Commit Graph

127 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Chris Stephens 2dd64a7816
plans: Update error message for apply validation (#21312)
* Update error message for apply validation

Add a hint that the validation failure has occurred at the root of the resource
schema to the error message. This is because the root resource has an empty
path when being validated and the path is being relied upon to provide context
into the error message.
2020-06-05 15:08:10 -04:00
Martin Atkins 31a4b44d2e backend/local: treat output changes as side-effects to be applied
This is a baby-step towards an intended future where all Terraform actions
which have side-effects in either remote objects or the Terraform state
can go through the plan+apply workflow.

This initial change is focused only on allowing plan+apply for changes to
root module output values, so that these can be written into a new state
snapshot (for consumption by terraform_remote_state elsewhere) without
having to go outside of the primary workflow by running
"terraform refresh".

This is also better than "terraform refresh" because it gives an
opportunity to review the proposed changes before applying them, as we're
accustomed to with resource changes.

The downside here is that Terraform Core was not designed to produce
accurate changesets for root module outputs. Although we added a place for
it in the plan model in Terraform 0.12, Terraform Core currently produces
inaccurate changesets there which don't properly track the prior values.

We're planning to rework Terraform Core's evaluation approach in a
forthcoming release so it would itself be able to distinguish between the
prior state and the planned new state to produce an accurate changeset,
but this commit introduces a temporary stop-gap solution of implementing
the logic up in the local backend code, where we can freeze a snapshot of
the prior state before we take any other actions and then use that to
produce an accurate output changeset to decide whether the plan has
externally-visible side-effects and render any changes to output values.

This temporary approach should be replaced by a more appropriately-placed
solution in Terraform Core in a release, which should then allow further
behaviors in similar vein, such as user-visible drift detection for
resource instances.
2020-05-29 07:36:40 -07:00
James Bardin e690fa1363
Merge pull request #24904 from hashicorp/jbardin/plan-data-sources
Evaluate data sources in plan when necessary
2020-05-20 10:00:32 -04:00
James Bardin 8e3728af54 rename methods for ConfigResource changes 2020-05-13 13:58:11 -04:00
Kazuki Higashiguchi 7e46b6b9e7 fix typo ResourceInstancChange to ResourceInstanceChange 2020-05-13 17:14:58 +09:00
James Bardin 18ca98a064 GetConfigResourceChanges from plans
In order to find any changes related to a particular configuration
address, we need a new method to get changes to all possible instances.
2020-05-08 12:25:56 -04:00
James Bardin 323d9fb69f plans fix 2020-04-13 16:21:09 -04:00
James Bardin 2490e6c84b provide a method to get all modules changes
Since modules need to be evaluated as whole objects, yet the outputs are
all handled individually, we need a method to collect and return all
output changes for a module from the plan, including all known
module instances.
2020-04-12 11:29:21 -04:00
James Bardin e13eecbc5b finish provider ModuleInstance replacement 2020-03-11 14:19:52 -04:00
Kristin Laemmert 47a16b0937
addrs: embed Provider in AbsProviderConfig instead of Type
a large refactor to addrs.AbsProviderConfig, embedding the addrs.Provider instead of a Type string. I've added and updated tests, added some Legacy functions to support older state formats and shims, and added a normalization step when reading v4 (current) state files (not the added tests under states/statefile/roundtrip which work with both current and legacy-style AbsProviderConfig strings).

The remaining 'fixme' and 'todo' comments are mostly going to be addressed in a subsequent PR and involve looking up a given local provider config's FQN. This is fine for now as we are only working with default assumption.
2020-02-13 15:32:58 -05:00
Martin Atkins 8b511524d6
Initial steps towards AbsProviderConfig/LocalProviderConfig separation (#23978)
* Introduce "Local" terminology for non-absolute provider config addresses

In a future change AbsProviderConfig and LocalProviderConfig are going to
become two entirely distinct types, rather than Abs embedding Local as
written here. This naming change is in preparation for that subsequent
work, which will also include introducing a new "ProviderConfig" type
that is an interface that AbsProviderConfig and LocalProviderConfig both
implement.

This is intended to be largely just a naming change to get started, so
we can deal with all of the messy renaming. However, this did also require
a slight change in modeling where the Resource.DefaultProviderConfig
method has become Resource.DefaultProvider returning a Provider address
directly, because this method doesn't have enough information to construct
a true and accurate LocalProviderConfig -- it would need to refer to the
configuration to know what this module is calling the provider it has
selected.

