
is now valid.

Unfortunately there is no good way to distinguish between a list and a
map in the flatmap. In lieu of changing that representation (which is
risky), we assume that if all the keys are numeric, this is intended to
be a list, and if not it is intended to be a map. This does preclude
maps which have purely numeric keys, which should be noted as a
backwards compatibility concern.
2016-05-10 14:49:14 -04:00
James Nugent f49583d25a core: support native list variables in config
This commit adds support for native list variables and outputs, building
up on the previous change to state. Interpolation functions now return
native lists in preference to StringList.

List variables are defined like this:

variable "test" {
    # This can also be inferred
    type = "list"
    default = ["Hello", "World"]
}

output "test_out" {
    value = "${var.a_list}"
}
This results in the following state:

```
...
            "outputs": {
                "test_out": [
                    "hello",
                    "world"
                ]
            },
...
```

And the result of terraform output is as follows:

```
$ terraform output
test_out = [
  hello
  world
]
```

Using the output name, an xargs-friendly representation is output:

```
$ terraform output test_out
hello
world
```

The output command also supports indexing into the list (with
appropriate range checking and no wrapping):

```
$ terraform output test_out 1
world
```

Along with maps, list outputs from one module may be passed as variables
into another, removing the need for the `join(",", var.list_as_string)`
and `split(",", var.list_as_string)` which was previously necessary in
Terraform configuration.

This commit also updates the tests and implementations of built-in
interpolation functions to take and return native lists where
appropriate.

A backwards compatibility note: previously the concat interpolation
function was capable of concatenating either strings or lists. The
strings use case was deprectated a long time ago but still remained.
Because we cannot return `ast.TypeAny` from an interpolation function,
this use case is no longer supported for strings - `concat` is only
capable of concatenating lists. This should not be a huge issue - the
type checker picks up incorrect parameters, and the native HIL string
concatenation - or the `join` function - can be used to replicate the
missing behaviour.
2016-05-10 14:49:14 -04:00
Paul Hinze b4df304b47
helper/schema: Normalize bools to "true"/"false" in diffs
For a long time now, the diff logic has relied on the behavior of
`mapstructure.WeakDecode` to determine how various primitives are
converted into strings.  The `schema.DiffString` function is used for
all primitive field types: TypeBool, TypeInt, TypeFloat, and TypeString.

The `mapstructure` library's string representation of booleans is "0"
and "1", which differs from `strconv.FormatBool`'s "false" and "true"
(which is used in writing out boolean fields to the state).

Because of this difference, diffs have long had the potential for
cosmetically odd but semantically neutral output like:

    "true" => "1"
    "false" => "0"

So long as `mapstructure.Decode` or `strconv.ParseBool` are used to
interpret these strings, there's no functional problem.

We had our first clear functional problem with #6005 and friends, where
users noticed diffs like the above showing up unexpectedly and causing
troubles when `ignore_changes` was in play.

This particular bug occurs down in Terraform core's EvalIgnoreChanges.
There, the diff is modified to account for ignored attributes, and
special logic attempts to handle properly the situation where the
ignored attribute was going to trigger a resource replacement. That
logic relies on the string representations of the Old and New fields in
the diff to be the same so that it filters properly.

So therefore, we now get a bug when a diff includes `Old: "0", New:
"false"` since the strings do not match, and `ignore_changes` is not
properly handled.

Here, we introduce `TypeBool`-specific normalizing into `finalizeDiff`.
I spiked out a full `diffBool` function, but figuring out which pieces
of `diffString` to duplicate there got hairy. This seemed like a simpler
and more direct solution.

