Commit graph

20 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Paul Stack e955a6b06a Refactor Mock newResource and call to accept property bag rather than individual args (#6672) 2021-04-14 19:32:18 +01:00
evanboyle 7d171917ea support inline programs for nodejs automation api 2020-10-08 12:19:01 -07:00
Pat Gavlin 682dced40b
Mock resource monitor (#3738)
These changes add support for mocking the resource monitor to the NodeJS
and Python SDKs. The proposed mock interface is a simplified version of
the standard resource monitor that allows an end-user to replace the
usual implementations of ReadResource/RegisterResource and Invoke with
their own. This can be used in unit tests to allow for precise control
of resource outputs and invoke results.
2020-02-28 17:22:50 -08:00
CyrusNajmabadi 2b610ce577
Actually export type. (#1971) 2018-09-21 11:58:58 -07:00
CyrusNajmabadi 193af7bda8
Simpler way of stating which dependencies need to be available at runtime. (#1890) 2018-09-05 16:18:31 -07:00
CyrusNajmabadi 9d0dc65f49
Provide helper to compute whihc sub-packages should be included even if we would exclude a higher package. (#1883) 2018-09-05 12:54:28 -07:00
CyrusNajmabadi 5a52c1c080
Actually export function. (#1710) 2018-08-06 15:45:06 -04:00
Luke Hoban 076d8887c9
Compute required packages during closure serialization (#1457)
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).
2018-06-03 21:55:37 -07:00
joeduffy 5967259795 Add license headers 2018-05-22 15:02:47 -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
CyrusNajmabadi 304af9cdf1
Split closure serialization into separate files containing the different concerns. (#1045)
The four concerns are:

    parsing a v8 function string so we can figure out captured variables.
    walkgin the function/object graph producing the graph we will serialize.
    rewriting constructors and methods so that 'super' works.
    serializing graph to text.
2018-03-12 18:12:49 -07:00
Sean Gillespie e87204d3e1
Move language host logic from Node to Go (#901)
* experimental: separate language host from node

* Remove langhost details from the NodeJS SDK runtime

* Cleanup

* Work around an issue where Node sometimes loads the same module twice in two different contexts, resulting in two distinct module objects. Some additional cleanup.

* Add some tests

* Fix up the Windows script

* Fix up the install scripts and Windows build

* Code review feedback

* Code review feedback: error capitalization
2018-02-10 02:15:04 +00:00
joeduffy 86f97de7eb Merge root stack changes with parenting 2017-11-26 08:14:01 -08:00
joeduffy c5281d29f7 Expose a log module
This exposes the existing runtime logging functionality in a way meant
for 3rd-parties to consume.  This can be useful if we want to introduce
debug logging, warnings, or other things, that fit nicely with the
Pulumi CLI and overall developer workflow.
2017-10-08 12:10:46 -07:00
joeduffy 828d7863fd Implement an invoke runtime function
This wires up the Node.js SDK to the newly added Invoke function
on the resource monitor and provider gRPC interfaces, letting us
expose functions that are implemented by the providers to user code.
2017-09-30 14:53:27 -04:00
joeduffy f8ee6c570e Eliminate Computed/Property in favor of Promises
As part of pulumi/pulumi-fabric#331, we've been exploring just using
undefined to indicate that a property value is absent during planning.
We also considered blocking the message loop to simplify the overall
programming model, so that all asynchrony is hidden.

It turns out ThereBeDragons 🐲 anytime you try to block the
message loop.  So, we aren't quite sure about that bit.

But the part we are convicted about is that this Computed/Property
model is far too complex.  Furthermore, it's very close to promises, and
yet frustratingly so far away.  Indeed, the original thinking in
pulumi/pulumi-fabric#271 was simply to use promises, but we wanted to
encourage dataflow styles, rather than control flow.  But we muddied up
our thinking by worrying about awaiting a promise that would never resolve.

It turns out we can achieve a middle ground: resolve planning promises to
undefined, so that they don't lead to hangs, but still use promises so
that asynchrony is explicit in the system.  This also avoids blocking the
message loop.  Who knows, this may actually be a fine final destination.
2017-09-20 09:59:32 -07:00
joeduffy 2a22a71116 Tidy up resource properties
This changes a few aspects of resource properties:

* Move all runtime-related goo into the runtime module, in an
  internal PromiseState class.  This encapsulates the internal
  state transitions and protects against misuse.  It also allows
  us to clean up the public API for the Property<T> type so that
  it's entirely suitable for external usage.

* Track input and output property values distinctly.  It turns
  out we want to key off events differently.  For example, to marshal
  property values to a resource provider, we only care about the
  inputs.  For final property values that are used in, say, thens
  or as inputs to other properties, we want the output property value.

* Be more precise about when an output is truly final, and known, or
  unknown due to planning/dry-runs.  Note that this does mean that
  we'll encounter unknown values more frequently because, aside from
  IDs and URNs, we can't say for sure that arbitrary properties will never
  change post-creation.  We have ideas on how to denote this; see
  pulumi/pulumi-fabric#330 for more details.
2017-09-05 09:31:03 -07:00
joeduffy f718ab6501 Add a runtime.Log class
This change adds the ability to perform runtime logging, including
debug logging, that wires up to the Pulumi Fabric engine in the usual
ways.  Most stdout/stderr will automatically go to the right place,
but this lets us add some debug tracing in the implementation of the
runtime itself (and should come in handy in other places, like perhaps
the Pulumi Framework and even low-level end-user code).
2017-09-04 11:35:21 -07:00
joeduffy 3427647f93 Implement free variable calculations
This change implements free variable calculations and wires it up
to closure serialization.  This is recursive, in the sense that
the serializer may need to call back to fetch free variables for
nested functions encountered during serialization.

The free variable calculation works by parsing the serialized
function text and walking the AST, applying the usual scoping rules
to determine what is free.  In particular, it respects nested
function boundaries, and rules around var, let, and const scoping.

We are using Acorn to perform the parsing.  I'd originally gone
down the path of using V8, so that we have one consistent parser
in the game, however unfortunately neither V8's parser nor its AST
is a stable API meant for 3rd parties.  Unlike the exising internal
V8 dependencies, this one got very deep very quickly, and I became
nervous about maintaining all those dependencies.  Furthermore,
by doing it this way, we can write the free variable logic in
JavaScript, which means one fewer C++ component to maintain.

This also includes a fairly significant amount of testing, all
of which passes! 🎉
2017-09-04 11:35:21 -07:00
joeduffy d8635fd4f3 Move modules to package root
The organization of packages underneath lib/ breaks the easy consumption
of submodules, a la

    import {FileAsset} from "@pulumi/pulumi-fabric/asset";

We will go back to having everything hanging off the module root directory.
2017-09-04 11:35:21 -07:00
Renamed from sdk/nodejs/lib/runtime/index.ts (Browse further)