* Use Promise.resolve.
* Use `Inputs | Promise<Inputs> | Output<Inputs>` rather than
`Input<Inputs>`, which looks supremely bizarre.
* Update ComponentResource.registerOutputs also.
This change partly addresses pulumi/pulumi#1611, by permitting you
to export a promise at the top-level, and have it be recognized as
a stack output. In other words, you can now say things like
async function main() {
...
return {
a: "x",
...,
z: 42,
};
}
module.exports = main();
and your Pulumi program will record distinct outputs as you'd hope:
---outputs:---
a: "x"
...
z: 42
This is arguably just a bug in the way we implemented stack outputs.
The remainder of the requests in #1611 will remain open for future
design and discussion, as they have more subtle ramifications.
If a `tsconfig.json` file is not present at the root of the Pulumi
project, ts-node will look up the directory tree to see if there is
one. If there is, it will treat that as the root of the project. While
reasonable for some cases, this isn't the behavior we want for our use
of ts-node. We actually set compiler options such that in the common
case you don't even need a `tsconfig.json` and for pure JavaScript
projects, there wouldn't be a `tsconfig.json` file.
In both of these cases, there's a big foot-gun waiting. For example in
pulumi/pulumi#1772 we ran into a case where there was a tsconfig.json
file in $HOME, causing the entirety of $HOME to be analyzed by
TypeScript which made it look like Pulumi hung.
To address this, tell ts-node to not use a project in cases where
there is not a `tsconfig.json` at the root of the project.
Fixes#1772
This commit will introduce a field, `IsStatus` to `LogRequest`. A
"status" logging event will be displayed in the `Info` column of the
main display, but will not be printed out at the end, when resource
operations complete.
For example, for complex resource initialization, we'd like to display a
series of intermediate results: `[1/4] Service object created`, for
example. We'd like these to appear in the `Info` column, but not at the
end, where they are not helpful to the user.
This change adopts the code review suggestion to use a bag of options
for config constraints rather than having overloaded function names.
This is a much cleaner approach, lets us use more descriptive names,
and is far more future proof in case we decide to add more capabilities.
Everytime I convert a CloudFormation template to Pulumi, I inevitably
run into the fact that CloudFormation has advanced "schema" capabilities
for input variables, like min/max for numbers and string lengths, enums,
and regex pattern matching. This is always cumbersome to convert.
In this change, I've added a number of config helpers for these cases:
For string enums:
getEnum(key: string, values: string[]): string | undefined;
requireEnum(key: string: values: string[]): string;
For min/max strlen:
getMinMax(key: string, min: number, max: number): string | undefined;
requireMinMax(key: string, min: number, max: number): string;
For regex patterns:
getPattern(key: string, regexp: string | RegExp): string | undefined;
requirePattern(key: string, regexp: string | RegExp): string;
For min/max strlen _and_ regex patterns:
getMinMaxPattern(key: string, min: number, max: number,
regexp: string | RegExp): string | undefined;
requireMinMaxPattern(key: string, min: number, max: number,
regexp: string | RegExp): string;
For min/max numbers:
getNumberMinMax(key: string, min: number, max: number): number | undefined;
requireNumberMinMax(key: string, min: number, max: number): number;
Each function throws a detailed RunError-derived exception type if the
configuration value doesn't meet the constraint.
This fixespulumi/pulumi#1671.
* Fix an issue with NodeJS host logging
Related to pulumi/pulumi#1694. This issue prevented the language host
from being aware that an engine (logging endpoint) was available and
thus no log messages were sent to the engine. By default, the language
host wrote them to standard out instead, which resulted in a pretty bad
error experience.
This commit fixes the PR and adds machinery to the NodeJS langhost tests
for testing the engine RPC endpoint. It is now possible to give a "log"
function to tests which will be hooked up to the "log" RPC endpoint
normally provided by the Pulumi engine.
