Commit Graph

17 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Martin Atkins 1879a39d2d configs: Refined error messages for mismatched provider passing
This set of diagnostic messages is under a number of unusual constraints
that make them tough to get right:
 - They are discussing a couple finicky concepts which authors are
   likely to be encountering for the first time in these error messages:
   the idea of "local names" for providers, the relationship between those
   and provider source addresses, and additional ("aliased") provider
   configurations.
 - They are reporting concerns that span across a module call boundary,
   and so need to take care to be clear about whether they are talking
   about a problem in the caller or a problem in the callee.
 - Some of them are effectively deprecation warnings for features that
   might be in use by a third-party module that the user doesn't control,
   in which case they have no recourse to address them aside from opening
   a feature request with the upstream module maintainer.
 - Terraform has, for backward-compatibility reasons, a lot of implied
   default behaviors regarding providers and provider configurations,
   and these errors can arise in situations where Terraform's assumptions
   don't match the author's intent, and so we need to be careful to
   explain what Terraform assumed in order to make the messages
   understandable.

After seeing some confusion with these messages in the community, and
being somewhat confused by some of them myself, I decided to try to edit
them a bit for consistency of terminology (both between the messages and
with terminology in our docs), being explicit about caller vs. callee
by naming them in the messages, and making explicit what would otherwise
be implicit with regard to the correspondences between provider source
addresses and local names.

My assumed audience for all of these messages is the author of the caller
module, because it's the caller who is responsible for creating the
relationship between caller and callee. As much as possible I tried to
make the messages include specific actions for that author to take to
quiet the warning or fix the error, but some of the warnings are only
fixable by the callee's maintainer and so those messages are, in effect,
a suggestion to send a request to the author to stop using a deprecated
feature.

I think these new messages are also not ideal by any means, because it's
just tough to pack so much information into concise messages while being
clear and consistent, but I hope at least this will give users seeing
these messages enough context to infer what's going on, possibly with the
help of our documentation.

I intentionally didn't change which cases Terraform will return warnings
or errors -- only the message texts -- although I did highlight in a
comment in one of the tests that what it is a asserting seems a bit
suspicious to me. I don't intend to address that here; instead, I intend
that note to be something to refer to if we later see a bug report that
calls that behavior into question.

This does actually silence some _unrelated_ warnings and errors in cases
where a provider block has an invalid provider local name as its label,
because our other functions for dealing with provider addresses are
written to panic if given invalid addresses under the assumption that
earlier code will have guarded against that. Doing this allowed for the
provider configuration validation logic to safely include more information
about the configuration as helpful context, without risking tripping over
known-invalid configuration and panicking in the process.
2022-03-10 10:05:56 -08:00
Alisdair McDiarmid b06fe04621 core: Check rule error message expressions
Error messages for preconditions, postconditions, and custom variable
validations have until now been string literals. This commit changes
this to treat the field as an HCL expression, which must evaluate to a
string. Most commonly this will either be a string literal or a template
expression.

When the check rule condition is evaluated, we also evaluate the error
message. This means that the error message should always evaluate to a
string value, even if the condition passes. If it does not, this will
result in an error diagnostic.

If the condition fails, and the error message also fails to evaluate, we
fall back to a default error message. This means that the check rule
failure will still be reported, alongside diagnostics explaining why the
custom error message failed to render.

As part of this change, we also necessarily remove the heuristic about
the error message format. This guidance can be readded in future as part
of a configuration hint system.
2022-03-04 15:35:39 -05:00
Alisdair McDiarmid 7ded73f266 configs: Validate pre/postcondition self-refs
Preconditions and postconditions for resources and data sources may not
refer to the address of the containing resource or data source. This
commit adds a parse-time validation for this rule.
2022-02-03 09:37:22 -05:00
Martin Atkins 9076400436 configs: Decode preconditions and postconditions
This allows precondition and postcondition checks to be declared for
resources and output values as long as the preconditions_postconditions
experiment is enabled.

Terraform Core doesn't currently know anything about these features, so
as of this commit declaring them does nothing at all.
2022-01-28 11:00:29 -05:00
James Bardin 0771a214d8 skip provider resolution when there are errors
If there are errors loading the configuration, don't try to resolve the
provider names, as those names may not even be valid.
2021-12-06 14:28:34 -05:00
Martin Atkins affe2c3295 addrs: Expose the registry address parser's error messages
Previously we ended up losing all of the error message detail produced by
the registry address parser, because we treated any registry address
failure as cause to parse the address as a go-getter-style remote address
instead.

That led to terrible feedback in the situation where the user _was_
trying to write a module address but it was invalid in some way.

Although we can't really tighten this up in the default case due to our
compatibility promises, it's never been valid to use the "version"
argument with anything other than a registry address and so as a
compromise here we'll use the presence of "version" as a heuristic for
user intent to parse the source address as a registry address, and thus
we can return a registry-address-specific error message in that case and
thus give more direct feedback about what was wrong.

