This API was introduced to aid the refactoring, but it isn't something
we want to support long term. Remove it and for a few places, push
passing config.Key around more, instead of converting to the old type
eagerly.
We now unify new Config("package") and new Config("package:config"),
printing a warning when the new Config("package:config") form is
used and pointing consumers towards just new Config("package")
I've updated our examples to use the newer syntax, but I've added a
test ot the langhost to ensure both forms work.
Fixes#923
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.
Make many fixes to closure serialization
Primary things that i've done as part of this change:
Added support for cyclic objects.
Properly serialize objects that are shared across different function. previously you would get multiple copies, now you properly reference the same copy.
Remove the usages of 'hashes' for functions. Because we track identity of objects, we no longer need them.
Serialize properties of functions (if they have any).
Handle Objects/Functions with different __proto__s than normal. i.e. classes/constructors. but also anything the user may have done themselves to the object.
Handle generator functions.
Handle functions with 'computed' names.
Handle functions with 'symbol' names.
Handle serializing Promises as Promises.
Removed the dual Closure/AsyncClosure tree. One existed solely so we could have a tree without promises (for use in testing maybe?). Because this all exists in a part of our codebase that is entirely async, it's fine to have promises in the tree, and to await them when serializing the Closure to a string.
Handle serializing class-constructors and methods. Including properly handling 'super' calls.
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.
* Produce better error messages when the main module is not found
If we fail to load a program's main module, inspect the program's
package.json and attempt to diagnose why the main module load failed.
* Code review feedback: entrypoint -> entry point, call out npm build explicitly, simplify control flow
* Code review feedback: add a little more levity to the unknown exception error message
This change passes --user to pip install, so that it installs packages
underneath the home directory. This is required because, except for the
"python" image in Travis, all Python and Pip-related directories are
root-owned. The --user approach avoids needing to sudo all over the place.
This change includes a lot more functionality. Enough to actually
run the webserver-py example through previews, updates, and destroys!
* Actually wire up the gRPC connections to the engine/monitor.
* Move the Node.js and Python generated Protobuf/gRPC files underneath
the actual SDK directories to simplify this generally. No more
copying during `make` and, in fact, this was required to give a smoother
experience with good packages/modules for the Python's SDK development.
* Build the Python egg during `make build`.
* Add support for program stacks. Just like with the Node.js runtime,
we will auto-parent any resources without explicit parents to a single
top-level resource component.
* Add support for component resource output properties.
* Add get_project() and get_stack() functions for retrieving the current
project and stack names.
* Properly use UNKNOWN sentinels.
* Add a set_outputs() function on Resource. This is defined by the
code-generator and allows custom logic for output property setting.
This is cleaner than the way we do this in Node.js, and gives us a
way to ensure that output properties are "real" properties, complete
with member documentation. This also gives us a hook to perform
name demangling, which the code-generator typically controls anyway.
* Add package dependencies to setuptools.py and requirements.txt.
This change gets enough of the Python SDK up and running that the
empty Python program will work. Mostly just scaffolding, but the
basic structure is now in place. The primary remaining work is to
wire up resource creation to the gRPC interfaces.
In summary:
* The basic structure is as follows:
- Everything goes into sdk/python/.
- sdk/python/cmd/pulumi-langhost-python is a Go language host
that simply knows how to spawn Python processes to run out
entrypoint in response to requests by the engine.
- sdk/python/cmd/pulumi-langhost-python-exec is a little Python
shim that is invoked by the language host to run Python programs,
and is responsible for setting up the minimal goo before we can
do so (RPC connections and the like).
- sdk/python/lib/ contains a Python Pip package suitable for PyPi.
- In there, we have two packages: the root pulumi package that
contains all of the basic Pulumi programming model abstractions,
and pulumi.runtime, which contains the implementation of
resource registration, RPC interfacing with the engine, and so on.
* Add logic in our test framework to conditionalize on the language
type and react accordingly. This will allow us to skip Yarn for
Python projects and eventually run Pip if there's a requirements.txt.
* Created the basic project structure, including all of the usual
Make targets for installing into the proper places.
* Building also runs Pylint and we are clean.
There are a few other minor things in here:
* Add an "empty" test for both Node.js and Python. These pass.
* Fix an existing bug in plugin shutdown logic. At some point, we
started waiting for stderr/stdout to flush before shutting down
the plugin; but if certain failures happen "early" during the
plugin launch process, these channels will never get initialized
and so waiting for them deadlocks.
* Recently we seem to have added logic to delete test temp
directories if a failure happened during initialization of said
temp directories. This is unfortunate, because you often need to
look at the temp directory to see what failed. We already clean
them up elsewhere after the full test completes successfully, so
I don't think we need to be doing this, and I've removed it.
Still many loose ends (config, resources, etc), but it's a start!
This change adds a basic Python langhost RPC server. It's fairly
barebones and merely acts as a jumping off point for the Pulumi engine
to spawn a Python program. The host is written in Go, in contrast to
implementing the host in Python, and more closely resembles how I
expect the Node.js language host to work once pulumi/pulumi#331 is done.
