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57 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
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 11f1e444f4
Require a resource's parent to actually be a resource. (#1266) 2018-04-24 17:23:18 -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
Sean Gillespie 28806ac9f3
Fix the protect_resources test (#1228)
Step 3 should also assert that the protected resource that we failed to
delete is still in the checkpoint.
2018-04-18 12:26:46 -07:00
Matt Ellis 50982e8763 Add some randomness to stack names in our integration tests
To prepare for a world where stack names must be unique across an
owner, add some randomness to the names we use for stacks as part of
our integration tests.
2018-04-18 04:54:02 -07:00
Matt Ellis bac02f1df1 Remove the need to pulumi init for the local backend
This change removes the need to `pulumi init` when targeting the local
backend. A fair amount of the change lays the foundation that the next
set of changes to stop having `pulumi init` be used for cloud stacks
as well.

Previously, `pulumi init` logically did two things:

1. It created the bookkeeping directory for local stacks, this was
stored in `<repository-root>/.pulumi`, where `<repository-root>` was
the path to what we belived the "root" of your project was. In the
case of git repositories, this was the directory that contained your
`.git` folder.

2. It recorded repository information in
`<repository-root>/.pulumi/repository.json`. This was used by the
cloud backend when computing what project to interact with on
Pulumi.com

The new identity model will remove the need for (2), since we only
need an owner and stack name to fully qualify a stack on
pulumi.com, so it's easy enough to stop creating a folder just for
that.

However, for the local backend, we need to continue to retain some
information about stacks (e.g. checkpoints, history, etc). In
addition, we need to store our workspace settings (which today just
contains the selected stack) somehere.

For state stored by the local backend, we change the URL scheme from
`local://` to `local://<optional-root-path>`. When
`<optional-root-path>` is unset, it defaults to `$HOME`. We create our
`.pulumi` folder in that directory. This is important because stack
names now must be unique within the backend, but we have some tests
using local stacks which use fixed stack names, so each integration
test really wants its own "view" of the world.

For the workspace settings, we introduce a new `workspaces` directory
in `~/.pulumi`. In this folder we write the workspace settings file
for each project. The file name is the name of the project, combined
with the SHA1 of the path of the project file on disk, to ensure that
multiple pulumi programs with the same project name have different
workspace settings.

This does mean that moving a project's location on disk will cause the
CLI to "forget" what the selected stack was, which is unfortunate, but
not the end of the world. If this ends up being a big pain point, we
can certianly try to play games in the future (for example, if we saw
a .git folder in a parent folder, we could store data in there).

With respect to compatibility, we don't attempt to migrate older files
to their newer locations. For long lived stacks managed using the
local backend, we can provide information on where to move things
to. For all stacks (regardless of backend) we'll require the user to
`pulumi stack select` their stack again, but that seems like the
correct trade-off vs writing complicated upgrade code.
2018-04-18 04:53:49 -07:00
Matt Ellis 6f0bc7eb46 Call pulumi stack rm --yes in some tests
Our normal lifecycle tests always call pulumi stack rm, but some of
the tests that used the more barebones framework did not do so. This
was "ok" in the past, since all bookkeeping data about a stack was
stored next to the Pulumi program itself and we deleted that folder
once the test passed.

As part of removing `pulumi init` workspace tracking will move to
~/.pulumi/workspaces and so we'd like to have a gesture that actually
removes the stack, which will cause the workspace file to be removed
as well, instead of littering ~/.pulumi/workspaces with tests.
2018-04-18 03:29:19 -07:00
Matt Ellis e83aa175ff Remove configuration upgrade code
Upcoming work to remove the need for `pulumi init` makes testing the
upgrade code much harder than it did in the past (since workspace data
is moving to a different location on the file system, as well as some
other changes).

Instead of trying to maintain the code and test, let's just remove
it. Folks who haven't migrated (LM and the PPC deployment in the
service) should use the 0.11.3 or earlier CLI to migrate their
projects (simply by logging in and running a pulumi command) or move
things forward by hand.
2018-04-18 03:29:19 -07:00
Matt Ellis a55d3f9d7e Make diff tests pass when running against a local service
In cases where we are running against a local service, the CLI does
not print a Permalink line when updating a stack, because we can not
determine what the URL for the link would be. This breaks the diff
tests which need to clean the CLI output and compare them to known
values, since the output now has one less line than expected.