* Remove accidental console.log
Replace the Source-based implementation of refresh with a phase that
runs as the first part of plan execution and rewrites the snapshot in-memory.
In order to fit neatly within the existing framework for resource operations,
these changes introduce a new kind of step, RefreshStep, to represent
refreshes. RefreshSteps operate similar to ReadSteps but do not imply that
the resource being read is not managed by Pulumi.
In addition to the refresh reimplementation, these changes incorporate those
from #1394 to run refresh in the integration test framework.
Fixes#1598.
Fixespulumi/pulumi-terraform#165.
Contributes to #1449.
The plugin host can ask the language host to provide a list of
resource plugins that it thinks will be nessecary for use at
deployment time, so they can be eagerly loaded.
In NodeJS (the only language host that implements this RPC) This works
by walking the directory tree rooted at the CWD of the project,
looking for package.json files, parsing them and seeing it they have
some marker property set. If they do, we add information about them
which we return at the end of our walk.
If there is *any* error, the entire operation fails. We've seen a
bunch of cases where this happens:
- Broken symlinks written by some editors as part of autosave.
- Access denied errors when part of the tree is unwalkable (Eric ran
into this on Windows when he had a Pulumi program at the root of his
file system.
- Recusive symlinks leading to errors when trying to walk down the
infinite chain. (See #1634 for one such example).
The very frustrating thing about this is that when you hit an error
its not clear what is going on and fixing it can be non-trivial. Even
worse, in the normal case, all of these plugins are already installed
and could be loaded by the host (in the common case, plugins are
installed as a post install step when you run `npm install`) so if we
simply didn't do this check at all, things would work great.
This change does two things:
1. It does not stop at the first error we hit when discovering
plugins, instead we just record the error and continue.
2. Does not fail the overall operation if there was an error. Instead,
we return to the host what we have, which may be an incomplete view
of the world. We glog the errors we did discover for diagnostics if
we ever need them.
I believe that long term most of this code gets deleted anyway. I
expect we will move to a model long term where the engine faults in
the plugin (downloading it if needed) when a request for the plugin
arrives. But for now, we shouldn't block normal operations just
because we couldn't answer a question with full fidelity.
Fixes#1478
If a resource's options bag does not specify `protect` or `provider`,
pull a default value from the resource's parent.
In order to allow a parent resource to specify providers for multiple
resource types, component resources now accept an optional map from
package name to provider instance. When a custom resource needs a
default provider from its parent, it checks its parent provider bag for
an entry under its package. If a component resource does not have a
provider bag, its pulls a default from its parent.
These changes also add a `parent` field to `InvokeOptions` s.t. calls to
invoke can use the same behavior as resource creation w.r.t. providers.
Fixes#1735, #1736.
* Added dist target for make, will help with Homebrew
* Try to install go dependencies before building
* Make sure dep ensure is called before trying to build SDKs
* Removed dep ensure from dist initial step
### First-Class Providers
These changes implement support for first-class providers. First-class
providers are provider plugins that are exposed as resources via the
Pulumi programming model so that they may be explicitly and multiply
instantiated. Each instance of a provider resource may be configured
differently, and configuration parameters may be source from the
outputs of other resources.
### Provider Plugin Changes
In order to accommodate the need to verify and diff provider
configuration and configure providers without complete configuration
information, these changes adjust the high-level provider plugin
interface. Two new methods for validating a provider's configuration
and diffing changes to the same have been added (`CheckConfig` and
`DiffConfig`, respectively), and the type of the configuration bag
accepted by `Configure` has been changed to a `PropertyMap`.
These changes have not yet been reflected in the provider plugin gRPC
interface. We will do this in a set of follow-up changes. Until then,
these methods are implemented by adapters:
- `CheckConfig` validates that all configuration parameters are string
or unknown properties. This is necessary because existing plugins
only accept string-typed configuration values.
