Commit Graph

51 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Alisdair McDiarmid b335918c3c backend: Only show root module output changes
When rendering planned output changes, we need to filter the plan's
output changes to ensure that only root module outputs which have
changed are rendered. Otherwise we will render changes for submodule
outputs, and (with concise diff disabled) render unchanged outputs also.
2020-11-02 10:24:22 -05:00
James Bardin 5eca0788c6 rely solely on the plan changes for outputs
Now that outputs changes are tracked in full, we can remove the
comparisons with the prior state and use the planned changes directly.
2020-10-12 18:59:14 -04:00
James Bardin be757bd416 Refresh instances during plan
This change refreshes the instance state during plan, so a complete
Refresh no longer needs to happen before Plan.
2020-09-17 09:54:59 -04:00
Kristin Laemmert 86e9ba3d65
* backend/local: push responsibility for unlocking state into individual operations
* unlock the state if Context() has an error, exactly as backend/remote does today
* terraform console and terraform import will exit before unlocking state in case of error in Context()
* responsibility for unlocking state in the local backend is pushed down the stack, out of backend.go and into each individual state operation
* add tests confirming that state is not locked after apply and plan

* backend/local: add checks that the state is unlocked after operations

This adds tests to plan, apply and refresh which validate that the state
is unlocked after all operations, regardless of exit status. I've also
added specific tests that force Context() to fail during each operation
to verify that locking behavior specifically.
2020-08-11 11:23:42 -04:00
Martin Atkins 31a4b44d2e backend/local: treat output changes as side-effects to be applied
This is a baby-step towards an intended future where all Terraform actions
which have side-effects in either remote objects or the Terraform state
can go through the plan+apply workflow.

This initial change is focused only on allowing plan+apply for changes to
root module output values, so that these can be written into a new state
snapshot (for consumption by terraform_remote_state elsewhere) without
having to go outside of the primary workflow by running
"terraform refresh".

This is also better than "terraform refresh" because it gives an
opportunity to review the proposed changes before applying them, as we're
accustomed to with resource changes.

The downside here is that Terraform Core was not designed to produce
accurate changesets for root module outputs. Although we added a place for
it in the plan model in Terraform 0.12, Terraform Core currently produces
inaccurate changesets there which don't properly track the prior values.

We're planning to rework Terraform Core's evaluation approach in a
forthcoming release so it would itself be able to distinguish between the
prior state and the planned new state to produce an accurate changeset,
but this commit introduces a temporary stop-gap solution of implementing
the logic up in the local backend code, where we can freeze a snapshot of
the prior state before we take any other actions and then use that to
produce an accurate output changeset to decide whether the plan has
externally-visible side-effects and render any changes to output values.

This temporary approach should be replaced by a more appropriately-placed
solution in Terraform Core in a release, which should then allow further
behaviors in similar vein, such as user-visible drift detection for
resource instances.
2020-05-29 07:36:40 -07:00
Yuri Astrakhan 6eb968531d
backend/plan: Show warnings even if no changes are needed 2020-02-19 15:59:15 -08:00
Kristin Laemmert 47a16b0937
addrs: embed Provider in AbsProviderConfig instead of Type
a large refactor to addrs.AbsProviderConfig, embedding the addrs.Provider instead of a Type string. I've added and updated tests, added some Legacy functions to support older state formats and shims, and added a normalization step when reading v4 (current) state files (not the added tests under states/statefile/roundtrip which work with both current and legacy-style AbsProviderConfig strings).

The remaining 'fixme' and 'todo' comments are mostly going to be addressed in a subsequent PR and involve looking up a given local provider config's FQN. This is fine for now as we are only working with default assumption.
2020-02-13 15:32:58 -05:00
Kristin Laemmert 80ab551867
terraform: use addrs.Provider as map keys for provider schemas (#24002)
This is a stepping-stone PR for the provider source project. In this PR
"legcay-stype" FQNs are created from the provider name string. Future
work involves encoding the FQN directly in the AbsProviderConfig and
removing the calls to addrs.NewLegacyProvider().
2020-02-03 08:18:04 -05:00
Martin Atkins 8b511524d6
Initial steps towards AbsProviderConfig/LocalProviderConfig separation (#23978)
* Introduce "Local" terminology for non-absolute provider config addresses

In a future change AbsProviderConfig and LocalProviderConfig are going to
become two entirely distinct types, rather than Abs embedding Local as
written here. This naming change is in preparation for that subsequent
work, which will also include introducing a new "ProviderConfig" type
that is an interface that AbsProviderConfig and LocalProviderConfig both
implement.

