When using the static NAT resource, you no longer have to specify a `network_id`. This can be inferred from the choosen `virtual_machine_id` and/or the `vm_guest_ip`.
* Adding private gateway and static route resource to cloudstack provider
Testing the private gateway and static route resource requires a ROOT
account in Cloudstack
* changes requested by reviewer
* govendor: update go-cloudstack dependency
* Separate security groups and rules
This commit separates the creation and management of security groups and security group rules.
It extends the `icmp` options so you can supply `icmp_type` and `icmp_code` to enbale more specific configs.
And it adds lifecycle management of security group rules, so that security groups do not have to be recreated when rules are added or removed.
This is particulary helpful since the `cloudstack_instance` cannot update a security group without having to recreate the instance.
In CloudStack >= 4.9.0 it is possible to update security groups of existing instances, but as that is just added to the latest version it seems a bit too soon to start using this (causing backwards incompatibility issues for people or service providers running older versions).
* Add and update documentation
* Add acceptance tests
In CloudStack you can dynamically start using an ACL and once you use
an ACL you can dynamically swap ACL’s. But once your using an ACL, you
can no longer stop using an ACL without rebuilding the network.
This change makes the `ForceNew` value dynamic so that it only returns
`true` if you are reverting from using an ACL to not using an ACL
anymore, making this functionally inline with the behaviour CloudStack
offers.
We have a curtesy function in place allowing you to specify both a
`name` of `ID`. But in order for the graph to be build correctly when
you recreate or taint stuff that other resources depend on, we need to
reference the `ID` and *not* the `name`.
So in order to enforce this and by that help people to not make this
mistake unknowingly, I deprecated all the parameters this allies to and
changed the logic, docs and tests accordingly.
It turns out all other providers use `ip_address` where the CloudStack
provider uses `ipaddress`. To make this more consistent this PR
deprecates `ipaddress` and adds `ip_address` where needed…
- Added a retry loop for attaching disks as this something was tried to
fast when the VM was still booting
- Fix issue #3033
- Update docs for latest updates and done some minor refactoring
(styling)