In order to leave a trail to follow for subsequent work, all of the
changes here are intended to ensure that remaining work will become
obvious via compile-time errors when all of the following changes happen:
- The concept of "legacy" provider addresses is removed from the addrs
  package, including removing addrs.NewLegacyProvider and
  addrs.Provider.LegacyString.
- addrs.AbsProviderConfig stops having addrs.LocalProviderConfig embedded
  in it and has an addrs.Provider and a string alias directly instead.
- The provider-schema-handling parts of Terraform core are updated to
  work with addrs.Provider to identify providers, rather than legacy
  strings.

In particular, there are still several codepaths here making legacy
provider address assumptions (in order to limit the scope of this change)
but I've made sure each one is doing something that relies on at least
one of the above changes not having been made yet.

* addrs: ProviderConfig interface

In a (very) few special situations in the main "terraform" package we need
to make runtime decisions about whether a provider config is absolute
or local.

We currently do that by exploiting the fact that AbsProviderConfig has
LocalProviderConfig nested inside of it and so in the local case we can
just ignore the wrapping AbsProviderConfig and use the embedded value.

In a future change we'll be moving away from that embedding and making
these two types distinct in order to represent that mapping between them
requires consulting a lookup table in the configuration, and so here we
introduce a new interface type ProviderConfig that can represent either
AbsProviderConfig or LocalProviderConfig decided dynamically at runtime.

This also includes the Config.ResolveAbsProviderAddr method that will
eventually be responsible for that local-to-absolute translation, so
that callers with access to the configuration can normalize to an
addrs.AbsProviderConfig given a non-nil addrs.ProviderConfig. That's
currently unused because existing callers are still relying on the
simplistic structural transform, but we'll switch them over in a later
commit.

* rename LocalType to LocalName

Co-authored-by: Kristin Laemmert <mildwonkey@users.noreply.github.com>
2020-01-31 08:23:07 -05:00
Kristin Laemmert 6541775ce4
addrs: roll back change to Type field in ProviderConfig (#23937) 2020-01-28 08:13:30 -05:00
Kristin Laemmert e3416124cc
addrs: replace "Type string" with "Type Provider" in ProviderConfig
* huge change to weave new addrs.Provider into addrs.ProviderConfig
* terraform: do not include an empty string in the returned Providers /
Provisioners
- Fixed a minor bug where results included an extra empty string
2019-12-06 08:00:18 -05:00
Radek Simko 7860f55e4f
Version tools per Go convention under tools.go 2019-10-17 22:23:39 +02:00
Radek Simko 3d94baecf6
Regenerate protobuf files under latest versions
Used protobuf 3.9.1 with protoc-gen-go 1.3.2
2019-09-05 14:36:15 +02:00
James Bardin 7a183a0e90 don't assert set block length with unknowns
If a planned NestingList block value looks like it may represent a
dynamic block, we don't check the length since it may be unknown. This
check was missing in the NestingSet case, but it applies for the same
reason.

<
2019-07-12 16:48:49 -04:00
James Bardin bfa5e7f811 actual value may be unknown in nested list
When checking AssertObjectCompatible, we need to allow for a possible
unkown nested list block, just as we did for a set in 0b2cc62.
2019-06-25 16:43:57 -04:00
Radek Simko 8a6d1d62b6
stringer: Regenerate files with latest version 2019-05-13 15:34:27 +01:00
Martin Atkins 332010fd56 plans/objchange: Fix handling of dynamic block placeholders
If a dynamic block (in the HCL dynamic block extension sense) has an
unknown value for its for_each argument, it gets expanded to a single
placeholder block with all of its attributes set to a unknown values.

We can use this as part of a heuristic to relax our object compatibility
checks for situations where the plan included an object that appears to
be (but isn't necessarily) such a placeholder, allowing for the fact that
the one placeholder block could be replaced with zero or more real blocks
once the for_each value is known.

