This commit adds the openstack_compute_volume_attach_v2 resource. This
resource enables a volume to be attached to an instance by using the
OpenStack Compute (Nova) v2 volumeattach API.
This commit adds the openstack_blockstorage_volume_attach_v2 resource. This
resource enables a volume to be attached to an instance by using the OpenStack
Block Storage (Cinder) v2 API.
* provider/github: add GitHub labels resource
Provides a GitHub issue label resource.
This resource allows easy management of issue labels for an
organisation's repositories. A name, and a color can be set.
These attributes can be updated without creating a new resource.
* provider/github: add documentation for GitHub issue labels resource
* provider/aws: Add aws_alb_listener data source
This adds the aws_alb_listener data source to get information on an AWS
Application Load Balancer listener.
The schema is slightly modified (only option-wise, attributes are the
same) and we use the aws_alb_listener resource read function to get the
data.
Note that the HTTPS test here may fail due until
hashicorp/terraform#10180 is merged.
* provider/aws: Add aws_alb_listener data source docs
Now documented.
Picked up from where #6548 left off
settings and protected_settings take JSON objects as strings to make extension
generic
TF_ACC=1 go test ./builtin/providers/azurerm -v -run "TestAccAzureRMVirtualMachineExtension" -timeout 120m
=== RUN TestAccAzureRMVirtualMachineExtension_importBasic
--- PASS: TestAccAzureRMVirtualMachineExtension_importBasic (697.55s)
=== RUN TestAccAzureRMVirtualMachineExtension_basic
--- PASS: TestAccAzureRMVirtualMachineExtension_basic (824.17s)
=== RUN TestAccAzureRMVirtualMachineExtension_concurrent
--- PASS: TestAccAzureRMVirtualMachineExtension_concurrent (929.74s)
=== RUN TestAccAzureRMVirtualMachineExtension_linuxDiagnostics
--- PASS: TestAccAzureRMVirtualMachineExtension_linuxDiagnostics (803.19s)
PASS
ok github.com/hashicorp/terraform/builtin/providers/azurerm 3254.663s
* Implemented EventHubs
* Missing the sidebar link
* Fixing the type
* Fixing the docs for Namespace
* Removing premium tests
* Checking the correct status code on delete
* Added a test case for the import
* Documentation for importing
* Fixing a typo
* GH-8755 - Adding in support to attach ASG to ELB as independent action
* GH-8755 - Adding in docs
* GH-8755 - Adjusting attribute name and responding to other PR feedback
This will allows us to filter a specific ebs_volume for attachment to an
aws_instance
```
make testacc TEST=./builtin/providers/aws TESTARGS='-run=TestAccAWSEbsVolumeDataSource_'✹
==> Checking that code complies with gofmt requirements...
go generate $(go list ./... | grep -v /terraform/vendor/)
2016/11/01 12:39:19 Generated command/internal_plugin_list.go
TF_ACC=1 go test ./builtin/providers/aws -v
-run=TestAccAWSEbsVolumeDataSource_ -timeout 120m
=== RUN TestAccAWSEbsVolumeDataSource_basic
--- PASS: TestAccAWSEbsVolumeDataSource_basic (28.74s)
=== RUN TestAccAWSEbsVolumeDataSource_multipleFilters
--- PASS: TestAccAWSEbsVolumeDataSource_multipleFilters (28.37s)
PASS
ok github.com/hashicorp/terraform/builtin/providers/aws57.145s
```
* Adding private gateway and static route resource to cloudstack provider
Testing the private gateway and static route resource requires a ROOT
account in Cloudstack
* changes requested by reviewer
* provider/aws: data source for AWS Security Group
* provider/aws: add documentation for data source for AWS Security Group
* provider/aws: data source for AWS Security Group (improve if condition and syntax)
* fix fmt
* Add AWS Prefix List data source.
AWS Prefix List data source acceptance test.
AWS Prefix List data source documentation.
* Improve error message when PL not matched.
* govendor: update go-cloudstack dependency
* Separate security groups and rules
This commit separates the creation and management of security groups and security group rules.
It extends the `icmp` options so you can supply `icmp_type` and `icmp_code` to enbale more specific configs.
And it adds lifecycle management of security group rules, so that security groups do not have to be recreated when rules are added or removed.
