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14 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
joeduffy
8b5874dab5 General prep work for refresh
This change includes a bunch of refactorings I made in prep for
doing refresh (first, the command, see pulumi/pulumi#1081):

* The primary change is to change the way the engine's core update
  functionality works with respect to deploy.Source.  This is the
  way we can plug in new sources of resource information during
  planning (and, soon, diffing).  The way I intend to model refresh
  is by having a new kind of source, deploy.RefreshSource, which
  will let us do virtually everything about an update/diff the same
  way with refreshes, which avoid otherwise duplicative effort.

  This includes changing the planOptions (nee deployOptions) to
  take a new SourceFunc callback, which is responsible for creating
  a source specific to the kind of plan being requested.

  Preview, Update, and Destroy now are primarily differentiated by
  the kind of deploy.Source that they return, rather than sprinkling
  things like `if Destroying` throughout.  This tidies up some logic
  and, more importantly, gives us precisely the refresh hook we need.

* Originally, we used the deploy.NullSource for Destroy operations.
  This simply returns nothing, which is how Destroy works.  For some
  reason, we were no longer doing this, and instead had some
  `if Destroying` cases sprinkled throughout the deploy.EvalSource.
  I think this is a vestige of some old way we did configuration, at
  least judging by a comment, which is apparently no longer relevant.

* Move diff and diff-printing logic within the engine into its own
  pkg/engine/diff.go file, to prepare for upcoming work.

* I keep noticing benign diffs anytime I regenerate protobufs.  I
  suspect this is because we're also on different versions.  I changed
  generate.sh to also dump the version into grpc_version.txt.  At
  least we can understand where the diffs are coming from, decide
  whether to take them (i.e., a newer version), and ensure that as
  a team we are monotonically increasing, and not going backwards.

* I also tidied up some tiny things I noticed while in there, like
  comments, incorrect types, lint suppressions, and so on.
2018-03-28 07:45:23 -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
Matt Ellis
dc57119206 Only replace secret text if it is longer than 2 characters
This is inline with what Travis does. Otherwise, for very short
secrets our regex based approach will throw `[secret]` all over the
place.
2018-03-10 13:03:46 -08:00
Matt Ellis
225975ae2d Respond to some Pull Request feedback 2018-03-09 13:23:25 -08:00
Matt Ellis
96d39b60d1 Filter secrets from Pulumi's outputs
When a stack has secrets, we now take the secret values and construct
a regular expression which is just an alternation of all the secret
values. Then, before pushing any string data into an Event, we run the
regular expression and replace all matches with '[secret]'.

Fixes #747
2018-03-09 13:23:25 -08:00
Matt Ellis
db079b1b0a Emit richer events for resource steps
The engine now emits events with richer metadata during the
ResourceOutputs and ResourcePre callbacks. The CLI can then use this
information to decide if it should display the event or not and how
much of the event to display.

Options dealing with what to display and how to display it have moved
into the CLI and the engine now emits all information for each event.
2018-03-09 13:11:42 -08:00
Matt Ellis
02c45f9f10 Move summary printing out of the engine
The engine now emits a special type of summary event, which the CLI
displays.
2018-03-09 11:13:06 -08:00
Matt Ellis
4e2f94df95 Remove UpdateOptions.ShowConfig
The engine now unconditionally emits a new type of event, a
PreludeEvent, which contains the configuration for a stack as well as
an indication if the stack is being previewed or updated. The
responsibility for interpreting the --show-config flag on the command
line is now handled by the CLI, which uses this to decide if it should
print the configuration or not, and then writes the "Previewing
changes" or "Deploying chanages" header.
2018-03-09 11:13:06 -08:00
Matt Ellis
39dbdc98e9 Clean up colorization logic
The existing logic would flow colorization information into the
engine, so depending on the settings in the CLI, the engine may or may
not have emitted colorized events. This coupling is not great and we
want to start moving to a world where the presentation happens
exclusively at the CLI level.

With this change, the engine will always produce strings that have the
colorization formatting directives (i.e. the directives that
reconquest/loreley understands) and the CLI will apply
colorization (which could mean either running loreley to turn the
directives into ANSI escape codes, or drop them or retain them, for
debuging purposes).

Fixes #742
2018-01-31 15:46:14 -08:00
Joe Duffy
f0c28db639
Attempt to fix colorization (#740)
Our recent changes to colorization changed from a boolean to a tri-valued
enum (Always, Never, Raw).  The events from the service, however, are still
boolean-valued.  This changes the message payload to carry the full values.
2017-12-18 11:42:32 -08:00
CyrusNajmabadi
e4946a6620
Allow users to control if and how output is colorized. (#718)
Part of the work to make it easier to tests of diff output.  Specifically, we now allow users to pass --color=option for several pulumi commands.  'option' can be one of 'always', 'never', 'raw', and 'auto' (the default).  

The meaning of these flags are:

1. auto: colorize normally, unless in --debug 
2. always: always colorize no matter what
3. never: never colorize no matter what.
4. raw: colorize, but preserve the original "<{%%}>" style control codes and not the translated platform specific codes.   This is for testing purposes and ensures we can have test for this stuff across platform.
2017-12-14 11:53:02 -08:00
joeduffy
3d9dcb0942 Break the diag goroutine upon exit 2017-10-22 15:52:00 -07:00
joeduffy
9e20f15adf Fix CLI hangs when errors occur
The change to use a Goroutine for pumping output causes a hang
when an error occurs.  This is because we unconditionally block
on the <-done channel, even though the failure means the done
will actually never occur.  This changes the logic to only wait
on the channel if we successfully began the operation in question.
2017-10-20 17:28:35 -07:00
Matt Ellis
7587bcd7ec Have engine emit "events" instead of writing to streams
Previously, the engine would write to io.Writer's to display output.
When hosted in `pulumi` these writers were tied to os.Stdout and
os.Stderr, but other applications hosting the engine could send them
other places (e.g. a log to be sent to an another application later).

While much better than just using the ambient streams, this was still
not the best. It would be ideal if the engine could just emit strongly
typed events and whatever is hosting the engine could care about
displaying them.

As a first step down that road, we move to a model where operations on
the engine now take a `chan engine.Event` and during the course of the
operation, events are written to this channel. It is the
responsibility of the caller of the method to read from the channel
until it is closed (singifying that the operation is complete).

The events we do emit are still intermingle presentation with data,
which is unfortunate, but can be improved over time. Most of the
events today are just colorized in the client and printed to stdout or
stderr without much thought.
2017-10-09 18:24:56 -07:00