Update the test's cleaning logic to handle this case.
2018-04-16 16:38:39 -07:00
CyrusNajmabadi f2b9bd4b13
Remove the explicit 'pulumi preview' command. (#1170)
Old command still exists, but tells you to run "pulumi update --preview".
2018-04-13 22:26:01 -07:00
Sean Gillespie 2c479c172d
Lift snapshot management out of the engine and serialize writes to snapshot (#1069)
* Lift snapshot management out of the engine

This PR is a prerequisite for parallelism by addressing a major problem
that the engine has to deal with when performing parallel resource
construction: parallel mutation of the global snapshot. This PR adds
a `SnapshotManager` type that is responsible for maintaining and
persisting the current resource snapshot. It serializes all reads and
writes to the global snapshot and persists the snapshot to persistent
storage upon every write.

As a side-effect of this, the core engine no longer needs to know about
snapshot management at all; all snapshot operations can be handled as
callbacks on deployment events. This will greatly simplify the
parallelization of the core engine.

Worth noting is that the core engine will still need to be able to read
the current snapshot, since it is interested in the dependency graphs
contained within. The full implications of that are out of scope of this
PR.

Remove dead code, Steps no longer need a reference to the plan iterator that created them

Fixing various issues that arise when bringing up pulumi-aws

Line length broke the build

Code review: remove dead field, fix yaml name error

Rebase against master, provide implementation of StackPersister for cloud backend

Code review feedback: comments on MutationStatus, style in snapshot.go

Code review feedback: move SnapshotManager to pkg/backend, change engine to use an interface SnapshotManager

Code review feedback: use a channel for synchronization

Add a comment and a new test

* Maintain two checkpoints, an immutable base and a mutable delta, and
periodically merge the two to produce snapshots

* Add a lot of tests - covers all of the non-error paths of BeginMutation and End

* Fix a test resource provider

* Add a few tests, fix a few issues

* Rebase against master, fixed merge
2018-04-12 09:55:34 -07:00
Chris Smith ab2385437a
Validate stack properties like names, runtime, etc. (#1146)
* Validate stack properties like names, runtime, etc.

* Fix build error
2018-04-11 10:08:32 -07:00
CyrusNajmabadi a759f2e085
Switch to a resource-progress oriented view for pulumi preview/update/destroy (#1116) 2018-04-10 12:03:11 -07:00
CyrusNajmabadi 97c1344035
Disallow capturing 'this' inside a lambda (#1138) 2018-04-09 15:57:39 -07:00
Matt Ellis d3240fdc64 Require pulumi login before commands that need a backend
This change does three major things:

1. Removes the ability to be logged into multiple clouds at the same
time. Previously, we supported being logged into multiple clouds at
the same time and the CLI would fan out requests and join responses
when needed. In general, this was only useful for Pulumi employees
that wanted run against multiple copies of the service (say production
and staging) but overall was very confusing (for example in the old
world a stack with the same identity could appear twice (since it was
in two backends) which the CLI didn't handle very well).

2. Stops treating the "local" backend as a special thing, from the
point of view of the CLI. Previouly we'd always connect to the local
backend and merge that data with whatever was in clouds we were
connected to. We had gestures like `--local` in `pulumi stack init`
that meant "use the local mode". Instead, to use the local mode now
you run `pulumi login --cloud-url local://` and then you are logged in
the local backend. Since you can only ever be logged into a single
backend, we can remove the `--local` and `--remote` flags from `pulumi
stack init`, it just now requires you to be logged in and creates a
stack in whatever back end you were logged into. When logging into the
local backend, you are not prompted for an access key.

3. Prompt for login in places where you have to log in, if you are not
already logged in.
2018-04-05 10:19:41 -07:00
Luke Hoban 5ede33e03d
Run tests against managed stacks backend instead of FnF (#1092)
Tests now target managed stacks instead of local stacks.