Previously our heuristic was too strict: it would match only if the only
block present was a dynamic placeholder. In practice, users may mix
dynamic blocks with static blocks of the same type, so we need to be more
liberal to avoid generating incorrect incompatibility errors in such
cases.
2019-05-02 14:08:40 -07:00
Martin Atkins 95e5ef13a7 vendor: go get github.com/zclconf/go-cty@master
This includes a more comprehensive implementation of Value.GoString, along
with various other changes that don't affect Terraform.
2019-04-25 14:22:57 -07:00
Martin Atkins 88e76fa9ef configs/configschema: Introduce the NestingGroup mode for blocks
In study of existing providers we've found a pattern we werent previously
accounting for of using a nested block type to represent a group of
arguments that relate to a particular feature that is always enabled but
where it improves configuration readability to group all of its settings
together in a nested block.

The existing NestingSingle was not a good fit for this because it is
designed under the assumption that the presence or absence of the block
has some significance in enabling or disabling the relevant feature, and
so for these always-active cases we'd generate a misleading plan where
the settings for the feature appear totally absent, rather than showing
the default values that will be selected.

NestingGroup is, therefore, a slight variation of NestingSingle where
presence vs. absence of the block is not distinguishable (it's never null)
and instead its contents are treated as unset when the block is absent.
This then in turn causes any default values associated with the nested
arguments to be honored and displayed in the plan whenever the block is
not explicitly configured.

The current SDK cannot activate this mode, but that's okay because its
"legacy type system" opt-out flag allows it to force a block to be
processed in this way anyway. We're adding this now so that we can
introduce the feature in a future SDK without causing a breaking change
to the protocol, since the set of possible block nesting modes is not
extensible.
2019-04-10 14:53:52 -07:00
Martin Atkins 87fe6cbecd plans/objchange: Don't panic when prior state contains nested map blocks
We were using the wrong cty operation to access map members, causing a
panic whenever a prior value was present for a resource type with a nested
block backed by a map value.
2019-03-18 09:16:50 -07:00
Martin Atkins c5aa5c68bc plans/objchange: Don't panic when dynamic-typed attrs are present
When dynamically-typed attributes are in the schema, we use different
conventions for representing nested blocks containing them (using tuples
and objects instead of lists and maps).

The normalization code here doesn't deal with those because the legacy
SDK never generates them, but we must still pass them through properly or
else other SDKs will be blocked from using dynamic attributes.

Previously this function would panic in that situation. Now it will just
pass through nested blocks containing dynamic attribute values entirely
as-is, with no normalization whatsoever. That's okay, because the scope
of this function is only to normalize inconsistencies that the legacy
SDK is known to produce, and the legacy SDK never produces dynamic-typed
attributes.
2019-03-11 08:18:26 -07:00
James Bardin e50be82da4 don't add empty blocks in ProposedNewObject
If the config contained a null block, don't convert it to a block with
empty values for the proposed new value.
2019-03-02 11:21:59 -05:00
Martin Atkins c280c27d87 plans/objchange: func NormalizeObjectFromLegacySDK
Now that we have an opt-out to let the legacy SDK return values that are
inconsistent with the new conventions for representing configuration,
various parts of Terraform must now be prepared to deal with
inconsistencies.

This function normalizes the most egregious inconsistencies relating to
the representation of nested blocks, freeing any recipient of its result
from worrying about these inconsistencies itself.
2019-02-27 16:53:29 -08:00
Martin Atkins 0b2cc6298b plans/objchange: Fix panic in AssertObjectCompatible with set blocks
Our usual "ground rules" for mapping configschema to cty call for the
collection values representing nested block types to always be known and
non-null, using an empty collection to represent the absense of any blocks
of that type so that users can always safely use length(...) etc on them
without worrying about them sometimes being null.

However, due to some different behaviors in the legacy SDK we've allowed
it an exception to this rule which means that we can see unknown and null
collections in these positions in object values returned from provider
operations like PlanResourceChange and ApplyResourceChange when the legacy
SDK opt-out is activated.

As a consequence of this, we need to be mindful in our safety check
functions, like AssertObjectCompatible here, of tolerating these non-ideal
situations to allow the safety checks to complete. We run these checks
even when the provider requests an opt-out, because we want to note any
inconsistencies as WARNING level log lines to aid in debugging.
2019-02-14 10:04:51 -08:00
Martin Atkins e831182c8d plans/objchange: Hide sensitive attribute values in error messages
Since these error messages get printed in Terraform's output and we
encourage users to share them as part of bug reports, we should avoid
including sensitive information in them to reduce the risk of accidental
exposure.
2019-02-11 17:26:50 -08:00
Martin Atkins fec6e0328d plans/objchange: AssertPlanValid function
Completing our set of provider result safety-check functions,
AssertPlanValid checks a result from a provider's PlanResourceChange to
make sure it doesn't propose a change that is not valid within the user
model of Terraform.

