setuptools's "develop" action is not safe to run concurrently when
targeting the same source tree. In order to work around this, this
commit explicitly serializes package installations.
When the install fails, we end up printing the entire contents of
yarn's stdout to stdout. This output can often be quite long and will
cause Travis to fail in some cases.
The regular error output should be sufficent for us to diagnose any
issues we'll face.
Add a new property to ProgramTestOptions, `Overrides` that allows a
test to request a different version of a package is used instead of
what would be listed in the package.json file.
This will be used by our nightly automation to run everything "at head"
While the lifecycle tests wrote a `.yarnrc` file to ensure that copies
of `yarn` did not race with one another, the more barebones testing
framework did not.
This should address some of the yarn issues we've been seeing in CI
recently
The lockfile is not super interesting when running the lifecycle
tests, since the test project is not a long lived artifact. There was
no real harm in writing it, exepct that in some cases `pipenv` gets
very confused when you have dependencies on pre-release
versions (which is the case right now as we are brining up Python 3).
The packages are still installed correctly, even when we don't write a
lock file.
* Fix Python support in integration test framework
Update the integratino test framework to use pipenv to bootstrap new
virtual environments for tests and use those virtual environments to run
pulumi update and pulumi preview.
Fixespulumi/pulumi#2138
* Install packages via 'Dependencies' field
* Remove code for installing packages from Dependencies
In preparation for some workspace restructuring, I decided to scratch a
few itches of my own in the code:
* Change project's RuntimeInfo field to just Runtime, to match the
serialized name in JSON/YAML.
* Eliminate the no-longer-used Context and NoDefaultIgnores fields on
project, and all of the associated legacy PPC-related code.
* Eliminate the no-longer-used IgnoreFile constant.
* Remove a bunch of "// nolint: lll" annotations, and simply format
the structures with comments on dedicated lines, to avoid overly
lengthy lines and lint suppressions.
* Mark Dependencies and InitErrors as `omitempty` in the JSON
serialization directives for CheckpointV2 files. This was done for
the YAML directives, but (presumably accidentally) omitted for JSON.
* Remove TODO for issue since fixed in PPCs.
* Update issue reference to source
* Update comment wording
* Remove --ppc arg of stack init
* Remove PPC references in int. testing fx
* Remove vestigial PPC API types
This change adds GitLab CI support, by sniffing out the right
variables (equivalent to what we already do for Travis).
I've also restructured the code to share more logic with our
existing CI detection code, now moved to the pkg/util/ciutil
package, and will be fleshing this out more in the days to come.
Add two command-line options to the test framework, "-dirs" and
"list-dirs". The former accepts a regex that is used to select which
integration tests to run. The latter lists available integration tests
without running them.
As part of making the local backend more prominent, this changes a few
aspects of how you use it:
* Simplify how you log into a specific cloud; rather than
`pulumi login --cloud-url <url>`, just say `pulumi login <url>`.
* Use a proper URL scheme to denote local backend usage. We have chosen
file://, since the REST API backend is of course always https://.
This means that you can say `pulumi login file://~` to use the local
backend, with state files stored in your home directory. Similarly,
we support `pulumi login file://.` for the current directory.
* Add a --local flag to the login command, to make local logins a
bit easier in the common case of using your home directory. Just say
`pulumi login --local` and it is sugar for `pulumi login file://~`.
* Print the URL for the backend after logging in; for the cloud,
this is just the user's stacks page, and for the local backend,
this is the path to the user's stacks directory on disk.
* Tidy up the documentation for login a bit to be clearer about this.
This is part of pulumi/pulumi#1818.
The pattern we are using here is generally prone to error, so I hope we find a way to move away from this more generally - but for now we need to be able to configure more of these in places we are using `With`.
Also remove some `+""` that are tripping up the linter for me locally.
Often when the test fails, you'll want to use the web console to
investigate the stack, looking at detailed log messages, for
example. But since we always delete the stack today, you often can't.
Stop running `pulumi stack rm` when the test fails, however do run a
`pulumi destroy` so we at least clean up any resources the stack may
have allocated during testing.
Fixes#1722
Replace the Source-based implementation of refresh with a phase that
runs as the first part of plan execution and rewrites the snapshot in-memory.
In order to fit neatly within the existing framework for resource operations,
these changes introduce a new kind of step, RefreshStep, to represent
refreshes. RefreshSteps operate similar to ReadSteps but do not imply that
the resource being read is not managed by Pulumi.
In addition to the refresh reimplementation, these changes incorporate those
from #1394 to run refresh in the integration test framework.
Fixes#1598.
Fixespulumi/pulumi-terraform#165.
Contributes to #1449.
* Initial support for passing URLs to `new` and `up`
This PR adds initial support for `pulumi new` using Git under the covers
to manage Pulumi templates, providing the same experience as before.
You can now also optionally pass a URL to a Git repository, e.g.
`pulumi new [<url>]`, including subdirectories within the repository,
and arbitrary branches, tags, or commits.