- `DiffConfig` either returns "never replace" if all configuration
values are known or "must replace" if any configuration value is
unknown. The justification for this behavior is given
[here](https://github.com/pulumi/pulumi/pull/1695/files#diff-a6cd5c7f337665f5bb22e92ca5f07537R106)
- `Configure` converts the config bag to a legacy config map and
configures the provider plugin if all config values are known. If any
config value is unknown, the underlying plugin is not configured and
the provider may only perform `Check`, `Read`, and `Invoke`, all of
which return empty results. We justify this behavior becuase it is
only possible during a preview and provides the best experience we
can manage with the existing gRPC interface.
### Resource Model Changes
Providers are now exposed as resources that participate in a stack's
dependency graph. Like other resources, they are explicitly created,
may have multiple instances, and may have dependencies on other
resources. Providers are referred to using provider references, which
are a combination of the provider's URN and its ID. This design
addresses the need during a preview to refer to providers that have not
yet been physically created and therefore have no ID.
All custom resources that are not themselves providers must specify a
single provider via a provider reference. The named provider will be
used to manage that resource's CRUD operations. If a resource's
provider reference changes, the resource must be replaced. Though its
URN is not present in the resource's dependency list, the provider
should be treated as a dependency of the resource when topologically
sorting the dependency graph.
Finally, `Invoke` operations must now specify a provider to use for the
invocation via a provider reference.
### Engine Changes
First-class providers support requires a few changes to the engine:
- The engine must have some way to map from provider references to
provider plugins. It must be possible to add providers from a stack's
checkpoint to this map and to register new/updated providers during
the execution of a plan in response to CRUD operations on provider
resources.
- In order to support updating existing stacks using existing Pulumi
programs that may not explicitly instantiate providers, the engine
must be able to manage the "default" providers for each package
referenced by a checkpoint or Pulumi program. The configuration for
a "default" provider is taken from the stack's configuration data.
The former need is addressed by adding a provider registry type that is
responsible for managing all of the plugins required by a plan. In
addition to loading plugins froma checkpoint and providing the ability
to map from a provider reference to a provider plugin, this type serves
as the provider plugin for providers themselves (i.e. it is the
"provider provider").
The latter need is solved via two relatively self-contained changes to
plan setup and the eval source.
During plan setup, the old checkpoint is scanned for custom resources
that do not have a provider reference in order to compute the set of
packages that require a default provider. Once this set has been
computed, the required default provider definitions are conjured and
prepended to the checkpoint's resource list. Each resource that
requires a default provider is then updated to refer to the default
provider for its package.
While an eval source is running, each custom resource registration,
resource read, and invoke that does not name a provider is trapped
before being returned by the source iterator. If no default provider
for the appropriate package has been registered, the eval source
synthesizes an appropriate registration, waits for it to complete, and
records the registered provider's reference. This reference is injected
into the original request, which is then processed as usual. If a
default provider was already registered, the recorded reference is
used and no new registration occurs.
### SDK Changes
These changes only expose first-class providers from the Node.JS SDK.
- A new abstract class, `ProviderResource`, can be subclassed and used
to instantiate first-class providers.
- A new field in `ResourceOptions`, `provider`, can be used to supply
a particular provider instance to manage a `CustomResource`'s CRUD
operations.
- A new type, `InvokeOptions`, can be used to specify options that
control the behavior of a call to `pulumi.runtime.invoke`. This type
includes a `provider` field that is analogous to
`ResourceOptions.provider`.
When this argument is not provided, we'll default to the value of
pulumi.getProject(). This is what you want for application level code
anyway and it matches the CLI behavior where if you don't qualify a
key with a package we use the name of the current project.
Fixes#1581
The pulumi runtime used to lazily load and parse both config and
settings data set by the language host. The initial reason for this
design was that we wanted the runtime to be usable in a normal node
environment, but we have moved away from supporting that.
In addition, while we claimed we loaded these value "lazily", we
actually forced their loading quite eagerly when we started
up. However, when capturing config (or settings, as we now do), we
would capture all the logic about loading these values from the
environment.
