Commit graph

9 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Alex Clemmer 8ee88f3bc6 Move planResult#Chdir into fsutil
`pulumi query` needs to exec a query program in some directory, just as
`pulumi up` does. But, it won't use the planning/step execution
machinery at all. One small piece these two paths have in common is that
they both can use the `planResult#Chdir`. So, this commit will move this
to `fsutil` so they can both use it.
2019-05-02 18:08:08 -07:00
Sean Gillespie b245fd7595
Use both a in-proc and out-of-proc pipenv lock (#2381)
* Use both a in-proc and out-of-proc pipenv lock

Turns out that flock alone is not sufficient to guarantee exclusive
access to a resource within a single process. To remedy this, a few
FileMutex type wraps both an in-proc mutex and an out-of-proc
file-backed mutex to achieve the goal of exclusive access to a resource
in both in-proc and out-of-proc scenarios.

This commit also uses this lock globally in the integration test
framework in order to globally serialize invocations of pipenv install.

* Remove merge markers
2019-01-23 09:32:59 -08:00
joeduffy 5967259795 Add license headers 2018-05-22 15:02:47 -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
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 818246a708 Allow control of uploaded archive root in Pulumi.yaml
Previously, when uploading a projectm to the service, we would only
upload the folder rooted by the Pulumi.yaml for that project. This
worked well, but it meant that customers needed to structure their
code in a way such that Pulumi.yaml was always as the root of their
project, and if they wanted to share common files between two projects
there was no good solution for doing this.

This change introduces an optional piece of metadata, named context,
that can be added to Pulumi.yaml, which allows controlling the root
folder used for computing the root folder to archive from.  When it is
set, it is combined with the location of the Pulumi.yaml file for the
project we are uploading and that folder is uses as the root of what
we upload to the service.

Fixes: #574
2018-01-31 16:22:58 -08:00
Joe Duffy 971f6189f2
Fix pending delete replacement failure (#658)
The two-phase output properties change broke the ability to recover
from a failed replacement that yields pending deletes in the checkpoint.
The issue here is simply that we should remember pending registrations
only for logical operations that *also* have a "new" state (create or
update).  This commit fixes this, and also adds a new step test with
fault injection to probe many interesting combinations of steps.
2017-12-07 09:44:38 -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
Matt Ellis 3f1197ef84 Move .pulumi to root of a repository
Now, instead of having a .pulumi folder next to each project, we have
a single .pulumi folder in the root of the repository. This is created
by running `pulumi init`.

When run in a git repository, `pulumi init` will place the .pulumi
file next to the .git folder, so it can be shared across all projects
in a repository. When not in a git repository, it will be created in
the current working directory.

We also start tracking information about the repository itself, in a
new `repo.json` file stored in the root of the .pulumi folder. The
information we track are "owner" and "name" which map to information
we use on pulumi.com.

When run in a git repository with a remote named origin pointing to a
GitHub project, we compute the owner and name by deconstructing
information from the remote's URL. Otherwise, we just use the current
user's username and the name of the current working directory as the
owner and name, respectively.
2017-10-27 11:46:21 -07:00