The AWS API call ModifyVpcAttribute will allow only one attribute to be
modified at a time. Modifying both results in the error:
Fields for multiple attribute types specified: enableDnsHostnames, enableDnsSupport
Retructure the provider to honor this restriction.
Also, enable DNS support before attempting to enable DNS hostnames,
since the former is a prerequisite of the latter.
Additionally, fix what must have been a copy&paste error, setting
enable_dns_support to the value of enable_dns_hostnames.
If the state file contained a VPC or a route table which no longer
exists, Terraform would fail to create the correct plan, which is to
recreate them.
In the case of VPCs, this was due to incorrect error handling. The AWS
SDK returns a aws.APIError, not a *aws.APIError on error. When the VPC
no longer exists, upon attempting to refresh state Terraform would
simply exit with an error.
For route tables, the provider would recognize that the route table no
longer existed, but would not make the appropriate call to update the
state as such. Thus there'd be no crash, but also no plan to re-create
the route table.
Though not directly connected, trying to delete a subnet and security group in
parallel can cause a dependency violation from the subnet, claiming there are
dependencies.
This commit fixes that by allowing subnet deletion to tolerate failure with a
retry / refresh function.
Fixes#934
Instance block devices are now managed by three distinct sub-resources:
* `root_block_device` - introduced previously
* `ebs_block_device` - all additional ebs-backed volumes
* `ephemeral_block_device` - instance store / ephemeral devices
The AWS API support around BlockDeviceMapping is pretty confusing. It's
a single collection type that supports these three members each of which
has different fields and different behavior.
My biggest hiccup came from the fact that Instance Store volumes do not
show up in any response BlockDeviceMapping for any EC2 `Describe*` API
calls. They're only available from the instance meta-data service as
queried from inside the node.
This removes `block_device` altogether for a clean break from old
configs. New configs will need to sort their `block_device`
declarations into the three new types. The field has been marked
`Removed` to indicate this to users.
With the new block device format being introduced, we need to ensure
Terraform is able to properly read statefiles written in the old format.
So we use the new `helper/schema` facility of "state migrations" to
transform statefiles in the old format to something that the current
version of the schema can use.
Fixes#858
Fixes a bug in Route53 and wildcard entries. Refs #501.
Also fixes:
- an issue in the library where we don't fully wait for the results, because the
error code/condition changed with the migration to aws-sdk-go
- a limitation in the test, where we only consider the first record returned
* master:
provider/aws: Fix encoding bug with AWS Instance
minor style cleanups
Tags Schema
Added Tagging
Added vpc refactor in aws sdk go
Removed additional variable for print, added for debugging
Using hashicorp/aws-sdk-go
Changed things around as suggested by @catsby
Refactor with Acceptance Tests
VPC Refactor
First refactor
Added Connection to config
* master: (69 commits)
upgrade tests and remove ICMPTypeCode for now
helper/ssh: update import location
clean up
provider/aws: Convert AWS Network ACL to aws-sdk-go
Update website docs on AWS RDS encryption field
more test updates
provider/aws update Network ACL tests
code cleanup on subnet check
restore IOPS positioning
Code cleanup
Update CHANGELOG.md
Bugfix: Add tags on AWS IG creation, not just on update
fix nit-pick from go vet
remove duplicated function
provider/aws: Convert AWS Route Table Association to aws-sdk-go
Cleansup: Restore expandIPPerms, remove flattenIPPerms
clean up debug output to make go vet happy
providers/aws: Convert AWS VPC Peering to aws-sdk-go
provider/aws: Add env default for AWS_ACCOUNT_ID in VPC Peering connection
convert route table tests to aws-sdk-go
...