Rather than shelling out to the `rm` and `cp` commands,
use Go's os utils to perform these operations. This will
work on any platform rather than just Linux.
The integration test framework currently supports using `dep` for dependency management.
However, `dep` has no native ability to manage "yarn link"-style dependencies on locally available packages.
This is a necessary scenario for testing in most repos though, as (e.g.) examples in the Kubernetes repo need to test against the locally available version of `pulumi-kubernetes`.
The best we can do is a trick of (a) deleting the vendored copy of the locally available dependency (b) copying the locally available dependency into the vendor folder (c) deleting the nested vendor folder in the new copy of the locally available dependency.
* Make Python StackReference test similar to others (with two steps)
* Include new Python StackReference integration test that uses multiple stacks
* Expose various life cycle methods for ProgramTester
The provider plugin protocol is to write a port number followed by `\n`. We must guarantee we do that even on Windows, so must avoid Python `print` statements which implicitly rewrite newlines to platform specific character sequences.
Fixes#3807.
Add support for a test option that indicates that failed update steps
should be retried. Currently the maximum number of retries (3) is not
configurable.
This change adds support for lists and maps in config. We now allow
lists/maps (and nested structures) in `Pulumi.<stack>.yaml` (or
`Pulumi.<stack>.json`; yes, we currently support that).
For example:
```yaml
config:
proj:blah:
- a
- b
- c
proj:hello: world
proj:outer:
inner: value
proj:servers:
- port: 80
```
While such structures could be specified in the `.yaml` file manually,
we support setting values in maps/lists from the command line.
As always, you can specify single values with:
```shell
$ pulumi config set hello world
```
Which results in the following YAML:
```yaml
proj:hello world
```
And single value secrets via:
```shell
$ pulumi config set --secret token shhh
```
Which results in the following YAML:
```yaml
proj:token:
secure: v1:VZAhuroR69FkEPTk:isKafsoZVMWA9pQayGzbWNynww==
```
Values in a list can be set from the command line using the new
`--path` flag, which indicates the config key contains a path to a
property in a map or list:
```shell
$ pulumi config set --path names[0] a
$ pulumi config set --path names[1] b
$ pulumi config set --path names[2] c
```
Which results in:
```yaml
proj:names
- a
- b
- c
```
Values can be obtained similarly:
```shell
$ pulumi config get --path names[1]
b
```
Or setting values in a map:
```shell
$ pulumi config set --path outer.inner value
```
Which results in:
```yaml
proj:outer:
inner: value
```
Of course, setting values in nested structures is supported:
```shell
$ pulumi config set --path servers[0].port 80
```
Which results in:
```yaml
proj:servers:
- port: 80
```
If you want to include a period in the name of a property, it can be
specified as:
```
$ pulumi config set --path 'nested["foo.bar"]' baz
```
Which results in:
```yaml
proj:nested:
foo.bar: baz
```
Examples of valid paths:
- root
- root.nested
- 'root["nested"]'
- root.double.nest
- 'root["double"].nest'
- 'root["double"]["nest"]'
- root.array[0]
- root.array[100]
- root.array[0].nested
- root.array[0][1].nested
- root.nested.array[0].double[1]
- 'root["key with \"escaped\" quotes"]'
- 'root["key with a ."]'
- '["root key with \"escaped\" quotes"].nested'
- '["root key with a ."][100]'
Note: paths that contain quotes can be surrounded by single quotes.
When setting values with `--path`, if the value is `"false"` or
`"true"`, it will be saved as the boolean value, and if it is
convertible to an integer, it will be saved as an integer.
Secure values are supported in lists/maps as well:
```shell
$ pulumi config set --path --secret tokens[0] shh
```
Will result in:
```yaml
proj:tokens:
- secure: v1:wpZRCe36sFg1RxwG:WzPeQrCn4n+m4Ks8ps15MxvFXg==
```
Note: maps of length 1 with a key of “secure” and string value are
reserved for storing secret values. Attempting to create such a value
manually will result in an error:
```shell
$ pulumi config set --path parent.secure foo
error: "secure" key in maps of length 1 are reserved
```
**Accessing config values from the command line with JSON**
```shell
$ pulumi config --json
```
Will output:
```json
{
"proj:hello": {
"value": "world",
"secret": false,
"object": false
},
"proj:names": {
"value": "[\"a\",\"b\",\"c\"]",
"secret": false,
"object": true,
"objectValue": [
"a",
"b",
"c"
]
},
"proj:nested": {
"value": "{\"foo.bar\":\"baz\"}",
"secret": false,
"object": true,
"objectValue": {
"foo.bar": "baz"
}
},
"proj:outer": {
"value": "{\"inner\":\"value\"}",
"secret": false,
"object": true,
"objectValue": {
"inner": "value"
}
},
"proj:servers": {
"value": "[{\"port\":80}]",
"secret": false,
"object": true,
"objectValue": [
{
"port": 80
}
]
},
"proj:token": {
"secret": true,
"object": false
},
"proj:tokens": {
"secret": true,
"object": true
}
}
```
If the value is a map or list, `"object"` will be `true`. `"value"` will
contain the object as serialized JSON and a new `"objectValue"` property
will be available containing the value of the object.
