Here is an example that will setup the following:
+ An SSH key resource.
+ A virtual server resource that uses an existing SSH key.
+ A virtual server resource using an existing SSH key and a Terraform managed SSH key (created as "test_key_1" in the example below).
(create this as sl.tf and run terraform commands from this directory):
```hcl
provider "softlayer" {
username = ""
api_key = ""
}
resource "softlayer_ssh_key" "test_key_1" {
name = "test_key_1"
public_key = "${file(\"~/.ssh/id_rsa_test_key_1.pub\")}"
# Windows Example:
# public_key = "${file(\"C:\ssh\keys\path\id_rsa_test_key_1.pub\")}"
}
resource "softlayer_virtual_guest" "my_server_1" {
name = "my_server_1"
domain = "example.com"
ssh_keys = ["123456"]
image = "DEBIAN_7_64"
region = "ams01"
public_network_speed = 10
cpu = 1
ram = 1024
}
resource "softlayer_virtual_guest" "my_server_2" {
name = "my_server_2"
domain = "example.com"
ssh_keys = ["123456", "${softlayer_ssh_key.test_key_1.id}"]
image = "CENTOS_6_64"
region = "ams01"
public_network_speed = 10
cpu = 1
ram = 1024
}
```
You'll need to provide your SoftLayer username and API key,
so that Terraform can connect. If you don't want to put
credentials in your configuration file, you can leave them
out:
```
provider "softlayer" {}
```
...and instead set these environment variables:
- **SOFTLAYER_USERNAME**: Your SoftLayer username
- **SOFTLAYER_API_KEY**: Your API key
IPv6 support added.
We support 1 IPv6 address per interface. It seems like the vSphere SDK supports more than one, since it's provided as a list.
I can change it to support more than one address. I decided to stick with one for now since that's how the configuration parameters
had been set up by other developers.
The global gateway configuration option has been removed. Instead the user should specify a gateway on NIC level (ipv4_gateway and ipv6_gateway).
For now, the global gateway will be used as a fallback for every NICs ipv4_gateway.
The global gateway configuration option has been marked as deprecated.
* added update function with support for vcpu and memory
* waiting for vmware tools redundant with WaitForIP
* proper error handling of PowerOn task
* added test cases for update memory and vcpu
* reboot flag
this implements two new resource types:
* openstack_networking_secgroup_v2 - create a neutron security group
* openstack_networking_secgroup_rule_v2 - create a newutron security
group rule
Unlike their nova counterparts the neutron security groups allow a user
to specify the target tenant_id allowing a cloud admin to create per
tenant resources.
Import networking/v2/extensions/security/groups and
networking/v2/extensions/security/rules from gophercloud.
These will be used by two new resouces openstack_networking_secgroup_v2 and
openstack_networking_secgroup_rule_v2.
* Adding File Resource for vSphere provider
Allows for file upload to vSphere at specified location. This also
includes update for moving or renaming of file resources.
* Ensuring required parameters are provided
If any of the entries in `commands` on `docker_container` resources was
empty, the assertion to string panic'd. Since we can't use ValidateFunc
on list elements, we can only really check this at apply time. If any
value is nil (resolves to empty string during conversion), we fail with
an error prior to creating the container.
Fixes#6409.
This commit adds several example uses of the
openstack_compute_instance_v2 resource. It also makes a clarification
about booting from volumes and image ids/names.
We were passing in a disk path of `[datastore] `, which the createDisk
call would create a file named `.vmdk` on the datastore, which is not
the expected behavior. This make sure that if the user did not pass in
a vmdk path, that we call CreateDisk with an empty string like it
expects.
* command/fmt: Document -diff doesn't disable -write
As noted in hashicorp/terraform#6343, this description misleadingly
suggested that the `-diff` option disables the `-write` option.
This isn't the case and because of the default options (described in
c753390) the behaviour of `terraform fmt -diff` is actually the same as
`terraform fmt -write -list -diff`.
Replace the "instead of rewriting" description to clarify that.
Documentation in hcl/fmtcmd is corrected in hashicorp/hcl#117 but it's not
really necessary to bump the dependency version.
* command/fmt: Show flag defaults in help text
These were documented on the website but not in the `-help` text. This
should help to clarify that you need to pass `-list=false -write=false
-diff` if you only want to see diffs.
Accordingly I've replaced the word "disabled" with "always false" in the
STDIN special cases so that it matches the terminology used in the defaults
and better indicates that it is overridden.
NB: The 3x duplicated defaults and documentation makes me feel uneasy once
again. I'm not sure how to solve that, though.