Fixes #6005 (and potentially others!)
2016-05-05 09:00:58 -05:00
Martin Atkins c1ce8ff31a Merge pull request #5218 from paybyphone/paybyphone_set_maxitems
Add MaxItems attribute to Schema
2016-03-01 09:27:59 -08:00
Radek Simko 8bdd92187c Merge pull request #4446 from TimeIncOSS/f-schema-new-resource
helper/schema: Allow identification of a new resource in update func
2016-02-29 20:07:00 +00:00
Chris Marchesi 8c5354b7dc Add MaxItems attribute to Schema
* MaxItems defines a maximum amount of items that can exist within a
   TypeSet or TypeList. Specific use cases would be if a TypeSet is being
   used to wrap a complex structure, however more than one instance would
   cause instability.
2016-02-23 16:41:32 -08:00
Trevor Pounds 0cd0ff0f8e Use built-in schema.HashString. 2016-02-07 16:29:34 -08:00
Mitchell Hashimoto 4576eaa966 helper/schema: replace config/lang 2016-02-03 13:24:04 -05:00
Paul Hinze da872eee66 Merge pull request #4864 from hashicorp/phinze/aws-min-elb-cap-regression
aws: undeprecate min_elb_capacity; restore min capacity waiting
2016-01-27 14:17:10 -06:00
Paul Hinze c70eab6500 aws: undeprecate min_elb_capacity; restore min capacity waiting
It was a mistake to switched fully to `==` when activating waiting for
capacity on updates in #3947. Users that didn't set `min_elb_capacity ==
desired_capacity` and instead treated it as an actual "minimum" would
see timeouts for every create, since their target numbers would never be
reached exactly.

Here, we fix that regression by restoring the minimum waiting behavior
during creates.

In order to preserve all the stated behavior, I had to split out
different criteria for create and update, criteria which are now
exhaustively unit tested.

The set of fields that affect capacity waiting behavior has become a bit
of a mess. Next major release I'd like to rework all of these into a
more consistently named block of config. For now, just getting the
behavior correct and documented.

(Also removes all the fixed names from the ASG tests as I was hitting
collision issues running them over here.)

Fixes #4792
2016-01-27 13:30:44 -06:00
Paul Hinze 069425a700 consul: Fix several problems w/ consul_keys update
Implementation notes:

 * The hash implementation was not considering key value, causing "diffs
   did not match" errors when a value was updated. Switching to default
   HashResource implementation fixes this
 * Using HashResource as a default exposed a bug in helper/schema that
   needed to be fixed so the Set function is picked up properly during
   Read
 * Stop writing back values into the `key` attribute; it triggers extra
   diffs when `default` is used. Computed values all just go into `var`.
 * Includes a state migration to prevent unnecessary diffs based on
   "key" attribute hashcodes changing.

In the tests:

 * Switch from leaning on the public demo Consul instance to requiring a
   CONSUL_HTTP_ADDR variable be set pointing to a `consul agent -dev`
   instance to be used only for testing.
 * Add a test that exposes the updating issues and covers the fixes

Fixes #774
Fixes #1866
Fixes #3023
2016-01-26 14:46:26 -06:00
Radek Simko 4c6ceef9b8 helper/schema: Allow identification of a new resource in update func 2015-12-27 14:01:03 +01:00
Paul Hinze edaf5795a5 Merge pull request #3257 from fatih/fix-nil-setting-schema
schema: delete non existing values
2015-12-08 20:15:00 -06:00
Paul Hinze 99244c5597 helper/schema: skip provider input for deprecated fields
There's no reason that a field that's been deprecated should ever
prompt.

fixes #4033
2015-12-07 11:28:45 -06:00
Paul Hinze f1e7cec566 Merge pull request #3992 from svanharmelen/f-change-sets
core: change set internals and make (extreme) performance improvements
2015-12-04 09:03:43 -06:00
Sander van Harmelen ef4726bd50 Change Set internals and make (extreme) performance improvements
Changing the Set internals makes a lot of sense as it saves doing
conversions in multiple places and gives a central place to alter
the key when a item is computed.

This will have no side effects other then that the ordering is now
based on strings instead on integers, so the order will be different.
This will however have no effect on existing configs as these will
use the individual codes/keys and not the ordering to determine if
there is a diff or not.

