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>`).
I'll be changing the structure of the representation of config.Key, so
let's write some tests first to ensure we can continue to treat
everything as JSON and YAML.
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.
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.
While it's safe to publish the tgz that we use internally for other
repositories that are on "the link plan" after the build completes, we
shouldn't publish packages to NPM and PyPi at that point. There are
two reasons for doing this:
1. Publishing packages before they are tested, which means we could
end up publishing packages that don't work.
2. NPM prevents publishing the same package more than once, so if we
had to re-run the job (due to tests failing for transient issues), the
publish step will start failing, preventing us from running the tests
at all.
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.
The change to refactor out where we store configuration data broke our
old strategy, which we discovered when we tried to take this payload
into pulumi-aws.
As it stands, we only configure those providers for which configuration
is present. This can lead to surprising failure modes if those providers
are then used to create resources. These changes ensure that all
resource providers that are not configured during plan initialization
are configured upon first load.
Fixes#758.
By using untyped deployment structures via `json.RawMessage`, we can
support round-tripping between old CLI clients and newer servers, without
dropping possibly-important information on the floor. I hadn't realized
this design goal with the original system, and after talking to @pgavlin,
I better realized the intent and that we want to preserve this.
The filenames we used to store history data locally only had second
level precision. On my machine, the test history test is able to run
multiple `pulumi update` commands in the same second, which causes a
newer history file to overwrite an older one.
This change moves to using a nanosecond precision timestamp when
writing config. In addition, the CLI was trying to sort the updates
that came back from the backend (instead of just trusting them to be
in newest first order, as we documented) so I removed that code as
well.
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.
A hold-over from a previous experiment (LumiIDL) which we don't use
anymore. If we decide to bring that back, we can easily restore these
types, but for now, let's just remove this dead code.
Most of the errors in this package are holdovers from our previous
syetem where we had our own custom compiler and evaluator and are no
longer needed. The few we still use during plan applicaton (via the
diagnostics system, which is another component from the old system
that we still use) have been promoted into the diag package. Doing so,
allows us to not have to import "github.com/pkg/errors" as "goerr" in
some parts of the engine, a nice cleaup.
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.
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#866Closes#872Closes#731
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.
Per pulumi/pulumi#984, we will now issue an error if it appears you're
importing a checkpoint from a different stack. This can be overridden
if you know what you're doing (with --force), but in general this is a
sign that you're doing something very wrong that will be hard to undo.
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.
Previously, we would prefer a plugin on the $PATH which is more or
less always the case for people hacking on `pulumi`. Later, when we
went to check the loaded plugin version matched the one we requested,
we fail.
Now, if we have a version, we'll first consult the local plugin
cache. If that fails, we'll fall back to the $PATH as we used to.
When we are loading a plugin without a version, we continue to use the
one on the $PATH (without testing the cache) on the assumption it is
newer.
In addition, we've turned the "plugin versions are mis-matched" from
an error into a warning. We expect that we'll only ever see this
warning when something strange is going on (since in the normal case,
we'll have found the exact version in the cache) but having it not
hard fail does help in development cases.
Fixes#977
If currently logged in, `stack init` creates a managed stack. Otherwise, it creates a local
stack. This avoids the need to specify `--local` when not using the service.
As today, `--local` can be passed, which will create a local stack regardless of being logged
in or not.
A new flag, `--remote`, has been added, which can be passed to indicate a managed stack,
used to force an error if not logged into the service.
* 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
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.