Specifically, it forbids the provider from planning a value that
contradicts what the user gave in configuration, which is important to
ensure that making a reference to an attribute elsewhere in the
configuration will produce exactly the given result, as users reasonably
expect.

Providers _are_ allowed (and, in fact, required) to make changes to
any Computed attribute values declared in the schema in order to fill in
the default values that the provider has generated. Later checks during
the apply phase will ensure that the provider remains true to these
planned values, to ensure that Terraform can keep its promise of doing
exactly what was planned or presenting an error explaining why not.
2019-02-08 19:47:02 -08:00
Martin Atkins 312d798a89 core: Restore our EvalReadData behavior
In an earlier commit we changed objchange.ProposedNewObject so that the
task of populating unknown values for attributes not known during apply
is the responsibility of the provider's PlanResourceChange method, rather
than being handled automatically.

However, we were also using objchange.ProposedNewObject to construct the
placeholder new object for a deferred data resource read, and so we
inadvertently broke that deferral behavior. Here we restore the old
behavior by introducing a new function objchange.PlannedDataResourceObject
which is a specialized version of objchange.ProposedNewObject that
includes the forced behavior of populating unknown values, because the
provider gets no opportunity to customize a deferred read.

TestContext2Plan_createBeforeDestroy_depends_datasource required some
updates here because its implementation of PlanResourceChange was not
handling the insertion of the unknown value for attribute "computed".
The other changes here are just in an attempt to make the flow of this
test more obvious, by clarifying that it is simulating a -refresh=false
run, which effectively forces a deferred read since we skip the eager
read that would normally happen in the refresh step.
2019-02-07 18:33:14 -08:00
Martin Atkins c794bf5bcc plans/objchange: Don't presume unknown for values unset in config
Previously we would construct a proposed new state with unknown values in
place of any not-set-in-config computed attributes, trying to save the
provider a little work in specifying that itself.

Unfortunately that turns out to be problematic because it conflates two
concerns: attributes can be explicitly set in configuration to an unknown
value, in which case the final result of that unknown overrides any
default value the provider might normally populate.

In other words, this allows the provider to recognize in the proposed new
state the difference between an Optional+Computed attribute being set to
unknown in the config vs not being set in the config at all.

The provider now has the responsibility to replace these proposed null
values with unknown values during PlanResourceChange if it expects to
select a value during the apply step. It may also populate a known value
if the final result can be predicted at plan time, as is the case for
constant defaults specified in the provider code.

This change comes from a realization that from core's perspective the
helper/schema ideas of zero values, explicit default values, and
customizediff tweaks are all just examples of "defaults", and by allowing
the provider to see during plan whether these attributes are being
explicitly set in configuration and thus decide whether the default will
be provided immediately during plan or deferred until apply.
2019-02-07 14:01:39 -08:00
Martin Atkins 7216049fdb plans/objchange: Improve precision of AssertObjectCompatible with sets
Previously we were just asserting that the number of elements didn't grow
between planned and actual. We still can't precisely correlate elements in
sets with unknown values, but here we adapt some logic we added earlier
to config/hcl2shim to ensure that we can find a plausible correlation for
each element in each set to at least one element in the other set, and
thus catch more cases where set elements might vanish or appear between
plan and apply, for improved safety.

This will still generate false negatives in some cases where unknown
values are present due to having to assume correlation is intended
wherever it is possible, but we'll catch situations where the actual value
is obviously contrary to what was planned.
2019-02-04 18:19:46 -08:00
James Bardin f3fe6184a0 test for destroy plan round trip 2018-12-20 15:11:08 -05:00
James Bardin 1b8617cef0 don't attempt to decode empty changes values
An empty DynamicValue can't be decoded but indicates no state, so just
return a NullVal.
2018-12-20 13:06:53 -05:00
James Bardin a915f3f13e don't convert empty DynamicValue to nil 2018-12-20 10:28:26 -05:00
James Bardin 78256ae225 return early when comparing Null values 2018-11-27 08:54:15 -05:00
Martin Atkins 300eceeb25 plans/planfile: fix TestRoundtrip
This was broken by an earlier change to verify the Terraform version
number when reading a state file. To fix it, we'll use our current version
in our constructed file which should then match when it's read back in.
2018-11-19 09:02:35 -08:00
Martin Atkins ab62b330c1 core: Allow planned output changes to be updated during apply
If plan and apply are both run against the same context then we still have
the planned output values in memory while we're doing the apply walk, so
we need to make sure to update them along with the state as we learn the
final known values of each output.

