Commit graph

11 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
James Nugent
7f6a6501ef Depend on pulumi fork of glog.
This removes the need for a replace directive in every downstream `go.mod`.
2019-07-25 16:10:53 -05:00
Paul Stack
02ffff8840
Addition of Custom Timeouts (#2885)
* Plumbing the custom timeouts from the engine to the providers

* Plumbing the CustomTimeouts through to the engine and adding test to show this

* Change the provider proto to include individual timeouts

* Plumbing the CustomTimeouts from the engine through to the Provider RPC interface

* Change how the CustomTimeouts are sent across RPC

These errors were spotted in testing. We can now see that the timeout
information is arriving in the RegisterResourceRequest

```
req=&pulumirpc.RegisterResourceRequest{
           Type:                    "aws:s3/bucket:Bucket",
           Name:                    "my-bucket",
           Parent:                  "urn:pulumi:dev::aws-vpc::pulumi:pulumi:Stack::aws-vpc-dev",
           Custom:                  true,
           Object:                  &structpb.Struct{},
           Protect:                 false,
           Dependencies:            nil,
           Provider:                "",
           PropertyDependencies:    {},
           DeleteBeforeReplace:     false,
           Version:                 "",
           IgnoreChanges:           nil,
           AcceptSecrets:           true,
           AdditionalSecretOutputs: nil,
           Aliases:                 nil,
           CustomTimeouts:          &pulumirpc.RegisterResourceRequest_CustomTimeouts{
               Create:               300,
               Update:               400,
               Delete:               500,
               XXX_NoUnkeyedLiteral: struct {}{},
               XXX_unrecognized:     nil,
               XXX_sizecache:        0,
           },
           XXX_NoUnkeyedLiteral: struct {}{},
           XXX_unrecognized:     nil,
           XXX_sizecache:        0,
       }
```

* Changing the design to use strings

* CHANGELOG entry to include the CustomTimeouts work

* Changing custom timeouts to be passed around the engine as converted value

We don't want to pass around strings - the user can provide it but we want
to make the engine aware of the timeout in seconds as a float64
2019-07-16 00:26:28 +03:00
Pat Gavlin
6e5c4a38d8
Defer all diffs to resource providers. (#2849)
Thse changes make a subtle but critical adjustment to the process the
Pulumi engine uses to determine whether or not a difference exists
between a resource's actual and desired states, and adjusts the way this
difference is calculated and displayed accordingly.

Today, the Pulumi engine get the first chance to decide whether or not
there is a difference between a resource's actual and desired states. It
does this by comparing the current set of inputs for a resource (i.e.
the inputs from the running Pulumi program) with the last set of inputs
used to update the resource. If there is no difference between the old
and new inputs, the engine decides that no change is necessary without
consulting the resource's provider. Only if there are changes does the
engine consult the resource's provider for more information about the
difference. This can be problematic for a number of reasons:

- Not all providers do input-input comparison; some do input-state
  comparison
- Not all providers are able to update the last deployed set of inputs
  when performing a refresh
- Some providers--either intentionally or due to bugs--may see changes
  in resources whose inputs have not changed

All of these situations are confusing at the very least, and the first
is problematic with respect to correctness. Furthermore, the display
code only renders diffs it observes rather than rendering the diffs
observed by the provider, which can obscure the actual changes detected
at runtime.

These changes address both of these issues:
- Rather than comparing the current inputs against the last inputs
  before calling a resource provider's Diff function, the engine calls
  the Diff function in all cases.
- Providers may now return a list of properties that differ between the
  requested and actual state and the way in which they differ. This
  information will then be used by the CLI to render the diff
  appropriately. A provider may also indicate that a particular diff is
  between old and new inputs rather than old state and new inputs.

Fixes #2453.
2019-07-01 12:34:19 -07:00
Luke Hoban
15e924b5cf
Support aliases for renaming, re-typing, or re-parenting resources (#2774)
Adds a new resource option `aliases` which can be used to rename a resource.  When making a breaking change to the name or type of a resource or component, the old name can be added to the list of `aliases` for a resource to ensure that existing resources will be migrated to the new name instead of being deleted and replaced with the new named resource.

There are two key places this change is implemented. 

The first is the step generator in the engine.  When computing whether there is an old version of a registered resource, we now take into account the aliases specified on the registered resource.  That is, we first look up the resource by its new URN in the old state, and then by any aliases provided (in order).  This can allow the resource to be matched as a (potential) update to an existing resource with a different URN.

The second is the core `Resource` constructor in the JavaScript (and soon Python) SDKs.  This change ensures that when a parent resource is aliased, that all children implicitly inherit corresponding aliases.  It is similar to how many other resource options are "inherited" implicitly from the parent.

Four specific scenarios are explicitly tested as part of this PR:
1. Renaming a resource
2. Adopting a resource into a component (as the owner of both component and consumption codebases)
3. Renaming a component instance (as the owner of the consumption codebase without changes to the component)
4. Changing the type of a component (as the owner of the component codebase without changes to the consumption codebase)
4. Combining (1) and (3) to make both changes to a resource at the same time
2019-05-31 23:01:01 -07:00
Joe Duffy
bf75fe0662
Suppress JSON outputs in preview correctly (#2771)
If --suppress-outputs is passed to `pulumi preview --json`, we
should not emit the stack outputs. This change fixes pulumi/pulumi#2765.

Also adds a test case for this plus some variants of updates.
2019-05-25 12:10:38 +02:00
Matt Ellis
ffc6053c88 Fix --json output
We were dropping new and old states on the floor instead of including
them as part of the previewed operation due to a logic error (we want
to append them when there are no errors from serialization, vs when
there are errors).
2019-05-10 17:07:52 -07:00
Matt Ellis
25453d88bf Fix a bug in out logic for replacing secrets with [secret] 2019-05-10 17:07:52 -07:00
Matt Ellis
a5ef966caf Update --json output for preview in light of secrets
Replace any secret properties with the string `[secret]` for now. We
can consider allowing something like allowing `--show-secrets` to show
them.
2019-05-10 17:07:52 -07:00
Matt Ellis
cc74ef8471 Encrypt secret values in deployments
When constructing a Deployment (which is a plaintext representation of
a Snapshot), ensure that we encrypt secret values. To do so, we
introduce a new type `secrets.Manager` which is able to encrypt and
decrypt values. In addition, it is able to reflect information about
itself that can be stored in the deployment such that we can
deserialize the deployment into a snapshot (decrypting the values in
the process) without external knowledge about how it was encrypted.

The ability to do this is import for allowing stack references to
work, since two stacks may not use the same manager (or they will use
the same type of manager, but have different state).

The state value is stored in plaintext in the deployment, so it **must
not** contain sensitive data.

A sample manager, which just base64 encodes and decodes strings is
provided, as it useful for testing. We will allow it to be varried
soon.
2019-05-10 17:07:52 -07:00
joeduffy
23f905a468 Respect --show flags for --json (and --diff) 2019-04-25 17:36:31 -07:00
joeduffy
250bcb9751 Add a --json flag to the preview command
This change adds a --json flag to the preview command, enabling
basic JSON serialization of preview plans. This effectively flattens
the engine event stream into a preview structure that contains a list
of steps, diagnostics, and summary information. Each step contains
the deep serialization of resource state, in addition to metadata about
the step, such as what kind of operation it entails.

This is a partial implementation of pulumi/pulumi#2390. In particular,
we only support --json on the `preview` command itself, and not `up`,
meaning that it isn't possible to serialize the result of an actual
deployment yet (thereby limiting what you can do with outputs, etc).
2019-04-25 17:36:31 -07:00