This is particulary helpful since the `cloudstack_instance` cannot update a security group without having to recreate the instance.
In CloudStack >= 4.9.0 it is possible to update security groups of existing instances, but as that is just added to the latest version it seems a bit too soon to start using this (causing backwards incompatibility issues for people or service providers running older versions).
* Add and update documentation
* Add acceptance tests
* Converting archive_file to datasource.
* Ratcheting back new dir perms.
* Ratcheting back new dir perms.
* goimports
* Adding output_base64sha256 attribute to archive_file.
Updating docs.
* Dropping CheckDestroy since this is a data source.
* Correcting data source attribute checks.
use us-west-2 region in tests
update test with working config
provider/aws: Update EMR contribution with passing test, polling for instance in DELETE method
remove defaulted role
document emr_cluster
rename aws_emr -> aws_emr_cluster
update docs for name change
update delete timeout/polling
rename emr taskgroup to emr instance group
default instance group count to 0, down from 60
update to ref emr_cluster, emr_instance_group
more cleanups for instance groups; need to read and update
add read, delete method for instance groups
refactor the read method to seperate out the fetching of the specific group
more refactoring for finding instance groups
update emr instance group docs
err check on reading HTTP. Dont' return the error, just log it
refactor the create method to catch optionals
additional cleanups, added a read method
update test to be non-master-only
wrap up the READ method for clusters
poll for instance group to be running after a modification
patch up a possible deref
provider/aws: EMR cleanups
fix test naming
remove outdated docs
randomize emr_profile names
The primary purpose of this data source is to ask the question "what is
my current region?", but it can also be used to retrieve the endpoint
hostname for a particular (possibly non-current) region, should that be
useful for some esoteric case.
This adds a singular data source in addition to the existing plural one.
This allows retrieving data about a specific AZ.
As a helper for writing reusable modules, the AZ letter (without its
usual region name prefix) is exposed so that it can be used in
region-agnostic mappings where a different value is used per AZ, such as
for subnet numbering schemes.
In c244e5a6 this resource was converted to a data source, but that was
a mistake since data sources are expected to produce stable results on
each run, and yet certificate requests contain a random nonce as part of
the signature.
Additionally, using the data source as a managed resource through the
provided compatibility shim was not actually working, since "Read" was
trying to parse the private key out of a SHA1 hash of the key, which is
what we place in state due to the StateFunc on that attribute.
By restoring this we restore Terraform's ability to produce all of the
parts of a basic PKI/CA, which is useful for creating dev environments
and bootstrapping PKI for production environments.
- add remote state provider backed by Joyent's Manta
- add documentation of Manta remote state provider
- explicitly check for passphrase-protected SSH keys, which are currently
unsupported, and generate a more helpful error (borrowed from Packer's
solution to the same problem):
https://github.com/mitchellh/packer/blob/master/common/ssh/key.go#L27
This is a rework of pull request #6213 submitted by @joshuaspence,
adjusted to work with the remote state data source. We also add
a deprecation warning for people using the unsupported API, and retain
the ability to refer to "_local" as well as "local" for users in a mixed
version environment.
This is a requirement for enabling CloudWatch Logging on Kinesis
Firehost
% make testacc TEST=./builtin/providers/aws TESTARGS='-run=TestAccAWSCloudWatchLogStream_'
==> Checking that code complies with gofmt requirements...
go generate $(go list ./... | grep -v /terraform/vendor/)
2016/09/02 16:19:14 Generated command/internal_plugin_list.go
TF_ACC=1 go test ./builtin/providers/aws -v
-run=TestAccAWSCloudWatchLogStream_ -timeout 120m
=== RUN TestAccAWSCloudWatchLogStream_basic
--- PASS: TestAccAWSCloudWatchLogStream_basic (22.31s)
=== RUN TestAccAWSCloudWatchLogStream_disappears
--- PASS: TestAccAWSCloudWatchLogStream_disappears (21.21s)
PASS
ok github.com/hashicorp/terraform/builtin/providers/aws 43.538s
This commit adds a new "attachment" style resource for setting the
policy of an AWS S3 bucket. This is desirable such that the ARN of the
bucket can be referenced in an IAM Policy Document.
