We are renaming Lumi to Pulumi Fabric. This change simply renames the
pulumi/lumi repo to pulumi/pulumi-fabric, without the CLI tools and other
changes that will follow soon afterwards.
This changes the RPC interfaces between Lumi and provider ever so
slightly, so that we can track default properties explicitly. This
is required to perform accurate diffing between inputs provided by
the developer, inputs provided by the system, and outputs. This is
particularly important for default values that may be indeterminite,
such as those we use in the bridge to auto-generate unique IDs.
Otherwise, we fail to reapply defaults correctly, and trick the
provider into thinking that properties changed when they did not.
This is a small step towards pulumi/lumi#306, in which we will defer
even more responsibility for diffing semantics to the providers.
This change serializes unknown properties anywhere in the entire
property structure, including deeply embedded inside object maps, etc.
This is now done in such a way that we can recover both the computed
nature of the serialized property, along with its expected eventual
type, on the other side of the RPC boundary.
This will let us have perfect fidelity with the new bridge's view on
computed properties, rather than special casing them on "one side".
For Update and Delete operations, we provided just the input state
for a resource. This is insufficient, because the provider may need
to depend on output state from the Create or prior Update operations.
This change merges the output atop the input during the step application.
As part of the bridge bringup, I've discoverd that the property state
returned from Creates does *not* always equal the state that is then
read from calls to Get. (I suspect this is a bug and that they should
be equivalent, but I doubt it's fruitfal to try and track down all
occurrences of this; I bet it's widespread). To cope with this, we will
return state from Create and Update, instead of issuing a call to Get.
This was a design we considered to start with and frankly didn't have
a super strong reason to do it the current way, other than that it seemed
elegant to place all of the Get logic in one place.
Note that providers may choose to return nil, in which case we will read
state from the provider in the usual Get style.
This change mirrors the dynamic marshaling structure on the static
definition of the Asset and Archive types. This ensures that they
marshal correctly even when deeply embedded inside other structures.
This change brings the same typed serialization we use for RPC
to the serialization of deployments. This ensures that we get
repeatable diffs from one deployment to the next.
This reverts commit c3db70849d.
I've opted to take a new strategy to ensure the bridge properties
don't conflict (with manual renames), similar to the name property.
This change recognizes assets and archives as 1st class resource
property values. This is necessary to support them in the new bridge
work, and lays the foundation for fixing pulumi/lumi#153.
I also took the opportunity to clean up some old cruft in the
resource properties area.
This renames the basemost resource properties, id and urn, to
names that are less likely to conflict with properties that real
resources will want to use, pid and upn (provider ID and Universal
Pulumi Name, respectively).
I actually ran into this with the current bridge work. An alternative
solution would be to require derived resources to pick different names,
however this is unfortunate because usually they are more "user-facing"
than ours. Another alternative is to not hijack the object properties
at all, but that too is problematic because we use these properties
during the evaluation of plans and deployments.
This seems like a reasonable middle ground.
This adds a ReadLocations RPC function to the engine interface, alongside
the singular ReadLocation. The plural function takes a single token that
represents a module or class and we will then return all of the module
or class (static) properties that are currently known.
This adds a handy MapReplace function on pkg/resource's PropertyMap and
PropertyValue types. This is just like the existing Mappable function,
except that it permits easy replacement of elements as the map transformation
occurs. We need this to perform float64=>int transformations.
We fail very late in the process of plan application, should a duplicate
URN arise. This change fails as early in the process as possible and
ensures that it does so with good line number information.
This properly unwinds the interpreter should something happen that
results in cancellation. This occurs, for example, when the planning
engine encounters an error and decides that it doesn't need to proceed
further with evaluation before it simply goes ahead and exits.
This adds a few missing closes for the plugin host/context. This
should fixpulumi/lumi#261. Eventually when we have more robust
nightly test options, and want to spend the time, we should think
about doing more rigorous stress testing that kills processes at
inopportune times and guarantees we don't leak. I've filed
pulumi/lumi#263 to do that.
This change fixes a few things:
* Most importantly, we need to place a leading "." in the paths
to Gometalinter, otherwise some sub-linters just silently skip
the directory altogether. errcheck is one such linter, which
is a very important one!
* Use an explicit Gometalinter.json file to configure the various
settings. This flips on a few additional linters that aren't
on by default (line line length checking). Sadly, a few that
I'd like to enable take waaaay too much time, so in the future
we may consider a nightly job (this includes code similarity,
unused parameters, unused functions, and others that generally
require global analysis).
* Now that we're running more, however, linting takes a while!
The core Lumi project now takes 26 seconds to lint on my laptop.
That's not terrible, but it's long enough that we don't want to
do the silly "run them twice" thing our Makefiles were previously
doing. Instead, we shall deploy some $$($${PIPESTATUS[1]}-1))-fu
to rely on the fact that grep returns 1 on "zero lines".
* Finally, fix the many issues that this turned up.
I think(?) we are done, except, of course, for needing to drive
down some of the cyclomatic complexity issues (which I'm possibly
going to punt on; see pulumi/lumi#259 for more details).
We were not propagating the error from `deployLatest` through
to the CLI error result. Despite out recent efforts to integrate
gometalinter, there were also several additional similar cases of
ignored error results reported by `errcheck`. Not yet clear why
these are not being reported via gometalinter.
Fixes#262.
After 233c5a8 landed, I noticed there are a few things to be fixed up:
* Run gometalinter in all the right places. We need to run both in
lint and lint_quiet targets. I've also cleaned up some of the logic
around what to suppress so there's less repetition.
