* provider/fastly: Add support for Conditions for Fastly Services
Docs here:
- https://docs.fastly.com/guides/conditions/
Also Bump go-fastly version for domain support in S3 Logging
Here is an example that will setup the following:
+ An SSH key resource.
+ A virtual server resource that uses an existing SSH key.
+ A virtual server resource using an existing SSH key and a Terraform managed SSH key (created as "test_key_1" in the example below).
(create this as sl.tf and run terraform commands from this directory):
```hcl
provider "softlayer" {
username = ""
api_key = ""
}
resource "softlayer_ssh_key" "test_key_1" {
name = "test_key_1"
public_key = "${file(\"~/.ssh/id_rsa_test_key_1.pub\")}"
# Windows Example:
# public_key = "${file(\"C:\ssh\keys\path\id_rsa_test_key_1.pub\")}"
}
resource "softlayer_virtual_guest" "my_server_1" {
name = "my_server_1"
domain = "example.com"
ssh_keys = ["123456"]
image = "DEBIAN_7_64"
region = "ams01"
public_network_speed = 10
cpu = 1
ram = 1024
}
resource "softlayer_virtual_guest" "my_server_2" {
name = "my_server_2"
domain = "example.com"
ssh_keys = ["123456", "${softlayer_ssh_key.test_key_1.id}"]
image = "CENTOS_6_64"
region = "ams01"
public_network_speed = 10
cpu = 1
ram = 1024
}
```
You'll need to provide your SoftLayer username and API key,
so that Terraform can connect. If you don't want to put
credentials in your configuration file, you can leave them
out:
```
provider "softlayer" {}
```
...and instead set these environment variables:
- **SOFTLAYER_USERNAME**: Your SoftLayer username
- **SOFTLAYER_API_KEY**: Your API key
Import networking/v2/extensions/security/groups and
networking/v2/extensions/security/rules from gophercloud.
These will be used by two new resouces openstack_networking_secgroup_v2 and
openstack_networking_secgroup_rule_v2.
* provider/fastly: Add S3 Log Streaming to Fastly Service
Adds streaming logs to an S3 bucket to Fastly Service V1
* provider/fastly: Bump go-fastly version for domain support in S3 Logging
This change adds the support for the proxied configuration option for a
record which enables origin protection for CloudFlare records.
In order to do so the golang library needed to be changed as the old did
not support the option and was using and outdated API version.
Open issues which ask for this (#5049, #3805).
* CloudFront implementation v3
* Update tests
* Refactor - new resource: aws_cloudfront_distribution
* Includes a complete re-write of the old aws_cloudfront_web_distribution
resource to bring it to feature parity with API and CloudFormation.
* Also includes the aws_cloudfront_origin_access_identity resource to generate
origin access identities for use with S3.
Update github.com/joyent/gosdc/...
Test does the minimum described in hashicorp/terraform#6109, i.e.
- Start a small instance, t4-standard-128M
- Check firewall is enabled
- Change configuration to disable firewall
- Check firewall is disabled.
Fixes#6119.
This brings across the following resources for Triton from the
joyent/triton-terraform repository, and converts them to the canonical
Terraform style, introducing Terraform-style documentation and
acceptance tests which run against the live API rather than the local
APIs:
- triton_firewall_rule
- triton_machine
- triton_key
This brings across the following resources for Triton from the
joyent/triton-terraform repository, and converts them to the canonical
Terraform style, introducing Terraform-style documentation and
acceptance tests which run against the live API rather than the local
APIs:
- triton_firewall_rule
- triton_machine
- triton_key
`publicly_accessible` to be changed
Also updated the AWS Go SDK from 1.1.9 -> 1.1.12 as this was required to
allow the new behavior for the Redshift API
This brings in the go-colorable library when running on Windows in order
to output console colors correctly instead of leaving the codes in place
as is currently the case.
We had actually caught mismatched deps versions between the `kms`
package and others, so `godep restore` was not working on master.
Fixing it requires a `godep update` so I figured we might as well update
to the latest release.
This adds support for Elastic Beanstalk Applications, Configuration Templates,
and Environments.
This is a combined work of @catsby, @dharrisio, @Bowbaq, and @jen20
This uses the `fmtcmd` package which has recently been merged into HCL. Per
the usage text, this rewrites Terraform config files to their canonical
formatting and style.
Some notes about the implementation for this initial commit:
- all of the fmtcmd options are exposed as CLI flags
- it operates on all files that have a `.tf` suffix
- it currently only operates on the working directory and doesn't accept a
directory argument, but I'll extend this in subsequent commits
- output is proxied through `cli.UiWriter` so that we write in the same way
as other commands and we can capture the output during tests
- the test uses a very simple fixture just to ensure that it is working
correctly end-to-end; the fmtcmd package has more exhaustive tests
- we have to write the fixture to a file in a temporary directory because it
will be modified and for this reason it was easier to define the fixture
contents as a raw string
The original contents of `vendor` were inadvertently captured with an
older version of `godep`. Here, we recapture dependencies by running the
following:
```
godep restore -v
cat Godeps/Godeps.json | jq -r '.Deps[].ImportPath' | xargs godep update -v
```
The newer godep makes the following changes as it captures dependencies:
* Skips test files
* Copies `LICENSE` / `PATENTS` files
There is also an additional diff in `golang.org/x/sys/unix` that looks
very similar to the diff between `master..c65f27f` in that repo, so I'm
guessing that dependency was accidentally captured from master instead
of the commit saved to `Godeps.json`.
All in all, these changes should all be "more correct" and result in
smaller diffs for any future updates made to dependencies.