package command import ( "context" "fmt" "io" "os" "strings" "github.com/hashicorp/terraform/command/clistate" "github.com/hashicorp/terraform/states/statefile" "github.com/hashicorp/terraform/states/statemgr" "github.com/mitchellh/cli" ) // StatePushCommand is a Command implementation that shows a single resource. type StatePushCommand struct { Meta StateMeta } func (c *StatePushCommand) Run(args []string) int { args, err := c.Meta.process(args, true) if err != nil { return 1 } var flagForce bool cmdFlags := c.Meta.flagSet("state push") cmdFlags.BoolVar(&flagForce, "force", false, "") if err := cmdFlags.Parse(args); err != nil { return cli.RunResultHelp } args = cmdFlags.Args() if len(args) != 1 { c.Ui.Error("Exactly one argument expected.\n") return cli.RunResultHelp } // Determine our reader for the input state. This is the filepath // or stdin if "-" is given. var r io.Reader = os.Stdin if args[0] != "-" { f, err := os.Open(args[0]) if err != nil { c.Ui.Error(err.Error()) return 1 } // Note: we don't need to defer a Close here because we do a close // automatically below directly after the read. r = f } // Read the state srcStateFile, err := statefile.Read(r) if c, ok := r.(io.Closer); ok { // Close the reader if possible right now since we're done with it. c.Close() } if err != nil { c.Ui.Error(fmt.Sprintf("Error reading source state %q: %s", args[0], err)) return 1 } // Load the backend b, backendDiags := c.Backend(nil) if backendDiags.HasErrors() { c.showDiagnostics(backendDiags) return 1 } // Get the state manager for the currently-selected workspace env := c.Workspace() stateMgr, err := b.StateMgr(env) if err != nil { c.Ui.Error(fmt.Sprintf("Failed to load destination state: %s", err)) return 1 } if c.stateLock { stateLocker := clistate.NewLocker(context.Background(), c.stateLockTimeout, c.Ui, c.Colorize()) if err := stateLocker.Lock(stateMgr, "taint"); err != nil { c.Ui.Error(fmt.Sprintf("Error locking state: %s", err)) return 1 } defer stateLocker.Unlock(nil) } if err := stateMgr.RefreshState(); err != nil { c.Ui.Error(fmt.Sprintf("Failed to refresh destination state: %s", err)) return 1 } if srcStateFile == nil { // We'll push a new empty state instead srcStateFile = statemgr.NewStateFile() } // Import it, forcing through the lineage/serial if requested and possible. if err := statemgr.Import(srcStateFile, stateMgr, flagForce); err != nil { c.Ui.Error(fmt.Sprintf("Failed to write state: %s", err)) return 1 } if err := stateMgr.WriteState(srcStateFile.State); err != nil { c.Ui.Error(fmt.Sprintf("Failed to write state: %s", err)) return 1 } if err := stateMgr.PersistState(); err != nil { c.Ui.Error(fmt.Sprintf("Failed to persist state: %s", err)) return 1 } return 0 } func (c *StatePushCommand) Help() string { helpText := ` Usage: terraform state push [options] PATH Update remote state from a local state file at PATH. This command "pushes" a local state and overwrites remote state with a local state file. The command will protect you against writing an older serial or a different state file lineage unless you specify the "-force" flag. This command works with local state (it will overwrite the local state), but is less useful for this use case. If PATH is "-", then this command will read the state to push from stdin. Data from stdin is not streamed to the backend: it is loaded completely (until pipe close), verified, and then pushed. Options: -force Write the state even if lineages don't match or the remote serial is higher. ` return strings.TrimSpace(helpText) } func (c *StatePushCommand) Synopsis() string { return "Update remote state from a local state file" } const errStatePushLineage = ` The lineages do not match! The state will not be pushed. The "lineage" is a unique identifier given to a state on creation. It helps protect Terraform from overwriting a seemingly unrelated state file since it represents potentially losing real state. Please verify you're pushing the correct state. If you're sure you are, you can force the behavior with the "-force" flag. ` const errStatePushSerialNewer = ` The destination state has a higher serial number! The state will not be pushed. A higher serial could indicate that there is data in the destination state that was not present when the source state was created. As a protection measure, Terraform will not automatically overwrite this state. Please verify you're pushing the correct state. If you're sure you are, you can force the behavior with the "-force" flag. `