The example is referencing a non-existent variable, `allocation_id`, within the `aws_eip` resource. I believe this should actually be `aws_eip.example.id` instead of `aws_eip.example.allocation_id`.
Add the iam_arn attribute to aws_cloudfront_origin_access_identity,
which computes the IAM ARN for a certain CloudFront origin access
identity.
This is necessary because S3 modifies the bucket policy if CanonicalUser
is sent, causing spurious diffs with aws_s3_bucket resources.
This brings over the work done by @apparentlymart and @radeksimko in
PR #3124, and converts it into a data source for the AWS provider:
This commit adds a helper to construct IAM policy documents using
familiar Terraform concepts. It makes Terraform-style interpolations
easier and resolves the syntax conflict between Terraform interpolations
and IAM policy variables by changing the latter to use &{...} for its
interpolations.
Its use is completely optional and users are free to go on using literal
heredocs, file interpolations or whatever else; this just adds another
option that fits more naturally into a Terraform config.
...as this will hopefully clue people in that this function will indeed
work to manipulate ipv6 networks.
Not that I completely spaced on that for quite some time, or anything
like that.
Nope, not me. Not at all.
This data source allows one to look up the most recent AMI for a specific
set of parameters, much like aws ec2 describe-images in the AWS CLI.
Basically a refresh of hashicorp/terraform#4396, in data source form.
* Add per user, role and group policy attachment
* Add docs for new IAM policy attachment resources.
* Make policy attachment resources manage only 1 entity<->policy attachment
* provider/aws: Tidy up IAM Group/User/Role attachments
This commit adds a data source with a single list, `instance` for the
schema which gets populated with the availability zones to which an
account has access.
Allow a cloud admin to target a specific tenant in which to allocate
a floating IP. This is useful when the cloud admin does not want to
delegate network privileges to the tenants or various Q&A scenarios.
resource
We had a line on the Update func that said:
```
Hash key can only be specified at creation, you cannot modify it.
```
The resource has now been changed to ForceNew on the hashkey
```
aws_dynamodb_table.demo-user-table: Refreshing state... (ID: Users)
aws_dynamodb_table.demo-user-table: Destroying...
aws_dynamodb_table.demo-user-table: Destruction complete
aws_dynamodb_table.demo-user-table: Creating...
aws_dynamodb_table.demo-user-table: Creation complete
```
Changed schema type for disks to support dynamic non-ordered disk
swapping. All Disk attributes have been made non ForceNew since
any changes should be handled in the upgrade() function.
Added 'name' attribute to disks to act as a unique
identifier for when users request for new disks. It is also used as
the filename for the new disk. Templates are considered immutable.
The openstack_networking_subnet_v2 resource was originally designed
to have DHCP disabled by default; however, a bug in the original
implementation caused DHCP to always be enabled and never be
disabled. This bug was fixed in #6052.
Recent discussions have shown that users prefer if DHCP is enabled
by default. This commit implements makes the change.
When stage_name is not passed to the resource
aws_api_gateway_deployment a terraform apply will fail. This is
because the stage_name is required and not optional.
* Grafana provider
* grafana_data_source resource.
Allows data sources to be created in Grafana. Supports all data source
types that are accepted in the current version of Grafana, and will
support any future ones that fit into the existing structure.
* Vendoring of apparentlymart/go-grafana-api
This is in anticipation of adding a Grafana provider plugin.
* grafana_dashboard resource
* Website documentation for the Grafana provider.
* provider/datadog Update go-datadog-api.
* provider/datadog Add support for "require_full_window" and "locked".
* provider/datadog Update tests, update doco, gofmt.
* provider/datadog Add options to update resource.
* provider/datadog "require_full_window" defaults to True, "locked" to False. Use
those initial values as the starting configuration.
* provider/datadog Update notify_audit tests to use the default value for
testAccCheckDatadogMonitorConfig and a custom value for
testAccCheckDatadogMonitorConfigUpdated.
This catches a situation where the code ignores setting the option on creation,
and the update function merely asserts the default value, versus actually changing
the value.
`azurerm_storage_account` access keys
Please note that we do NOT have the ability to manage the access keys -
we are just getting the keys that the account creates for us. To manage
the keys, you would need to use the azure portal still
As a first example of a real-world data source, the pre-existing
terraform_remote_state resource is adapted to be a data source. The
original resource is shimmed to wrap the data source for backward
compatibility.
As requested in #4822, add support for a KMS Key ID (ARN) for Db
Instance
```
make testacc TEST=./builtin/providers/aws
TESTARGS='-run=TestAccAWSDBInstance_kmsKey' 2>~/tf.log
==> Checking that code complies with gofmt requirements...
go generate $(go list ./... | grep -v /vendor/)
TF_ACC=1 go test ./builtin/providers/aws -v
-run=TestAccAWSDBInstance_kmsKey -timeout 120m
=== RUN TestAccAWSDBInstance_basic
--- PASS: TestAccAWSDBInstance_basic (587.37s)
=== RUN TestAccAWSDBInstance_kmsKey
--- PASS: TestAccAWSDBInstance_kmsKey (625.31s)
PASS
ok github.com/hashicorp/terraform/builtin/providers/aws 1212.684s
```
Auto-generating an Instance Template name (or just its suffix) allows the
create_before_destroy lifecycle option to function correctly on the
Instance Template resource. This in turn allows Instance Group Managers
to be updated without being destroyed.
This introduces the terraform state list command to list the resources
within a state. This is the first of many state management commands to
come into 0.7.
This is the first command of many to come that is considered a
"plumbing" command within Terraform (see "plumbing vs porcelain":
http://git.661346.n2.nabble.com/what-are-plumbing-and-porcelain-td2190639.html).
As such, this PR also introduces a bunch of groundwork to support
plumbing commands.
The main changes:
- Main command output is changed to split "common" and "uncommon"
commands.
- mitchellh/cli is updated to support nested subcommands, since
terraform state list is a nested subcommand.
- terraform.StateFilter is introduced as a way in core to filter/search
the state files. This is very basic currently but I expect to make it
more advanced as time goes on.
- terraform state list command is introduced to list resources in a
state. This can take a series of arguments to filter this down.
Known issues, or things that aren't done in this PR on purpose:
- Unit tests for terraform state list are on the way. Unit tests for the
core changes are all there.
This introduces the terraform state list command to list the resources
within a state. This is the first of many state management commands to
come into 0.7.
This is the first command of many to come that is considered a
"plumbing" command within Terraform (see "plumbing vs porcelain":
http://git.661346.n2.nabble.com/what-are-plumbing-and-porcelain-td2190639.html).
As such, this PR also introduces a bunch of groundwork to support
plumbing commands.
The main changes:
- Main command output is changed to split "common" and "uncommon"
commands.
- mitchellh/cli is updated to support nested subcommands, since
terraform state list is a nested subcommand.
- terraform.StateFilter is introduced as a way in core to filter/search
the state files. This is very basic currently but I expect to make it
more advanced as time goes on.
- terraform state list command is introduced to list resources in a
state. This can take a series of arguments to filter this down.
Known issues, or things that aren't done in this PR on purpose:
- Unit tests for terraform state list are on the way. Unit tests for the
core changes are all there.