This is intended to be largely just a naming change to get started, so
we can deal with all of the messy renaming. However, this did also require
a slight change in modeling where the Resource.DefaultProviderConfig
method has become Resource.DefaultProvider returning a Provider address
directly, because this method doesn't have enough information to construct
a true and accurate LocalProviderConfig -- it would need to refer to the
configuration to know what this module is calling the provider it has
selected.

In order to leave a trail to follow for subsequent work, all of the
changes here are intended to ensure that remaining work will become
obvious via compile-time errors when all of the following changes happen:
- The concept of "legacy" provider addresses is removed from the addrs
  package, including removing addrs.NewLegacyProvider and
  addrs.Provider.LegacyString.
- addrs.AbsProviderConfig stops having addrs.LocalProviderConfig embedded
  in it and has an addrs.Provider and a string alias directly instead.
- The provider-schema-handling parts of Terraform core are updated to
  work with addrs.Provider to identify providers, rather than legacy
  strings.

In particular, there are still several codepaths here making legacy
provider address assumptions (in order to limit the scope of this change)
but I've made sure each one is doing something that relies on at least
one of the above changes not having been made yet.

* addrs: ProviderConfig interface

In a (very) few special situations in the main "terraform" package we need
to make runtime decisions about whether a provider config is absolute
or local.

We currently do that by exploiting the fact that AbsProviderConfig has
LocalProviderConfig nested inside of it and so in the local case we can
just ignore the wrapping AbsProviderConfig and use the embedded value.

In a future change we'll be moving away from that embedding and making
these two types distinct in order to represent that mapping between them
requires consulting a lookup table in the configuration, and so here we
introduce a new interface type ProviderConfig that can represent either
AbsProviderConfig or LocalProviderConfig decided dynamically at runtime.

This also includes the Config.ResolveAbsProviderAddr method that will
eventually be responsible for that local-to-absolute translation, so
that callers with access to the configuration can normalize to an
addrs.AbsProviderConfig given a non-nil addrs.ProviderConfig. That's
currently unused because existing callers are still relying on the
simplistic structural transform, but we'll switch them over in a later
commit.

* rename LocalType to LocalName

Co-authored-by: Kristin Laemmert <mildwonkey@users.noreply.github.com>
2020-01-31 08:23:07 -05:00
Kristin Laemmert 6541775ce4
addrs: roll back change to Type field in ProviderConfig (#23937) 2020-01-28 08:13:30 -05:00
Pam Selle 37d16b2f79 Deletions from backend local 2020-01-13 15:30:46 -05:00
Kristin Laemmert e3416124cc
addrs: replace "Type string" with "Type Provider" in ProviderConfig
* huge change to weave new addrs.Provider into addrs.ProviderConfig
* terraform: do not include an empty string in the returned Providers /
Provisioners
- Fixed a minor bug where results included an extra empty string
2019-12-06 08:00:18 -05:00
James Bardin 6caa5d23e2 fix diagnostics handling
Located all non-test paths where a Diagnostic type was assigned to an
error variable.
2019-11-21 09:14:50 -05:00
Martin Atkins 9a62ab3014 command: "terraform show" renders plans like "terraform plan"
During the Terraform 0.12 work we briefly had a partial update of the old
Terraform 0.11 (and prior) diff renderer that could work with the new
plan structure, but could produce only partial results.

We switched to the new plan implementation prior to release, but the
"terraform show" command was left calling into the old partial
implementation, and thus produced incomplete results when rendering a
saved plan.

Here we instead use the plan rendering logic from the "terraform plan"
command, making the output of both identical.

Unfortunately, due to the current backend architecture that logic lives
inside the local backend package, and it contains some business logic
around state and schema wrangling that would make it inappropriate to move
wholesale into the command/format package. To allow for a low-risk fix to
the "terraform show" output, here we avoid some more severe refactoring by
just exporting the rendering functionality in a way that allows the
"terraform show" command to call into it.