The existing logged in user and target backend API are used unless PULUMI_ACCES_TOKEN is defined, in which case tests are run under that access token and against the PULUMI_API backend.

For developer machines, we will now need to be logged in to Pulumi to run tests, and whichever default API backend is logged in (the one listed as current in ~/.pulumi/credentials.json) will be used. If you need to override these, provide PULUMI_ACCESS_TOKEN and possibly PULUMI_API.

For Travis, we currently target the staging service using the Pulumi Bot user.

We have decided to run tests in the pulumi organization. This can be overridden for local testing (or in Travis in the future) by defining PULUMI_API_OWNER_ORGANIZATION and using an access token with access to that organization.

Part of pulumi/home#195.
2018-04-02 21:34:54 -07:00
Pat Gavlin a23b10a9bf
Update the copyright end date to 2018. (#1068)
Just what it says on the tin.
2018-03-21 12:43:21 -07:00
Joe Duffy 41127c55e9
Add basic config tests (#1049)
This adds a basic config test, for both Node.js and Python runtimes,
that simply reads back and checks configuration and secret values.
2018-03-14 12:24:49 -07:00
CyrusNajmabadi 5b244dbdb1
Use a class for Output serialization to ensure that .apply exists on it. (#1040)
Also, rename/cleanup a bunch of serialization code.

Also, generate better environment names in the serialized closure code. Thsi code should be much easier to make sense of as hte names will better track to the original names in the user code.

Also, dedupe simple non-capturing functions. This helps ensure we don't spit out N copies of __awaiter (one per file it is declared in).
2018-03-12 16:27:00 -07:00
Matt Ellis 81a273c7bb Change represention of config.Key
config.Key has become a pair of namespace and name. Because the whole
world has not changed yet, there continues to be a way to convert
between a tokens.ModuleMember and config.Key, however now sometime the
conversion from tokens.ModuleMember can fail (when the module member
is not of the form `<package>:config:<name>`).
2018-03-08 10:52:25 -08:00
Matt Ellis 7c39620e9a Introduce config.Key
Right now, config.Key is a type alias for tokens.ModuleMember. I did a
pass over the codebase such that we use config.Key everywhere it
looked like the value did not leak to some external process (e.g a
resource provider or a langhost).

Doing this makes it a little clearer (hopefully) where code is
depending on a module member structure (e.g. <package>:config:<value>)
instead of just an opaque type.
2018-03-08 10:52:25 -08:00
Matt Ellis 96d7f9307a
Merge pull request #986 from pulumi/config-refactor
Rework config storage
2018-03-02 13:46:49 -08:00
CyrusNajmabadi e7c0e4cdaa
Make many fixes to closure serialization (#944)
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.
2018-03-01 00:32:01 -08:00
Matt Ellis e2ce16b057 Upgrade configuration files on first run
Migrate configuration from the old model to the new model. The
strategy here is that when we first run `pulumi` we enumerate all of
the stacks from all of the backends we know about and for each stack
get the configuration values from the project and workspace and
promote them into the new file. As we do this, we remove stack
specific config from the workspace and Pulumi.yaml file.

If we are able to upgrade all the stacks we know about, we delete all
global configuration data in the workspace and in Pulumi.yaml as well.

We have a test that ensures upgrades continue to work.
2018-02-28 17:37:18 -08:00
Matt Ellis 207a9755d8 Rework configuration model
This change updates our configuration model to make it simpler to
understand by removing some features and changing how things are
persisted in files.

Notable changes:

- We've removed the notion of "workspace" vs "project"
  config. Now, configuration is always stored in a file next to
  `Pulumi.yaml` named `Pulumi.<stack-name>.yaml` (the same file we'd
  use for an other stack specific information we would need to persist
  in the future).
- We've removed the notion of project wide configuration. Every new
  stack gets a completely empty set of configuration and there's no
  way to share common values across stacks, instead the common value
  has to be set on each stack.

We retain some of the old code for the configuration system so we can
support upgrading a project in place. That will happen with the next
change.

This change fixes some issues and allows us to close some
others (since they are no longer possible).