In addition, we now suppress diffs on the (now-computed) policy in the
S3 bucket for structurally equivalent policies, which prevents flapping
because of whitespace and map ordering changes made by the S3 endpoint.
* provider/aws: Add docs for Default Route Table
* add new default_route_table_id attribute, test to VPC
* stub
* add warning to docs
* rough implementation
* first test
* update test, add swap test
* fix typo
* provider/consul: first stab at adding prepared query support
* provider/consul: flatten pq resource
* provider/consul: implement updates for PQ's
* provider/consul: implement PQ delete
* provider/consul: add acceptance tests for prepared queries
* provider/consul: add template support to PQ's
* provider/consul: use substructures to express optional related components for PQs
* website: first pass at consul prepared query docs
* provider/consul: PQ's support datacenter option and store_token option
* provider/consul: remove store_token on PQ's for now
* provider/consul: allow specifying a separate stored_token
* website: update consul PQ docs
* website: add link to consul_prepared_query resource
* vendor: update github.com/hashicorp/consul/api
* provider/consul: handle 404's when reading prepared queries
* provider/consul: prepared query failover dcs is a list
* website: update consul PQ example usage
* website: re-order arguments for consul prepared queries
This commit adds a resource, acceptance tests and documentation for the
Target Groups for Application Load Balancers.
This is the second in a series of commits to fully support the new
resources necessary for Application Load Balancers.
This commit adds a resource, acceptance tests and documentation for the
new Application Load Balancer (aws_alb). We choose to use the name alb
over the package name, elbv2, in order to avoid confusion.
This is the first in a series of commits to fully support the new
resources necessary for Application Load Balancers.
When you need to enable monitoring for Redshift, you need to create the
correct policy in the bucket for logging. This needs to have the
Redshift Account ID for a given region. This data source provides a
handy lookup for this
http://docs.aws.amazon.com/redshift/latest/mgmt/db-auditing.html#db-auditing-enable-logging
% make testacc TEST=./builtin/providers/aws
% TESTARGS='-run=TestAccAWSRedshiftAccountId_basic' 2 ↵ ✹ ✭
==> Checking that code complies with gofmt requirements...
/Users/stacko/Code/go/bin/stringer
go generate $(go list ./... | grep -v /terraform/vendor/)
2016/08/16 14:39:35 Generated command/internal_plugin_list.go
TF_ACC=1 go test ./builtin/providers/aws -v
-run=TestAccAWSRedshiftAccountId_basic -timeout 120m
=== RUN TestAccAWSRedshiftAccountId_basic
--- PASS: TestAccAWSRedshiftAccountId_basic (19.47s)
PASS
ok github.com/hashicorp/terraform/builtin/providers/aws 19.483s
This commit adds the `state rm` command for removing an address from
state. It is the result of a rebase from pull-request #5953 which was
lost at some point during the Terraform 0.7 feature branch merges.
This data source provides access during configuration to the ID of the
AWS account for the connection to AWS. It is primarily useful for
interpolating into policy documents, for example when creating the
policy for an ELB or ALB access log bucket.
This will need revisiting and further testing once the work for
AssumeRole is integrated.
This commit adds VPN Gateway attachment resource, and also an initial tests and
documentation stubs.
Signed-off-by: Krzysztof Wilczynski <krzysztof.wilczynski@linux.com>
* Improve influxdb provider
- reduce public funcs. We should not make things public that don't need to be public
- improve tests by verifying remote state
- add influxdb_user resource
allows you to manage influxdb users:
```
resource "influxdb_user" "admin" {
name = "administrator"
password = "super-secret"
admin = true
}
```
and also database specific grants:
```
resource "influxdb_user" "ro" {
name = "read-only"
password = "read-only"
grant {
database = "a"
privilege = "read"
}
}
```
* Grant/ revoke admin access properly
* Add continuous_query resource
see
https://docs.influxdata.com/influxdb/v0.13/query_language/continuous_queries/
for the details about continuous queries:
```
resource "influxdb_database" "test" {
name = "terraform-test"
}
resource "influxdb_continuous_query" "minnie" {
name = "minnie"
database = "${influxdb_database.test.name}"
query = "SELECT min(mouse) INTO min_mouse FROM zoo GROUP BY time(30m)"
}
```
* provider/mysql: User Resource
This commit introduces a mysql_user resource. It includes basic
functionality of adding a user@host along with a password.