There were actually two different bugs here:

- We weren't removing any existing planned change for an output when
  setting a new one. In retrospect a map would've been a better data
  structure for the output changes, rather than a slice to mimic what we
  do for resource instance objects, but for now we'll leave the structures
  alone and clean up as needed. (The set of outputs should be small for
  any reasonable configuration, so the main impact of this is some ugly
  code in RemoveOutputChange.)

- RemoveOutputChange itself had a bug where it was iterating over the
  resource changes rather than the output changes. This didn't matter
  before because we weren't actually using that function, but now we are.

This fix is confirmed by restoring various existing context apply tests
back to passing again.
2018-11-05 16:02:45 -08:00
Martin Atkins bbf8dacac8 plans: OutputChange.Encode must preserve Addr field 2018-11-01 17:33:10 -07:00
James Bardin e93d69f18b more nil/known checks before val.LengthInt 2018-10-19 16:51:15 -04:00
James Bardin e08a388d3c check IsKnown on values that may panic 2018-10-18 19:21:32 -04:00
Martin Atkins ec57927ea3 build: Take protoc out of the "go generate" path
Since protoc is not go-gettable, and most development tasks in Terraform
won't involve recompiling protoc files anyway, we'll use a separate
mechanism for these.

This way "go generate" only depends on things we can "go get" in the
"make tools" target.

In a later commit we should also in some way specify a particular version
of protoc to use so that we don't get "flapping" regenerations as
developers work with different versions, but the priority here is just to
make "make generate" minimally usable again to restore the dev workflow
documented in the README.

This also includes some updates that resulted from running "make generate"
and "make protobuf" after those Makefile changes were in place.
2018-10-18 10:39:20 -07:00
Martin Atkins 9b4b43c077 plans/objchange: Don't panic when a prior value with a set is null
ProposedNewObject intentionally replaces a null prior with an unknown
prior in order to easily fill in unknown values where they "show through"
under values not set explicitly in config, but it was failing to handle
that situation when dealing with nested blocks that are backed by sets.
2018-10-17 17:02:47 -07:00
Martin Atkins 2b80df0163 backend/local: Require caller to set PlanOutBackend with PlanOutPath
We can't generate a valid plan file without a backend configuration to
write into it, but it's the responsibility of the caller (the command
package) to manage the backend configuration mechanism, so we require it
to tell us what to write here.

This feels a little strange because the backend in principle knows its
own config, but in practice the backend only knows the _processed_ version
of the config, not the raw configuration value that was used to configure
it.
2018-10-16 19:14:11 -07:00
Kristin Laemmert 2d3cb87789 backend/local tests tests tests
converted the existing testPlanState() from terraform.State to
states.State to fix various plan tests.

reverted the "bandaid" in plans/planfile/tfplan.go - at this moment the
backend tests do not include backend configuration, and so the planfile
package can write the plan file but not read it back in. That will be
revisted in a separate track of work.
2018-10-16 19:14:11 -07:00
Kristin Laemmert 6a37ee9277 backend/local: more tests passing
I have no confidence in the change to plans/planfile/tfplan.go. The
tests were passing an empty backend config, which planfile  was able to
write to a file but not read from the same file. This change let me move
past that and it did not break any tests in the planfile package, but I
am concerned that it introduces undesired behavior.
2018-10-16 19:14:11 -07:00
Martin Atkins b0016e9cf6 command: Allow tests to run to completion without panics or hangs
There are still 160 test failures as of this commit, but at least the test
program can run to completion and list out all the failures.
2018-10-16 19:14:11 -07:00
Kristin Laemmert c661157999 plans/objchange: further harden ProposedNewObject against ~weird~
incoming values

Addresses an odd state where the priorV of an object to be changed is
known but null.

