The main significant change here is that the package name for the proto
definition is "tfplugin5", which is important because this name is part
of the wire protocol for references to types defined in our package.
Along with that, we also move the generated package into "internal" to
make it explicit that importing the generated Go package from elsewhere is
not the right approach for externally-implemented SDKs, which should
instead vendor the proto definition they are using and generate their
own stubs to ensure that the wire protocol is the only hard dependency
between Terraform Core and plugins.
After this is merged, any provider binaries built against our
helper/schema package will need to be rebuilt so that they use the new
"tfplugin5" package name instead of "proto".
In a future commit we will include more elaborate and organized
documentation on how an external codebase might make use of our RPC
interface definition to implement an SDK, but the primary concern here
is to ensure we have the right wire package name before release.
helper/schema will remove "timeouts" from the config, and stash them in
the diff.Meta map. Terraform sees "timeouts" as a regular config block,
so needs them to be present in the state in order to not show a diff.
Have the GRPCProviderServer shim copy all timeout values into any state
it returns to provide consistent diffs in core.
The helper/resource unit tests will panic, because they were using the
legacy terraform.MockResourceProvider, which doesn't have the same
internals required by the new GRPC shims.
Fail these tests for now, and a new test provider will need to be made
out of a schema.Provider instance.
Use the new SimpleDiff method of the provider so that the diff isn't
altered by ForceNew attributes.
Always set an "id" as RequiresReplace so core knows an instance will be
replaced, even if all ForceNew attributes are filtered out due to
ignore_changes.
An earlier change introduced a new function testConfig to the main code
for this package, which conflicted with a function of the same name in
the test code.
Here we rename the function from the test code, allowing for the more
generally-named testConfig to be the one in the main code.
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.
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.
While this initial implementation is a very simple wrapper function, implementing this in the helper/resource package provides some downstream benefits:
* Provides a standard interface for plugin developers to enable parallel acceptance testing
* Existing plugins can simply convert resource.Test to resource.ParallelTest references (as appropriate) to enable the functionality, rather than worrying about additional line(s) to each acceptance test function or TestCase
* Potential enhancements to ParallelTest (e.g. adding an environment variable to skip enabling the behavior) are consistently propagated
ImportStateVerify does not respect DiffSuppressFunc or CustomizeDiff, which is worth documenting (and maybe, possibly, worth changing?). ImportStateVerifyIgnore is a list of prefixes, rather than a list of fields.
This adds the Taint field to the acceptance testing framework, allowing
the ability to pre-taint resources at the beginning of a particular
TestStep. This can be useful for when an explicit ForceNew is required
for a specific resource for troubleshooting things like diff mismatches,
etc.
The field accepts resource addresses as a list of strings. To keep
things simple for the time being, only addresses in the root module are
accepted. If we ever want to expand this past that, I'd be almost
inclined to add some facilities to the core terraform package to help
translate actual module resource addresses (ie:
module.foo.module.bar.some_resource.baz) into the correct state, versus
the current convention in some acceptance testing facilities that take
the module address as a list of strings (ie: []string{"root", "foo",
"bar"}).
This is rarely needed, but sometimes tests need to create temporary files as part of their operation. This should be used sparingly, since it prevents the pro-active cleanup of the temporary working directory.
Looks like while we were checking errors correctly when ExpectError was
set, we weren't checking for the *absence* of an error, which is should
be checked as well (no error is still not the error we are looking for).
Added a few more tests for ExpectError as well.
Validation is the best time to return detailed diagnostics
to the user since we're much more likely to have source
location information, etc than we are in later operations.
This change doesn't actually add any detail to the messages
yet, but it changes the interface so that we can gradually
introduce more detailed diagnostics over time.
While here there are some minor adjustments to some of the
messages to improve their consistency with terminology we
use elsewhere.
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.
Add an ImportStateIdFunc field to the ImportState testing functionality.
This will allow for more powerful generation of complex import state IDs
that can't be accomplished by ImportStateId or ImportStateIdPrefix
themselves.
Provider import tests previously didn't have to supply a config, but
terraform now requires the provider to be declared for discovery.
testProviderConfig returns a stub config with provider blocks based
on the TestCase Providers. This allows basic import tests in providers
to remain unchanged.
The timestamp prefix added in #8249 was removed in #10152 to ensure that
returned IDs really are properly ordered. However, this meant that IDs were no
longer ordered over multiple invocations of terraform, which was the main
motivation for adding the timestamp in the first place. This commit does a
hybrid: timestamp-plus-incrementing-counter instead of just incrementing counter
or timestamp-plus-random.
Rather than providing an already-resolved map of plugins to core, we now
provide a "provider resolver" which knows how to resolve a set of provider
dependencies, to be determined later, and produce that map.
This requires the context to be instantiated in a different way, so this
very noisy diff is a mostly-mechanical update of all of the existing
places where contexts get created for testing, using some adapted versions
of the pre-existing utilities for passing in mock providers.
Previously having a config was mutually exclusive with running an import,
but we need to provide a config so that the provider is declared, or else
we can't actually complete the import in the future world where providers
are installed dynamically based on their declarations.
* provider/aws: Add Sweeper setup, Sweepers for DB Option Group, Key Pair
* provider/google: Add sweeper for any leaked databases
* more recursion and added LC sweeper, to test out the Dependency path
* implement a dependency example
* implement sweep-run flag to filter runs
* stub a test for TestMain
* test for multiple -sweep-run list
A couple tests require lowering the grace period to keep the test from
taking the full 30s timeout.
The Retry_hang test also needed to be removed from the Parallel group,
becuase it modifies the global refreshGracePeriod variable.
Refresh calls may have side effects that need to be recorded if it
succeeds, especially common when when WaitForState is called from
resource.Retry.