Fixes #866
Closes #872
Closes #731
2018-02-28 17:30:50 -08:00
Matt Ellis d99f9457b0 Deprecate old configuration model
We are going to be changing the configuration model. To begin, let's
take most of the existing stuff and mark it as "deprecated" so we can
keep the existing behavior (to help transition newer code forward)
while making it clear what APIs should not be called in the
implementation of `pulumi` itself.
2018-02-28 17:25:09 -08:00
joeduffy 2362d45a5c Eliminate type redundancy
Despite our good progress moving towards having an apitype package,
where our exchange types live and can be shared among the engine and
our services, there were a few major types that were still duplciated.
Resource was the biggest example -- and indeed, the apitype varirant
was missing the new Dependencies property -- but there were others,
like Manfiest, PluginInfo, etc.  These too had semi-random omissions.

This change merges all of these types into the apitype package.  This
not only cleans up the redundancy and missing properties, but will
"force the issue" with respect to keeping them in sync and properly
versioning the information in a backwards compatible way.

The resource/stack package still exists as a simple marshaling layer
to and from the engine's core data types.

Finally, I've made the controversial change to share the actual
Deployment data structure at the apitype layer also.  This will force
us to confront differences in that data structure similarly, and will
allow us to leverage the strong typing throughout to catch issues.
2018-02-28 12:44:55 -08:00
joeduffy 1acb0eb226 Use new package name for empty test 2018-02-24 10:39:18 -08:00
joeduffy 74563afdc8 Get the empty Python program working
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!
2018-02-23 19:33:02 -08:00
Sean Gillespie b84320b45e
Code review feedback:
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
2018-02-22 13:33:50 -08:00
Joe Duffy 902d646215
Rename package to project (#935)
This addresses pulumi/pulumi#446: what we used to call "package" is
now called "project".  This has gotten more confusing over time, now
that we're doing real package management.

Also fixes pulumi/pulumi#426, while in here.
2018-02-14 13:56:16 -08:00
Joe Duffy a74aa51662
Rename pulumi package to @pulumi/pulumi (#917)
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.
2018-02-12 13:13:13 -08:00
Pat Gavlin 5c0b62e1aa
Serialize resource registration after inputs resolve. (#882)
As it stands, we serialize more than is correct when registering
resources: in addition to serializing the RegisterResource RPC, we also
wait for input properties to resolve in the same context. Unfortunately,
this means that we can create cycles in the promise graph when a
resource A is constructed in an earlier turn than some resource B and
one of B's output properties is an input to resource A. These changes
fix this issue by allowing input properties to resolve *before*
serializing the RegisterResource RPC.

Some integration tests had taken a dependency on the ordering of resources in
either the output of the `pulumi` command or the checkpoint file. The
only test that took a dependency on command output was updated s.t. its
resources have exactly one legal topographical sort (and therefore their
ordering is deterministic). The other tests were updated s.t. their
validation did not depend on resource ordering.
2018-02-05 16:29:20 -08:00
Matt Ellis 4422700f0f Run yarn upgrade and commit all resulting lockfiles
This also adds lock files for some of our tests which we previously
did not commit.
2018-01-30 14:46:44 -08:00
Matt Ellis e00f782301 Remove yarn.lock from .gitignore 2018-01-30 14:46:44 -08:00
Chris Smith 4c217fd358
Add "pulumi history" command (#826)
This PR adds a new `pulumi history` command, which prints the update history for a stack.

The local backend stores the update history in a JSON file on disk, next to the checkpoint file. The cloud backend simply provides the update metadata, and expects to receive all the data from a (NYI) `/history` REST endpoint.

`pkg/backend/updates.go` defines the data that is being persisted. The way the data is wired through the system is adding a new `backend.UpdateMetadata` parameter to a Stack/Backend's `Update` and `Destroy` methods.

I use `tests/integration/stack_outputs/` as the simple app for the related tests, hence the addition to the `.gitignore` and fixing the name in the `Pulumi.yaml`.

