* Add trace proxying to fix sub-process trace collection when tracing to files
* Better func naming in test
* Avoid dealing with Windows path nightmare
* On Windows it is go.exe of course
* Rename operation to component to better align with existing trace output
When passing a package source as part of a `dotnet add package` in
our acceptance testing framework, dotnet was then trying to use that
package source for the restoration of other packages in the csproj
file.
We have removed passing the source to dotnet add package add
and replaced it with adding a machine level package source via
dotnet nuget add source command
this is the more correct way to work and will allow us to be able
to search multiple locations as part of the dotnet restore command
This way, the tests use the built-in virtual environment support by
default, which is what most customers will be using. A new `UsePipenv`
option is available to go back to using pipenv for tests.
We previously looked for `python3` and fallback to `python` on all systems. However, our Windows CI images include a `python3.exe` symlink to `python.exe` which does not work with `venv`. So on Windows, just look for `python` first, falling back to `python3`. (The default python.org Windows installation only includes `python.exe`).
We make several calls to `os/user`, which uses CGO and means
cross-compilation is not possible. This replaces `os/user` with the
`luser` package, which is a drop-in replacement which does not use `CGO`
Automatically create a virtual environment and install dependencies in it with `pulumi new` and `pulumi policy new` for Python templates.
This will save a new `virtualenv` runtime option in `Pulumi.yaml` (`PulumiPolicy.yaml` for policy packs):
```yaml
runtime:
name: python
options:
virtualenv: venv
```
`virtualenv` is the path to a virtual environment that Pulumi will use when running `python` commands.
Existing projects are unaffected and can opt-in to using this by setting `virtualenv`, otherwise, they'll continue to work as-is.
Fixes: #4585
This was happening by default in the test framework and then again
in the go language runtime
Also we were replacing a module and then running go mod tidy - this
is unnecessary - go mod download is sufficient here to ensure we
have the correct dependency we need. The tidy may have been removing
the replacements added
* Make `async:true` the default for `invoke` calls (#3750)
* Switch away from native grpc impl. (#3728)
* Remove usage of the 'deasync' library from @pulumi/pulumi. (#3752)
* Only retry as long as we get unavailable back. Anything else continues. (#3769)
* Handle all errors for now. (#3781)
* Do not assume --yes was present when using pulumi in non-interactive mode (#3793)
* Upgrade all paths for sdk and pkg to v2
* Backport C# invoke classes and other recent gen changes (#4288)
Adjust C# generation
* Replace IDeployment with a sealed class (#4318)
Replace IDeployment with a sealed class
* .NET: default to args subtype rather than Args.Empty (#4320)
* Adding system namespace for Dotnet code gen
This is required for using Obsolute attributes for deprecations
```
Iam/InstanceProfile.cs(142,10): error CS0246: The type or namespace name 'ObsoleteAttribute' could not be found (are you missing a using directive or an assembly reference?) [/Users/stack72/code/go/src/github.com/pulumi/pulumi-aws/sdk/dotnet/Pulumi.Aws.csproj]
Iam/InstanceProfile.cs(142,10): error CS0246: The type or namespace name 'Obsolete' could not be found (are you missing a using directive or an assembly reference?) [/Users/stack72/code/go/src/github.com/pulumi/pulumi-aws/sdk/dotnet/Pulumi.Aws.csproj]
```
* Fix the nullability of config type properties in C# codegen (#4379)
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.