In future we'd like to move all of the code that actually writes to the
output into the "command" package so that the roles of these components
are better segregated, but that is too big a change to block fixing this
issue.
2019-11-06 06:53:32 -08:00
Martin Atkins b1213f7f6c backend/local: don't panic when an instance has only a deposed object
This unusual situation isn't supposed to arise in normal use, but it can
come up in practice in some edge-case scenarios where Terraform fails in
a severe way during a create_before_destroy.

Some earlier versions of Terraform also had bugs in their handling of
deposed objects, so this may also arise if upgrading from one of those
older versions with some leftover deposed objects in the state.
2019-06-04 09:23:29 -07:00
Kristin Laemmert b9d8e96e0c
command/plan: plan output should indicate if a resource is being (#20580)
replaced because the instance was tainted.
2019-03-05 16:18:55 -08:00
Radek Simko f64978b64c
backend/local: Render CBD replacement (+/-) correctly (#19642)
* backend/local: Render CBD replacement (+/-) correctly

* command/format: Use IsReplace helper function
2018-12-14 13:45:47 +00:00
Radek Simko 3ab4739ba4
backend/local: Avoid rendering data sources on destroy 2018-12-12 18:21:49 +00:00
Martin Atkins 168d84b3c4 core: Make resource type schema versions visible to callers
Previously we were fetching these from the provider but then immediately
discarding the version numbers because the schema API had nowhere to put
them.

To avoid a late-breaking change to the internal structure of
terraform.ProviderSchema (which is constructed directly all over the
tests) we're retaining the resource type schemas in a new map alongside
the existing one with the same keys, rather than just switching to
using the providers.Schema struct directly there.

The methods that return resource type schemas now return two arguments,
intentionally creating a little API friction here so each new caller can
be reminded to think about whether they need to do something with the
schema version, though it can be ignored by many callers.

Since this was a breaking change to the Schemas API anyway, this also
fixes another API wart where there was a separate method for fetching
managed vs. data resource types and thus every caller ended up having a
switch statement on "mode". Now we just accept mode as an argument and
do the switch statement within the single SchemaForResourceType method.
2018-11-27 15:53:54 -08:00
Sander van Harmelen a17f317025 Change how to fall back from remote to local backend
In order to support free organizations, we need a way to load the `remote` backend and then, depending on the used offering/plan, enable or disable remote operations.

In other words, we should be able to dynamically fall back to the `local` backend if needed, after first configuring the `remote` backend.

To make this works we need to change the way this was done previously when the env var `TF_FORCE_LOCAL_BACKEND` was set. The clear difference of course being that the env var would be available on startup, while the used offering/plan is only known after being able to connect to TFE.
2018-11-20 22:25:52 +01:00
Sander van Harmelen 52a1b22f7a Implement the remote enhanced backend
This is a refactored version of the `remote` backend that was initially added to Terraform v0.11.8 which should now be compatible with v0.12.0.
2018-11-06 16:29:46 +01:00
Martin Atkins 98bbd560b5 command: Fix most (but not all) "terraform plan" tests 2018-10-16 19:14:11 -07:00
Martin Atkins 2b80df0163 backend/local: Require caller to set PlanOutBackend with PlanOutPath
We can't generate a valid plan file without a backend configuration to
write into it, but it's the responsibility of the caller (the command
package) to manage the backend configuration mechanism, so we require it
to tell us what to write here.

This feels a little strange because the backend in principle knows its
own config, but in practice the backend only knows the _processed_ version
of the config, not the raw configuration value that was used to configure
it.
2018-10-16 19:14:11 -07:00
Kristin Laemmert 6a37ee9277 backend/local: more tests passing
I have no confidence in the change to plans/planfile/tfplan.go. The
tests were passing an empty backend config, which planfile  was able to
write to a file but not read from the same file. This change let me move
past that and it did not break any tests in the planfile package, but I
am concerned that it introduces undesired behavior.
2018-10-16 19:14:11 -07:00
Kristin Laemmert c661157999 plans/objchange: further harden ProposedNewObject against ~weird~
incoming values

Addresses an odd state where the priorV of an object to be changed is
known but null.