While this situation should not happen, it seemed prudent to ensure that
core is resilient to providers sending incorrect values (which might
also occur with manually edited state).
2018-10-16 19:14:11 -07:00
Kristin Laemmert 2a8aa6a139 plans/objchange: if priorV is unknown, fall through to the recursive call to `ProposedNewObject` 2018-10-16 19:14:11 -07:00
Martin Atkins 32974549cd plans/objchange: Fix handling of unknown in AssertValueCompatible
We need to check for the known-ness of the prior value before we check for
the null-ness of actual, because it's valid for an unknown value to become
a null.
2018-10-16 19:14:11 -07:00
Martin Atkins 896b6bc897 core: Fix test build for ./plans/planfile
This was missed in the splitting of "Replace" into "DeleteThenCreate" and
"CreateThenDelete".
2018-10-16 19:14:11 -07:00
Martin Atkins 9179cdcbc6 plans/planfile: allow resource instances with no instance key
This happens for resources that don't have either "count" or "for_each"
set.
2018-10-16 19:14:11 -07:00
Martin Atkins 3e9d23b120 plans: Regenerate Action.String for new action values
This was missed on the initial update of these because at the time the
package wasn't generate-able due to other problems.
2018-10-16 19:14:11 -07:00
Martin Atkins a43b7df282 core: Handle forced-create_before_destroy during the plan walk
Previously we used a single plan action "Replace" to represent both the
destroy-before-create and the create-before-destroy variants of replacing.
However, this forces the apply graph builder to jump through a lot of
hoops to figure out which nodes need it forced on and rebuild parts of
the graph to represent that.

If we instead decide between these two cases at plan time, the actual
determination of it is more straightforward because each resource is
represented by only one node in the plan graph, and then we can ensure
we put the right nodes in the graph during DiffTransformer and thus avoid
the logic for dealing with deposed instances being spread across various
different transformers and node types.

As a nice side-effect, this also allows us to show the difference between
destroy-then-create and create-then-destroy in the rendered diff in the
CLI, although this change doesn't fully implement that yet.
2018-10-16 19:14:11 -07:00
James Bardin b738cdb19f make Changes.Empty() not count NoOps
This make the plan `Empty` concept more closely match the legacy diff
behavior.

Remove old unknown field from plan_test
2018-10-16 19:14:11 -07:00
Martin Atkins d53c3d5c1b plans: Retain output value changes for all outputs in memory
During the plan operation we need to retain _somewhere_ the planned
changes for all outputs so we can refer to them during expression
evaluation. For consistency with how we handle resource instance changes,
we'll keep them in the plan so we can properly retain unknown values,
which cannot be written to state.

As with output values in the state, only root output plans are retained
in a round-trip through the on-disk plan file format, but that's okay
because we can trivially re-calculate all of these during apply. We
include the _root_ outputs in the plan file only because they are
externally-visible side effects that ought to be included in any rendering
of the plan made from the plan file for user inspection.
2018-10-16 19:14:11 -07:00
Martin Atkins 8048e9a585 plans/objchange: Don't panic if old or new values are null 2018-10-16 19:14:11 -07:00
Martin Atkins 6fd82ef97e core: Split Replace changes into separate Delete/Create changes
Since we do our deletes using a separate graph node from all of the other
actions, and a "Replace" change implies both a delete _and_ a create, we
need to pretend at apply time that a single replace change was actually
two separate changes.

