The fake installable package meta used a ZIP archive which gave
different checksums between macOS and Linux targets. This commit removes
the target from the contents of this archive, and updates the golden
hash value in the test to match. This test should now pass on both
platforms.
The provider fully-qualified name string used in configuration is very
long, and since most providers are hosted in the public registry, most
of that length is redundant. This commit adds and uses a `ForDisplay`
method, which simplifies the presentation of provider FQNs.
If the hostname is the default hostname, we now display only the
namespace and type. This is only used in UI, but should still be
unambiguous, as it matches the FQN string parsing behaviour.
This restores some of the local search directories we used to include when
searching for provider plugins in Terraform 0.12 and earlier. The
directory structures we are expecting in these are different than before,
so existing directory contents will not be compatible without
restructuring, but we need to retain support for these local directories
so that users can continue to sideload third-party provider plugins until
the explicit, first-class provider mirrors configuration (in CLI config)
is implemented, at which point users will be able to override these to
whatever directories they want.
This also includes some new search directories that are specific to the
operating system where Terraform is running, following the documented
layout conventions of that platform. In particular, this follows the
XDG Base Directory specification on Unix systems, which has been a
somewhat-common request to better support "sideloading" of packages via
standard Linux distribution package managers and other similar mechanisms.
While it isn't strictly necessary to add that now, it seems ideal to do
all of the changes to our search directory layout at once so that our
documentation about this can cleanly distinguish "0.12 and earlier" vs.
"0.13 and later", rather than having to document a complex sequence of
smaller changes.
Because this behavior is a result of the integration of package main with
package command, this behavior is verified using an e2etest rather than
a unit test. That test, TestInitProvidersVendored, is also fixed here to
create a suitable directory structure for the platform where the test is
being run. This fixes TestInitProvidersVendored.
There was a remaining TODO in this package to find the true provider FQN
when looking up the schema for a resource type. We now have that data
available in the Provider field of configs.Resource, so we can now
complete that change.
The tests for this functionality actually live in the parent "command"
package as part of the tests for the "terraform show" command, so this
fix is verified by all of the TestShow... tests now passing except one,
and that remaining one is failing for some other reason which we'll
address in a later commit.
Built-in providers are special providers that are distributed as part of
Terraform CLI itself, rather than being installed separately. They always
live in the terraform.io/builtin/... namespace so it's easier to see that
they are special, and currently there is only one built-in provider named
"terraform".
Previous commits established the addressing scheme for built-in providers.
This commit makes the installer aware of them to the extent that it knows
not to try to install them the usual way and it's able to report an error
if the user requests a built-in provider that doesn't exist or tries to
impose a particular version constraint for a built-in provider.
For the moment the tests for this are the ones in the "command" package
because that's where the existing testing infrastructure for this
functionality lives. A later commit should add some more focused unit
tests here in the internal/providercache package, too.
* command: refactor testBackendState to write states.State
testBackendState was using the older terraform.State format, which is no
longer sufficient for most tests since the state upgrader does not
encode provider FQNs automatically. Users will run `terraform
0.13upgrade` to update their state to include provider FQNs in
resources, but tests need to use the modern state format instead of
relying on the automatic upgrade.
* plan tests passing
* graph tests passing
* json packages test update
* command test updates
* update show test fixtures
* state show tests passing
In the new design the ProviderSource is decided by package main, not by
the "command" package, and so making sure the vendor directory is included
is the responsibility of that package instead. Therefore we can no longer
test this at the "command" package level, but we'll retain a test for it
in e2etests to record that it isn't currently working, so that we have
a prompt to fix it before releasing.
Due to some incomplete rework of this function in an earlier commit, the
safety check for using the same directory as both the target and the
cache was inverted and was raising an error _unless_ they matched, rather
than _if_ they matched.
This change is verified by the e2etest TestInitProviders_pluginCache,
which is also updated to use the new-style cache directory layout as part
of this commit.
These tests make assertions against specific user-oriented output from the
"terraform init" command, but we've intentionally changed some of these
messages as part of introducing support for the decentralized provider
namespace.
Both of these are attempting to test -plugin-dir, which means we need some
additional help to populate some suitable directories for -plugin-dir to
refer to. The new installFakeProviderPackagesElsewhere helper generalizes
the earlier installFakeProviderPackages to allow installing fake provider
packages to an arbitrary other directory.
This test is focused on making sure that the required_providers syntax
is working, so the rewritten version does not include any special handling
of pre-installed packages or "vendored" packages. Pre-installed plugins
are tested in other tests such as TestInit_getUpgradePlugins.
This test now requires a bit of a different approach because it was
previously directly constructing a cache directory but we now use a
different directory layout.
Rather than manually constructing the new heirarchical directory layout
(which would've required a lot more inline code), this introduces a helper
function installFakeProviderPackages that installs a fake provider package
directly into the local cache directory associated with a Meta object,
with the correct directory layout.
This is a slightly different approach than we used to take for this
option: rather than disabling the installer and causing all future
commands to look elsewhere for plugins, we'll now leave the installer
enabled by constrain it to only look at the given directories.
This is overall simpler because it doesn't require any special tracking
of the plugin directories for subsequent commands. Instead, the selections
file generated by the installer will record the versions it selected from
the specified directories, and we'll link them in to the local cache just
as we would normally so that other commands don't need to do anything
special to select the right plugins in either case.