While this situation should not happen, it seemed prudent to ensure that
core is resilient to providers sending incorrect values (which might
also occur with manually edited state).
2018-10-16 19:14:11 -07:00
Martin Atkins a43b7df282 core: Handle forced-create_before_destroy during the plan walk
Previously we used a single plan action "Replace" to represent both the
destroy-before-create and the create-before-destroy variants of replacing.
However, this forces the apply graph builder to jump through a lot of
hoops to figure out which nodes need it forced on and rebuild parts of
the graph to represent that.

If we instead decide between these two cases at plan time, the actual
determination of it is more straightforward because each resource is
represented by only one node in the plan graph, and then we can ensure
we put the right nodes in the graph during DiffTransformer and thus avoid
the logic for dealing with deposed instances being spread across various
different transformers and node types.

As a nice side-effect, this also allows us to show the difference between
destroy-then-create and create-then-destroy in the rendered diff in the
CLI, although this change doesn't fully implement that yet.
2018-10-16 19:14:11 -07:00
Martin Atkins 5390fb1eed backend/local: Don't count outputs for choosing diff action symbols
We're not yet showing outputs in the rendered diff, so it doesn't make
sense to count them for the purpose of deciding which change action
symbols to include in the legend.
2018-10-16 19:14:11 -07:00
Martin Atkins 20318ca193 backend/local: Sort planned resource changes before rendering them
As in the old plan renderer, they are ordered by the natural ordering of
the resource addresses.
2018-10-16 19:14:11 -07:00
Martin Atkins 239a54ad6f command: initial structural diff rendering
This is a light adaptation of our earlier prototype of structural diff
rendering, as a starting point for what we'll actually ship. This is not
consistent with the latest mocks, so will need some additional work before
it is ready, but integrating this allows us to at least see the plan
contents while fixing up remaining issues elsewhere.
2018-10-16 19:14:11 -07:00
Martin Atkins a3403f2766 terraform: Ugly huge change to weave in new State and Plan types
Due to how often the state and plan types are referenced throughout
Terraform, there isn't a great way to switch them out gradually. As a
consequence, this huge commit gets us from the old world to a _compilable_
new world, but still has a large number of known test failures due to
key functionality being stubbed out.

The stubs here are for anything that interacts with providers, since we
now need to do the follow-up work to similarly replace the old
terraform.ResourceProvider interface with its replacement in the new
"providers" package. That work, along with work to fix the remaining
failing tests, will follow in subsequent commits.

The aim here was to replace all references to terraform.State and its
downstream types with states.State, terraform.Plan with plans.Plan,
state.State with statemgr.State, and switch to the new implementations of
the state and plan file formats. However, due to the number of times those
types are used, this also ended up affecting numerous other parts of core
such as terraform.Hook, the backend.Backend interface, and most of the CLI
commands.

Just as with 5861dbf3fc49b19587a31816eb06f511ab861bb4 before, I apologize
in advance to the person who inevitably just found this huge commit while
spelunking through the commit history.
2018-10-16 19:11:09 -07:00
Martin Atkins c937c06a03 terraform: ugly huge change to weave in new HCL2-oriented types
Due to how deeply the configuration types go into Terraform Core, there
isn't a great way to switch out to HCL2 gradually. As a consequence, this
huge commit gets us from the old state to a _compilable_ new state, but
does not yet attempt to fix any tests and has a number of known missing
parts and bugs. We will continue to iterate on this in forthcoming
commits, heading back towards passing tests and making Terraform
fully-functional again.

The three main goals here are:
- Use the configuration models from the "configs" package instead of the
  older models in the "config" package, which is now deprecated and
  preserved only to help us write our migration tool.
- Do expression inspection and evaluation using the functionality of the
  new "lang" package, instead of the Interpolator type and related
  functionality in the main "terraform" package.
- Represent addresses of various objects using types in the addrs package,
  rather than hand-constructed strings. This is not critical to support
  the above, but was a big help during the implementation of these other
  points since it made it much more explicit what kind of address is
  expected in each context.

Since our new packages are built to accommodate some future planned
features that are not yet implemented (e.g. the "for_each" argument on
resources, "count"/"for_each" on modules), and since there's still a fair
amount of functionality still using old-style APIs, there is a moderate
amount of shimming here to connect new assumptions with old, hopefully in
a way that makes it easier to find and eliminate these shims later.