1. Various idiomatic Go and TypeScript fixes
2. Add an integration test that end-to-end roundtrips dependency
information for a simple Pulumi program
3. Add an additional test assert that tests that dependency information
comes from the language host as expected
This commit does two things:
1. All dependencies of a resource, both implicit and explicit, are
communicated directly to the engine when registering a resource. The
engine keeps track of these dependencies and ultimately serializes
them out to the checkpoint file upon successful deployment.
2. Once a successful deployment is done, the new `pulumi stack
graph` command reads the checkpoint file and outputs the dependency
information within in the DOT format.
Keeping track of dependency information within the checkpoint file is
desirable for a number of reasons, most notably delete-before-create,
where we want to delete resources before we have created their
replacement when performing an update.
This change refactors the way we do ${VERSION} substitution in both
the Node.js SDK's version.js and package.json, so that it can work on
Windows. This is required now that we are actually parsing semvers.
On Windows, when we launch the language host, it will end up with
a ".exe" file extension at the end of os.Args[0]. This leads us to
produce a garbage filename for the -exec script -- namely,
pulumi-language-nodejs.exe-exec -- which, of course fails. We simply
need to trim off the ".exe" bit before producing the script name.
We have had a long-standing bug in here where we waiting on a
stdout channel that never got populated, when the language plugin
fails to load entirely. This would lead to hung processes. The
fix is simple: only wait for stdout/stderr channels to drain that
have actually been wired up to enjoy the requisite signaling.
This adds support for two things:
* Installing all plugins that a project requires with a single command:
$ pulumi plugin install
* Listing the plugins that this project requires:
$ pulumi plugin ls --project
$ pulumi plugin ls -p
This brings back the Node.js language plugin's GetRequiredPlugins
function, reimplemented in Go now that the language host has been
rewritten from JavaScript. Fairly rote translation, along with
some random fixes required to get tests passing again.
This change implements the Node.js language host's GetRequiredPlugins
function. This merely scans all node_modules/*/package.json files in
the program directory, looking for those that have associated plugins.
It returns a list of any found along with their version numbers.
This change adds a GetRequiredPlugins RPC method to the language
host, enabling us to query it for its list of plugin requirements.
This is language-specific because it requires looking at the set
of dependencies (e.g., package.json files).
It also adds a call up front during any update/preview operation
to compute the set of plugins and require that they are present.
These plugins are populated in the cache and will be used for all
subsequent plugin-related operations during the engine's activity.
We now cache the language plugins, so that we may load them
eagerly too, which we never did previously due to the fact that
we needed to pass the monitor address at load time. This was a
bit bizarre anyhow, since it's really the Run RPC function that
needs this information. So, to enable caching and eager loading
-- which we need in order to invoke GetRequiredPlugins -- the
"phone home" monitor RPC address is passed at Run time.
In a subsequent change, we will switch to faulting in the plugins
that are missing -- rather than erroring -- in addition to
supporting the `pulumi plugin install` CLI command.
This change introduces a workspace.GetPluginPath function that probes
the central workspace cache of plugins for a matching plugin binary that
matches the desired kind, name, and, optionally, version. It also permits
overriding this with $PATH for developer scenarios.
The analyzer, language, and resource plugin logic now uses this function
for deciding which binary path to load at runtime.
Fixes#356. Instead of downloading a node binary with our closure
serialization code linked-in, this PR instead publishes the
`nativeruntime.node` produced by the NodeJS SDK build as part of the SDK.
This has a number of advantages. First, it is vastly more easy to
develop closure.cc in this configuration. Second, we have the ability
to ship different `nativeruntime.node`s side-by-side, paving the way
for enabling future versions of Node. Third, we don't have to stay
in the business of shipping custom builds of Node, although we do still
need to ship a version of Node with minor modifications in order for
Windows to still work.
The windows build was still on the old plan from way back when where
we had binaries littered in the build tree and you had to add parts of
your build-tree to the `%PATH%` for the integration tests to work.
This cleans that up and moves all of our scripts that invoke
javascript to be on the same plan. They invoke our specially named
node with a relative path to the JS code we want to run.
We no longer have a node_modules folder in the SDK (since all
packages now come from NPM) so we need to adjust the shell script we
use to launch our runner to use a relative path.
This improves the failure messages in two circumstances:
1) If the resource monitor RPC connection is missing. This can happen
two ways: either you run a Pulumi program using vanilla Node.js, instead
of the CLI, or you've accidentally loaded the Pulumi SDK more than once.
2) Failure to load the custom Pulumi SDK Node.js extension. This is a new
addition and would happen if you tried running a Pulumi program using a
vanilla Node.js, rather than using the Pulumi CLI.
In order to begin publishing our core SDK package to NPM, we will
need it to be underneath the @pulumi scope so that it may remain
private. Eventually, we can alias pulumi back to it.
This is part of pulumi/pulumi#915.
* experimental: separate language host from node
* Remove langhost details from the NodeJS SDK runtime
* Cleanup
* Work around an issue where Node sometimes loads the same module twice in two different contexts, resulting in two distinct module objects. Some additional cleanup.
* Add some tests
* Fix up the Windows script
* Fix up the install scripts and Windows build
* Code review feedback
* Code review feedback: error capitalization