Fixes #636.
2018-01-24 18:22:41 -08:00
Matthew Riley 3c070d3ad5 Restore support for non-Additive edits
None were used in this repository, but `pulumi-aws` used them.
2018-01-09 17:02:30 -08:00
Matthew Riley b0eed85871 Remove non-additive edits
Now we know we only create one temporary directory per test
2018-01-08 13:46:21 -08:00
Pat Gavlin 3ca874d3f7
Merge pull request #781 from pulumi/ExportImport
Add the ability to {ex,im}port a stack's deployment.
2018-01-05 17:56:16 -08:00
pat@pulumi.com b96217341f Add the ability to {ex,im}port a stack's deployment.
These changes add the ability to export a stack's latest deployment or
import a new deployment to a stack via the Pulumi CLI. These
capabilities are exposed by two new verbs under `stack`:
- export, which writes the current stack's latest deployment to stdout
- import, which reads a new deployment from stdin and applies it to the
  current stack.

In the local case, this simply involves reading/writing the stack's
latest checkpoint file. In the cloud case, this involves hitting two new
endpoints on the service to perform the export or import.
2018-01-05 16:22:31 -08:00
Matt Ellis f510f3c914 Do not allow encrypted global configuration
The cloud backend does not support this because it computes an
encryption key per stack, so we should not support this in the CLI.

Fixes #770
2017-12-27 19:00:55 -08:00
Joe Duffy bc2cf55463
Implement resource protection (#751)
This change implements resource protection, as per pulumi/pulumi#689.
The overall idea is that a resource can be marked as "protect: true",
which will prevent deletion of that resource for any reason whatsoever
(straight deletion, replacement, etc).  This is expressed in the
program.  To "unprotect" a resource, one must perform an update setting
"protect: false", and then afterwards, they can delete the resource.

For example:

    let res = new MyResource("precious", { .. }, { protect: true });

Afterwards, the resource will display in the CLI with a lock icon, and
any attempts to remove it will fail in the usual ways (in planning or,
worst case, during an actual update).

This was done by adding a new ResourceOptions bag parameter to the
base Resource types.  This is unfortunately a breaking change, but now
is the right time to take this one.  We had been adding new settings
one by one -- like parent and dependsOn -- and this new approach will
set us up to add any number of additional settings down the road,
without needing to worry about breaking anything ever again.

This is related to protected stacks, as described in
pulumi/pulumi-service#399.  Most likely this will serve as a foundational
building block that enables the coarser grained policy management.
2017-12-20 14:31:07 -08:00
Luke Hoban d5acc3da87
Add option to specify command line flags to pulumi update in integration tests (#749)
And use this in the diff test which needs to apply `--colors=raw`.
2017-12-20 11:17:25 -08:00
CyrusNajmabadi a5cf6f25d6
Add a framework for baselining and validating pulumi-update diff output. (#700) 2017-12-14 17:10:05 -08:00
Luke Hoban 6f15fa8ed8
Pass more stack info to ExtraRuntimeValidation (#717)
This will allow us to remove a lot of current boilerplate in individual tests, and move it into the test harness.

Note that this will require updating users of the integration test framework.  By moving to a property bag of inputs, we should avoid needing future breaking changes to this API though.
2017-12-13 16:09:14 -08:00
joeduffy 92ea5b5bdd Add a test case for delete-before-recreate 2017-12-13 10:47:18 -08:00
Joe Duffy 36ab8f0087
Make config a little less error prone
As articulated in #714, the way config defaults to workspace-local
configuration is a bit error prone, especially now with the cloud
workflow being the default.  This change implements several improvements:

* First, --save defaults to true, so that configuration changes will
  persist into your project file.  If you want the old local workspace
  behavior, you can specify --save=false.

* Second, the order in which we applied configuration was a little
  strange, because workspace settings overwrote project settings.
  The order is changed now so that we take most specific over least
  specific configuration.  Per-stack is considered more specific
  than global and project settings are considered more specific
  than workspace.

* We now warn anytime workspace local configuration is used.  This
  is a developer scenario and can have subtle effects.  It is simply
  not safe to use in a team environment.  In fact, I lost an arm
  this morning due to workspace config... and that's why you always
  issue warnings for unsafe things.
2017-12-13 10:46:54 -08:00