terraform/command/views/validate.go

139 lines
4.1 KiB
Go

package views
import (
"encoding/json"
"fmt"
"github.com/hashicorp/terraform/command/arguments"
"github.com/hashicorp/terraform/command/format"
viewsjson "github.com/hashicorp/terraform/command/views/json"
"github.com/hashicorp/terraform/internal/tfdiags"
)
// The Validate is used for the validate command.
type Validate interface {
// Results renders the diagnostics returned from a validation walk, and
// returns a CLI exit code: 0 if there are no errors, 1 otherwise
Results(diags tfdiags.Diagnostics) int
// Diagnostics renders early diagnostics, resulting from argument parsing.
Diagnostics(diags tfdiags.Diagnostics)
}
// NewValidate returns an initialized Validate implementation for the given ViewType.
func NewValidate(vt arguments.ViewType, view *View) Validate {
switch vt {
case arguments.ViewJSON:
return &ValidateJSON{view: view}
case arguments.ViewHuman:
return &ValidateHuman{view: view}
default:
panic(fmt.Sprintf("unknown view type %v", vt))
}
}
// The ValidateHuman implementation renders diagnostics in a human-readable form,
// along with a success/failure message if Terraform is able to execute the
// validation walk.
type ValidateHuman struct {
view *View
}
var _ Validate = (*ValidateHuman)(nil)
func (v *ValidateHuman) Results(diags tfdiags.Diagnostics) int {
columns := v.view.outputColumns()
if len(diags) == 0 {
v.view.streams.Println(format.WordWrap(v.view.colorize.Color(validateSuccess), columns))
} else {
v.Diagnostics(diags)
if !diags.HasErrors() {
v.view.streams.Println(format.WordWrap(v.view.colorize.Color(validateWarnings), columns))
}
}
if diags.HasErrors() {
return 1
}
return 0
}
const validateSuccess = "[green][bold]Success![reset] The configuration is valid.\n"
const validateWarnings = "[green][bold]Success![reset] The configuration is valid, but there were some validation warnings as shown above.\n"
func (v *ValidateHuman) Diagnostics(diags tfdiags.Diagnostics) {
v.view.Diagnostics(diags)
}
// The ValidateJSON implementation renders validation results as a JSON object.
// This object includes top-level fields summarizing the result, and an array
// of JSON diagnostic objects.
type ValidateJSON struct {
view *View
}
var _ Validate = (*ValidateJSON)(nil)
func (v *ValidateJSON) Results(diags tfdiags.Diagnostics) int {
// FormatVersion represents the version of the json format and will be
// incremented for any change to this format that requires changes to a
// consuming parser.
const FormatVersion = "0.1"
type Output struct {
FormatVersion string `json:"format_version"`
// We include some summary information that is actually redundant
// with the detailed diagnostics, but avoids the need for callers
// to re-implement our logic for deciding these.
Valid bool `json:"valid"`
ErrorCount int `json:"error_count"`
WarningCount int `json:"warning_count"`
Diagnostics []*viewsjson.Diagnostic `json:"diagnostics"`
}
output := Output{
FormatVersion: FormatVersion,
Valid: true, // until proven otherwise
}
configSources := v.view.configSources()
for _, diag := range diags {
output.Diagnostics = append(output.Diagnostics, viewsjson.NewDiagnostic(diag, configSources))
switch diag.Severity() {
case tfdiags.Error:
output.ErrorCount++
output.Valid = false
case tfdiags.Warning:
output.WarningCount++
}
}
if output.Diagnostics == nil {
// Make sure this always appears as an array in our output, since
// this is easier to consume for dynamically-typed languages.
output.Diagnostics = []*viewsjson.Diagnostic{}
}
j, err := json.MarshalIndent(&output, "", " ")
if err != nil {
// Should never happen because we fully-control the input here
panic(err)
}
v.view.streams.Println(string(j))
if diags.HasErrors() {
return 1
}
return 0
}
// Diagnostics should only be called if the validation walk cannot be executed.
// In this case, we choose to render human-readable diagnostic output,
// primarily for backwards compatibility.
func (v *ValidateJSON) Diagnostics(diags tfdiags.Diagnostics) {
v.view.Diagnostics(diags)
}