This package attempts to install itself to GOROOT which will fail for
non-root users. Most users will have already installed the vet tool via a
system package, so it shouldn't be necessary to 'go get' here.
Moreover, the 'vet' make target already checks that it is installed before
running it, running 'go get' if necessary.
This is the output when running 'make updatedeps' as a regular user
without this change:
```
$ make updatedeps
go get -u github.com/mitchellh/gox
go get -u golang.org/x/tools/cmd/stringer
go get -u golang.org/x/tools/cmd/vet
go install golang.org/x/tools/cmd/vet: open /usr/local/go/pkg/tool/linux_amd64/vet: permission denied
make: *** [updatedeps] Error 1
```
HgGetter tests failed on windows/amd64 using Mercurial version 3.2.4:
--- FAIL: TestHgGetter (0.11s)
get_hg_test.go:35: err: C:\Program Files\Mercurial\hg.exe exited with 255: abort: file:// URLs can only refer to localhost
--- FAIL: TestHgGetter_branch (0.11s)
get_hg_test.go:62: err: C:\Program Files\Mercurial\hg.exe exited with 255: abort: file:// URLs can only refer to localhost
FAIL
FAIL github.com/hashicorp/terraform/config/module 5.615s
This commit fixes the failures by adjusting the file:// URL to a form that
Mercurial expects.
Only adjust the URL Scheme when parsing drive letter file paths on
Windows, don't add a file scheme prefix.
FileDetector is responsible for adding the file scheme prefix.
After discussing with the very gracious @cespare over at
https://github.com/cespare/deplist/pull/2 I now understand that we can
pull off the same logic with just `go list`.
The logic is now simpler and more consistent:
* List out all packages in our repo
* For each of those packages, list their dependencies
* Filter out any dependencies that already live in this repo
* Remove duplicates
* And fetch the rest. `go get` will work out all transitive dependencies
from there
Currently when running `make updatedeps` from a branch, the dependency
list from master ends up getting used. We tried to work around this in
35490f7812, and got part way there, but
here's what was happening:
- record the current SHA
- run `go get -f -u -v ./...` which ends up checking out master
- master is checked out early in the `go get` process, which means all
subsequent dependencies are resolved from master
- re-checkout the recorded SHA
- run tests
This works in most cases, except when the branch being tested actually
changes the list of dependencies in some way.
Here we move away from letting `go get -v` walk through everything in
`./...`, instead building our own list of dependencies with the help of
`deplist`. We can then filter terraform packages out from the list, so
they don't get touched, and safely update the rest.
This should solve problems like those observed in #899 and #900.
__Note__: had to add a feature to deplist to make this work properly;
see 016ef97111
Working on getting it accepted upstream.
If map_public_ip_on_launch was not specified, AWS picks a default of
"0", which is different than the "" in the state file, triggerinng an
update each time. Mark that parameter as Computed, avoiding the update.
This is necessary to support creating parameter groups with parameters
that require a reboot, since the RDS API will return an error when
attempting to set those parameters with ApplyMethod "immediate".
If a subnet exists in the state file and a refresh is performed, the
read function for subnets would return an error. Now it updates the
state to indicate that the subnet no longer exists, so Terraform can
plan to recreate it.
with this commit, the google compute instance acceptance tests are
passing
- remove GOOGLE_CLIENT_FILE requirement from provider tests to finish
out #452
- skip extra "#" key that shows up in metadata maps, fixes#757 and
sprouts #883 to figure out core issue
- more verbose variablenames in metadata parsing, since it took me
awhile to grok and i thought there might have been a shadowing bug in
there for a minute. maybe someday when i'm a golang master i'll be
smart enough to be comfortable with one-char varnames. :)
Several of the arguments were optional, and if omitted, they are
calculated. Mark them as such in the schema to avoid triggering an
update.
Go back to storing the password in the state file. Without doing so,
there's no way for Terraform to know the password has changed. It should
be hashed, but then interpolating the password yields a hash instead of
the password.
Make the `name` parameter optional. It's not required in any engine, and
in some (MS SQL Server) it's not allowed at all.
Drop the `skip_final_snapshot` argument. If `final_snapshot_identifier`
isn't specified, then don't make a final snapshot. As things were, it
was possible to create a resource with neither of these arguments
specified which would later fail when it was to be deleted since the RDS
API requires exactly one of the two.
Resolves issue #689.