I apologize in advance to the person who inevitably just found this huge
commit while spelunking through the commit history.
2018-10-16 18:46:46 -07:00
Martin Atkins 5782357c28 backend: Update interface and implementations for new config loader
The new config loader requires some steps to happen in a different
order, particularly in regard to knowing the schema in order to
decode the configuration.

Here we lean directly on the configschema package, rather than
on helper/schema.Backend as before, because it's generally
sufficient for our needs here and this prepares us for the
helper/schema package later moving out into its own repository
to seed a "plugin SDK".
2018-10-16 18:39:12 -07:00
James Bardin e9a76808df create clistate.Locker interface
Simplify the use of clistate.Lock by creating a clistate.Locker
instance, which stores the context of locking a state, to allow unlock
to be called without knowledge of how the state was locked.

This alows the backend code to bring the needed UI methods to the point
where the state is locked, and still unlock the state from an outer
scope.

Provide a NoopLocker as well, so that callers can always call Unlock
without verifying the status of the lock.

Add the StateLocker field to the backend.Operation, so that the state
lock can be carried between the different function scopes of the backend
code. This will allow the backend context to lock the state before it's
read, while allowing the different operations to unlock the state when
they complete.
2018-02-23 16:48:15 -05:00
James Bardin ef8ed1e275 coalesce the backened interrupt code
Moves the nested select statements for backend operations into a single
function. The only difference in this part was that apply called
PersistState, which should be harmless regardless of the type of
operation being run.
2018-02-12 11:56:54 -05:00
James Bardin 7cba68326a always wait for a RunningOperation to return
If the user wishes to interrupt the running operation, only the first
interrupt was communicated to the operation by canceling the provided
context. A second interrupt would start the shutdown process, but not
communicate this to the running operation. This order of event could
cause partial writes of state.

What would happen is that once the command returns, the plugin system
would stop the provider processes. Once the provider processes dies, all
pending Eval operations would return return with an error, and quickly
cause the operation to complete. Since the backend code didn't know that
the process was shutting down imminently, it would continue by
attempting to write out the last known state. Under the right
conditions, the process would exit part way through the writing of the
state file.

Add Stop and Cancel CancelFuncs to the RunningOperation, to allow it to
easily differentiate between the two signals. The backend will then be
able to detect a shutdown and abort more gracefully.

In order to ensure that the backend is not in the process of writing the
state out, the command will always attempt to wait for the process to
complete after cancellation.
2018-02-12 11:56:03 -05:00
James Bardin 85295e5c23 watch for cancellation in plan and refresh
Cancellation in the local backend was only implemented for apply.
2017-12-05 10:17:20 -05:00
Martin Atkins 0fe43c8977 cli: allow disabling "next steps" message in terraform plan
In #15884 we adjusted the plan output to give an explicit command to run
to apply a plan, whereas before this command was just alluded to in the
prose.

Since releasing that, we've got good feedback that it's confusing to
include such instructions when Terraform is running in a workflow
automation tool, because such tools usually abstract away exactly what
commands are run and require users to take different actions to
proceed through the workflow.

To accommodate such environments while retaining helpful messages for
normal CLI usage, here we introduce a new environment variable
TF_IN_AUTOMATION which, when set to a non-empty value, is a hint to
Terraform that it isn't being run in an interactive command shell and
it should thus tone down the "next steps" messaging.

The documentation for this setting is included as part of the "...in
automation" guide since it's not generally useful in other cases. We also
intentionally disclaim comprehensive support for this since we want to
avoid creating an extreme number of "if running in automation..."
codepaths that would increase the testing matrix and hurt maintainability.

The focus is specifically on the output of the three commands we give in
the automation guide, which at present means the following two situations:

* "terraform init" does not include the final paragraphs that suggest
  running "terraform plan" and tell you in what situations you might need
  to re-run "terraform init".
* "terraform plan" does not include the final paragraphs that either
  warn about not specifying "-out=..." or instruct to run
  "terraform apply" with the generated plan file.
2017-09-14 10:51:41 -07:00
Martin Atkins 83414beb8f command: various adjustments to the diff presentation
The previous diff presentation was rather "wordy", and not very friendly
to those who can't see color either because they have color-blindness or
because they don't have a color-supporting terminal.

This new presentation uses the actual symbols used in the plan output
and tries to be more concise. It also uses some framing characters to
try to separate the different stages of "terraform plan" to make it
easier to visually navigate.

