Commit Graph

4 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Kristin Laemmert 3f6ce3c588 Mildwonkey/tests (#24522)
* 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
2020-04-06 09:24:23 -07:00
Kristin Laemmert 80ab551867
terraform: use addrs.Provider as map keys for provider schemas (#24002)
This is a stepping-stone PR for the provider source project. In this PR
"legcay-stype" FQNs are created from the provider name string. Future
work involves encoding the FQN directly in the AbsProviderConfig and
removing the calls to addrs.NewLegacyProvider().
2020-02-03 08:18:04 -05:00
Martin Atkins 39e609d5fd vendor: switch to HCL 2.0 in the HCL repository
Previously we were using the experimental HCL 2 repository, but now we'll
shift over to the v2 import path within the main HCL repository as part of
actually releasing HCL 2.0 as stable.

This is a mechanical search/replace to the new import paths. It also
switches to the v2.0.0 release of HCL, which includes some new code that
Terraform didn't previously have but should not change any behavior that
matters for Terraform's purposes.

For the moment the experimental HCL2 repository is still an indirect
dependency via terraform-config-inspect, so it remains in our go.sum and
vendor directories for the moment. Because terraform-config-inspect uses
a much smaller subset of the HCL2 functionality, this does still manage
to prune the vendor directory a little. A subsequent release of
terraform-config-inspect should allow us to completely remove that old
repository in a future commit.
2019-10-02 15:10:21 -07:00
Martin Atkins e39c69750c core: Specialized errors for incorrect indexes in resource reference
In prior versions of Terraform we permitted inconsistent use of indexes
in resource references, but in as of 0.12 the index usage must correlate
properly with whether "count" is set on the resource.

Since users are likely to have existing configurations with incorrect
usage, here we introduce some specialized error messages for situations
where we can detect such issues statically. This seems to cover all of the
common patterns we've seen in practice.

Some usage patterns will fall back on a less-helpful dynamic error here,
but no configurations coming from 0.11 can end up that way because 0.11
did not permit forms such as aws_instance.no_count[count.index].bar that
this validation would not be able to "see".

Our configuration upgrade tool also contains a fix for this already, but
it takes a more conservative approach of adding the index [1] rather than
[count.index] because it can't be sure (without human help) if correlation
of indices is what was intended.
2018-12-20 13:55:42 -08:00