This will also early-exit eval if a destroy node finds a non-Delete change
or if an apply node finds a Delete change. These should not happen in
practice because we leave these nodes out of the graph when they are not
needed for the given action, but we do this here for robustness so as not
to have an invisible dependency between the graph builder and the eval
phase.
2018-10-16 19:14:11 -07:00
Martin Atkins 1aa9ac14cc plans/objchange: LongestCommonSubsequence
This algorithm is the usual first step when generating diffs. This package
is a bit of a strange home for it, but since it works with changes to
cty.Value this feels more natural than any other place it could be.
2018-10-16 19:14:11 -07:00
Martin Atkins 1ced176fc6 plans: Track RequiredReplace as a cty.PathSet
We were previously tracking this as a []cty.Path, but having it turned
into a pathset on creation makes downstream use of it more convenient and
ensures that it'll obey expected invariants like not containing the same
path twice.
2018-10-16 19:14:11 -07:00
Martin Atkins 3f8a973846 plans/objchange: when prior is null, computed attributes are unknown 2018-10-16 19:14:11 -07:00
Martin Atkins 1d672623eb core: Remove changes from the plan after they are applied 2018-10-16 19:14:11 -07:00
Martin Atkins 2f0e5d93c8 plans: ChangesSync.GetResourceInstanceChange must copy the change
This is promised in its doc comment, but wasn't actually done in practice.
2018-10-16 19:14:11 -07:00
Martin Atkins 3d86dc51e0 core: Re-implement EvalReadDiff for the new plan types
This also includes passing in the provider schema to a few more EvalNodes
that were expecting it but not getting it, in order to be able to
successfully test the implementation of EvalReadDiff here.
2018-10-16 19:14:11 -07:00
Martin Atkins bd299b9a22 core: Re-implement EvalWriteDiff to work with new plan types 2018-10-16 19:14:11 -07:00
Martin Atkins 44bc7519a6 terraform: More wiring in of new provider types
This doesn't actually work yet, but it builds and then panics in a pretty
satisfying way.
2018-10-16 19:12:54 -07:00
Martin Atkins 549544f201 configschema: Handle nested blocks containing dynamic-typed attributes
We need to make the collection itself be a tuple or object rather than
list or map in this case, since otherwise all of the elements of the
collection are constrained to be of the same type and that isn't the
intent of a provider indicating that it accepts any type.
2018-10-16 19:11:09 -07:00
Martin Atkins 4c78539c2b plans/objchange: AssertObjectSuperset function
This function's goal is to ensure that the "final" plan value produced
by a provider during the apply step is always consistent with the known
parts of the planned value produced during the plan step.

Any error produced here indicates a bug in the provider.
2018-10-16 19:11:09 -07:00
Martin Atkins 0317da9911 plans/objchange: logic for merging prior state with config
This produces a "proposed new state", which already has prior computed
values propagated into it (since that behavior is standard for all
resource types) but could be customized further by the provider to make
the "_planned_ new state".

In the process of implementing this it became clear that our configschema
DecoderSpec behavior is incorrect, since it's producing list values for
NestingList and map values for NestingMap. While that seems like it should
be right, we should actually be using tuple and object types respectively
to allow each block to have a different runtime type in situations where
an attribute is given the type cty.DynamicPseudoType. That's not fixed
here, and so without a further fix list and map blocks will panic here.
The DecoderSpec implementation will be fixed in a subsequent commit.
2018-10-16 19:11:09 -07:00
Martin Atkins dfe0988f10 plans: Record private data bytes as part of resource change
This allows a provider to retain arbitrary extra data in the plan and
make use of it during apply. The contents are not used by Terraform and
never shown to the user.
2018-10-16 19:11:09 -07:00
Martin Atkins a3403f2766 terraform: Ugly huge change to weave in new State and Plan types
Due to how often the state and plan types are referenced throughout
Terraform, there isn't a great way to switch them out gradually. As a
consequence, this huge commit gets us from the old world to a _compilable_
new world, but still has a large number of known test failures due to
key functionality being stubbed out.

The stubs here are for anything that interacts with providers, since we
now need to do the follow-up work to similarly replace the old
terraform.ResourceProvider interface with its replacement in the new
"providers" package. That work, along with work to fix the remaining
failing tests, will follow in subsequent commits.

The aim here was to replace all references to terraform.State and its
downstream types with states.State, terraform.Plan with plans.Plan,
state.State with statemgr.State, and switch to the new implementations of
the state and plan file formats. However, due to the number of times those
types are used, this also ended up affecting numerous other parts of core
such as terraform.Hook, the backend.Backend interface, and most of the CLI
commands.

Just as with 5861dbf3fc49b19587a31816eb06f511ab861bb4 before, I apologize
in advance to the person who inevitably just found this huge commit while
spelunking through the commit history.
2018-10-16 19:11:09 -07:00
Martin Atkins b7db32b819 plans: separate types for encoded and decoded changes
The types here were originally written to allow us to defer decoding of
object values until schemas are available, but it turns out that this was
forcing us to defer decoding longer than necessary and potentially decode
the same value multiple times.

