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.
For situations where the default network-based discovery is inappropriate
or inconvenient, this allows users to provide a hard-coded discovery
document for a particular hostname in the CLI config.
This is a new config block, rather than combined with the existing
"credentials" block, because credentials should ideally live in separate
files from other config so that they can be managed more carefully.
However, this new "host" block _is_ designed to have room for additional
host-specific configuration _other than_ credentials in future, which
might include TLS certificate overrides or other such things used during
the discovery step.
The default network-based discovery is not desirable for all situations,
so this mechanism allows callers to provide a services map for a given
hostname that was obtained some other way (caller-defined) which will then
cause network-based discovery to be skipped and the given map to be
returned verbatim.
We encourage users to share the "terraform version" output as part of
filing an issue, but previously it only printed the core Terraform version
and this left provider maintainers with no information about which
_provider_ version an issue relates to.
Here we make a best effort to show versions for providers, though we will
omit some or all of them if either "terraform init" hasn't been run (and
so no providers were selected yet) or if there are other inconsistencies
that would cause Terraform to object on startup and require a re-run of
"terraform init".
Two different errors here caused this test to pass even though it was
incorrect: the wanted version string was incorrect, but the test for it
was also inverted, and so together this made the test pass even though
it was actually not testing the output at all.
Removed some of the test cases that we don't allow in the svchost
package. Will check back if those are needed in the registry and work
around them as necessary.
For the same reason the disco tests need to override the http.Transport,
other test fixtures will need to as well. Provide a field to override
the default httpTransport.
It appears that the cacert option for the winrm provisioner was
not getting passed correctly to the winrm package. Log output
showed that CACert was false regardless of configuration.
While the validation of the connector looked for cacert, the winrm
communicator looked for ca_cert.
Now that we are looking into the CLI config file for service host
credentials, it's important to support multiple separate files so that
users can keep credentials separate from other settings and credentials
for different hosts separate from one another.
There is no restriction on which settings can appear in which locations.
This is up to the user to decide, depending on their security needs and
e.g. on whether certain files are generated vs. manually-edited.
Previously we handled all of the config sources directly within the main
function. We're going to make CLI config loading more complex shortly, so
having this encapsulated in its own function will avoid creating even more
clutter inside the main function.
Along the way here we also switch from using native Go "error" to using
tfdiags.Diagnostics, so that we can potentially issue warnings here too
in future, and so that we can return multiple errors.
We require that each "credentials" block has a valid hostname and that
there be no more than one "credentials_helper" block.
There are some more sophisticated validations we could do here, such as
checking if the same host is declared more than once, but since this
config handling will be rewritten to use HCL2 in the near future, and this
sort of check is easier to do in the HCL2 API, we just check the basic
stuff for now and plan to revisit later.
Fixes#15921
When terraform re-creates an existing node/client with chef provisioner,
the already existing client (which has old keys) must be removed from
the vault items. Afterwards, the chef-vault will be updated with the
newly created client (which has the new keys). Therefore, the recreated
client will be able to decrypt the vault items properly.
Update all references to the version values to use the new package.
The VersionString function was left in the terraform package
specifically for the aws provider, which is vendored. We can remove that
last call once the provider is updated.
Many terraform project packages now want access to the current terraform
version information. Since most packages end up being consumed by the
core terraform package, preventing import cycles becomes difficult.
This uses an in-memory table of credentials keyed on hostname. This is
the simplest possible credentials source that can actually return
credentials, and is suitable for representing statically-configured
credentials from configuration.
The command package is the main place we need access to these, so that
we can use them during init (to install packages, for example) and so that
we can use them to configure remote backends.
For the moment we're just providing an empty credentials object, which
will start to include both statically-configured and
helper-program-provided credentials sources in subsequent commits.
For situations where no credentials are needed but where a working
CredentialsSource is still required, this variable provides a convenient
way to get a fully-functional-but-empty credentials source.
Although service discovery metadata is usually not sensitive, a service
host may wish to produce different results depending on the requesting
user, such as if users are migrating between two different implementations
that are both running concurrently for some period.
This credentials source wraps another and caches its results in memory
in a map that is keyed on the request hostname.
This should ease the common case of many services operating on the same
hostname by allowing an initial set of credentials to be re-used for
subsequent requests.