Even worse, in the case where you had two copies of @pulumi/pulumi
loaded, it would be possible to capture a config object which was not
initialized and then at runtime the initialization logic would try to
read PULUMI_CONFIG from the process environment and fail.
So we adopt a new model where configuration and settings are parsed as
we load their containing modules. In addition, to support SxS
scinerios, we continue to use `process.env` as a way to control both
configuration and settings. This means that `run.ts` must now ensure
that these values are present in the environment before either the
config or runtime modules have been loaded.
Set the following compiler defaults:
```
"target": "es6",
"module": "commonjs",
"moduleResolution": "node",
"sourceMap": true,
```
Which allows us to not even include a tsconfig.json file. If one is
present, `ts-node` will use its options, but the above settings will
override any settings in a local tsconfig.json file. This means if you
want full control over the target, you'll need to go back to the raw
tsc workflow where you explicitly build ahead of time.
This change lets us set runtime specific options in Pulumi.yaml, which
will flow as arguments to the language hosts. We then teach the nodejs
host that when the `typescript` is set to `true` that it should load
ts-node before calling into user code. This allows using typescript
natively without an explicit compile step outside of Pulumi.
This works even when a tsconfig.json file is not present in the
application and should provide a nicer inner loop for folks writing
typescript (I'm pretty sure everyone has run into the "but I fixed
that bug! Why isn't it getting picked up? Oh, I forgot to run tsc"
problem.
Fixes#958
I tried to re-generate the Protobuf/gRPC files, but generate.sh seems to
have assumed I manually built the Dockerfile ahead-of-time (unless I'm
missing something -- very possible). Unfortunately, when I went to do
that, I ended up with a handful of errors, most of them due to
differences in versions. (We probably want to think about pinning them.)
To remedy both issues, I've fixed up the Dockerfile so that it works for
me at least, and added a build step to the front of generate.sh.
* Protobuf changes to record dependencies for read resources
* Add a number of tests for read resources, especially around replacement
* Place read resources in the snapshot with "external" bit set
Fixespulumi/pulumi#1521. This commit introduces two new step ops: Read
and ReadReplacement. The engine generates Read and ReadReplacement steps
when servicing ReadResource RPC calls from the language host.
* Fix an omission of OpReadReplace from the step list
* Rebase against master
* Transition to use V2 Resources by default
* Add a semantic "relinquish" operation to the engine
If the engine observes that a resource is read and also that the
resource exists in the snapshot as a non-external resource, it will not
delete the resource if the IDs of the old and new resources match.
* Typo fix
* CR: add missing comments, DeserializeDeployment -> DeserializeDeploymentV2, ID check
When a resource fails to initialize (i.e., it is successfully created,
but fails to transition to a fully-initialized state), and a user
subsequently runs `pulumi update` without changing that resource, our
CLI will fail to warn the user that this resource is not initialized.
This commit begins the process of allowing our CLI to report this by
storing a list of initialization errors in the checkpoint.
* Revert "Parallelize much more of resource creation in the JS language provider SDK (#1618)"
This reverts commit 4edd244a26.
* Revert "Process our async-work-queue in parallel. (#1619)"
This reverts commit b8c1cb9574.
This commit adds CLI support for resource providers to provide partial
state upon failure. For resource providers that model resource
operations across multiple API calls, the Provider RPC interface can now
accomodate saving bags of state for resource operations that failed.
This is a common pattern for Terraform-backed providers that try to do
post-creation steps on resource as part of Create or Update resource
operations.
A critical part of the partial update protocol is to return a structured
error when a resource is successfully created, but fails to initialize.
This structured error contains the properties of the
partially-initialized resource, and instructs the engine to halt.
Most languages implement this by attaching "details" to the error, i.e.,
an arbitrary proto message attached to the error. The JavaScript
implementation is not mature enough to include all the facilities
required to use this, so here we must add a `Status` message, which
protobuf requires as part of its structure for returning details.