This unfortunately won't help someone trying to install from the registry
_without_ a version constraint, but I didn't want to let perfect be the
enemy of the good here, particularly since we recommend using version
constraints with registry modules anyway; indeed, that's one of the main
benefits of using a registry rather than a remote source directly.
2021-11-30 15:46:16 -08:00
Katy Moe df6dad5070
add failing test for IgnoreAllChanges override 2021-11-01 19:00:54 +00:00
James Bardin b91d9435ea
Merge pull request #29832 from hashicorp/jbardin/nullable-variable
configs: explicitly nullable variable values
2021-11-01 12:46:31 -04:00
Martin Atkins 94cbc8fb5d experiments: config_driven_move has concluded
Based on feedback during earlier alpha releases, we've decided to move
forward with the current design for the first phase of config-driven
refactoring.

Therefore here we've marked the experiment as concluded with no changes
to the most recent incarnation of the functionality. The other changes
here are all just updating test fixtures to no longer declare that they
are using experimental features.
2021-11-01 08:46:15 -07:00
James Bardin 7b7972ac95 allow nullable override 2021-10-29 17:20:14 -04:00
James Bardin f0a64eb456 configs: explicitly nullable variable values
The current behavior of module input variables is to allow users to
override a default by assigning `null`, which works contrary to the
behavior of resource attributes, and prevents explicitly accepting a
default when the input must be defined in the configuration.

Add a new variable attribute called `nullable` will allow explicitly
defining when a variable can be set to null or not. The current default
behavior is that of `nullable=true`.

Setting `nullable=false` in a variable block indicates that the variable
value can never be null. This either requires a non-null input value, or
a non-null default value. In the case of the latter, we also opt-in to
the new behavior of a `null` input value taking the default rather than
overriding it.

In a future language edition where we make `nullable=false` the default,
setting `nullable=true` will allow the legacy behavior of `null`
overriding a default value. The only future configuration in which this
would be required even if the legacy behavior were not desired is when
setting an optional+nullable value. In that case `default=null` would
also be needed and we could therefor imply `nullable=true` without
requiring it in the configuration.
2021-10-29 13:59:46 -04:00
Chris Arcand 18d54c1129 Allow cloud block overrides
These changes allow cloud blocks to be overridden by backend blocks and
vice versa; the logic follows the current backend behavior of a block
overriding a preceding block in full, with no merges.
2021-10-28 19:29:09 -05:00
Chris Arcand a4c24e3147 Add cloud {} configuration block for Terraform Cloud
This is a replacement declaration for using Terraform Cloud as a remote
backend, leaving the literal backend as an implementation detail and not
a user-level concept.
2021-10-28 19:29:09 -05:00
Martin Atkins 6b8e103d6a configs: Include "moved" blocks when merging multiple files into a module
An earlier commit added logic to decode "moved" blocks and do static
validation of them. Here we now include that result also in modules
produced from those files, which we can then use in Terraform Core to
actually implement the moves.

This also places the feature behind an active experiment keyword called
config_driven_move. For now activating this doesn't actually achieve
anything except let you include moved blocks that Terraform will summarily
ignore, but we'll expand the scope of this in later commits to eventually
reach the point where it's really usable.
2021-07-01 08:28:02 -07:00
Kristin Laemmert 3acb5e2841
configs: add decodeMovedBlock behind a locked gate. (#28973)
This PR adds decoding for the upcoming "moved" blocks in configuration. This code is gated behind an experiment called EverythingIsAPlan, but the experiment is not registered as an active experiment, so it will never run (there is a test in place which will fail if the experiment is ever registered).

This also adds a new function to the Targetable interface, AddrType, to simplifying comparing two addrs.Targetable.

There is some validation missing still: this does not (yet) descend into resources to see if the actual resource types are the same (I've put this off in part because we will eventually need the provider schema to verify aliased resources, so I suspect this validation will have to happen later on).
2021-06-21 10:53:16 -04:00
Martin Atkins 1a8da65314 Refactoring of module source addresses and module installation
It's been a long while since we gave close attention to the codepaths for
module source address parsing and external module package installation.
Due to their age, these codepaths often diverged from our modern practices
such as representing address types in the addrs package, and encapsulating
package installation details only in a particular location.

In particular, this refactor makes source address parsing a separate step
from module installation, which therefore makes the result of that parsing
available to other Terraform subsystems which work with the configuration
representation objects.

This also presented the opportunity to better encapsulate our use of
go-getter into a new package "getmodules" (echoing "getproviders"), which
is intended to be the only part of Terraform that directly interacts with
go-getter.

This is largely just a refactor of the existing functionality into a new
code organization, but there is one notable change in behavior here: the
source address parsing now happens during configuration loading rather
than module installation, which may cause errors about invalid addresses
to be returned in different situations than before. That counts as
backward compatible because we only promise to remain compatible with
configurations that are _valid_, which means that they can be initialized,
planned, and applied without any errors. This doesn't introduce any new
error cases, and instead just makes a pre-existing error case be detected
earlier.

Our module registry client is still using its own special module address
type from registry/regsrc for now, with a small shim from the new
addrs.ModuleSourceRegistry type. Hopefully in a later commit we'll also
rework the registry client to work with the new address type, but this
commit is already big enough as it is.
2021-06-03 08:50:34 -07:00
Martin Atkins 31349a9c3a Move configs/ to internal/configs/
This is part of a general effort to move all of Terraform's non-library
package surface under internal in order to reinforce that these are for
internal use within Terraform only.

If you were previously importing packages under this prefix into an
external codebase, you could pin to an earlier release tag as an interim
solution until you've make a plan to achieve the same functionality some
other way.
2021-05-17 14:09:07 -07:00