If the object contains any secret values, `"secret"` will be `true`, and
just like with scalar values, the value will not be outputted unless
`--show-secrets` is specified.
**Accessing config values from Pulumi programs**
Map/list values are available to Pulumi programs as serialized JSON, so
the existing
`getObject`/`requireObject`/`getSecretObject`/`requireSecretObject`
functions can be used to retrieve such values, e.g.:
```typescript
import * as pulumi from "@pulumi/pulumi";
interface Server {
port: number;
}
const config = new pulumi.Config();
const names = config.requireObject<string[]>("names");
for (const n of names) {
console.log(n);
}
const servers = config.requireObject<Server[]>("servers");
for (const s of servers) {
console.log(s.port);
}
```
* Add the ability to log all engine events to a file.
The path to the file can be specified using the `--event-log` flag to
the CLI. The file will be truncated if it exists. Events are written as
a list of JSON values using the schema described by `pkg/apitype`.
* Expose update engine events to ExtraRuntimeValidation.
Just what it says on the tin. Events from previews are not exposed.
This was causing an error as follows:
```
error: could not create stack: validating stack properties: invalid stack name: a stack name may only contain alphanumeric, hyphens, underscores, or periods
```
This matches what we tell our customers to do and makes some
downstream testing stuff for beta versions of our python packages
easier (since `pip` has a more straightforward package selection
algorithm than `pipenv`)
This will allow us to install a latest version from PyPi or NPM
and then yarn link / pip install from local machine and test that
no changes are introduced when this occurs
If the flag is not passed, then the dependencies are installed
as before where we prefer a local package to be linked / installed
Adds support for additional cloud secrets providers (AWS KMS, Azure KeyVault, Google Cloud KMS, and HashiCorp Vault) as the encryption backend for Pulumi secrets. This augments the previous choice between using the app.pulumi.com-managed secrets encryption or a fully-client-side local passphrase encryption.
This is implemented using the Go Cloud Development Kit support for pluggable secrets providers.
Like our cloud storage backend support which also uses Go Cloud Development Kit, this PR also bleeds through to users the URI scheme's that the Go CDK defines for specifying each of secrets providers - like `awskms://alias/LukeTesting?region=us-west-2` or `azurekeyvault://mykeyvaultname.vault.azure.net/keys/mykeyname`.
Also like our cloud storage backend support, this PR doesn't solve for how to configure the cloud provider client used to resolve the URIs above - the standard ambient credentials are used in both cases. Eventually, we will likely need to provide ways for both of these features to be configured independently of each other and of the providers used for resource provisioning.
Dynamic providers in Python.
This PR uses [dill](https://pypi.org/project/dill/) for code serialization, along with a customization to help ensure deterministic serialization results.
One notable limitation - which I believe is a general requirement of Python - is that any serialization of Python functions must serialize byte code, and byte code is not safely versioned across Python versions. So any resource created with Python `3.x.y` can only be updated by exactly the same version of Python. This is very constraining, but it's not clear there is any other option within the realm of what "dynamic providers" are as a feature. It is plausible that we could ensure that updates which only update the serialized provider can avoid calling the dynamic provider operations, so that version updates could still be accomplished. We can explore this separately.
