It's possible to not change the backend config, but require updating the
stored backend state by moving init options from the config file to the
`-backend-config` flag. If the config is the same, but the hash doesn't
match, update the stored state.
This method mirrors that of config.Backend, so we can compare the
configration of a backend read from a config vs that of a backend read
from a state. This will prevent init from reinitializing when using
`-backend-config` options that match the existing state.
The plug-in crashes if "localNetworkGateways" is not found in the id parameter. The fix is to verify the parameter before proceeding.
Also the "import" example in the documentation is wrong, "localNetworkGateways" should be case sensitive. The current example actually causes the plugin to crash due to the bug.
Most of the bios have five lines of text, so that's the driver for the
layout except for @grubernaut's and @mbfrahry's where there's only three
lines. This makes the pictures following the short bios look misaligned.
This quick fix just always leaves enough room for five lines of bio text,
ensuring that the photos appear at a consistent vertical rhythm.
It's annoying to hard-code a particular value here, since this value won't
survive e.g. a change to the typesetting, but a more involved fix here
(using flexbox layout, or something else complicated) doesn't seem
warranted.
The variable validator assumes that any AST node it gets from an
interpolation walk is an indicator of an interpolation. Unfortunately,
back in f223be15 we changed the interpolation walker to emit a LiteralNode
as a way to signal that the result is a literal but not identical to the
input due to escapes.
The existence of this issue suggests a bit of a design smell in that the
interpolation walker interface at first glance appears to skip over all
literals, but it actually emits them in this one situation. In the long
run we should perhaps think about whether the abstraction is right here,
but this is a shallow, tactical change that fixes#13001.
golang/tools commit 23ca8a263 changed the format of the leading comment
to comply with some new standards discussed here:
https://golang.org/issue/13560
This is the result of running generate with the latest version of
stringer. Everyone working on Terraform will need to update stringer
after this is merged, to avoid reverting this:
go get -u golang.org/x/tools/cmd/stringer
* provider/aws: Add Support for maintenance_window and back_window to rds_cluster_instance
Fixes: #9489
```
% make testacc TEST=./builtin/providers/aws TESTARGS='-run=TestAccAWSRDSClusterInstance_basic'
==> Checking that code complies with gofmt requirements...
go generate $(go list ./... | grep -v /terraform/vendor/)
2017/03/28 23:08:45 Generated command/internal_plugin_list.go
TF_ACC=1 go test ./builtin/providers/aws -v -run=TestAccAWSRDSClusterInstance_basic -timeout 120m
=== RUN TestAccAWSRDSClusterInstance_basic
--- PASS: TestAccAWSRDSClusterInstance_basic (1433.41s)
PASS
ok github.com/hashicorp/terraform/builtin/providers/aws 1433.438s
```
* Update rds_cluster_instance.html.markdown
* Update rds_cluster_instance.html.markdown
It turns out if you're trying to write a config to conditionally restore
an instance from a snapshot, you end up painted into a corner with the
combination of `snapshot_identifier` and `name`.
You need `name` to be specified for DBs you're creating, but when
`snapshot_identifier` is populated you need it to be blank or else the
AWS API throws an error.
The logical next step is to drop a ternary in:
```tf
resource "aws_db_instance" "foo" {
# ...
snapshot_identifier = "${var.snap}"
name = "${var.snap != "" ? "" : var.dbname}"
}
```
**BUT** the above config will _replace_ the DB on subsequent runs as the
config basically has `name = ""` which will trigger a ForceNew diff once
the `name` is populated from the snapshot restore.
**SO** we can get a workable solution by actively avoiding populating
DBName when we're using one of the engines the docs explicitly mention.
It does not look like there are any tests covering `snapshot_identifer`,
so I'll subject this to some manual tests and follow up with some
results.