This commit switches from dep to Go 1.12 modules for tracking Pulumi
dependencies. Rather than _building_ using Go modules, we instead use the `go
mod vendor` command to populate a vendor tree in the same way as `dep ensure`
was previously doing.
In order to prevent checksum mismatches, it was necessary to also update CI to
use Go 1.12 instead of 1.11 - which also necessitated fixing some linting errors
which appeared with the upgraded golangci-lint for 1.12.
* Install missing plugins on startup
This commit addresses the problem of missing plugins by scanning the
snapshot and language host on startup for the list of required plugins
and, if there are any plugins that are required but not installed,
installs them. The mechanism by which plugins are installed is exactly
the same as 'pulumi plugin install'.
The installation of missing plugins is best-effort and, if it fails,
will not fail the update.
This commit addresses pulumi/pulumi-azure#200, where users using Pulumi
in CI often found themselves missing plugins.
* Add CHANGELOG
* Skip downloading plugins if no client provided
* Reduce excessive test output
* Update Gopkg.lock
* Update pkg/engine/destroy.go
Co-Authored-By: swgillespie <sean@pulumi.com>
* CR: make pluginSet a newtype
* CR: Assign loop induction var to local var
- Remove the forked copy of the toolset
- Stop installing `pipenv` in sdk/python/Makefile
After this, we'll require that you already have `pipenv` present
before building.
* Implement RPC for Python 3
* Try not setting PYTHONPATH
* Remove PYTHONPATH line
* Implement Invoke for Python 3
* Implement register resource
* progress
* Rewrite the whole thing
* Fix a few bugs
* All tests pass
* Fix an abnormal shutdown bug
* CR feedback
* Provide a hook for resources to rename properties
As dictionaries and other classes come from the engine, the
translate_property hook can be used to intercept them and rename
properties if desired.
* Fix variable names and comments
* Disable Python integration tests for now
* 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 changes the Dockerfile to install the same specific dep version
we use in CI. To ensure we don't end up duplicating logic, it refactors
the versions themselves into a separate sourceable script that's shared
between both the Dockerfile and our existing CI scripts.
* Added dist target for make, will help with Homebrew
* Try to install go dependencies before building
* Make sure dep ensure is called before trying to build SDKs
* Removed dep ensure from dist initial step
Stop cloning pulumi/home. This doesn't work in Travis because public
repositories can not have private SSH keys, which we'd need to clone
this repository. All the scripts we consume from there are now in
pulumi/scripts and so we'll just consume them from there.
All scripts that are generally useful across all builds have been moved
into `pulumi/scripts`. These changes clone that repository and retarget
the various scripts to their new location.
This change eliminates our dependencies on the SDK repo. Now that
SDKs are comprised solely of pulumi/pulumi artifacts, a separate repo
isn't required. This allows us to simplify some of the distribution.
The install.sh script is modified slightly, to permit overriding the
default install location using $PULUMI_INSTALL_PATH.
* Introduce a simple repetition operator to match expected error messages against actual ones
* Convert required and optional objects to use a Map (node v9 compat), improve the error formatting for failed tests
* Test node v6, v8, and v9 in CI
* Get rid of PULUMI_API env in .travis.yml, it's set from the Travis console now
After the move to stop including packages in the SDK, we no longer
published an SDK per build. This corrects this. Since the only things
in the SDK today are the language plugins and the CLI itself, we can
publish an SDK per build from pulumi/pulumi.
This change re-uses the existing infrastructure we have in
pulumi/sdk.
Fixes#1076
This change temporarily disables Pylint. Assuming it is on the path,
and furthermore that the one on the path runs under 2.7, simply won't
work. See pulumi/pulumi#1007 for details; it also tracks reenabling.
This change includes a few things:
1) Prefer python2 and pip2 when on the PATH, over the undecorated
names python and pip. This is the standard convention for package
managers like Pip, etc., to support Python2 and Python3 side-by-side.
2) Fail-fast if neither can be found on the PATH.
3) Check the reported version number for python, pip, and pylint, and
fail-fast if it doesn't report back 2.7, just to safeguard against
undecorated binaries with unsupported versions.
Also, we had not listed wheel as a dependency in the requirements.txt
file. This needs to be there to support building bdist_wheels. Fixed.
We now publish the Pulumi Python SDK package to our private PyPI
server at the same time we also publish the NPM package. For now,
we use the test Pulumi.com service, and will switch to staging as
soon as it becomes available.
Pip is called `pip2.7` in Travis' Mac image. Our script already
had to deal with this, but did so by conditionalizing the name we
use in our scripts. Rather than doing that, let's create a symlink
with the name `pip` so that everything can just use the good name.
For some tools we used, like `dep` and `gometalinter` we were just
calling `go install` which caused us to pick up whatever was in `HEAD`
at that time. Now, we move to a model where we install fixed versions,
which will change per milestone.
While doing this, I changed the way our .travis.yml file runs
everything to move as much as possible out into scripts and do so in a
way that allows us to share as much common logic across our
repositories.
Our scripts currently copy the package.json that does *not* have
the expanded semver, so its version is simply "${VERSION}", and NPM
is very much not happy with that. We can just stop copying the
package.json explicitly since it's inside of the bin/ directory.
To install a package, we copied the pacakge to the destination root,
deleted the node_modules folder and then restored just the production
dependencies. Because of how we were using yarn, this meant hitting
the network, which sucks.
Make two changes:
1. Copy over the yarn.lock file we created when we did our initial
restore (e.g from `make ensure`) so yarn can reuse it.
2. Pass --offline to yarn when we do yarn install. Since we already
installed the packages previously (as part of `make ensure`) they will
be present in the cache and hence we do not need network access.
This cuts the time spent in the make install step by half or more.