* Test the Python language host end-to-end
This commit introduces an end-to-end language host testing framework for
the Python SDK, similar to what already exists for the Node SDK. The
real language host is used to run Pulumi programs written in Python
while mocking out the resource monitor.
* Add new tests
* Print out better diagnostics when the langhost fails to launch
* Use the in-tree executor for testing
* CR: Place tests and code being tested in the same directory for ease of understanding, add a README
* Turns out I misunderstood the semantics of resource registration - fix two tests so that they pass now and fix a few bugs in the test harness
This change includes the Python and Golang language hosts in the Windows
SDK. As part of this change, I had to adjust how we launched the second
stage of the language host, since we can't depend on the shebang, so now
we invoke `python` passing the executor and then the arguments.
Fixes#1509
1) Use a state block for *Outputs, just to protect against dereferencing
and aliasing. These are mutable due to concurrency.
2) Dig into *Output type aliases, like *URNOutput, et. al, during
RPC marshaling.
This change adds a config package. This is syntactic sugar atop the
underlying config functionality in the pulumi.Context, but mirrors what
we do in our other Node.js and Python SDKs more closely.
This includes three families of functions:
- config.Get*: returns the value or its default if missing.
- config.Require*: returns the value or panics if missing.
- config.Try*: returns the value or an error if missing.
In all cases, there are simple Get/Require/Try functions, that just
deal in terms of strings, in addition to type specific functions,
GetT/RequireT/TryT, for the most common Ts that you might need.
This commit implements unknown outputs in the same style as our Node.js
language provider. That is to say, during previews, it's possible that
certain outputs will not have known values. In those cases, we want to
flow sufficient information through the resolution of values, so that we
may skip applies. We also return this fact from the direct accessors.
This change primarily does two things:
* Adds output marshaling.
* Adds tests for roundtripping inputs to outputs.
It also
* Fixes a bug in the verification of asset archives.
* Change input types to simply `interface{}` and `map[string]interface{}`.
There is no need for wrapper types. This is more idiomatic.
* Reject output properties upon marshaling failure.
* Don't support time.Time as a marshaling concept. This was getting too
cute. It's not clear what its marshaling format ought to be.
This improves the strong typing of output properties, by leveraging the
cast library to support numeric conversions to and from many types,
without hitting interface{}-cast panics. Also adds strongly typed
applies and adds a number of additional tests for these functions.
This change adds some convenience functions and types, to make strongly
typed outputs more pleasant to interact with. It also includes tests
for output generally, in addition to these new functions and types.
This adds rudimentary support for Pulumi programs written in Go. It
is not complete yet but the basic resource registration works.
Note that, stylistically speaking, Go is a bit different from our other
languages. This made it a bit easier to build this initial prototype,
since what we want is actually a rather thin veneer atop our existing
RPC interfaces. The lack of generics, however, adds some friction and
is something I'm continuing to hammer on; this will most likely lead to
little specialized types (e.g. StringOutput) once the dust settles.
There are two primary components:
1) A new language host, `pulumi-language-go`, which is responsible for
communicating with the engine through the usual gRPC interfaces.
Because Go programs are pre-compiled, it very simply loads a binary
with the same name as the project.
2) A client SDK library that Pulumi programs bind against. This exports
the core resource types -- including assets -- properties -- including
output properties -- and configuration.
Most remaining TODOs are marked as such in the code, and this will not
be merged until they have been addressed, and some better tests written.
* Fix a few issues with the Python language host
1. Fix an issue where the UNKNOWN sentinel was leaking into user
programs
2. Fix an issue where Protobuf types were leaking into user programs
In fixing this issues I also added a framework for writing tests against
the Python SDK.