If the WaitForState timeout is reached and there is a Refresh call
in-flight, wait up to refreshGracePeriod (set to 30s) for it to
complete.
This test unfortunately relies on the timing of the loops in
WaitForState, and the text of the error message. Adjust the timing so
the timeout isn't an even multiple of the poll interval, and make sure
we reach a minimum number of retries.
Make sure that we can cancel the WaitForState refresh loop when reaching
a timeout, otherwise it may run indefinitely. There's no need to try and
store and read the Result concurrently, just pass the value over a
channel.
Adds the `ImportStateIdPrefix` field for import acceptance tests. There are (albeit fairly rare) import cases where a resource needs to be imported with a combination of the resource's ID and a known string prefix. This allows the developer to specify the known prefix, and omit the `ImportStateId` field.
```
$ make test TEST=./helper/resource TESTARGS="-run=TestTest_importStateIdPrefix"
==> Checking that code complies with gofmt requirements...
==> Checking AWS provider for unchecked errors...
==> NOTE: at this time we only look for uncheck errors in the AWS package
go generate $(go list ./... | grep -v /terraform/vendor/)
2017/03/30 18:08:36 Generated command/internal_plugin_list.go
go test -i ./helper/resource || exit 1
echo ./helper/resource | \
xargs -t -n4 go test -run=TestTest_importStateIdPrefix -timeout=60s -parallel=4
go test -run=TestTest_importStateIdPrefix -timeout=60s -parallel=4 ./helper/resource
ok github.com/hashicorp/terraform/helper/resource 0.025s
```
Sometimes when waiting on a target state, the set of valid states
through which a value will transition is unknown. This commit adds
support for an empty Pending slice and will treat any states that are not
the target as valid provided the timeouts are not exceeded.
the terraform package doesn't know about TestProvider, so don't put the
hooks in terraform.MockResourceProvider. Wrap the mock in the test where
we need to check the TestProvider functionality.
Call all ResourceProviderFactories and reset the providers before tests.
Store the provider and/or the error in a fixed factory function to be
returned again later.
Before this patch it was not possible to test for a key in a map where
the value is an empty string. With this patch, however, it is now
possible to write a check like:
```
resource.TestCheckResourceAttr("res.name", "mymap.KeyWithEmptyValue", ""),
```
To test that `KeyWithEmptyValue` is a valid key in `mymap`.
UniqueId attempted to provide an ordered unique id by using a nanosecond
timestamp, but doesn't take into account that time is not monotonic
increasing. This provides an implementation that will always be
increasing.
The WaitForState method can't read the result values in a timeout
because they are still owned by the running goroutine. Keep all values
scoped inside the goroutine, and save them into an atomic.Value to be
returned.
Fixes race introduced in #8510
This means that two resources created by the same rule will get names
which sort in the order they are created.
The rest of the ID is still random base32 characters; we no longer set
the bit values that denote UUIDv4.
The length of the ID returned by PrefixedUniqueId is not changed by this
commit; that way we don't break any resources where the underlying
resource has a name length limit.
Fixes#8143.
This commit adds a function which composes a series of TestFuncs, but
will run all tests before returning an error, unlike ComposeTestFunc.
This is useful when verifying contents of state in acceptance tests and
it is desirable to see all the failing cases in one run for slow
resources.
This commit adds a TestCheckFunc which ensures that a value is set for a
given name/key combination. It is primarily useful for ensuring that
computed values are set where it is not possible to know the expected
value ahead of time.
In #7170 we found two scenarios where the type checking done during the
`context.Validate()` graph walk was circumvented, and the subsequent
assumption of type safety in the provider's `Diff()` implementation
caused panics.
Both scenarios have to do with interpolations that reference Computed
values. The sentinel we use to indicate that a value is Computed does
not carry any type information with it yet.
That means that an incorrect reference to a list or a map in a string
attribute can "sneak through" validation only to crop up...
1. ...during Plan for Data Source References
2. ...during Apply for Resource references
In order to address this, we:
* add high-level tests for each of these two scenarios in `provider/test`
* add context-level tests for the same two scenarios in `terraform`
(these tests proved _really_ tricky to write!)
* place an `EvalValidateResource` just before `EvalDiff` and `EvalApply` to
catch these errors
* add some plumbing to `Plan()` and `Apply()` to return validation
errors, which were previously only generated during `Validate()`
* wrap unit-tests around `EvalValidateResource`
* add an `IgnoreWarnings` option to `EvalValidateResource` to prevent
active warnings from halting execution on the second-pass validation
Eventually, we might be able to attach type information to Computed
values, which would allow for these errors to be caught earlier. For
now, this solution keeps us safe from panics and raises the proper
errors to the user.
Fixes#7170
I noticed we had two mechanisms for unit test override. One that dropped
a sentinel into the env var, and another with a struct member on
TestCase. This consolidates the two, using the cleaner struct member
internal mechanism and the nicer `resource.UnitTest()` entry point.
This commit adds a flag to acceptance tests in order to make
appropriately named tests work during `make test` irrespective of the
TF_ACC environment variable. This should only be used on tests which are
known to be fast.
When testing destroy, the test harness calls Refresh followed by Plan,
with the expectation that the resulting diff will be empty.
Data resources challenge this expectation, because they will always be
instantiated during refresh if their configuration isn't computed, and so
the subsequent diff will want to destroy what was instantiated.
To work around this, we make an exception that data resource destroy
diffs may appear in the plan but nothing else.
This fixes#6713.
This commit forward ports the changes made for 0.6.17, in order to store
the type and sensitive flag against outputs.
It also refactors the logic of the import for V0 to V1 state, and
fixes up the call sites of the new format for outputs in V2 state.
Finally we fix up tests which did not previously set a state version
where one is required.