package objchange import ( "fmt" "strconv" "github.com/zclconf/go-cty/cty" "github.com/zclconf/go-cty/cty/convert" "github.com/hashicorp/terraform/configs/configschema" ) // AssertObjectCompatible checks whether the given "actual" value is a valid // completion of the possibly-partially-unknown "planned" value. // // This means that any known leaf value in "planned" must be equal to the // corresponding value in "actual", and various other similar constraints. // // Any inconsistencies are reported by returning a non-zero number of errors. // These errors are usually (but not necessarily) cty.PathError values // referring to a particular nested value within the "actual" value. // // The two values must have types that conform to the given schema's implied // type, or this function will panic. func AssertObjectCompatible(schema *configschema.Block, planned, actual cty.Value) []error { return assertObjectCompatible(schema, planned, actual, nil) } func assertObjectCompatible(schema *configschema.Block, planned, actual cty.Value, path cty.Path) []error { var errs []error if planned.IsNull() && !actual.IsNull() { errs = append(errs, path.NewErrorf("was absent, but now present")) return errs } if actual.IsNull() && !planned.IsNull() { errs = append(errs, path.NewErrorf("was present, but now absent")) return errs } if planned.IsNull() { // No further checks possible if both values are null return errs } for name, attrS := range schema.Attributes { plannedV := planned.GetAttr(name) actualV := actual.GetAttr(name) path := append(path, cty.GetAttrStep{Name: name}) moreErrs := assertValueCompatible(plannedV, actualV, path) if attrS.Sensitive { if len(moreErrs) > 0 { // Use a vague placeholder message instead, to avoid disclosing // sensitive information. errs = append(errs, path.NewErrorf("inconsistent values for sensitive attribute")) } } else { errs = append(errs, moreErrs...) } } for name, blockS := range schema.BlockTypes { plannedV := planned.GetAttr(name) actualV := actual.GetAttr(name) // As a special case, if there were any blocks whose leaf attributes // are all unknown then we assume (possibly incorrectly) that the // HCL dynamic block extension is in use with an unknown for_each // argument, and so we will do looser validation here that allows // for those blocks to have expanded into a different number of blocks // if the for_each value is now known. maybeUnknownBlocks := couldHaveUnknownBlockPlaceholder(plannedV, blockS, false) path := append(path, cty.GetAttrStep{Name: name}) switch blockS.Nesting { case configschema.NestingSingle, configschema.NestingGroup: // If an unknown block placeholder was present then the placeholder // may have expanded out into zero blocks, which is okay. if maybeUnknownBlocks && actualV.IsNull() { continue } moreErrs := assertObjectCompatible(&blockS.Block, plannedV, actualV, path) errs = append(errs, moreErrs...) case configschema.NestingList: // A NestingList might either be a list or a tuple, depending on // whether there are dynamically-typed attributes inside. However, // both support a similar-enough API that we can treat them the // same for our purposes here. if !plannedV.IsKnown() || !actualV.IsKnown() || plannedV.IsNull() || actualV.IsNull() { continue } if maybeUnknownBlocks { // When unknown blocks are present the final blocks may be // at different indices than the planned blocks, so unfortunately // we can't do our usual checks in this case without generating // false negatives. continue } plannedL := plannedV.LengthInt() actualL := actualV.LengthInt() if plannedL != actualL { errs = append(errs, path.NewErrorf("block count changed from %d to %d", plannedL, actualL)) continue } for it := plannedV.ElementIterator(); it.Next(); { idx, plannedEV := it.Element() if !actualV.HasIndex(idx).True() { continue } actualEV := actualV.Index(idx) moreErrs := assertObjectCompatible(&blockS.Block, plannedEV, actualEV, append(path, cty.IndexStep{Key: idx})) errs = append(errs, moreErrs...) } case configschema.NestingMap: // A NestingMap might either be a map or an object, depending on // whether there are dynamically-typed attributes inside, but // that's decided statically and so both values will have the same // kind. if plannedV.Type().IsObjectType() { plannedAtys := plannedV.Type().AttributeTypes() actualAtys := actualV.Type().AttributeTypes() for k := range plannedAtys { if _, ok := actualAtys[k]; !ok { errs = append(errs, path.NewErrorf("block key %q has vanished", k)) continue } plannedEV := plannedV.GetAttr(k) actualEV := actualV.GetAttr(k) moreErrs := assertObjectCompatible(&blockS.Block, plannedEV, actualEV, append(path, cty.GetAttrStep{Name: k})) errs = append(errs, moreErrs...) } if !maybeUnknownBlocks { // new blocks may appear if unknown blocks were present in the plan for k := range actualAtys { if _, ok := plannedAtys[k]; !ok { errs = append(errs, path.NewErrorf("new block key %q has appeared", k)) continue } } } } else { if !plannedV.IsKnown() || plannedV.IsNull() || actualV.IsNull() { continue } plannedL := plannedV.LengthInt() actualL := actualV.LengthInt() if plannedL != actualL && !maybeUnknownBlocks { // new blocks may appear if unknown blocks were persent in the plan errs = append(errs, path.NewErrorf("block count changed from %d to %d", plannedL, actualL)) continue } for it := plannedV.ElementIterator(); it.Next(); { idx, plannedEV := it.Element() if !actualV.HasIndex(idx).True() { continue } actualEV := actualV.Index(idx) moreErrs := assertObjectCompatible(&blockS.Block, plannedEV, actualEV, append(path, cty.IndexStep{Key: idx})) errs = append(errs, moreErrs...) } } case configschema.NestingSet: if !plannedV.IsKnown() || !actualV.IsKnown() || plannedV.IsNull() || actualV.IsNull() { continue } setErrs := assertSetValuesCompatible(plannedV, actualV, path, func(plannedEV, actualEV cty.Value) bool { errs := assertObjectCompatible(&blockS.Block, plannedEV, actualEV, append(path, cty.IndexStep{Key: actualEV})) return len(errs) == 0 }) errs = append(errs, setErrs...) // There can be fewer elements in a set after its elements are all // known (values that turn out to be equal will coalesce) but the // number of elements must never get larger. plannedL := plannedV.LengthInt() actualL := actualV.LengthInt() if plannedL < actualL { errs = append(errs, path.NewErrorf("block set length changed from %d to %d", plannedL, actualL)) } default: panic(fmt.Sprintf("unsupported nesting mode %s", blockS.Nesting)) } } return errs } func assertValueCompatible(planned, actual cty.Value, path cty.Path) []error { // NOTE: We don't normally use the GoString rendering of cty.Value in // user-facing error messages as a rule, but we make an exception // for this function because we expect the user to pass this message on // verbatim to the provider development team and so more detail is better. var errs []error if planned.Type() == cty.DynamicPseudoType { // Anything goes, then return errs } if problems := planned.Type().TestConformance(actual.Type()); len(problems) > 0 { errs = append(errs, path.NewErrorf("wrong final value type: %s", convert.MismatchMessage(actual.Type(), planned.Type()))) // If the types don't match then we can't do any other comparisons, // so we bail early. return errs } if !planned.IsKnown() { // We didn't know what were going to end up with during plan, so // anything goes during apply. return errs } if actual.IsNull() { if planned.IsNull() { return nil } errs = append(errs, path.NewErrorf("was %#v, but now null", planned)) return errs } if planned.IsNull() { errs = append(errs, path.NewErrorf("was null, but now %#v", actual)) return errs } ty := planned.Type() switch { case !actual.IsKnown(): errs = append(errs, path.NewErrorf("was known, but now unknown")) case ty.IsPrimitiveType(): if !actual.Equals(planned).True() { errs = append(errs, path.NewErrorf("was %#v, but now %#v", planned, actual)) } case ty.IsListType() || ty.IsMapType() || ty.IsTupleType(): for it := planned.ElementIterator(); it.Next(); { k, plannedV := it.Element() if !actual.HasIndex(k).True() { errs = append(errs, path.NewErrorf("element %s has vanished", indexStrForErrors(k))) continue } actualV := actual.Index(k) moreErrs := assertValueCompatible(plannedV, actualV, append(path, cty.IndexStep{Key: k})) errs = append(errs, moreErrs...) } for it := actual.ElementIterator(); it.Next(); { k, _ := it.Element() if !planned.HasIndex(k).True() { errs = append(errs, path.NewErrorf("new element %s has appeared", indexStrForErrors(k))) } } case ty.IsObjectType(): atys := ty.AttributeTypes() for name := range atys { // Because we already tested that the two values have the same type, // we can assume that the same attributes are present in both and // focus just on testing their values. plannedV := planned.GetAttr(name) actualV := actual.GetAttr(name) moreErrs := assertValueCompatible(plannedV, actualV, append(path, cty.GetAttrStep{Name: name})) errs = append(errs, moreErrs...) } case ty.IsSetType(): // We can't really do anything useful for sets here because changing // an unknown element to known changes the identity of the element, and // so we can't correlate them properly. However, we will at least check // to ensure that the number of elements is consistent, along with // the general type-match checks we ran earlier in this function. if planned.IsKnown() && !planned.IsNull() && !actual.IsNull() { setErrs := assertSetValuesCompatible(planned, actual, path, func(plannedV, actualV cty.Value) bool { errs := assertValueCompatible(plannedV, actualV, append(path, cty.IndexStep{Key: actualV})) return len(errs) == 0 }) errs = append(errs, setErrs...) // There can be fewer elements in a set after its elements are all // known (values that turn out to be equal will coalesce) but the // number of elements must never get larger. plannedL := planned.LengthInt() actualL := actual.LengthInt() if plannedL < actualL { errs = append(errs, path.NewErrorf("length changed from %d to %d", plannedL, actualL)) } } } return errs } func indexStrForErrors(v cty.Value) string { switch v.Type() { case cty.Number: return v.AsBigFloat().Text('f', -1) case cty.String: return strconv.Quote(v.AsString()) default: // Should be impossible, since