* License headers, and adopt a more idiomatic testing pattern
* Additional idiomatic Python
* That's what I get for trying to be fancy (Travis CI python version is very old and does not respect this form)
* CR feedback: use more comprehensions, typo fix
* Break a circular dependency between resource, runtime.resource, and runtime.rpc
* Don't check in .vscode
* CR: sort inputs, rename global variable, add a test for CustomResource serialization
* Remove accidental code duplication
We retained these modules to support using v0.11.X and earlier
versions of @pulumi/pulumi, which required a native module to do
closure serialization. 0.12.X does not need this, so lets stop
including it.
Closure serialization now keeps track of the `require`d packages it sees in the function bodies that are serialized during a call to `serializeFunction`.
Also, replaces `serializeFunctionAsync` with `serializeFunction` which accepts richer parameters and return type, deprecating the former API (but leaving it available for now to avoid a breaking change).
Before the changes in #1414, all output properties were guaranteed to
have values after deserialization. After #1414, any properties with no
value were no longer resolved, which was treated as an error. These
changes resolve all missing proprties to `undefined`. If a property is
missing during an update, its `undefined` value is marked as known.
These changes add support for distinguishing an output property with
an unknown value from an output property with a known value that is
undefined.
In a broad sense, the Pulumi property type system is just JSON with the
addition of unknown values. Notably absent, however, are undefined
values. As it stands, our marshalers between JavaScript and Pulumi
property values treat all undefined JavaScript values as unknown Pulumi
values. Unfortunately, this conflates two very different concepts:
unknown Pulumi values are intended to represent values of output
properties that are unknown at time of preview, _not_ values that are
known but undefined. This results in difficulty reasoning about when
transforms are run on output properties as well as confusing output in
the `diff` view of Pulumi preview (user-specifed undefined values are
rendered as unknown values).
As it turns out, we already have a way to decide whether or not an
Output value is known or not: Output.performApply. These changes rename
this property to `isKnown`, clarify its meaning, and take advantage of
the result to decide whether or not an Output value should marshal as
an unknown Pulumi value.
This also allowed these changes to improve the serialization of
undefined object keys and array elements s.t. we better match JavaScript
to JSON serialization behavior (undefined object keys are omitted;
undefined array elements are marshaled as `null`).
Fixes https://github.com/pulumi/pulumi-cloud/issues/483.
* Delete Before Create
This commit implements the full semantics of delete before create. If a
resource is replaced and requires deletion before creation, the engine
will use the dependency graph saved in the snapshot to delete all
resources that depend on the resource being replaced prior to the
deletion of the resource to be replaced.
* Rebase against master
* CR: Simplify the control flow in makeRegisterResourceSteps
* Run Check on new inputs when re-creating a resource
* Fix an issue where the planner emitted benign but incorrect deletes of DBR-deleted resources
* CR: produce the list of dependent resources in dependency order and iterate over the list in reverse
* CR: deps->dependents, fix an issue with DependingOn where duplicate nodes could be added to the dependent set
* CR: Fix an issue where we were considering old defaults and new inputs
inappropriately when re-creating a deleted resource
* CR: save 'iter.deletes[urn]' as a local, iterate starting at cursorIndex + 1 for dependency graph
This changes two primary things about dynamic providers:
1) Always echo back the __provider upon read, even if there is a
missing read function on the dynamic provider. In fact, return
the full input state in that case.
2) Store the __provider in the output state of the dynamic resource,
in addition to the input state. My recollection of the "model"
discussion we had weeks ago was that the output properties are
mean to capture the state of a resource in its entirety; not having
this meant that refresh would marshal the outputs only, and find
on the other side of the RPC boundary that __provider was missing.
Note that an alternative to the latter fix would be to use some hybrid
of input and output state, as we used to do, by merging property maps.
