Provide a way to pass in credentials to be used by the module.Storage
when contacting registries.
Remove the mockTLSServer and use a static discovery map pointing to the
http url for tests.
Update the command package to use the new module storage. Move the old
command output strings into the module storage itself. This could be
moved back later either by using ui callbacks, or designing a module
storage interface once we know what the final requirements will look
like.
Exporting ModuleStorage allows us to explicitly pass in the storgae
location rather than extracting it out of the getter.Storage interface,
set a UI for communiating actions back to the user, and accepting a
services Disco for discovery.
If a provider configuration is inherited from another module, any
interpolations in that config won't have variables declared locally. Let
the config only be validated in it's original location.
Registry modules can't be handled directly by the getter.Storage
implementation, which doesn't know how to handle versions. First see if
we have a matching module stored that satisfies our constraints. If
not, and we're getting or updating, we can look it up in the registry.
This essentially takes the place of a "registry detector" for go-getter,
but required the intermediate step of resolving the version dependency.
This also starts breaking up the huge Tree.Load method into more
manageable parts. It was sorely needed, as indicated by the difficulty
encountered in this refactor. There's still a lot that can be done to
improve this, but at least there are now a few easier to read methods
when we come back to it.
The detection of registry modules will have to happen in mutliple
phases. The go-getter interface requires that the detector return the
final URL, while we won't know that until we verify which version we
need. This leaves the regisry sources broken, to be re-integrated in a
following commit.
wire up HTTP so we can test the mock discovery service
test lookupModuleVersions
Add a versions endpoint to the mock registry, and use that to verify the
lookupModuleVersions behavior.
lookupModuleVersions takes a Disco as the argument so a custom Transport
can be injected, and uses that transport for its own client if it set.
test looking up modules with default registry
Add registry.terrform.io to the hostname that the mock registry resolves
to localhost.
ACC test looking up module versions
Lookup a basic module for the available version in the default registry.
This test highlights how changing an intermediate source path prevents
reloading of submodules. While this is somewhat of an edge case now, it
becomes quite common in the cacse where module versions are updated.
Adds basic detector for registry module source strings. While this isn't
a thorough validation, this will eliminate anything that is definitely
not a registry module, and split out our host and module id strings.
lookupModuleVersions interrogates the registry for the available
versions of a particular module and the tree of dependencies.
Submodules were located by using their module path as the storage key.
Now that modules may have versions, a submodule needs to know how to
locate the corect source depending on the versions of its ancestors in
the tree.
Add a version field to each Tree, and a pointer back to the parent Tree
to step back through the ancestors. The new versionedPathKey method uses
this information to build a unique key for each module, dependent on the
ancestor versions.
Not only do stored modules need to know their version if it exists, but
any relative source needs to know all the ancestor versions in order to
resolve correctly.
The getter.Storage abstraction is proving entirely inadequate here, but
we can't replace it wholesale at the moment.
The Tree loader needs to know the location of the manifest before it can
start loading any modules. Since the version will have to be part of the
hashed storage key, there is no way to know what version of each module
are stored. The storageDir function will extract the StorageDir field
from the underlying FolderStorage instance for the tree to locate the
manifest.
To add registry support, a workaround in the local module storage was
added to record the subdirectory containing the module source from
within the archive file. Here we replace that temporary implementation
with the full manifest needed to record the necessary module metadata
for module loading.
In order to support versioned modules, the actual stored version needs
to be recorded. This can't be derived from the configuration, because
the configuration only contains the constraints, and at load time we need
to be able to enumerate the stored modules and all versions in order to
resolve them.
While the local storage key will be derived from the source and version,
that information is lost once it's hashed. While the entire storage
layer could be replaced to encode the needed data in the path itself,
this provides a minimal change to work with the existing storage code.
Now that we can enforce local modules being relative or absolute paths,
we can be assured that any module source matching a registry pattern
must be found in the registry. This allows us to surface more useful
errors to the user, rather than simply stating that a source string
isn't valid.
Breaking change for 0.11.
Local files were checked first to avoid the possibility of breaking a
module with a local source that looked like a registry ID. Now we can
enfore that any source iwth the pattern "namespace/identifier/provider"
must be a registry module.
This implements provider inheritance during config loading, rather than
during graph evaluation. At this point it's much simpler to find the
desired configuration, and once all providers are declared, all the
inheritance code in the graph can be removed.
The inheritance is dome by simply copying the RawConfig from the parent
ProviderConfig into the module. Since this happens before any
evaluation, we record the original interpolation scope in the
ProviderConfig so that it can be properly resolved later on.
Add the Version and Providers fields to the module config.
Add ProviderConfig.Scope, which will be used to record the original
path of a ProviderConfig for interpolation.
Having a reference to the originating source range will allow us to
generate decent error messages if certain references can't be resolved
at interpolation time.
This is not yet populated or used. It will never be populated nor used by
the current HCL/HIL-based interpolation path, but will be used by the
experimental HCL2-based interpolation path to give it the necessary info
to produce diagnostics.
The value-conversion machinery is also needed in the main "terraform"
package to help us populate our HCL2 evaluation scope, so a subset of the
shim functions move here into a new package where they can be public.
Some of them remain private within the config package since they depend
on some other symbols in the config package, and they are not needed
by outside callers anyway.
Previously we were using fmt.Sprintf and thus forcing the stringification
of the wrapped error.
Using errwrap allows us to unpack the original error at the top of the
stack, which is useful when the wrapped error is really a hcl.Diagnostics
containing potentially-multiple errors and possibly warnings.
We don't currently have any need for this information, but we're
propagating it out of helper/schema here pre-emptively so that once we
later have a use for it we will not need to rebuild the providers to gain
access to it.
The long-term expected use-case for this is to have Terraform Core use
static analysis techniques to trace the path of sensitive data through
interpolations so that intermediate results can be flagged as sensitive
too, but we have a lot more work to do before such a thing would actually
be possible.
zcldec now has its own function for computing the implied type for a spec,
so we can use that instead of our own logic.
The zcldec logic is more general since its spec model is more general than
our schema model here, but it produces the same results for the subset
of specifications that our DecoderSpec method produces.
This returns a cty.Type that the caller can expect to recieve when
decoding a value using the (not yet implemented) decoder specification
for a given schema.
Terraform has a _lot_ of functions written against HIL's function API, and
we're not ready to rewrite them all yet, so instead we shim the HIL
function API to conform to the HCL2 (really: cty) function API and thus
allow most of our existing functions to work as expected when called from
HCL2-based config files.
Not all of the functions can be fully shimmed in this way due to depending
on HIL implementation details that we can't mimic through the HCL2 API.
We don't attempt to address that yet, and instead just let them fail when
called. We will eventually address this by using first-class HCL2
functions for these few cases, thus avoiding the HIL API altogether where
we need to. (The methodology for that is already illustrated here in the
provision of jsonencode and jsondecode functions that are HCL2-native.)