Commit graph

26 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Sean Gillespie ca540cc736 Use math.MaxInt32 to signal unbounded parallelism
Downlevel versions of the Pulumi Node SDK assumed that a parallelism
level of zero implied serial execution, which current CLIs use to signal
unbounded parallelism. This commit works around the downlevel issue by
using math.MaxInt32 to signal unbounded parallelism.
2018-10-29 12:27:03 -07:00
Sean Gillespie 3e9b210edd
Default to unbounded parallelism (#2065)
Some providers (namely Kubernetes) require unbounded parallelism in
order to function correctly. This commit enables the engine to operate
in a mode with unbounded parallelism and switches to that mode by
default.
2018-10-17 15:33:26 -07:00
Joe Duffy c5a86ae7c2
Add an option to suppress displaying stack outputs (#2029)
This adds an option, --suppress-outputs, to many commands, to
avoid printing stack outputs for stacks that might contain sensitive
information in their outputs (like key material, and whatnot).

Fixes pulumi/pulumi#2028.
2018-10-06 14:13:02 -07:00
joeduffy 992aff2065 Move interactive checking into pkg/util/cmdutil 2018-09-29 10:49:14 -07:00
joeduffy 0e98091bd7 Make --non-interactive a global flag
Right now, we only support --non-interactive in a few places (up,
refresh, destroy, etc). Over time, we've added it to more (like new).
And now, as we're working on better Docker support (pulumi/pulumi#1991),
we want to support this more globally, so we can, for example, avoid
popping up a web browser inside a Docker contain for logging in.

So, this change makes --non-interactive a global flag. Because it is
a persistent flag, it still works in the old positions, so this isn't
a breaking change to existing commands that use it.
2018-09-29 10:41:02 -07:00
joeduffy 95e917441a Implement preview-then-update for local stacks
This change implements the same preview behavior we have for
cloud stacks, in pkg/backend/httpbe, for local stacks, in
pkg/backend/filebe. This mostly required just refactoring bits
and pieces so that we can share more of the code, although it
does still entail quite a bit of redundancy. In particular, the
apply functions for both backends are now so close to being
unified, but still require enough custom logic that it warrants
keeping them separate (for now...)
2018-09-05 07:33:18 -07:00
joeduffy bf51d7594a Refactor display logic out of pkg/backend/filestate
This simply refactors all the display logic out of the
pkg/backend/filestate package. This helps to gear us up to better unify
this logic between the filestate and httpstate backends.

Furthermore, this really ought to be in its own non-backend,
CLI-specific package, but I'm taking one step at a time here.
2018-09-05 07:33:18 -07:00
Justin Van Patten 1f8938e234
Run up automatically at the end of new (#1808)
We already walk through creating a stack and prompting for required
config, and then tell the user to run `pulumi up` to do an initial
deployment. Instead, just proceed with the `up` automatically.
2018-08-27 16:41:20 -07:00
Pat Gavlin 73f4f2c464
Reimplement refresh. (#1814)
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.
Fixes pulumi/pulumi-terraform#165.
Contributes to #1449.
2018-08-22 17:52:46 -07:00
Sean Gillespie 491bcdc602
Add a list of in-flight operations to the deployment (#1759)
* Add a list of in-flight operations to the deployment

This commit augments 'DeploymentV2' with a list of operations that are
currently in flight. This information is used by the engine to keep
track of whether or not a particular deployment is in a valid state.

The SnapshotManager is responsible for inserting and removing operations
from the in-flight operation list. When the engine registers an intent
to perform an operation, SnapshotManager inserts an Operation into this
list and saves it to the snapshot. When an operation completes, the
SnapshotManager removes it from the snapshot. From this, the engine can
infer that if it ever sees a deployment with pending operations, the
Pulumi CLI must have crashed or otherwise abnormally terminated before
seeing whether or not an operation completed successfully.

To remedy this state, this commit also adds code to 'pulumi stack
import' that clears all pending operations from a deployment, as well as
code to plan generation that will reject any deployments that have
pending operations present.

At the CLI level, if we see that we are in a state where pending
operations were in-flight when the engine died, we'll issue a
human-friendly error message that indicates which resources are in a bad
state and how to recover their stack.