Lastly (but I think also most importantly) there is a fix in this PR
that makes diffing sets extremely more performand. Before a full diff
required reading the complete Set for every single parameter/attribute
you wanted to diff, while now it only gets that specific parameter.

We have a use case where we have a Set that has 18 parameters and the
set consist of about 600 items (don't ask 😉). So when doing a diff
it would take 100% CPU of all cores and stay that way for almost an
hour before being able to complete the diff.

Debugging this we learned that for retrieving every single parameter
it made over 52.000 calls to `func (c *ResourceConfig) get(..)`. In
this function a slice is created and used only for the duration of the
call, so the time needed to create all needed slices and on the other
hand the time the garbage collector needed to clean them up again caused
the system to cripple itself. Next to that there are also some expensive
reflect calls in this function which also claimed a fair amount of CPU
time.

After this fix the number of calls needed to get a single parameter
dropped from 52.000+ to only 2! 😃
2015-11-22 14:21:28 +01:00
Paul Hinze c7dc1c10a3 helper/schema: skip StateFunc when value is nil
This takes the nil checking burden off of StateFunc.

fixes #3586, see that issue for further discussion
2015-11-20 14:07:18 -06:00
Paul Hinze 938281024f helper/schema: name test cases w/ strings
I promised myself that next time I jumped in this file I'd fix this up.
Now we don't have to manually index the file with comments, we can just
add descriptive names to the test cases!
2015-11-20 13:51:34 -06:00
James Nugent f4c03ec2a6 Reflect new comment format in stringer.go
As of November 8th 2015, (4b07c5ce8a), the word "Code" is prepended to
the comments in Go source files generated by the stringer utility.
2015-11-09 11:38:51 -05:00
Martin Atkins a67182543c Nicer error when list/map assigned to string argument.
Previous this would return the following sort of error:
expected type 'string', got unconvertible type '[]interface {}'

This is the raw error returned by the underlying mapstructure library.
This is not a helpful error message for anyone who doesn't know Go's
type system, and it exposes Terraform's internals to the UI.

Instead we'll catch these cases before we try to use mapstructure and
return a more straightforward message.

By checking the type before the IsComputed exception this also avoids
a crash caused when the assigned value is a computed list. Otherwise
the list of interpolations is allowed through here and then crashes later
during Diff when the value is not a primitive as expected.
2015-10-22 21:16:02 -07:00
Paul Hinze 2a179d1065 helper/schema: ValidateFunc support for maps 2015-10-14 15:10:22 -05:00
Panagiotis Moustafellos e4845f75cc removed extra parentheses 2015-10-08 15:48:04 +03:00
Martin Atkins cc8e8a55de helper/schema: Default hashing function for sets
A common issue with new resource implementations is not considering parts
of a complex structure that's used inside a set, which causes quirky
behavior.

The schema helper has enough information to provide a default reasonable
implementation of a set function that includes all non-computed attributes
in a deterministic way. Here we implement such a function and use it
when no explicit hashing function is provided.

In order to achieve this we encapsulate the construction of the zero
value for a schema in a new method schema.ZeroValue, which allows us to
put the fallback logic to the new default function in a single spot.
It is no longer valid to use &Set{F: schema.Set} and all uses of that
construct should be replaced with schema.ZeroValue().(*Set) .
2015-10-03 18:10:47 -07:00
Radek Simko 641b701830 schema: Make validation more strict 2015-10-03 14:29:19 -07:00
Fatih Arslan f269d4fc8c schema: add test for nil string case 2015-09-16 23:35:10 +03:00
Fatih Arslan 8e7fc240f9 schema: delete non existing values
We need to set the value to an empty value so the state file does
indeed change the value. Otherwise the obsolote value is still
intact and doesn't get changed at all. This means `terraform show`
still shows the obsolote value when the particular value is not
existing anymore. This is due the AWS API which is returning a null
instead of an empty string.
2015-09-16 23:26:27 +03:00
Anthony Scalisi 198e1a5186 remove various typos 2015-09-11 11:56:20 -07:00