* Fix a bug in promise leak detection that leaked promises when errors occur
* Add an opt-in to the super-verbose debug error message on promise leaks
* Fix a bad merge
* was/were grammar improvement in error message
* Fail the deployment if a debuggable promise leaks
* Graceful RPC shutdown: CLI side
* Handle unavailable resource monitor in language hosts
* Fix a comment
* Don't commit package-lock.json
* fix mangled pylint pragma
* Rebase against master and fix Gopkg.lock
* Code review feedback
* Fix a race between closing the callerEventsOpt channel and terminating a goroutine that writes to it
* glog -> logging
These changes enable tracing of Pulumi API calls.
The span with which to associate an API call is passed via a
`context.Context` parameter. This required plumbing a
`context.Context` parameter through a rather large number of APIs,
especially in the backend.
In general, all API calls are associated with a new root span that
exists for essentially the entire lifetime of an invocation of the
Pulumi CLI. There were a few places where the plumbing got a bit hairier
than I was willing to address with these changes; I've used
`context.Background()` in these instances. API calls that receive this
context will create new root spans, but will still be traced.
Instead of using a shell script to jump from the language host into
node, just invoke node directly. This makes our start-up path a little
simpler to understand and indirectly fixespulumi/home#156, where we
would fail on Windows if the `-exec` script was in a folder that had
spaces in it (due to a subtle interaction between how go launches cmd
files and how cmd.exe parses arguments).
Rather than filtering out the `id` and `urn` properties when serializing
the inputs to an invoke, pass these properties along. This enables the
use of invoke endpoints that accepts these as inputs (e.g. the endpoint
that backs `aws.ec2.getSubnet`).
* Improve the error message when npm/yarn install hasn't been run
* Same thing, but for Python
* Use PULUMI_RUN in batch script
* Use -e, -f doesn't work for symlinked paths (e.g. yarn link)
This change adopts `x is T` style of RTTI inquiry, which fits much
more nicely with TypeScript's typechecking flow.
Thanks to @lukehoban for teaching me a new trick today! :-)
This change moves us away from using JavaScript RTTI, by way of
`instanceof`, for built-in Pulumi types. If we use `instanceof`,
then the same logical type loaded from separate copies of the
SDK package -- as will happen in SxS scenarios -- are considered
different. This isn't actually what we want. The solution is
simple: implement our own quasi-RTTI solution, using __pulumi*
properties and manual as* and is* functions. Note that we could
have skipped the as* and is* functions, but I found that they led
to slightly easier to read code.
There is one strange thing in here, which I spoke to
@CyrusNajmabadi about: SerializedOutput<T>, because it implements
Output<T> as an _interface_, did not previously masquerade as an
actual Output<T>. In other words, `instanceof` would have returned
false, and indeed a few important properties (like promise) are
missing. This change preserves that behavior, although I'll admit
that this is slightly odd. I suspect we'll want to revisit this as
part of https://github.com/pulumi/pulumi/issues/1074.
Fixes https://github.com/pulumi/pulumi/issues/1203.
* Introduce a simple repetition operator to match expected error messages against actual ones
* Convert required and optional objects to use a Map (node v9 compat), improve the error formatting for failed tests
* Test node v6, v8, and v9 in CI
* Get rid of PULUMI_API env in .travis.yml, it's set from the Travis console now
While we no longer use the native runtime module, older versions of
@pulumi/pulumi still require it. Let's continue to have the launcher
put the native module location on the `$PATH`. And we'll include them
in the SDK for a while longer.
Fixes#1177
The RPC provider interface needs a way to convey back to the engine
that a resource being read no longer exists. To do this, we'll return
the ID property that was read back. If it is empty, it means the
resource is gone. If it is non-empty, we expect it to match the input.
* Implement closure scope chain analysis in pure TypeScript
This change makes use of four V8 intrinsics to avoid having to use a
native module to inspect the scope chains of live Function objects. This
unfortunately leads to the limitation of not allowing captures of 'this'
in arrow functions, but that is something we are willing to live with
for now.
