The .terraformrc file allows the user to override the executable location
for certain plugins. This mechanism allows us to retain that behavior for
a deprecation period by treating such executables as an unversioned
plugin for the given name and excluding all other candidates for that
name, thus ensuring that the override will "win".
Users must eventually transition away from using this mechanism and use
vendor directories instead, because these unversioned overrides will never
match for a provider referenced with non-zero version constraints.
These new methods ClientConfig and Client provide the bridge into the
main plugin infrastructure by configuring and instantiating (respectively)
a client object for the referenced plugin.
This stops short of getting the proxy object from the client since that
then requires referencing the interface for the plugin kind, which would
then create a dependency on the main terraform package which we'd rather
avoid here. It'll be the responsibility of the caller in the command
package to do the final wiring to get a provider instance out of a
provider plugin client.
For now this supports both our old and new directory layouts, so we can
preserve compatibility with existing configurations until a future major
release where support for the old paths will be removed.
Currently this allows both styles in all given directories, which means we
support more variants than we actually intend to but this is accepted to
keep the interface simple such that we can easily remove the legacy
exception later. The documentation will reflect only the subset of
path layouts that we actually intend to support.
With forthcoming support for versioned plugins we need to be able to
answer questions like what versions of plugins are currently installed,
what's the newest version of a given plugin available, etc.
PluginMetaSet gives us a building block for this sort of plugin version
wrangling.
* Data Source support for Resource Group
* Better message for mismatching locations.
* Reuse existing read code
* Adds documentation
* Adds test
* Adds a function for composing ID strings
* Change location to computed.
* initial commit - 101-vm-from-user-image
* changed branch name
* not deploying - storage problems
* provisions vm but image not properly prepared
* storage not correct
* provisions properly
* changed main.tf to azuredeploy.tf
* added tfvars and info for README
* tfvars ignored and corrected file ext
* added CI config; added sane defaults for variables; updated deployment script, added mac specific deployment for local testing
* deploy.sh to be executable
* executable deploy files
* added CI files; changed vars
* prep for PR
* removal of old folder
* prep for PR
* wrong args for travis
* more PR prep
* updated README
* commented out variables in terraform.tfvars
* Topic 101 vm from user image (#2)
* initial commit - 101-vm-from-user-image
* added tfvars and info for README
* added CI config; added sane defaults for variables; updated deployment script, added mac specific deployment for local testing
* prep for PR
* added new template
* oops, left off master
* prep for PR
* correct repository for destination
* renamed scripts to be more intuitive; added check for docker
* merge vm simple; vm from image
* initial commit
* deploys locally
* updated deploy
* consolidated deploy and after_deploy into a single script; simplified ci process; added os_profile_linux_config
* added terraform show
* changed to allow http & https (like ARM tmplt)
* changed host_name & host_name variable desc
* added az cli check
* on this branch, only build test_dir; master will aggregate all the examples
* merge master
* added new constructs/naming for deploy scripts, etc.
* suppress az login output
* suppress az login output
* forgot about line breaks
* breaking build as an example
* fixing broken build example
* merge of CI config
* fixed grammar in readme
* prep for PR
* took out armviz button and minor README changes
* changed host_name
* fixed merge conflicts
* changed host_name variable
* updating Hashicorp's changes to merged simple linux branch
* updating files to merge w/master and prep for Hashicorp pr
* Revert "updating files to merge w/master and prep for Hashicorp pr"
This reverts commit b850cd5d2a858eff073fc5a1097a6813d0f8b362.
* Revert "updating Hashicorp's changes to merged simple linux branch"
This reverts commit dbaf8d14a9cdfcef0281919671357f6171ebd4e6.
* removing vm from user image example from this branch
* removed old branch
* azure-2-vms-loadbalancer-lbrules (#13)
* initial commit
* need to change lb_rule & nic
* deploys locally
* updated README
* updated travis and deploy scripts for Hari's repo
* renamed deploy script
* clean up
* prep for PR
* updated readme
* fixing conflict in .travis.yml
* initial commit; in progress
* in progress
* in progress; encryption fails
* in progress
* deploys successfully locally
* clean up; deploy typo fixed
* merging hashi master into this branch
* troubleshooting deploy
* added missing vars to deploy script
* updated README, outputs, and added graph
* simplified outputs
* provisions locally
* cleaned up vars
* fixed chart on README
* prepping for pr
* fixed merge conflict
* switching to Hashicorp's .travis.yml
* edited comments
* removed graph
* reverting travis.yml to original
added return line at 45
* Move to v2 client in vendor directory
* Move to v2 api and project IDs for environments
* add host label support to registration command
* Update go-rancher/catalog
* Allow go-rancher to handle URL versioning
This reverts commit b73d037761.
This commit seems to have introduced a race condition where we can
concurrently keep updating state after we've checked if we need to
increase the serial, and thus end up writing partial changes
to the state backend.
In the case of Terraform Enterprise, this fails altogether because
of the state hash consistency check it does.
* provider/openstack: Optimize the printing of request/response headers when debugging Openstack HTTP requests
* provider/openstack: Log the response code aswell
This is a separate resource that serves a similar purpose to the
propagating_vgws argument on aws_route_table, but allows route
propagations to be created independently of the route table, which in
turn allows the VPN gateway to be created after the route table it will
contribute to, possibly in a separate Terraform module.
To make this work, propagating_vgws on aws_route_table is now marked
as Computed, meaning that it won't try to delete any existing propagation
edges if there is no setting for it in configuration at all. This allows
the user to choose whether to use the argument or the separate resource,
though using both together will not work, as explained in the docs.
* Update overview/API links for storage_bucket_objects, and acls for both buckets and objects.
* Minor formatting changes to google_storage_bucket and acl docs.
* Updated outdated custom ACL information and fixed grammar.