The apply command also adopts this new plan presentation, in preparation
for "terraform apply" (with interactive plan confirmation) becoming the
primary, safe workflow in the next major release.

Finally, we standardize on the terminology "perform" and "actions" rather
than "execute" and "changes" to reflect the fact that reading is now an
action and that isn't actually a _change_.
2017-09-01 17:55:05 -07:00
Martin Atkins 3ea159297c command/format: improve consistency of plan results
Previously the rendered plan output was constructed directly from the
core plan and then annotated with counts derived from the count hook.
At various places we applied little adjustments to deal with the fact that
the user-facing diff model is not identical to the internal diff model,
including the special handling of data source reads and destroys. Since
this logic was just muddled into the rendering code, it behaved
inconsistently with the tally of adds, updates and deletes.

This change reworks the plan formatter so that it happens in two stages:
- First, we produce a specialized Plan object that is tailored for use
  in the UI. This applies all the relevant logic to transform the
  physical model into the user model.
- Second, we do a straightforward visual rendering of the display-oriented
  plan object.

For the moment this is slightly overkill since there's only one rendering
path, but it does give us the benefit of letting the counts be derived
from the same data as the full detailed diff, ensuring that they'll stay
consistent.

Later we may choose to have other UIs for plans, such as a
machine-readable output intended to drive a web UI. In that case, we'd
want the web UI to consume a serialization of the _display-oriented_ plan
so that it doesn't need to re-implement all of these UI special cases.

This introduces to core a new diff action type for "refresh". Currently
this is used _only_ in the UI layer, to represent data source reads.
Later it would be good to use this type for the core diff as well, to
improve consistency, but that is left for another day to keep this change
focused on the UI.
2017-09-01 17:55:05 -07:00
James Bardin 305ef43aa6 provide contexts to clistate.Lock calls
Add fields required to create an appropriate context for all calls to
clistate.Lock.

Add missing checks for Meta.stateLock, where we would attempt to lock,
even if locking should be skipped.
2017-04-01 17:09:20 -04:00
James Bardin 3f0dcd1308 Have the clistate Lock use LockWithContext
- Have the ui Lock helper use state.LockWithContext.
- Rename the message package to clistate, since that's how it's imported
  everywhere.
- Use a more idiomatic placement of the Context in the LockWithContext
  args.
2017-04-01 17:09:20 -04:00
Mitchell Hashimoto d01886a644
command: remove legacy remote state on migration
Fixes #12871

We were forgetting to remove the legacy remote state from the actual
state value when migrating. This only causes an issue when saving a plan
since the plan contains the state itself and causes an error where both
a backend + legacy state exist.

If saved plans aren't used this causes no noticable issue.

Due to buggy upgrades already existing in the wild, I also added code to
clear the remote section if it exists in a standard unchanged backend
2017-03-20 10:14:59 -07:00
James Bardin f2e496a14c Have backend operations properly unlock state
Make sure unlock is called with the correct LockID during operations
2017-02-15 14:41:55 -05:00
James Bardin 67dc16c9ca Make backend/local test pass 2017-02-15 14:41:55 -05:00
Mitchell Hashimoto 235b7eb38e Merge pull request #11944 from hashicorp/f-state-slow
show message if state lock acquisition/release is slow
2017-02-14 14:00:23 -08:00
Mitchell Hashimoto 5e4f6cf2b1
backend/local: fix could not to did not to prevent error look 2017-02-14 12:09:45 -08:00
Mitchell Hashimoto 65982bd412
backend/local: use new command/state package for better UX 2017-02-14 11:17:28 -08:00
James Bardin 9cdba1f199 enable local state locking for apply
Have the LocalBackend lock the state during operations, and enble this
for the apply comand.
2017-02-02 18:08:28 -05:00
Mitchell Hashimoto a424203ea3
backend/local: validate module exists for plan
Fixes #11504

The local backend should error if `terraform plan` is called in a
directory with no Terraform config files (same behavior as 0.8.x).
**New behavior:** We now allow `terraform plan -destroy` with no
configuration files since that seems reasonable.
2017-01-29 20:02:12 -08:00
Mitchell Hashimoto 31f7cca77f
backend/local: fix crash (in tests) due to not guarding nil CLI 2017-01-26 14:33:50 -08:00