* provider/mysql: Grant Resource
This commit introduces a mysql_grant resource. It can grant a set
of privileges to a user against a whole database.
* provider/mysql: Adding documentation for user and grant resources
Previously the consul_keys resource did double-duty as both a reader and
writer of values from the Consul key/value store, but that made its
interface rather confusing and complex, as well as having all of the other
general problems associated with read-only resources.
Here we split the functionality such that reading is done with the
consul_keys data source while writing is done with the consul_keys
resource.
The old read behavior of the resource is still supported, but it's no
longer documented (except as a deprecation note) and will generate
deprecation warnings when used.
In future it should be possible to simplify the consul_keys resource by
removing all of the read support, but that is deferred for now to give
users a chance to gracefully migrate to the new data source.
Sidebar:
- Rename "Azure (Resource Manager)" to "Microsoft Azure" and sort
accordingly
- Rename "Azure (Service Management)" to "Microsoft Azure (Legacy ASM)"
and sort accordingly
ARM provider docs:
- Name changes everywhere to Microsoft Azure Provider
- Mention and link to "legacy Azure Service Management Provider" in opening paragraph
- Sidebar gains link at bottom to Azure Service Management Provider
ASM provider docs:
- Name changes everywhere to Azure Service Management Provider
- Sidebar gains link at bottom to Microsoft Azure Provider
- Every page gets a header with the following
- "NOTE: The Azure Service Management provider is no longer being actively developed by HashiCorp employees. It continues to be supported by the community. We recommend using the Azure Resource Manager based [Microsoft Azure Provider] instead if possible."
* Add scaleway provider
this PR allows the entire scaleway stack to be managed with terraform
example usage looks like this:
```
provider "scaleway" {
api_key = "snap"
organization = "snip"
}
resource "scaleway_ip" "base" {
server = "${scaleway_server.base.id}"
}
resource "scaleway_server" "base" {
name = "test"
# ubuntu 14.04
image = "aecaed73-51a5-4439-a127-6d8229847145"
type = "C2S"
}
resource "scaleway_volume" "test" {
name = "test"
size_in_gb = 20
type = "l_ssd"
}
resource "scaleway_volume_attachment" "test" {
server = "${scaleway_server.base.id}"
volume = "${scaleway_volume.test.id}"
}
resource "scaleway_security_group" "base" {
name = "public"
description = "public gateway"
}
resource "scaleway_security_group_rule" "http-ingress" {
security_group = "${scaleway_security_group.base.id}"
action = "accept"
direction = "inbound"
ip_range = "0.0.0.0/0"
protocol = "TCP"
port = 80
}
resource "scaleway_security_group_rule" "http-egress" {
security_group = "${scaleway_security_group.base.id}"
action = "accept"
direction = "outbound"
ip_range = "0.0.0.0/0"
protocol = "TCP"
port = 80
}
```
Note that volume attachments require the server to be stopped, which can lead to
downtimes of you attach new volumes to already used servers
* Update IP read to handle 404 gracefully
* Read back resource on update
* Ensure IP detachment works as expected
Sadly this is not part of the official scaleway api just yet
* Adjust detachIP helper
based on feedback from @QuentinPerez in
https://github.com/scaleway/scaleway-cli/pull/378
* Cleanup documentation
* Rename api_key to access_key
following @stack72 suggestion and rename the provider api_key for more clarity
* Make tests less chatty by using custom logger
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.
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.
* 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
* 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
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.
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.
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.
* Grafana provider
* grafana_data_source resource.
Allows data sources to be created in Grafana. Supports all data source
types that are accepted in the current version of Grafana, and will
support any future ones that fit into the existing structure.
* Vendoring of apparentlymart/go-grafana-api
This is in anticipation of adding a Grafana provider plugin.
* grafana_dashboard resource
* Website documentation for the Grafana provider.
As a first example of a real-world data source, the pre-existing
terraform_remote_state resource is adapted to be a data source. The
original resource is shimmed to wrap the data source for backward
compatibility.
This introduces the terraform state list command to list the resources
within a state. This is the first of many state management commands to
come into 0.7.
This is the first command of many to come that is considered a
"plumbing" command within Terraform (see "plumbing vs porcelain":
http://git.661346.n2.nabble.com/what-are-plumbing-and-porcelain-td2190639.html).