* We currently @ meaningful commands, which is unfortunate, since it
makes debugging Makefiles tough (especially when looking at CI build
logs). Going forward, we should only use @ for meaningless commands,
like @echo.
* The AWS project wasn't actually running tslint, because it needs to
say `tslint './pack/**/*.ts' --exclude='./pack/node_modules/**'`.
The current script of `tslint lib/aws/pack/...` wasn't actually
running lint, hence we missed a lot of AWS lint issues.
* Fix up the issues that these fixes uncovered. Mostly err shadowing.
This continues the previous commit and establishes the interpreter
context so that we can use the new host interface. In summary:
* Instead of using the NullSource for destructions -- which
doesn't hook up an interpreter and so any reads of configuration
variables will fail -- we will enlighten the EvalSource to know
how to orchestrate destruction interpretation. The primary
difference is that we don't actually run the code, but *we do*
perform all of the necessary configuration and variable init.
* Associate the active interpreter with the plugin context as
we are executing, so that the host object can actually read the
state from the heap as requested to do so by attached plugins.
* Rename anything "engine" related to use the term "host"; this
avoids introducing unnecesarily new terminology.
* Add a new pkg/resource/provider/ package where we can begin
consolidating helper functionality for resource providers.
Right now, this includes a wrapper interface atop the gRPC
machinery necessary to contact the host, in addition to a
Main function that hides some boilerplate entrypoint code.
* Add a rpcutil.IsBenignCloseErr routine to let us ignore
"benign" gRPC errors that are knowingly returned at shutdown.
This commit completes pulumi/lumi#117.
This addresses CR feedback from @lukehoban; namely, that we should
be going through the Read API for location reads in the plugin host
to ensure that getters are invoked as appropriate.
I also made Location's various fields private so that we aren't
tempted to make this mistake elsewhere, effectively "forcing" us
to go through the accessor methods.
This change adds an engine gRPC interface, and associated implementation,
so that plugins may do interesting things that require "phoning home".
Previously, the engine would fire up plugins and talk to them directly,
but there was no way for a plugin to ask the engine to do anything.
The motivation here is so that plugins can read evaluator state, such
as config information, but this change also allows richer logging
functionality than previously possible. We will still auto-log any
stdout/stderr writes; however, explicit errors, warnings, informational,
and even debug messages may be written over the Log API.
This change implements the `get` function for resources. Per pulumi/lumi#83,
this allows Lumi scripts to actually read from the target environment.
For example, we can now look up a SecurityGroup from its ARN:
let group = aws.ec2.SecurityGroup.get(
"arn:aws:ec2:us-west-2:153052954103:security-group:sg-02150d79");
The returned object is a fully functional resource object. So, we can then
link it up with an EC2 instance, for example, in the usual ways:
let instance = new aws.ec2.Instance(..., {
securityGroups: [ group ],
});
This didn't require any changes to the RPC or provider model, since we
already implement the Get function.
There are a few loose ends; two are short term:
1) URNs are not rehydrated.
2) Query is not yet implemented.
One is mid-term:
3) We probably want a URN-based lookup function. But we will likely
wait until we tackle pulumi/lumi#109 before adding this.
And one is long term (and subtle):
4) These amount to I/O and are not repeatable! A change in the target
environment may cause a script to generate a different plan
intermittently. Most likely we want to apply a different kind of
deployment "policy" for such scripts. These are inching towards the
scripting model of pulumi/lumi#121, which is an entirely different
beast than the repeatable immutable infrastructure deployments.
Finally, it is worth noting that with this, we have some of the fundamental
underpinnings required to finally tackle "inference" (pulumi/lumi#142).
This change simplifies the generated Check interface for providers.
Instead of
Check(ctx context.Context, obj *T) ([]error, error)
where T is the resource type, we have
Check(ctx context.Context, obj *T, property string) error
This is done so that we can drive the calls to Check one property
at a time, allowing us to skip any that are computed. (Otherwise,
we may fail the verification erroneously.)
This has the added advantage that the Check implementations are
simpler and can simply return a single error. Furthermore, the
generated RPC code handles wrapping the result, so we can just do
return errors.New("bad");
rather than the previous reflection-laden junk
return resource.NewFieldError(
reflect.TypeOf(obj), awsservice.AWSResource_Property,
errors.New("bad"))
This change implements showing a summary of the current environment.
All you need to do is run
$ lumi env
and the current environment's information will be printed.
This makes it convenient to grab resource information that might be
required, for instance, to correlate with logs (e.g., lambda ARNs).
Eventually, as per pulumi/lumi#184, we want to print details about
all of the resources too.
Tests all of our commonly used examples.
Also sets test parallelism to 10 by default
since we are I/O bound on API calls to
the resource providers.
Also avoids using larger EC2 examples in
our samples so that we can keep our test
costs lower :-).
On the first turn, we want to distinguish between a coroutine
running that owns its turn, and a coroutine that knows it doesn't
own the turn and is simply awaiting its turn. The old Meet logic
wasn't quite right; instead, we'll have the caller tell us this.
We now have enough output properties implementation
working to change our API gateway examples and API
wrapper to correctly wire the API routes to the ARNs of
lambdas passed in to them.
We both wire up the lambda to the route, but also create
a permission specific to each route to assign to the
corresponding lambda - providing least privelege needed
for the API definition.
Also adds `string#toUpperCase` and fixes NewUniqueHex
to match how we are using it.
This change overwrites output property slots in runtime objects
after performing a CRUD operation, in addition to null or missing
slots, fixing #251. The problem is that we sometimes have output
property values pre-populated in an object, and sometimes don't,
depending on various things (both are legal). We should handle both.