```py
from pulumi import ComponentResource, export, Input, Output
from pulumi.dynamic import Resource, ResourceProvider, CreateResult, UpdateResult
from typing import Optional
from github import Github, GithubObject
auth = "<auth token>"
g = Github(auth)
class GithubLabelArgs(object):
owner: Input[str]
repo: Input[str]
name: Input[str]
color: Input[str]
description: Optional[Input[str]]
def __init__(self, owner, repo, name, color, description=None):
self.owner = owner
self.repo = repo
self.name = name
self.color = color
self.description = description
class GithubLabelProvider(ResourceProvider):
def create(self, props):
l = g.get_user(props["owner"]).get_repo(props["repo"]).create_label(
name=props["name"],
color=props["color"],
description=props.get("description", GithubObject.NotSet))
return CreateResult(l.name, {**props, **l.raw_data})
def update(self, id, _olds, props):
l = g.get_user(props["owner"]).get_repo(props["repo"]).get_label(id)
l.edit(name=props["name"],
color=props["color"],
description=props.get("description", GithubObject.NotSet))
return UpdateResult({**props, **l.raw_data})
def delete(self, id, props):
l = g.get_user(props["owner"]).get_repo(props["repo"]).get_label(id)
l.delete()
class GithubLabel(Resource):
name: Output[str]
color: Output[str]
url: Output[str]
description: Output[str]
def __init__(self, name, args: GithubLabelArgs, opts = None):
full_args = {'url':None, 'description':None, 'name':None, 'color':None, **vars(args)}
super().__init__(GithubLabelProvider(), name, full_args, opts)
label = GithubLabel("foo", GithubLabelArgs("lukehoban", "todo", "mylabel", "d94f0b"))
export("label_color", label.color)
export("label_url", label.url)
```
Fixes https://github.com/pulumi/pulumi/issues/2902.
This commit will expose the new `Invoke` routine that lists resource
outputs through the Node.js SDK.
This API is implemented via a new API, `EnumerablePromise`, which is a
collection of simple query primitives built onto the `Promise` API. The
query model is lazy and LINQ-like, and generally intended to make
`Promise` simpler to deal with in query scenarios. See #2601 for more
details.
Fixes#2600.
Adds a new resource option `aliases` which can be used to rename a resource. When making a breaking change to the name or type of a resource or component, the old name can be added to the list of `aliases` for a resource to ensure that existing resources will be migrated to the new name instead of being deleted and replaced with the new named resource.
There are two key places this change is implemented.
The first is the step generator in the engine. When computing whether there is an old version of a registered resource, we now take into account the aliases specified on the registered resource. That is, we first look up the resource by its new URN in the old state, and then by any aliases provided (in order). This can allow the resource to be matched as a (potential) update to an existing resource with a different URN.
The second is the core `Resource` constructor in the JavaScript (and soon Python) SDKs. This change ensures that when a parent resource is aliased, that all children implicitly inherit corresponding aliases. It is similar to how many other resource options are "inherited" implicitly from the parent.
Four specific scenarios are explicitly tested as part of this PR:
1. Renaming a resource
2. Adopting a resource into a component (as the owner of both component and consumption codebases)
3. Renaming a component instance (as the owner of the consumption codebase without changes to the component)
4. Changing the type of a component (as the owner of the component codebase without changes to the consumption codebase)
4. Combining (1) and (3) to make both changes to a resource at the same time
When constructing a Deployment (which is a plaintext representation of
a Snapshot), ensure that we encrypt secret values. To do so, we
introduce a new type `secrets.Manager` which is able to encrypt and
decrypt values. In addition, it is able to reflect information about
itself that can be stored in the deployment such that we can
deserialize the deployment into a snapshot (decrypting the values in
the process) without external knowledge about how it was encrypted.
The ability to do this is import for allowing stack references to
work, since two stacks may not use the same manager (or they will use
the same type of manager, but have different state).
The state value is stored in plaintext in the deployment, so it **must
not** contain sensitive data.
A sample manager, which just base64 encodes and decodes strings is
provided, as it useful for testing. We will allow it to be varried
soon.
We changed the `pulumi update` command to be `pulumi up` a while back
(`update` is an alias of `up`). This change just makes it so we refer to
the actual command, `pulumi up`, instead of the older `pulumi update`.
This implements the new algorithm for deciding which resources must be
deleted due to a delete-before-replace operation.
We need to compute the set of resources that may be replaced by a
change to the resource under consideration. We do this by taking the
complete set of transitive dependents on the resource under
consideration and removing any resources that would not be replaced by
changes to their dependencies. We determine whether or not a resource
may be replaced by substituting unknowns for input properties that may
change due to deletion of the resources their value depends on and
calling the resource provider's Diff method.
This is perhaps clearer when described by example. Consider the
following dependency graph:
A
__|__
B C
| _|_
D E F
In this graph, all of B, C, D, E, and F transitively depend on A. It may
be the case, however, that changes to the specific properties of any of
those resources R that would occur if a resource on the path to A were
deleted and recreated may not cause R to be replaced. For example, the
edge from B to A may be a simple dependsOn edge such that a change to
B does not actually influence any of B's input properties. In that case,
neither B nor D would need to be deleted before A could be deleted.
In order to make the above algorithm a reality, the resource monitor
interface has been updated to include a map that associates an input
property key with the list of resources that input property depends on.
Older clients of the resource monitor will leave this map empty, in
which case all input properties will be treated as depending on all
dependencies of the resource. This is probably overly conservative, but
it is less conservative than what we currently implement, and is
certainly correct.