To avoid this, we create pairs of types to represent the encoded and
decoded versions and methods for moving between them. These types are
identical to one another apart from how the dynamic values are
represented.
2018-10-16 18:58:49 -07:00
Martin Atkins 074db88636 plans: Include target addresses in the plan
We shouldn't really need these because the plan is already filtered to
include diffs only for targeted resources, but we currently rely on this
to filter out non-resource items from the diff, and so we'll retain it
for now to avoid reworking how the apply-time graph builder works.
2018-10-16 18:50:29 -07:00
Martin Atkins d9dfd135c6 plans: Include backend settings in plan and plan files
On the first pass here we erroneously assumed that this was redundant with
the backend settings embedded in the configuration itself. In practice,
users can override backend configuration when running "terraform init"
and so we need to record the _effective_ backend configuration.

Along with this, we also return the selected workspace name at the time
the plan was created so we'll later be able to produce a specialized error
for the situation of having the wrong workspace selected. This isn't
strictly required because we'll also check the lineage of the state, but
the error message that would result from that failure would be relatively
opaque and thus less helpful to the user.
2018-10-16 18:50:29 -07:00
Martin Atkins f77e7a61b0 various: helpers for collecting necessary provider types
Since schemas are required to interpret provider, resource, and
provisioner attributes in configs, states, and plans, these helpers intend
to make it easier to gather up the the necessary provider types in order
to preload all of the needed schemas before beginning further processing.

Config.ProviderTypes returns directly the list of provider types, since
at this level further detail is not useful: we've not yet run the
provider allocation algorithm, and so the only thing we can reliably
extract here is provider types themselves.

State.ProviderAddrs and Plan.ProviderAddrs each return a list of
absolute provider addresses, which can then be turned into a list of
provider types using the new helper providers.AddressedTypesAbs.

Since we're already using configs.Config throughout core, this also
updates the terraform.LoadSchemas helper to use Config.ProviderTypes
to find the necessary providers, rather than implementing its own
discovery logic. states.State is not yet plumbed in, so we cannot yet
use State.ProviderAddrs to deal with the state but there's a TODO comment
to remind us to update that in a later commit when we swap out
terraform.State for states.State.

A later commit will probably refactor this further so that we can easily
obtain schema for the providers needed to interpret a plan too, but that
is deferred here because further work is required to make core work with
the new plan types first. At that point, terraform.LoadSchemas may become
providers.LoadSchemas with a different interface that just accepts lists
of provider and provisioner names that have been gathered by the caller
using these new helpers.
2018-10-16 18:50:29 -07:00
Martin Atkins 51aeba2cf2 plans: Record provider config address in each resource change
This allows us to record the resource-to-provider associations we made
during the plan phase and ensure that we use the same config during
apply.

This isn't technically necessary, since we can in principle just repeat
the same matching algorithm against the config, but that algorithm is
relatively complicated and so if we execute it just once during plan we
remove the risk of bugs causing different decisions to be made during
the apply phase.

This also includes updates to the plan file format to include the provider
addresses. Since we've not actually shipped any version of Terraform
using our protobuf schema yet, we renumber here all of the fields after
the new one to keep them incrementing consecutively. This example should
not be followed after we have a released version of Terraform using this,
as a courtesy to anyone trying to parse these files (even though we're
not yet guaranteeing compatibility between releases).
2018-10-16 18:50:29 -07:00
Martin Atkins a2eb462f5d plans/planfile: Reading and writing the new plan format
The new format is radically different in than the old in physical
structure, but still has the same logical parts: the plan itself, a
snapshot of the input configuration, and a snapshot of the state as it
existed when the plan was created.

Rather than creating plan-specific serializations of state and config, the
new format instead leans on the existing file formats implemented
elsewhere, wrapping the result up in a zip archive with some internal file
naming conventions.

The plan portion of the file is serialized with protobuf, consistent with
our general strategy of replacing all use of encoding/gob with protobuf
moving forward.
2018-10-16 18:50:29 -07:00
Martin Atkins 7357e7f734 plans: New package for in-memory plan models
The types in this package are intended to replace plan- and diff-related
types from the "terraform" package, although those older types must remain
for now so that they can be used to implement shims for older codepaths.

type "Changes" is approximately equivalent to terraform.Diff, but renamed
since it now describes whole objects before and after rather than an
attribute-level diff as before. The term "diff" is now reserved for the
visual rendition of the changes we'll display to the user, although
rendering of this new Changes model is not yet implemented.
2018-10-16 18:50:29 -07:00