Commit graph

7 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Sean Gillespie 14baf866f6
Snapshot management overhaul and refactor (#1273)
* Refactor the SnapshotManager interface

Lift snapshot management out of the engine by delegating it to the
SnapshotManager implementation in pkg/backend.

* Add a event interface for plugin loads and use that interface to record plugins in the snapshot

* Remove dead code

* Add comments to Events

* Add a number of tests for SnapshotManager

* CR feedback: use a successful bit on 'End' instead of having a separate 'Abort' API

* CR feedback

* CR feedback: register plugins one-at-a-time instead of the entire state at once
2018-04-25 17:20:08 -07:00
Joe Duffy 8421fd9e52
Show correct plugin sizes (#1137)
The code that calculated plugin sizes was incorrect; it would show the
total size consumed by all plugins, for each plugin, which is clearly
busted.  We should compute each plugin's size from its own directory.
2018-04-09 12:51:32 -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
pat@pulumi.com 45a4a41e0d Configure resource providers upon load.
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.
2018-03-06 16:38:53 -08:00
joeduffy 25f5a71568 Add support for project plugins
This adds support for two things:

* Installing all plugins that a project requires with a single command:

    $ pulumi plugin install

* Listing the plugins that this project requires:

    $ pulumi plugin ls --project
    $ pulumi plugin ls -p
2018-02-19 11:24:19 -08:00
joeduffy ffe8c4681a Rename plugin prune to rm
This change renames prune to rm, to match what we use for other
similar commands.  Someday perhaps we will add a prune that uses
some smarts to prune old plugins, etc.

Also tidy up some minor things about the command.  For example,
we now require --all if you want to truly clear the entire plugin
cache.  We also print more detail, like the full list of plugins
to be removed, in the confirmation prompt.
2018-02-19 09:06:02 -08:00
joeduffy c1752d357e Implement basic plugin management
This change implements basic plugin management, but we do not yet
actually use the plugins for anything (that comes next).

Plugins are stored in `~/.pulumi/plugins`, and are expected to be
in the format `pulumi-<KIND>-<NAME>-v<VERSION>[.exe]`.  The KIND is
one of `analyzer`, `language`, or `resource`, the NAME is a hyphen-
delimited name (e.g., `aws` or `foo-bar`), and VERSION is the
plugin's semantic version (e.g., `0.9.11`, `1.3.7-beta.a736cf`, etc).

This commit includes four new CLI commands:

* `pulumi plugin` is the top-level plugin command.  It does nothing
  but show the help text for associated child commands.

* `pulumi plugin install` can be used to install plugins manually.
  If run with no additional arguments, it will compute the set of
  plugins used by the current project, and download them all.  It
  may be run to explicitly download a single plugin, however, by
  invoking it as `pulumi plugin install KIND NAME VERSION`.  For
  example, `pulumi plugin install resource aws v0.9.11`.  By default,
  this command uses the cloud backend in the usual way to perform the
  download, although a separate URL may be given with --cloud-url,
  just like all other commands that interact with our backend service.

* `pulumi plugin ls` lists all plugins currently installed in the
  plugin cache.  It displays some useful statistics, like the size
  of the plugin, when it was installed, when it was last used, and
  so on.  It sorts the display alphabetically by plugin name, and
  for plugins with multiple versions, it shows the newest at the top.
  The command also summarizes how much disk space is currently being
  consumed by the plugin cache.  There are no filtering capabilities yet.

* `pulumi plugin prune` will delete plugins from the cache.  By
  default, when run with no arguments, it will delete everything.
  It may be run with additional arguments, KIND, NAME, and VERSION,
  each one getting more specific about what it will delete.  For
  instance, `pulumi plugin prune resource aws` will delete all AWS
  plugin versions, while `pulumi plugin prune resource aws <0.9`
  will delete all AWS plugins before version 0.9.  Unless --yes is
  passed, the command will confirm the deletion with a count of how
  many plugins will be affected by the command.

We do not yet actually download plugins on demand yet.  That will
come in a subsequent change.
2018-02-18 08:08:15 -08:00