* CR: Multi-line string literals, renaming in-flight -> pending

* CR: Add enum to apitype for operation type, also name status -> type for clarity

* Fix the yaml type

* Fix missed renames

* Add implementation for lifecycle_test.go

* Rebase against master
2018-08-10 21:39:59 -07:00
Justin Van Patten 9d84f2e249
Initial support for passing URLs to new and up (#1727)
* 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.
2018-08-10 18:08:16 -07:00
Sean Gillespie a09d9ba035
Default to a parallelism fanout of 10 (#1756)
* Default to a parallelism fanout of 10

* Add dependsOn to double_pending_delete tests to force serialization
2018-08-10 14:16:59 -07:00
CyrusNajmabadi 3ca56d1e82
Support the NO_COLOR env variable to suppres any colored output. (#1594)
Also, make --color a viable command option for any pulumi command.
2018-07-06 21:30:00 -07:00
Matt Ellis 5dd2f10993 Support -s in stack {export, graph, import, output}
Instead of needing you to first select the current stack to use any of
these commands, allow passing `-s <stack-name>` or `--stack
<stack-name>` to say what stack you want to operate on.

These commands still require a `Pulumi.yaml` file to be present, which
is not ideal, but would require a larger refactoring to fix. That
refactoring will happen as part of #1556.

Fixes #1370
2018-07-02 11:42:31 -07:00
joeduffy 5967259795 Add license headers 2018-05-22 15:02:47 -07:00
Pat Gavlin e3020e820b Expose change summaries from the backend.
This is a smallish refactoring that exposes the resource change
summaries reported by the engine from the relevant backend methods.
2018-05-15 17:44:35 -07:00
Joe Duffy 24b350ea40
Support -y as shorthand for --yes (#1340) 2018-05-08 09:55:08 -07:00
Pat Gavlin 97ace29ab1
Begin tracing Pulumi API calls. (#1330)
These changes enable tracing of Pulumi API calls.

The span with which to associate an API call is passed via a
`context.Context` parameter. This required plumbing a
`context.Context` parameter through a rather large number of APIs,
especially in the backend.

In general, all API calls are associated with a new root span that
exists for essentially the entire lifetime of an invocation of the
Pulumi CLI. There were a few places where the plumbing got a bit hairier
than I was willing to address with these changes; I've used
`context.Background()` in these instances. API calls that receive this
context will create new root spans, but will still be traced.
2018-05-07 18:23:03 -07:00
joeduffy 7c7f6d3ed7 Bring back preview, swizzle some flags
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.
2018-05-06 13:55:39 -07:00
joeduffy 6ad785d5c4 Revise the way previews are controlled
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.
2018-05-06 13:55:04 -07:00
CyrusNajmabadi fd3ddda917
Disable interactive mode for a CI/CD server. (#1297) 2018-04-30 15:27:53 -07:00
CyrusNajmabadi 3b13803c71
Add a hidden --no-interactive flag so that we can reduce interactive noise when running jenkins. (#1262) 2018-04-24 14:23:08 -07:00
Matt Ellis cc938a3bc8 Merge remote-tracking branch 'origin/master' into ellismg/identity 2018-04-20 01:56:41 -04:00
Pat Gavlin 4fa69bfd72
Plumb basic cancellation through the engine. (#1231)
hese changes plumb basic support for cancellation through the engine.
Two types of cancellation are supported for all engine operations:
- Cancellation, which waits for the operation to drive itself to a safe
  point before the operation returns, and
- Termination, which does not wait for the operation to drive itself
  to a safe opint for the operation returns.

When updating local or managed stacks, a single ^C triggers cancellation
of any running operation; a second ^C will trigger termination.

Fixes #513, #1077.
2018-04-19 18:59:14 -07:00
joeduffy bac58d7922 Respond to CR feedback
Incorporate feedback from @swgillespie and @pgavlin.
2018-04-18 11:46:37 -07:00
joeduffy b77403b4bb Implement a refresh command
This change implements a `pulumi refresh` command.  It operates a bit
like `pulumi update`, and friends, in that it supports `--preview` and
`--diff`, along with the usual flags, and will update your checkpoint.

It works through substitution of the deploy.Source abstraction, which
generates a sequence of resource registration events.  This new
deploy.RefreshSource takes in a prior checkpoint and will walk it,
refreshing the state via the associated resource providers by invoking
Read for each resource encountered, and merging the resulting state with
the prior checkpoint, to yield a new resource.Goal state.  This state is
then fed through the engine in the usual ways with a few minor caveats:
namely, although the engine must generate steps for the logical
operations (permitting us to get nice summaries, progress, and diffs),
it mustn't actually carry them out because the state being imported
already reflects reality (a deleted resource has *already* been deleted,
so of course the engine need not perform the deletion).  The diffing
logic also needs to know how to treat the case of refresh slightly
differently, because we are going to be diffing outputs and not inputs.

Note that support for managed stacks is not yet complete, since that
requires updates to the service to support a refresh endpoint.  That
will be coming soon ...
2018-04-18 10:57:16 -07:00