EIP with VPC only returns an allocationID. However, for standard we need
to lookup for PublicIP. When we use an example for standard EC2 instance
(here `t1.micro`):
```
resource "aws_instance" "example" {
ami = "ami-25773a24"
instance_type = "t1.micro"
}
resource "aws_eip" "ip" {
instance = "${aws_instance.example.id}"
}
```
then in this case, allocationID will be nil, but publicIP will be non
nil (which is used later for association the IP). So check for
allocationId only if it's of domain `VPC`.
* master: (511 commits)
Update CHANGELOG.md
core: avoid diff mismatch on NewRemoved fields during -/+
Update CHANGELOG.md
update CHANGELOG
Fix minor error in index/count docs
terraform: remove debug
terraform: when pruning destroy, only match exact nodes, or exact counts
up version for dev
update CHANGELOG
terraform: prune tainted destroys if no tainted in state [GH-1475]
update CHANGELOG
config/lang: support math on variables through implicits
update CHANGELOG
update cHANGELOG
update cHANGELOG
providers/aws: set id outside if/esle
providers/aws: set ID after creation
core: remove dead code from pre-deposed refactor
website: update LC docs to note name is optional
security_groups field expects a list of Security Group Group Names, not IDs
...
If GOPATH/bin doesn't exists the build scripts just exists, leaving the
`terraform/bin` folder with only one single binary called `terraform`.
Discovered while setting up a new GOPATH just for terraform.
It doesn't need to be a List of Maps, it can just be a Map.
We're also safe to remove a previous workaround I stuck in there.
The config parsing is equivalent between a list of maps and a plain map,
so we just need a state migration to make this backwards compatible.
For now, make dev creates in ${MAIN_GOPATH}/bin/ files like 'provider-google' alongside with 'terraform-provider-google'.
If we decided to build plugins with custom names and install them manually with 'cp' command, it could make sense not to do it here.
fixes#1508
In a DESTROY/CREATE scenario, the plan diff will be run against the
state of the old instance, while the apply diff will be run against an
empty state (because the state is cleared when the destroy node does its
thing.)
For complex attributes, this can result in keys that seem to disappear
between the two diffs, when in reality everything is working just fine.
Same() needs to take into account this scenario by analyzing NewRemoved
and treating as "Same" a diff that does indeed have that key removed.