no other index types are allowed! return fmt.Sprintf("%#v", v) } } // couldHaveUnknownBlockPlaceholder is a heuristic that recognizes how the // HCL dynamic block extension behaves when it's asked to expand a block whose // for_each argument is unknown. In such cases, it generates a single placeholder // block with all leaf attribute values unknown, and once the for_each // expression becomes known the placeholder may be replaced with any number // of blocks, so object compatibility checks would need to be more liberal. // // Set "nested" if testing a block that is nested inside a candidate block // placeholder; this changes the interpretation of there being no blocks of // a type to allow for there being zero nested blocks. func couldHaveUnknownBlockPlaceholder(v cty.Value, blockS *configschema.NestedBlock, nested bool) bool { switch blockS.Nesting { case configschema.NestingSingle, configschema.NestingGroup: if nested && v.IsNull() { return true // for nested blocks, a single block being unset doesn't disqualify from being an unknown block placeholder } return couldBeUnknownBlockPlaceholderElement(v, &blockS.Block) default: // These situations should be impossible for correct providers, but // we permit the legacy SDK to produce some incorrect outcomes // for compatibility with its existing logic, and so we must be // tolerant here. if !v.IsKnown() { return true } if v.IsNull() { return false // treated as if the list were empty, so we would see zero iterations below } // For all other nesting modes, our value should be something iterable. for it := v.ElementIterator(); it.Next(); { _, ev := it.Element() if couldBeUnknownBlockPlaceholderElement(ev, &blockS.Block) { return true } } // Our default changes depending on whether we're testing the candidate // block itself or something nested inside of it: zero blocks of a type // can never contain a dynamic block placeholder, but a dynamic block // placeholder might contain zero blocks of one of its own nested block // types, if none were set in the config at all. return nested } } func couldBeUnknownBlockPlaceholderElement(v cty.Value, schema *configschema.Block) bool { if v.IsNull() { return false // null value can never be a placeholder element } if !v.IsKnown() { return true // this should never happen for well-behaved providers, but can happen with the legacy SDK opt-outs } for name := range schema.Attributes { av := v.GetAttr(name) // Unknown block placeholders contain only unknown or null attribute // values, depending on whether or not a particular attribute was set // explicitly inside the content block. Note that this is imprecise: // non-placeholders can also match this, so this function can generate // false positives. if av.IsKnown() && !av.IsNull() { return false } } for name, blockS := range schema.BlockTypes { if !couldHaveUnknownBlockPlaceholder(v.GetAttr(name), blockS, true) { return false } } return true } // assertSetValuesCompatible checks that each of the elements in a can // be correlated with at least one equivalent element in b and vice-versa, // using the given correlation function. // // This allows the number of elements in the sets to change as long as all // elements in both sets can be correlated, making this function safe to use // with sets that may contain unknown values as long as the unknown case is // addressed in some reasonable way in the callback function. // // The callback always recieves values from set a as its first argument and // values from set b in its second argument, so it is safe to use with // non-commutative functions. // // As with assertValueCompatible, we assume that the target audience of error // messages here is a provider developer (via a bug report from a user) and so // we intentionally violate our usual rule of keeping cty implementation // details out of error messages. func assertSetValuesCompatible(planned, actual cty.Value, path cty.Path, f func(aVal, bVal cty.Value) bool) []error { a := planned b := actual // Our methodology here is a little tricky, to deal with the fact that // it's impossible to directly correlate two non-equal set elements because // they don't have identities separate from their values. // The approach is to count the number of equivalent elements each element // of a has in b and vice-versa, and then return true only if each element // in both sets has at least one equivalent. as := a.AsValueSlice() bs := b.AsValueSlice() aeqs := make([]bool, len(as)) beqs := make([]bool, len(bs)) for ai, av := range as { for bi, bv := range bs { if f(av, bv) { aeqs[ai] = true beqs[bi] = true } } } var errs []error for i, eq := range aeqs { if !eq { errs = append(errs, path.NewErrorf("planned set element %#v does not correlate with any element in actual", as[i])) } } if len(errs) > 0 { // Exit early since otherwise we're likely to generate duplicate // error messages from the other perspective in the subsequent loop. return errs } for i, eq := range beqs { if !eq { errs = append(errs, path.NewErrorf("actual set element %#v does not correlate with any element in plan", bs[i])) } } return errs }