The following commands result in the same behavior from the user's
perspective:
- `pulumi new javascript`
- `pulumi new https://github.com/pulumi/templates/templates/javascript`
- `pulumi new https://github.com/pulumi/templates/tree/master/templates/javascript`
- `pulumi new https://github.com/pulumi/templates/tree/HEAD/templates/javascript`
To specify an arbitrary branch, tag, or commit:
- `pulumi new https://github.com/pulumi/templates/tree/<branch>/templates/javascript`
- `pulumi new https://github.com/pulumi/templates/tree/<tag>/templates/javascript`
- `pulumi new https://github.com/pulumi/templates/tree/<commit>/templates/javascript`
Branches and tags can include '/' separators, and `pulumi` will still
find the right subdirectory.
URLs to Gists are also supported, e.g.:
`pulumi new https://gist.github.com/justinvp/6673959ceb9d2ac5a14c6d536cb871a6`
If the specified subdirectory in the repository does not contain a
`Pulumi.yaml`, it will look for subdirectories within containing
`Pulumi.yaml` files, and prompt the user to choose a template, along the
lines of how `pulumi new` behaves when no template is specified.
The following commands result in the CLI prompting to choose a template:
- `pulumi new`
- `pulumi new https://github.com/pulumi/templates/templates`
- `pulumi new https://github.com/pulumi/templates/tree/master/templates`
- `pulumi new https://github.com/pulumi/templates/tree/HEAD/templates`
Of course, arbitrary branches, tags, or commits can be specified as well:
- `pulumi new https://github.com/pulumi/templates/tree/<branch>/templates`
- `pulumi new https://github.com/pulumi/templates/tree/<tag>/templates`
- `pulumi new https://github.com/pulumi/templates/tree/<commit>/templates`
This PR also includes initial support for passing URLs to `pulumi up`,
providing a streamlined way to deploy installable cloud applications
with Pulumi, without having to manage source code locally before doing
a deployment.
For example, `pulumi up https://github.com/justinvp/aws` can be used to
deploy a sample AWS app. The stack can be updated with different
versions, e.g.
`pulumi up https://github.com/justinvp/aws/tree/v2 -s <stack-to-update>`
Config values can optionally be passed via command line flags, e.g.
`pulumi up https://github.com/justinvp/aws -c aws:region=us-west-2 -c foo:bar=blah`
Gists can also be used, e.g.
`pulumi up https://gist.github.com/justinvp/62fde0463f243fcb49f5a7222e51bc76`
* Fix panic when hitting ^C from "choose template" prompt
* Add description to templates
When running `pulumi new` without specifying a template, include the template description along with the name in the "choose template" display.
```
$ pulumi new
Please choose a template:
aws-go A minimal AWS Go program
aws-javascript A minimal AWS JavaScript program
aws-python A minimal AWS Python program
aws-typescript A minimal AWS TypeScript program
> go A minimal Go program
hello-aws-javascript A simple AWS serverless JavaScript program
javascript A minimal JavaScript program
python A minimal Python program
typescript A minimal TypeScript program
```
* React to changes to the pulumi/templates repo.
We restructured the `pulumi/templates` repo to have all the templates in the root instead of in a `templates` subdirectory, so make the change here to no longer look for templates in `templates`.
This also fixes an issue around using `Depth: 1` that I found while testing this. When a named template is used, we attempt to clone or pull from the `pulumi/templates` repo to `~/.pulumi/templates`. Having it go in this well-known directory allows us to maintain previous behavior around allowing offline use of templates. If we use `Depth: 1` for the initial clone, it will fail when attempting to pull when there are updates to the remote repository. Unfortunately, there's no built-in `--unshallow` support in `go-git` and setting a larger `Depth` doesn't appear to help. There may be a workaround, but for now, if we're cloning the pulumi templates directory to `~/.pulumi/templates`, we won't use `Depth: 1`. For template URLs, we will continue to use `Depth: 1` as we clone those to a temp directory (which gets deleted) that we'll never try to update.
* List available templates in help text
* Address PR Feedback
* Don't show "Installing dependencies" message for `up`
* Fix secrets handling
When prompting for config, if the existing stack value is a secret, keep it a secret and mask the prompt. If the template says it should be secret, make it a secret.
* Fix ${PROJECT} and ${DESCRIPTION} handling for `up`
Templates used with `up` should already have a filled-in project name and description, but if it's a `new`-style template, that has `${PROJECT}` and/or `${DESCRIPTION}`, be helpful and just replace these with better values.
* Fix stack handling
Add a bool `setCurrent` param to `requireStack` to control whether the current stack should be saved in workspace settings. For the `up <url>` case, we don't want to save. Also, split the `up` code into two separate functions: one for the `up <url>` case and another for the normal `up` case where you have workspace in your current directory. While we may be able to combine them back into a single function, right now it's a bit cleaner being separate, even with some small amount of duplication.
* Fix panic due to nil crypter
Lazily get the crypter only if needed inside `promptForConfig`.
* Embellish comment
* Harden isPreconfiguredEmptyStack check
Fix the code to check to make sure the URL specified on the command line matches the URL stored in the `pulumi:template` config value, and that the rest of the config from the stack satisfies the config requirements of the template.
