All of our MoveDestination methods have the common problem of deciding
whether the receiver is even potentially in the scope of a particular
MoveEndpointInModule, which requires that the receiver belong to an
instance of the module where the move statement was found.
Previously we had this logic inline in all three cases, but now we'll
factor it out into a shared helper function.
At first it seemed like there ought to be more factoring possible for
the AbsResource vs. AbsResourceInstance implementations, since textually
they look very similar, but in practice they only look similar because
those two types have a lot of method names in common, but the Go compiler
sees them as completely distinct and thus we must write the same logic
out twice. I did try some further refactoring to address that but it
made the resulting code significantly more complicated and, by my
judgement, harder to follow. Consequently I decided that a little
duplication was okay and warranted here because this logic is already
quite fiddly to read through and isn't likely to change significantly once
released (due to backward-compatibility promises).
Previously our MoveDestination methods only honored move statements whose
endpoints were module calls, module instances, or resources.
Now we'll additionally handle when the endpoints are individual resource
instances. This situation only applies to
AbsResourceInstance.MoveDestination because no other objects can be
contained inside of a resource instance.
This completes all of the MoveDestination cases for all supported move
statement types and moveable object types.
Previously our MoveDestination methods only honored move statements whose
endpoints were module calls or module instances.
Now we'll additionally handle when the endpoints are whole resource
addresses. This includes both renaming resource blocks and moving resource
blocks into or out of child modules.
This doesn't yet include endpoints that are specific resource _instances_,
which will follow in a subsequent commit. For the moment that situation
will always indicate a non-match.
This is a subset of the MoveDestination behavior for AbsResource and
AbsResourceInstance which deals with source and destination addresses that
refer to module calls or module instances.
They both work by delegating to ModuleInstance.MoveDestination and then
applying the same resource or resource instance address to the
newly-chosen module instance address, thus ensuring that when we move
a module we also move all of the resources inside that module in the same
way.
This doesn't yet include support for moving between specific resource or
resource instance addresses; that'll follow later. This commit should have
enough logic to support moving between module names and module instance
keys, including any module calls or resources nested within.
This method encapsulates the move-processing rules for applying move
statements to ModuleInstance addresses. It honors both module call moves
and module instance moves by trying to find a subsequence of the input
that matches the "from" endpoint and then, if found, replacing it with
the "to" endpoint while preserving the prefix and suffix around the match,
if any.
Change generic provider link to the registry, since the majority of
providers are no longer under the terraform-provider org.
Remove example link to an individual user's repo.
As part of this PR, just wanted to have this typo fixed to have a better sense of the sentence.
`apt-add-repository` usually automatically runs `apt update` as part of its work in order to fetch the new package indices, but if it does not, then you will need to do so manually before the packages will be available.
Also, I wanted to rephrase the sentence as below(less wording and more clarity- let me know if this is okay and I can raise a new pull request):
`apt-add-repository` usually automatically runs `apt update` as part of its work to fetch the new package indices, but if it does not, you will need to manually do so before the packages will be available.
* configs/configschema: extend block.AttributeByPath to descend into Objects
This commit adds a recursive Object.AttributeByPath function which will step through Attributes with NestedTypes. If an Attribute without a NestedType is encountered while there is still more to the path, it will return nil.
The etcdv3 client has a default request send limit of 2.0 MiB. This change
exposes the configuration option to increase that limit enabling larger
state using the etcdv3 backend.
This also requires that the corresponding --max-request-bytes flag be
increased on the server side. The default there is 1.5 MiB.
Fixes https://github.com/hashicorp/terraform/issues/25745
etcd rewrote its import path from coreos/etcd to go.etcd.io/etcd.
Changed the imports path in this commit, which also updates the code
version.
This lets us remove the github.com/ugorji/go/codec dependency, which
was pinned to a fairly old version. The net change is a loss of 30,000
lines of code in the vendor directory. (I first noticed this problem
because the outdated go/codec dependency was causing a dependency
failure when I tried to put Terraform and another project in the same
vendor directory.)
Note the version shows up funkily in go.mod, but I verified
visually it's the same commit as the "release-3.4" tag in
github.com/coreos/etcd. The etcd team plans to fix the release version
tagging in v3.5, which should be released soon.
The current usage of internal remote state backends requires that
`StateMgr` be able to return an instance of `statemgr.Full` even if the
state is currently locked.
Up until now marks were not considered by `ignore_changes`, that however
means changes to sensitivity within a configuration cannot ignored, even
though they are planned as changes.
Rather than separating the marks and tracking their paths, we can easily
update the processIgnoreChanges routine to handle the marked values
directly. Moving the `processIgnoreChanges` call also cleans up some of
the variable naming, making it more consistent through the body of the
function.