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409 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
joeduffy 1c4e41b916 Improve the overall cloud CLI experience
This improves the overall cloud CLI experience workflow.

Now whether a stack is local or cloud is inherent to the stack
itself.  If you interact with a cloud stack, we transparently talk
to the cloud; if you interact with a local stack, we just do the
right thing, and perform all operations locally.  Aside from sometimes
seeing a cloud emoji pop-up ☁️, the experience is quite similar.

For example, to initialize a new cloud stack, simply:

    $ pulumi login
    Logging into Pulumi Cloud: https://pulumi.com/
    Enter Pulumi access token: <enter your token>
    $ pulumi stack init my-cloud-stack

Note that you may log into a specific cloud if you'd like.  For
now, this is just for our own testing purposes, but someday when we
support custom clouds (e.g., Enterprise), you can just say:

    $ pulumi login --cloud-url https://corp.acme.my-ppc.net:9873

The cloud is now the default.  If you instead prefer a "fire and
forget" style of stack, you can skip the login and pass `--local`:

    $ pulumi stack init my-faf-stack --local

If you are logged in and run `pulumi`, we tell you as much:

    $ pulumi
    Usage:
      pulumi [command]

    // as before...

    Currently logged into the Pulumi Cloud ☁️
        https://pulumi.com/

And if you list your stacks, we tell you which one is local or not:

    $ pulumi stack ls
    NAME            LAST UPDATE       RESOURCE COUNT   CLOUD URL
    my-cloud-stack  2017-12-01 ...    3                https://pulumi.com/
    my-faf-stack    n/a               0                n/a

And `pulumi stack` by itself prints information like your cloud org,
PPC name, and so on, in addition to the usuals.

I shall write up more details and make sure to document these changes.

This change also fairly significantly refactors the layout of cloud
versus local logic, so that the cmd/ package is resonsible for CLI
things, and the new pkg/backend/ package is responsible for the
backends.  The following is the overall resulting package architecture:

* The backend.Backend interface can be implemented to substitute
  a new backend.  This has operations to get and list stacks,
  perform updates, and so on.

* The backend.Stack struct is a wrapper around a stack that has
  or is being manipulated by a Backend.  It resembles our existing
  Stack notions in the engine, but carries additional metadata
  about its source.  Notably, it offers functions that allow
  operations like updating and deleting on the Backend from which
  it came.

* There is very little else in the pkg/backend/ package.

* A new package, pkg/backend/local/, encapsulates all local state
  management for "fire and forget" scenarios.  It simply implements
  the above logic and contains anything specific to the local
  experience.

* A peer package, pkg/backend/cloud/, encapsulates all logic
  required for the cloud experience.  This includes its subpackage
  apitype/ which contains JSON schema descriptions required for
  REST calls against the cloud backend.  It also contains handy
  functions to list which clouds we have authenticated with.

* A subpackage here, pkg/backend/state/, is not a provider at all.
  Instead, it contains all of the state management functions that
  are currently shared between local and cloud backends.  This
  includes configuration logic -- including encryption -- as well
  as logic pertaining to which stacks are known to the workspace.

This addresses pulumi/pulumi#629 and pulumi/pulumi#494.
2017-12-02 14:34:42 -08:00
Chris Smith 454f946e8c
Wire Package.Main to the Pulumi Service. (#615)
This PR just wires the `Package.Main` field to the Pulumi Service (and in subsequent PRs, the `pulumi-service` and `pulumi-ppc` repos).

@joeduffy , should we just upload the entire `package.Package` type with the `UpdateProgramRequest` type? I'm not sure we want to treat that type as part of part of our public API surface area. But on the other hand, we'll need to mirror relevant fields in N places if we don't.
2017-11-30 08:14:47 -08:00
Joe Duffy 77460a7dc0
Plumb the project name correctly (#583)
This change fixes getProject to return the project name, as
originally intended.  (One line was missing.)

It also adds an integration test for this.

Fixes pulumi/pulumi#580.
2017-11-16 08:15:56 -08:00
Joe Duffy 98ef0c4bb5
Allow overriding a Pulumi.yaml's entrypoint (#582)
Because the Pulumi.yaml file demarcates the boundary used when
uploading a program to the Pulumi.com service at the moment, we
have trouble when a Pulumi program uses "up and over" references.
For instance, our customer wants to build a Dockerfile located
in some relative path, such as `../../elsewhere/`.

To support this, we will allow the Pulumi.yaml file to live
somewhere other than the main Pulumi entrypoint.  For example,
it can live at the root of the repo, while the Pulumi program
lives in, say, `infra/`:

    Pulumi.yaml:
    name: as-before
    main: infra/

This fixes pulumi/pulumi#575.  Further work can be done here to
provide even more flexibility; see pulumi/pulumi#574.
2017-11-16 07:49:07 -08:00
Matt Ellis 07b4d9b36b Add Pulumi.com backend, unify cobra Commands
As part of the unification it became clear where we did not support
features that we had for the local backend. I opened issues and added
comments.
2017-11-02 11:19:00 -07:00
Chris Smith fc82e71f21 Update Stack tests 2017-11-02 11:19:00 -07:00
Chris Smith 76f5e832c2 Add 'pulumi login' test 2017-11-02 11:19:00 -07:00
Pat Gavlin 6be6b9a854 Fix the "stack select" test.
PR #501 regressed this test due to a change in its error message. We
should consider updating the rest of the `stack` commands to use a
similar message (rather than the "file not found" they currently emit).
2017-10-30 23:24:09 -07:00
Chris Smith defe0038ca
Add integration tests for pulumi CLI (#493)
This PR adds integration tests for exercising `pulumi init` and the `pulumi stack *` commands. The only functional change is merging in https://github.com/pulumi/pulumi/pull/492 , which I found while writing the tests and (of course 😁 ) wrote a regression for.

To do this I introduce a new test driver called `PulumiProgram`. This is different from the one found in the `testing/integration`package in that it doesn't try to prescribe a workflow. It really just deals in executing commands, and confirming strings are in the output.

While it doesn't hurt to have more tests for `pulumi`, my motivation here was so that I could reuse these to ensure I keep the same behavior for my pending PR that implements Cloud-enabled variants of some of these commands.
2017-10-30 15:17:13 -07:00