We retain a few tests on the RunBuild plan, with `typescript` set to
false in the runtime options, but for the general case, we remove the
build steps and custom entry points for our programs.
This change lets us set runtime specific options in Pulumi.yaml, which
will flow as arguments to the language hosts. We then teach the nodejs
host that when the `typescript` is set to `true` that it should load
ts-node before calling into user code. This allows using typescript
natively without an explicit compile step outside of Pulumi.
This works even when a tsconfig.json file is not present in the
application and should provide a nicer inner loop for folks writing
typescript (I'm pretty sure everyone has run into the "but I fixed
that bug! Why isn't it getting picked up? Oh, I forgot to run tsc"
problem.
Fixes#958
This allows us to delete the one off export/import test, which is nice
because it failed to run when PULUMI_ACCESS_TOKEN was not set in the
environment (due to an interaction between `pulumi login` and the
bare-bones integration test framework)
Because we run our golang integration tests "in tree" (due to
the need to be under $GOPATH and have a vendor folder around), the
"command-output" folder was getting left behind, dirtying the worktree
after building.
This change does two things:
1. On a succecssful run, remove the folder.
2. Ignore the folder via .gitignore (this way if a test fails and you
do `git add .` you don't end up commiting this folder).
Due to the way GOPATH and vendoring works, copying Go tests out to a
random temp directory simply will not work. This is largely a holdover
to the days of when .pulumi/ directories would pollute the directory,
but is also done for languages like Node.js whose preparatory and build
steps also pollute the working directory (with bin/ and node_modules/
directories). Go does not have this problem, so we can safely skip.
Today we defaulted our tests to create stacks in the `pulumi`
organization. We did this because our tests run with `pulumi-bot` and
we'd rather create the stacks in our shared organization, so any
Pulumi developer can see them.
Of course, as we prepare to have folks outside of the Pulumi
organization write and run tests, this has now become a bad default.
Remove the ability to explicitly set an owner in
ProgramTestOptions (since that would more or less only lead to pain
going forward) and default to just creating the stacks in whatever
account is currently logged in. In CI, we'll set a new environment
variable "PULUMI_TEST_OWNER" which controls the owner of the stacks,
which we'll set to `pulumi`.
Impact to day to day developers is during test runs locally you'll see
stacks in your list of stacks. If any of the tests fail to clean up,
you'll see these lingering stacks (but you can go clean them up).
math/rand uses a fixed seed, meaning that across runs the Kth call to
`rand.Int63()` will always return the same value.
Given that we want to provide a unique suffix across multiple
concurrent runs, this isn't the behavior we want.
I saw an instance fail in CI where all three legs ran the test
concurrently and they raced on creating the test stack, since they all
generated the same name.
This lets us set these values globaly, in our Travis and AppVeyor
configurations instead of forcing every test to opt-in. It also means
that by default, local builds will not report any of this data (and
will not need access to these endpoints).
These changes add support for pre- and post-`pulumi` callbacks to the
integration test framework. These callbacks will be invoked immediately
before and after (respectively) running a `pulumi` command.
This changes the CLI interface in a few ways:
* `pulumi preview` is back! The alternative of saying
`pulumi update --preview` just felt awkward, and it's a common
operation to want to perform. Let's just make it work.
* There are two flags consistent across all update commands,
`update`, `refresh`, and `destroy`:
- `--skip-preview` will skip the preview step. Note that this
does *not* skip the prompt to confirm that you'd like to proceed.
Indeed, it will still prompt, with a little warning text about
the fact that the preview has been skipped.
* `--yes` will auto-approve the updates.
This lands us in a simpler and more intuitive spot for common scenarios.
I found the flag --force to be a strange name for skipping a preview,
since that name is usually reserved for operations that might be harmful
and yet you're coercing a tool to do it anyway, knowing there's a chance
you're going to shoot yourself in the foot.
I also found that what I almost always want in the situation where
--force was being used is to actually just run a preview and have the
confirmation auto-accepted. Going straight to --force isn't the right
thing in a CI scenario, where you actually want to run a preview first,
just to ensure there aren't any issues, before doing the update.
In a sense, there are four options here:
1. Run a preview, ask for confirmation, then do an update (the default).
2. Run a preview, auto-accept, and then do an update (the CI scenario).
3. Just run a preview with neither a confirmation nor an update (dry run).
4. Just do an update, without performing a preview beforehand (rare).
This change enables all four workflows in our CLI.
Rather than have an explosion of flags, we have a single flag,
--preview, which can specify the mode that we're operating in. The
following are the values which correlate to the above four modes:
1. "": default (no --preview specified)
2. "auto": auto-accept preview confirmation
3. "only": only run a preview, don't confirm or update
4. "skip": skip the preview altogether
As part of this change, I redid a bit of how the preview modes
were specified. Rather than booleans, which had some illegal
combinations, this change introduces a new enum type. Furthermore,
because the engine is wholly ignorant of these flags -- and only the
backend understands them -- it was confusing to me that
engine.UpdateOptions stored this flag, especially given that all
interesting engine options _also_ accepted a dryRun boolean. As of
this change, the backend.PreviewBehavior controls the preview options.