They still aren't passing, but this is just enough updating to make the
test program compile successfully after the refactoring related to
provider installation. They are now using the mock provider source offered
by the getproviders package, which is similar but not totally identical
to the idea of mocking the entire installer as these tests used to do, and
so many of them need further adjustment to still be testing what they
intended to test under this new architecture.
Subsequent commits will gradually repair the failing tests.
* terraform: add helper functions for creating test state
testSetResourceInstanceCurrent and testSetResourceInstanceTainted are
wrapper functions around states.Module.SetResourceInstanceCurrent()
used to set a resource in state. They work with current, non-deposed
resources with no dependencies.
testSetResourceInstanceDeposed can be used to set a desosed resource in state.
* terraform: update all tests to use modern providers and state
Back when we first introduced provider versioning in Terraform 0.10, we
did the provider version resolution in terraform.NewContext because we
weren't sure yet how exactly our versioning model was going to play out
(whether different versions could be selected per provider configuration,
for example) and because we were building around the limitations of our
existing filesystem-based plugin discovery model.
However, the new installer codepath is new able to do all of the
selections up front during installation, so we don't need such a heavy
inversion of control abstraction to get this done: the command package can
select the exact provider versions and pass their factories directly
to terraform.NewContext as a simple static map.
The result of this commit is that CLI commands other than "init" are now
able to consume the local cache directory and selections produced by the
installation process in "terraform init", passing all of the selected
providers down to the terraform.NewContext function for use in
implementing the main operations.
This commit is just enough to get the providers passing into the
terraform.Context. There's still plenty more to do here, including to
repair all of the tests this change has additionally broken.
There's still a lot of work to do here around both the UX and the
follow-up steps that need to happen after installation completes, but this
is enough to faciliate some initial end-to-end testing of the new-style
install process.
Terraform 0.13 will allow the installation of providers from various
sources. If a user updates their configuration to change the source of
an in-use provider (for example, if the provider namespace changes),
they will also need to update the state file accordingly.
This commit introduces a new `state replace-provider` subcommand which
supports this. All resources using the `from` provider will be updated
to use the `to` provider.
Previously, if a diagnostic context spanned multiple lines, any lines
which did not overlap with the highlight range would be displayed as
blank. This commit fixes the bug.
The problem was caused by the unconditional use of `PartitionAround` to
split the line into before/highlighted/after ranges. When two ranges
don't overlap, this method returns empty ranges, which results in a
blank line. Instead, we first check if the ranges do overlap, and if not
we print the entire line from the context.
Previously, diagnostic errors would display the filename and line
number, along with "(source code not available)". This is because the
fmt command directly loads and parses the configuration, instead of
using the config loader.
This commit registers the manually parsed source as a synthetic
configuration file, so that the diagnostic formatter can look up the
source for the range with the error and display it.
These new functions allow command implementations to get hold of the
providercache objects and installation source object derived from the
current CLI configuration.
missingPlugins was hard-coded to work only with provider plugins, so I
renamed it to clarify the usage.
Also renamed a test provider from greater_than to greater-than as the
underscore is an invalid provider name character and this will become a
hard error in the near future.
* import: remove Config from ImportOpts
`Config` in ImportOpts was any provider configuration provided by the
user on the command line. This option has already been removed in favor
of only taking the provider from the configuration loaded in the current
context.
* terrafrom: add Config to ImportStateTransformer and refactor Transform
to get the resource provider FQN from the Config
Implement a new provider_meta block in the terraform block of modules, allowing provider-keyed metadata to be communicated from HCL to provider binaries.
Bundled in this change for minimal protocol version bumping is the addition of markdown support for attribute descriptions and the ability to indicate when an attribute is deprecated, so this information can be shown in the schema dump.
Co-authored-by: Paul Tyng <paul@paultyng.net>
* command/jsonstate: fix inconsistency with resource address
Resource addresses in state output were not including index for
instances created with for_each or count, while the index was appearing
in the plan output. This PR fixes that inconsistency, adds tests, and
updates the existing tests.
Fixes#24110
* add tests showing expected prior state resource addressing
* added example of show json state output with modules
Our initial Terraform 0.13.0 release will continue to support only the
hard-coded official HashiCorp signing key, with support for other keys to
follow in a later release once the trust infrastructure is in place to
support that.
This change is intended to (marginally) improve the UX for a possible
future situation where a HashiCorp-distributed provider makes a released
signed with a new key and a prior version of Terraform ends up trying to
install it due to incorrect version constraints. With this new text we
hope to give the user a better prompt for onward troubleshooting, but
in a sort of hedging way because we have not yet finalized the details of
how new keys might roll out in practice.
Hopefully a user seeing this message would consult the release notes for
Terraform itself and for the provider in question and find some
as-yet-undetermined information about how to proceed.
If the decentralized trust model design comes together before the v0.13.0
release then we may make further amendments here to prepare for that, but
that work should not block the v0.13.0 release if other work concludes
first.
* WIP: dynamic expand
* WIP: add variable and local support
* WIP: outputs
* WIP: Add referencer
* String representation, fixing tests it impacts
* Fixes TestContext2Apply_outputOrphanModule
* Fix TestContext2Apply_plannedDestroyInterpolatedCount
* Update DestroyOutputTransformer and associated types to reflect PlannableOutputs
* Remove comment about locals
* Remove module count enablement
* Removes allowing count for modules, and reverts the test,
while adding a Skip()'d test that works when you re-enable
the config
* update TargetDownstream signature to match master
* remove unnecessary method
Co-authored-by: James Bardin <j.bardin@gmail.com>