Since this resource produces a list it feels more intuitive to give its
attribute a plural name, and since the noun "instance" already means
something specific in the AWS provider that doesn't apply here we use
"names" to indicate that these are availability zone names.
Also includes updating the docs to not show a dynamic count example for
now, since we don't support that yet.
false
Fixes#7035
A known issue in Terraform means that d.GetOk() on a bool which is false
will mean it doesn't get evaulated. Therefore, when people set
publicly_accessible to false, it will never get evaluated on the Create
We are going to make it default to false now
The documentation wording implies that in all cases you have to manually accept peering requests. This change is intended to clarify where this is required. The documentation also separates between "basic usage" and "basic usage with tags", but the expanded usage didn't actually provide much additional useful information. Expanded a bit to show the use of auto_accept since both VPCs are created by the content and to show setting the Name tag for proper display in the console.
resize
When resizing a DO droplet, you can only increase the size not
descrease. If you try and go down in size, the API will return this
error:
```
* digitalocean_droplet.foobar: Error resizing droplet (17090364):
POST https://api.digitalocean.com/v2/droplets/17090364/actions:
422 Size can not decrease size of Droplet's disk image
```
Since the custom_configuration_parameters can't take dots, we cannot
set 'disk.EnableUUID'. This adds a parameter for this options that gets
added to a configSpec. This option causes the vm to mount disks by uuid
on the guest OS.
* Adding debug functionality to log debug api calls
* adding debug and refactoring tests
* more tweaks with tests
* updating documentation
* more refactoring of tests
* working through factor for testing
* removing logging that displays username and password
* more work on getting tests stable
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.