A consequnce of the work done in #6185 was that variables which were in
a module but not set explicitly (i.e. the default value was relied upon)
were marked as type errors. This was reported in #6230.
This commit adds a test case for this and a patch which fixes the issue.
When a directory service was not found, Terraform was panicking due to
`dir := out.DirectoryDescriptions[0]`. The AWS API doesn't throw an
Error in this case. IT just return s0 results. Therefore, we should
check for 0 results in the return and remove the directory from the
state
This commit uses Riviera to register the Microsoft.Compute provider as a
canary for whether or not the Azure account credentials are set up. It
used to use the MS client, but that appeared to panic internally if the
credentials were bad. It's possible that we were using it wrong, but
there are no docs so ¯\_(ツ)_/¯.
As part of this, we parellelise the registration of the other providers.
This shaves the latency of each provider request times the number of
providers minus 1 off the "startup" time of the AzureRM provider. The
result is quite noticeable.
As I've been working through the resources, I'm finding that a lot are
going to need some serious work. Given we have hundreds, I think it
might be prudent to make this opt-in for now and we can revisit
automatic/opt-out at some future point.
Importability will likely be opt-in it appears so this will match up
with that.
Official OpenStack clients commonly support specifing a client
certificate/key to enable SSL client authentication when communicating
with OpenStack services. This patch enables such feature in Terraform
with new parameters and environment variables:
* 'cert' provider parameter or OS_CERT env variable to specify client
certificate file,
* 'key' provider parameter or OS_KEY env variable to specify client
certificate private key file.