The template resources don't actually need to retain any state, so they
are good candidates to be data sources.
This includes a few tweaks to the acceptance tests -- now configured to
run as unit tests -- since it seems that they have been slightly broken
for a while now. In particular, the "update" cases are no longer tested
because updating is not a meaningful operation for a data source.
When adding multiple notifications from one S3 bucket to one SQS queue, it wasn't immediately intuitive how to do this.
At first I created two `aws_s3_bucket_notification` configs and it seemed to work fine, however the config for one event
will overwrite the other. In order to have multiple events, you can defined the `queue` key twice, or use an array if you're
working with the JSON syntax. I tried to make this more clear in the documentation.
This fixes#7157. It doesn't change the way aws_ami works
```
make testacc TEST=./builtin/providers/aws
TESTARGS='-run=TestAccAWSAMICopy'
==> Checking that code complies with gofmt requirements...
go generate $(go list ./... | grep -v /vendor/)
TF_ACC=1 go test ./builtin/providers/aws -v -run=TestAccAWSAMICopy
-timeout 120m
=== RUN TestAccAWSAMICopy
--- PASS: TestAccAWSAMICopy (479.75s)
PASS
ok github.com/hashicorp/terraform/builtin/providers/aws 479.769s
```
This resource (unlike the others in this provider) isn't stateful, so it
is a good candidate to be a data source.
The old resource form is preserved via the standard shim in helper/schema,
which will generate a deprecation warning but will still allow the
resource to be used.
When applying or removing 2+ security groups from an instance, an EOF
error will be triggered even though the action was successful. This
patch accounts for and ignores the EOF error. It also adds a test
case.
Security Group and Port documentation are also updated in this
commit.
* small doc update
* provider/atlas: Add docs for Artifact Data Source
* provider/atlas: Remove a test method that isn't used
* provider/atlas: Add Data Source for Atlas Artifact
* provider/atlas: Show deprecation error on atlas_artifact resource
* Added support for redshift destination to firehose delivery streams
* Small documentation fix
* go fmt after rebase
* small fixes after rebase
* provider/aws: Firehose test cleanups
* provider/aws: Update docs
* Convert Redshift and S3 blocks to TypeList
* provider/aws: Add migration for S3 Configuration in Kinesis firehose
* providers/aws: Safety first when building Redshift config options
* restore commented out log statements in the migration
* provider/aws: use MaxItems in schema
* added additional error info for when memory swap assert fails.
related to https://github.com/hashicorp/terraform/pull/7392
* updated docker_container documentation
reflect recent changes to docker provider around tests, dns options and
dns search support.
* Grammar and punctuation changes
Docker container documentation.
* Spell checking, grammar and punctuation.
Docker container documentation.
* Markdown change sto docker container documentation
* Add SES resource
* Detect ReceiptRule deletion outside of Terraform
* Handle order of rule actions
* Add position field to docs
* Fix hashes, add log messages, and other small cleanup
* Fix rebase issue
* Fix formatting
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.
this datasource allows terraform to work with externally modified state, e.g.
when you're using an ECS service which is continously updated by your CI via the
AWS CLI.
right now you'd have to wrap terraform into a shell script which looks up the
current image digest, so running terraform won't change the updated service.
using the aws_ecs_container_definition data source you can now leverage
terraform, removing the wrapper entirely.
Since this resource produces a list it feels more intuitive to give its
attribute a plural name, and since the noun "instance" already means
something specific in the AWS provider that doesn't apply here we use
"names" to indicate that these are availability zone names.
Also includes updating the docs to not show a dynamic count example for
now, since we don't support that yet.
false
Fixes#7035
A known issue in Terraform means that d.GetOk() on a bool which is false
will mean it doesn't get evaulated. Therefore, when people set
publicly_accessible to false, it will never get evaluated on the Create
We are going to make it default to false now
The documentation wording implies that in all cases you have to manually accept peering requests. This change is intended to clarify where this is required. The documentation also separates between "basic usage" and "basic usage with tags", but the expanded usage didn't actually provide much additional useful information. Expanded a bit to show the use of auto_accept since both VPCs are created by the content and to show setting the Name tag for proper display in the console.
resize
When resizing a DO droplet, you can only increase the size not
descrease. If you try and go down in size, the API will return this
error:
```
* digitalocean_droplet.foobar: Error resizing droplet (17090364):
POST https://api.digitalocean.com/v2/droplets/17090364/actions:
422 Size can not decrease size of Droplet's disk image
```
Since the custom_configuration_parameters can't take dots, we cannot
set 'disk.EnableUUID'. This adds a parameter for this options that gets
added to a configSpec. This option causes the vm to mount disks by uuid
on the guest OS.
* Adding debug functionality to log debug api calls
* adding debug and refactoring tests
* more tweaks with tests
* updating documentation
* more refactoring of tests
* working through factor for testing
* removing logging that displays username and password
* more work on getting tests stable
The example is referencing a non-existent variable, `allocation_id`, within the `aws_eip` resource. I believe this should actually be `aws_eip.example.id` instead of `aws_eip.example.allocation_id`.
Add the iam_arn attribute to aws_cloudfront_origin_access_identity,
which computes the IAM ARN for a certain CloudFront origin access
identity.
This is necessary because S3 modifies the bucket policy if CanonicalUser
is sent, causing spurious diffs with aws_s3_bucket resources.
This brings over the work done by @apparentlymart and @radeksimko in
PR #3124, and converts it into a data source for the AWS provider:
This commit adds a helper to construct IAM policy documents using
familiar Terraform concepts. It makes Terraform-style interpolations
easier and resolves the syntax conflict between Terraform interpolations
and IAM policy variables by changing the latter to use &{...} for its
interpolations.
Its use is completely optional and users are free to go on using literal
heredocs, file interpolations or whatever else; this just adds another
option that fits more naturally into a Terraform config.
...as this will hopefully clue people in that this function will indeed
work to manipulate ipv6 networks.
Not that I completely spaced on that for quite some time, or anything
like that.
Nope, not me. Not at all.
This data source allows one to look up the most recent AMI for a specific
set of parameters, much like aws ec2 describe-images in the AWS CLI.
Basically a refresh of hashicorp/terraform#4396, in data source form.
* Add per user, role and group policy attachment
* Add docs for new IAM policy attachment resources.
* Make policy attachment resources manage only 1 entity<->policy attachment
* provider/aws: Tidy up IAM Group/User/Role attachments
This commit adds a data source with a single list, `instance` for the
schema which gets populated with the availability zones to which an
account has access.
Allow a cloud admin to target a specific tenant in which to allocate
a floating IP. This is useful when the cloud admin does not want to
delegate network privileges to the tenants or various Q&A scenarios.