Commit graph

5 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Alex Clemmer bcc17c8768 Return errors from query programs through the console 2019-06-03 14:56:49 -07:00
Matt Ellis 917f3738c5 Add --server to pulumi plugin install
Previously, when the CLI wanted to install a plugin, it used a special
method, `DownloadPlugin` on the `httpstate` backend to actually fetch
the tarball that had the plugin. The reason for this is largely tied
to history, at one point during a closed beta, we required presenting
an API key to download plugins (as a way to enforce folks outside the
beta could not download them) and because of that it was natural to
bake that functionality into the part of the code that interfaced with
the rest of the API from the Pulumi Service.

The downside here is that it means we need to host all the plugins on
`api.pulumi.com` which prevents community folks from being able to
easily write resource providers, since they have to manually manage
the process of downloading a provider to a machine and getting it on
the `$PATH` or putting it in the plugin cache.

To make this easier, we add a `--server` argument you can pass to
`pulumi plugin install` to control the URL that it attempts to fetch
the tarball from. We still have perscriptive guidence on how the
tarball must be
named (`pulumi-[<type>]-[<provider-name>]-vX.Y.Z.tar.gz`) but the base
URL can now be configured.

Folks publishing packages can use install scripts to run `pulumi
plugin install` passing a custom `--server` argument, if needed.

There are two improvements we can make to provide a nicer end to end
story here:

- We can augment the GetRequiredPlugins method on the language
  provider to also return information about an optional server to use
  when downloading the provider.

- We can pass information about a server to download plugins from as
  part of a resource registration or creation of a first class
  provider.

These help out in cases where for one reason or another where `pulumi
plugin install` doesn't get run before an update takes place and would
allow us to either do the right thing ahead of time or provide better
error messages with the correct `--server` argument. But, for now,
this unblocks a majority of the cases we care about and provides a
path forward for folks that want to develop and host their own
resource providers.
2019-06-03 09:31:18 -07:00
Alex Clemmer 2036aa7919 Fixup linting errors 2019-05-02 18:08:08 -07:00
Alex Clemmer 2c7af058de Expose resource outputs through invoke
This command exposes a new resource `Invoke` operation,
`pulumi:pulumi:readStackResourceOutputs` which retrieves all resource
outputs for some user-specified stack, not including those deleted.

Fixes #2600.
2019-05-02 18:08:08 -07:00
Alex Clemmer ea32fec8f9 Implement query primitives in the engine
`pulumi query` is designed, essentially, as a souped-up `exec`. We
execute a query program, and add a few convenience constructs (e.g., the
default providers that give you access to things like `getStack`).

Early in the design process, we decided to not re-use the `up`/update
path, both to minimize risk to update operations, and to simplify the
implementation.

This commit will add this "parallel query universe" into the engine
package. In particular, this includes:

* `QuerySource`, which executes the language provider running the query
  program, and providing it with some simple constructs, such as the
  default provider, which provides access to `getStack`. This is much
  like a very simplified `EvalSource`, though notably without any of the
  planning/step execution machinery.
* `queryResmon`, which disallows all resource operations, except the
  `Invoke` that retrieves the resource outputs of some stack's last
  snapshot. This is much like a simplified `resmon`, but without any of
  the provider resolution, and without and support for resource
  operations generally.
* Various static functions that pull together miscellaneous things
  needed to execute a query program. Notably, this includes gathering
  language plugins.
2019-05-02 18:08:08 -07:00