As such, this PR also introduces a bunch of groundwork to support
plumbing commands.
The main changes:
- Main command output is changed to split "common" and "uncommon"
commands.
- mitchellh/cli is updated to support nested subcommands, since
terraform state list is a nested subcommand.
- terraform.StateFilter is introduced as a way in core to filter/search
the state files. This is very basic currently but I expect to make it
more advanced as time goes on.
- terraform state list command is introduced to list resources in a
state. This can take a series of arguments to filter this down.
Known issues, or things that aren't done in this PR on purpose:
- Unit tests for terraform state list are on the way. Unit tests for the
core changes are all there.
* New top level AWS resource aws_eip_association
* Add documentation for aws_eip_association
* Add tests for aws_eip_association
* provider/aws: Change `aws_elastic_ip_association` to have computed
parameters
The AWS API was send ing more parameters than we had set. Therefore,
Terraform was showing constant changes when plans were being formed
Change the AWS DB Instance to now include the DB Option Group param. Adds a test to prove that it works
Add acceptance tests for the AWS DB Option Group work. This ensures that Options can be added and updated
Documentation for the AWS DB Option resource
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
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.
* provider/aws: Default Network ACL resource
Provides a resource to manage the default AWS Network ACL. VPC Only.
* Remove subnet_id update, mark as computed value. Remove extra tag update
* refactor default rule number to be a constant
* refactor revokeRulesForType to be revokeAllNetworkACLEntries
Refactor method to delete all network ACL entries, regardless of type. The
previous implementation was under the assumption that we may only eliminate some
rule types and possibly not others, so the split was necessary.
We're now removing them all, so the logic isn't necessary
Several doc and test cleanups are here as well
* smite subnet_id, improve docs
This introduces a provider for Cobbler. Cobbler manages bare-metal
deployments and, to some extent, virtual machines. This initial
commit supports the following resources: distros, profiles, systems,
kickstart files, and snippets.
* CloudFront implementation v3
* Update tests
* Refactor - new resource: aws_cloudfront_distribution
* Includes a complete re-write of the old aws_cloudfront_web_distribution
resource to bring it to feature parity with API and CloudFormation.
* Also includes the aws_cloudfront_origin_access_identity resource to generate
origin access identities for use with S3.
GitHub really doesn't like when you make the H lowercase, it violates
their brand guidelines and they won't help promote anything that doesn't
use the capital H.
It turns out all other providers use `ip_address` where the CloudStack
provider uses `ipaddress`. To make this more consistent this PR
deprecates `ipaddress` and adds `ip_address` where needed…
This brings across the following resources for Triton from the
joyent/triton-terraform repository, and converts them to the canonical
Terraform style, introducing Terraform-style documentation and
acceptance tests which run against the live API rather than the local
APIs:
- triton_firewall_rule
- triton_machine
- triton_key
This brings across the following resources for Triton from the
joyent/triton-terraform repository, and converts them to the canonical
Terraform style, introducing Terraform-style documentation and
acceptance tests which run against the live API rather than the local
APIs:
- triton_firewall_rule
- triton_machine
- triton_key
This adds support for Elastic Beanstalk Applications, Configuration Templates,
and Environments.
This is a combined work of @catsby, @dharrisio, @Bowbaq, and @jen20
This uses the `fmtcmd` package which has recently been merged into HCL. Per
the usage text, this rewrites Terraform config files to their canonical
formatting and style.
Some notes about the implementation for this initial commit:
- all of the fmtcmd options are exposed as CLI flags
- it operates on all files that have a `.tf` suffix
- it currently only operates on the working directory and doesn't accept a
directory argument, but I'll extend this in subsequent commits
- output is proxied through `cli.UiWriter` so that we write in the same way
as other commands and we can capture the output during tests
- the test uses a very simple fixture just to ensure that it is working
correctly end-to-end; the fmtcmd package has more exhaustive tests
- we have to write the fixture to a file in a temporary directory because it
will be modified and for this reason it was easier to define the fixture
contents as a raw string
This resource is the first which makes use of the new Riviera library
(at https://github.com/jen20/riviera), so there is some additional set
up work to add the provider to the client which gets passed among
resources.