Commit graph

6 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
joeduffy 22387d24cd Switch to a --parallel=P flag
This change flips the polarity on parallelism: rather than having a
--serialize flag, we will have a --parallel=P flag, and by default
we will shut off parallelism.  We aren't benefiting from it at the
moment (until we implement pulumi/pulumi-fabric#106), and there are
more hidden dependencies in places like AWS Lambdas and Permissions
than I had realized.  We may revisit the default, but this allows
us to bite off the messiness of dependsOn only when we benefit from
it.  And in any case, the --parallel=P capability will be useful.
2017-09-17 08:10:46 -07:00
joeduffy 087deb7643 Add optional dependsOn to Resource constructors
This change adds an optiona dependsOn parameter to Resource constructors,
to "force" a fake dependency between resources.  We have an extremely strong
desire to resort to using this only in unusual cases -- and instead rely
on the natural dependency DAG based on properties -- but experience in other
resource provisioning frameworks tells us that we're likely to need this in
the general case.  Indeed, we've already encountered the need in AWS's
API Gateway resources... and I suspect we'll run into more especially as we
tackle non-serverless resources like EC2 Instances, where "ambient"
dependencies are far more commonplace.

This also makes parallelism the default mode of operation, and we have a
new --serialize flag that can be used to suppress this default behavior.
Full disclosure: I expect this to become more Make-like, i.e. -j 8, where
you can specify the precise width of parallelism, when we tackle
pulumi/pulumi-fabric#106.  I also think there's a good chance we will flip
the default, so that serial execution is the default, so that developers
who don't benefit from the parallelism don't need to worry about dependsOn
in awkward ways.  This tends to be the way most tools (like Make) operate.

This fixes pulumi/pulumi-fabric#335.
2017-09-15 16:38:52 -07:00
joeduffy f2d53459eb Add the notion of stable states
If a resource's planning operation is to do nothing, we can safely
assume that all of its properties are stable.  This can be used during
planning to avoid cascading updates that we know will never happen.
2017-09-05 10:01:00 -07:00
joeduffy f189c40f35 Wire up Lumi to the new runtime strategy
🔥 🔥 🔥  🔥 🔥 🔥

Getting closer on #311.
2017-09-04 11:35:21 -07:00
joeduffy dc3bf4bffb Regenerate Protobufs 2017-09-04 11:35:20 -07:00
joeduffy 200fecbbaa Implement initial Lumi-as-a-library
This is the initial step towards redefining Lumi as a library that runs
atop vanilla Node.js/V8, rather than as its own runtime.

This change is woefully incomplete but this includes some of the more
stable pieces of my current work-in-progress.

The new structure is that within the sdk/ directory we will have a client
library per language.  This client library contains the object model for
Lumi (resources, properties, assets, config, etc), in addition to the
"language runtime host" components required to interoperate with the
Lumi resource monitor.  This resource monitor is effectively what we call
"Lumi" today, in that it's the thing orchestrating plans and deployments.

Inside the sdk/ directory, you will find nodejs/, the Node.js client
library, alongside proto/, the definitions for RPC interop between the
different pieces of the system.  This includes existing RPC definitions
for resource providers, etc., in addition to the new ones for hosting
different language runtimes from within Lumi.

These new interfaces are surprisingly simple.  There is effectively a
bidirectional RPC channel between the Lumi resource monitor, represented
by the lumirpc.ResourceMonitor interface, and each language runtime,
represented by the lumirpc.LanguageRuntime interface.

The overall orchestration goes as follows:

1) Lumi decides it needs to run a program written in language X, so
   it dynamically loads the language runtime plugin for language X.

2) Lumi passes that runtime a loopback address to its ResourceMonitor
   service, while language X will publish a connection back to its
   LanguageRuntime service, which Lumi will talk to.

3) Lumi then invokes LanguageRuntime.Run, passing information like
   the desired working directory, program name, arguments, and optional
   configuration variables to make available to the program.

4) The language X runtime receives this, unpacks it and sets up the
   necessary context, and then invokes the program.  The program then
   calls into Lumi object model abstractions that internally communicate
   back to Lumi using the ResourceMonitor interface.

5) The key here is ResourceMonitor.NewResource, which Lumi uses to
   serialize state about newly allocated resources.  Lumi receives these
   and registers them as part of the plan, doing the usual diffing, etc.,
   to decide how to proceed.  This interface is perhaps one of the
   most subtle parts of the new design, as it necessitates the use of
   promises internally to allow parallel evaluation of the resource plan,
   letting dataflow determine the available concurrency.

6) The program exits, and Lumi continues on its merry way.  If the program
   fails, the RunResponse will include information about the failure.

Due to (5), all properties on resources are now instances of a new
Property<T> type.  A Property<T> is just a thin wrapper over a T, but it
encodes the special properties of Lumi resource properties.  Namely, it
is possible to create one out of a T, other Property<T>, Promise<T>, or
to freshly allocate one.  In all cases, the Property<T> does not "settle"
until its final state is known.  This cannot occur before the deployment
actually completes, and so in general it's not safe to depend on concrete
resolutions of values (unlike ordinary Promise<T>s which are usually
expected to resolve).  As a result, all derived computations are meant to
use the `then` function (as in `someValue.then(v => v+x)`).

Although this change includes tests that may be run in isolation to test
the various RPC interactions, we are nowhere near finished.  The remaining
work primarily boils down to three things:

    1) Wiring all of this up to the Lumi code.

    2) Fixing the handful of known loose ends required to make this work,
       primarily around the serialization of properties (waiting on
       unresolved ones, serializing assets properly, etc).

    3) Implementing lambda closure serialization as a native extension.

This ongoing work is part of pulumi/pulumi-fabric#311.
2017-09-04 11:35:20 -07:00