Commit Graph

13 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Martin Atkins 6d80088f51 website: More accurate release versions for new plan options
While we were working on and documenting these it wasn't clear exactly
what Terraform CLI version they would land in, and so we used
"Terraform v1.0" in the docs as a safe bound that was definitely going to
include all of them.

With everything now landed though, we can be more specific about which
v0.15.x minor release each of these appeared in.
2021-05-26 09:19:33 -07:00
Alisdair McDiarmid f9fc47c22e website: Add documentation for machine readable UI
Terraform 0.15.3 added support for a `-json` flag to the plan, apply,
and refresh commands, which renders the Terraform UI output in a
structured machine readable format. This commit adds documentation for
this interface.
2021-05-25 16:01:32 -04:00
Karol Szczepański f684f91f3f
website/docs(plan): fix minor typos (#28713) 2021-05-18 11:05:42 -04:00
Martin Atkins 3c8a4e6e05 command+backend/local: -refresh-only and drift detection
This is a light revamp of our plan output to make use of Terraform core's
new ability to report both the previous run state and the refreshed state,
allowing us to explicitly report changes made outside of Terraform.

Because whether a plan has "changes" or not is no longer such a
straightforward matter, this now merges views.Operation.Plan with
views.Operation.PlanNoChanges to produce a single function that knows how
to report all of the various permutations. This was also an opportunity
to fill some holes in our previous logic which caused it to produce some
confusing messages, including a new tailored message for when
"terraform destroy" detects that nothing needs to be destroyed.

This also allows users to request the refresh-only planning mode using a
new -refresh-only command line option. In that case, Terraform _only_
performs drift detection, and so applying a refresh-only plan only
involves writing a new state snapshot, without changing any real
infrastructure objects.
2021-05-13 09:05:06 -07:00
Martin Atkins 42e0985839 command: use -lock=false consistently in -help output
Previously the docs for this were rather confusing because they showed an
option to turn _on_ state locking, even though it's on by default.

Instead, we'll now show -lock=false in all cases and document it as
_disabling_ the default locking.

While working on this I also noticed that the equivalent docs on the
website were differently inconsistent. I've not made them fully consistent
here but at least moreso than they were before.
2021-05-12 09:27:37 -07:00
Martin Atkins 1d3e34e35e command: New -replace=... planning option
This allows a similar effect to pre-tainting an object but does the action
within the context of a normal plan and apply, avoiding the need for an
intermediate state where the old object still exists but is marked as
tainted.

The core functionality for this was already present, so this commit is
just the UI-level changes to make that option available for use and to
explain how it contributed to the resulting plan in Terraform's output.
2021-05-03 15:43:23 -07:00
Martin Atkins 6bed3008a5 website: Reworking of the "terraform plan" docs, and related pages
It's been a long time since we gave this page an overhaul, and with our
ongoing efforts to make plan and apply incorporate all of the side-effects
that might need to be done against a configuration it seems like a good
time for some restructuring in that vein.

The starting idea here is to formally split the many "terraform plan"
options into a few different categories:
 - Planning modes
 - Planning options
 - Other options

The planning modes and options are the subset that are also accepted by
"terraform apply" when it's running in its default mode of generating a
plan and then prompting for interactive approval of it. This then allows
us to avoid duplicating all of that information on the "terraform apply"
page, and thus allows us to spend more words discussing each of them.

This set of docs is intended as a fresh start into which we'll be able to
more surgically add in the information about -refresh-only and -replace=...
once we have those implemented. Consequently there are some parts of this
which may seem a little overwraught for what it's currently describing;
that's a result of my having prepared this by just deleting the
-refresh-only and -replace=... content from our initial docs draft and
submitted the result, in anticipation of re-adding the parts I've deleted
here in the very near future in other commits.
2021-04-30 14:27:36 -07:00
Sam Velie 5d04c4ea27
docs: correct spelling of normally (#28508) 2021-04-30 12:24:02 -04:00
Robin Norwood e3bd661470
Merge pull request #28164 from hashicorp/rln-add-resource-targeting-tutorial-callout
Add callout to resource targeting tutorial
2021-03-29 09:12:30 -05:00
Martin Atkins 6f35c2847b command: Reorganize docs of the local backend's legacy CLI options
We have these funny extra options that date back to before Terraform even
had remote state, which we've preserved along the way by most recently
incorporating them as special-case overrides for the local backend.

The documentation we had for these has grown less accurate over time as
the details have shifted, and was in many cases missing the requisite
caveats that they are only for the local backend and that backend
configuration is the modern, preferred way to deal with the use-cases they
were intended for.

We always have a bit of a tension with this sort of legacy option because
we want to keep them documented just enough to be useful to someone who
finds an existing script/etc using them and wants to know what they do,
but not to take up so much space that they might distract users from
finding the modern alternative they should consider instead.

As a compromise in that vein here I've created a new section about these
options under the local backend documentation, which then gives us the
space to go into some detail about the various behaviors and interactions
and also to discuss their history and our recommended alternatives. I then
simplified all of the other mentions of these in command documentation
to just link to or refer to the local backend documentation. My hope then
is that folks who need to know what these do can still find the docs, but
that information can be kept out of the direct path of new users so they
can focus on learning about remote backends instead.

This is certainly not the most ideal thing ever, but it seemed like the
best compromise between the competing priorities I described above.
2021-03-25 13:56:48 -07:00
Robin Norwood 31323b911b Add callout to resource targeting tutorial 2021-03-22 11:55:41 -05:00
Nick Fagerlund d1e8537b33 website: CLI: Update links to moved docs pages 2021-01-22 12:22:21 -08:00
Nick Fagerlund a8332703c9 website: CLI: Move docs files to match new URLs 2021-01-22 12:22:21 -08:00