* Remove native module build and restore from the Makefile
* CR feedback: Be a little more efficient when scanning the scope chain
* Nuke everything related to custom Node versions and the native Node module
* CR feedback: rename native.ts -> v8.ts, document some interfaces in v8.ts
As I began to write code using the ability to perform resource
lookups, especially in the code-generators, I realized the way it
was surfaced as an argument to the Resource base constructor would
lead to overload explosion. Instead of doing that, let's pass it
in the ResourceOptions bag.
Prior to this change, if you ended up with multiple Pulumi SDK
packages loaded side-by-side, we would fail in obscure ways. The
reason for this was that we initialize and store important state
in static variables. In the case that you load the same library
twice, however, you end up with separate copies of said statics,
which means we would be missing engine RPC addresses and so on.
This change adds the ability to recover from this situation by
mirroring the initialized state in process-wide environment
variables. By doing this, we can safely recover simply by reading
them back when we detect that they are missing. I think we can
eventually go even further here, and eliminate the entry point
launcher shim altogether by simply having the engine launch the
Node program with the right environment variables. This would
be a nice simplification to the system (fewer moving pieces).
There is still a risk that the separate copy is incompatible.
Presumably the reason for loading multiple copies is that the
NPM/Yarn version solver couldn't resolve to a shared version.
This may yield obscure failure modes should RPC interfaces change.
Figuring out what to do here is part of pulumi/pulumi#957.
This fixespulumi/pulumi#777 and pulumi/pulumi#1017.
This change skips unknown IDs during read operations. This can happen
when a read is performed using the output property of another resource
during planning. This is intentionally supported via ID being an
Input<ID> and all we need to do for this to work correctly is skip the
actual provider RPC and the runtime will propagate unknown outputs as
usual.
This change wires up the new Read RPC method in such a manner that
Pulumi programs can invoke it. This is technically not required for
refreshing state programmatically (as in pulumi/pulumi#1081), however
it's a feature we had eons ago and have wanted since (see
pulumi/pulumi#83), and will allow us to write code like
let vm = aws.ec2.Instance.get("my-vm", "i-07043cd97bd2c9cfc");
// use any property from here on out ...
The way this works is simply by bridging the Pulumi program via its
existing RPC connection to the engine, much like Invoke and
RegisterResource RPC requests already do, and then invoking the proper
resource provider in order to read the state. Note that some resources
cannot be uniquely identified by their ID alone, and so an extra
resource state bag may be provided with just those properties required.
This came almost for free (okay, not exactly) and will come in handy as
we start gaining experience with reading live state from resources.
This commit changes two things about our resource model:
* Stop performing Pulumi Engine-side diffing of resource state.
Instead, we defer to the resource plugins themselves to determine
whether a change was made and, if so, the extent of it. This
manifests as a simple change to the Diff function; it is done in
a backwards compatible way so that we continue with legacy diffing
for existing resource provider plugins.
* Add a Read RPC method for resource providers. It simply takes a
resource's ID and URN, plus an optional bag of further qualifying
state, and it returns the current property state as read back from
the actual live environment. Note that the optional bag of state
must at least include enough additional properties for resources
wherein the ID is insufficient for the provider to perform a lookup.
It may, however, include the full bag of prior state, for instance
in the case of a refresh operation.
This is part of pulumi/pulumi#1108.
* Improve the error message arising from missing required configs for
resource providers
If the resource provider that we are speaking to is new enough, it will send
across a list of keys and their descriptions alongside an error
indicating that the provider we are configuring is missing required
config. This commit packages up the list of missing keys into an error
that can be presented nicely to the user.
* Code review feedback: renaming simplification and correcting errors in comments
This change actually makes our Python version numbers conformant
to PEP440. Previously we were including the Git commit hash in the
alpha "version number" part, which is incorrect. This simply led to
warnings upon publication and installation, but that warning very
clearly states that support for invalid versions will stop at some
point. This change puts any "informative" parts, like the Git hash,
inside of a local version tag, where such things are permitted.
Also move away from the inline sed silliness so that we can more
easily share this logic across all of our repos.