I lost a few hours figuring out the right way to describe an ARN for an API
Gateway resource. Specifically I translated the example poorly since I didn't
realize I had to append the path onto the end of the ARN.
Adds two links to an Amazon documentation page describing the format for API
Gateway ARN's. Adds an additional path component to the ARN example so you can
see you need to specify paths.
Fixes#11749
I'm **really** surprised this didn't come up earlier.
When only the state is available for a node, the advertised
referenceable name (the name used for dependency connections) included
the module path. This module path is automatically prepended to the
name. This means that probably every non-root resource for state-only
operations (destroys) didn't order properly.
This fixes that by omitting the path properly.
Multiple tests added to verify both graph correctness as well as a
higher level context test.
Will backport to 0.8.x
Storing error values to atomic.Value may fail if they have different
dynamic types. Wrap error value in a consistent struct type to avoid
panics.
Make sure we return a nil error on success
Remove the lock command for now to avoid confusion about the behavior of
locks. Rename lock to force-unlock to make it more aparent what it does.
Add a success message, and chose red because it can be a dangerous
operation.
Add confirmation akin to `destroy`, and a `-force` option for
automation and testing.
Fixes#11628
This is a simple fix to output warnings. I originally forgot to do this
since the local backend didn't have a CLI UI at the time. It does now so
this is an easy fix.
Previously the db_event_subscription import would only work if there was a single db_event_subscription resource. This fixes the import, allowing it to work as expected.
Also fixes the acceptance test for the resource to reflect this.
```
$ make testacc TEST=./builtin/providers/aws TESTARGS='-run=TestAccAWSDBEventSubscription_importBasic'
==> Checking that code complies with gofmt requirements...
go generate $(go list ./... | grep -v /terraform/vendor/)
2017/02/07 10:38:10 Generated command/internal_plugin_list.go
TF_ACC=1 go test ./builtin/providers/aws -v -run=TestAccAWSDBEventSubscription_importBasic -timeout 120m
=== RUN TestAccAWSDBEventSubscription_importBasic
--- PASS: TestAccAWSDBEventSubscription_importBasic (633.33s)
PASS
ok github.com/hashicorp/terraform/builtin/providers/aws 633.353s
```
* Adds schema for fastly healthcheck
* Handles changes to the fastly healthcheck
* Flattens and refreshed fastly healthchecks
* Adds testing for fastly healthcheck
* Adds website documentation for fastly healthcheck
* Fixes terraform syntax in test examples
To avoid chasing down issues like #11635 I'm proposing we disable the
shadow graph for end users now that we have merged in all the new
graphs. I've kept it around and default-on for tests so that we can use
it to test new features as we build them. I think it'll still have value
going forward but I don't want to hold us for making it work 100% with
all of Terraform at all times.
I propose backporting this to 0-8-stable, too.
Fixes#11349
I tracked this bug back to the early 0.7 days so this has been around a
really long time. I wanted to confirm that this wasn't introduced by any
new graph changes and it appears to predate all of that. I couldn't find
a single 0.7.x release where this worked, and I didn't want to go back
to 0.6.x since it was pre-vendoring.
The test case shows the logic the best, but the basic idea is: for
collections that go to zero elements, the "RequiresNew" sameness check
should be ignored, since the new diff can choose to not have that at all
in the diff.
Fixes the `TestAccAWSDBEventSubscription_basicUpdate` acceptance test
`TestAccAWSDBEventSubscription_importBasic` is still failing, but has been failing since November.
This changes removes read of the deprecated `policy_data` attr in
the `google_project` resource.
0.8.5 introduced new behavior that incorrectly read the `policy_data`
field during the read lifecycle event. This caused Terraform to
assume it owned not just policy defined in the data source, but
everything that was associated with the project. Migrating from 0.8.4
to 0.8.5, this would cause the config (partial) to be compared to the
state (complete, as it was read from the API) and assume some
policies had been explicitly deleted. Terraform would then delete them.
Fixes#11556