Commit graph

133 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Justin Van Patten
ed4b53d3ae
Add monitor feature for output values (#7870) 2021-09-15 14:16:00 -07:00
Luke Hoban
eb32039013
Add replaceOnChanges resource option (#7226)
Adds a new resource option to force replacement when certain properties report changes, even if the resource provider itself does not require a replacement.

Fixes #6753.

Co-authored-by: Levi Blackstone <levi@pulumi.com>
2021-07-01 13:32:08 -06:00
Justin Van Patten
84b574f0df
Initial support for resource methods (authoring from Node.js, calling from Python) (#7363)
Adds initial support for resource methods (via a new `Call` gRPC method similar to `Invoke`), with support for authoring methods from Node.js, and calling methods from Python.
2021-06-30 07:48:56 -07:00
Evan Boyle
634e97cd55
Include config secret info in Construct calls (#7358) 2021-06-24 15:38:01 -07:00
Pat Gavlin
4da051a799
Add a convert-trace command. (#7319)
This command converts an appdash trace into a pprof file for use with
`go tool pprof`. Spans are converted into stacks by sampling each root
span at a given rate and recording the stack of subspans at each sample.

These changes also replace the conditional addition of experimental and
debug commands with conditional visibility. Experimental and debug
commands will always be available, but will be hidden unless the
appropraite environment variables are set.

Co-authored-by: Levi Blackstone <levi@pulumi.com>
2021-06-17 14:46:05 -07:00
Justin Van Patten
a61e79eb0d
[sdk/nodejs] Warn when a secret config is read as a non-secret (#6896) 2021-05-18 09:48:08 -07:00
pulumi-bot
73a66f48ea [breaking] Changing the version of go.mod in sdk / pkg to be v3 2021-04-14 19:32:18 +01:00
Levi Blackstone
d0509bee49
[cli] Handle providers field for RegisterResourceRequest (#6764)
Update the RegisterResource method in the ResourceMonitor
to unmarshal the providers field added in d297db3 and then resolve
any provider references so that they can be set on the Construct call.
2021-04-13 18:56:34 -06:00
Pat Gavlin
e1ac01a9f2
Respect the version option for provider resources. (#6055)
Although raw provider resources accept an input that allows a user to
specifiy a provider version to use, this input is not reflected in
current SDK code generation. Furthermore, we already have a method to
specify the provider version that should be used for a resource: the
"version" resource option. These changes update the code that handles
provider resource registrations to autmoatically populate the version
input from the "version" resource option if the option is present.

Fixes https://github.com/pulumi/pulumi-azure/issues/803.
2021-01-05 15:57:11 -08:00
Levi Blackstone
1c87d58b4a
Fix bug with ComponentResource resource refs (#5949)
Now that resources are serialized as refs, ComponentResources
may try to unmarshal local resource refs before they are
initialized during the RegisterResource step.

This change avoids that issue by skipping Output marshaling
for local ComponentResources during the RegisterResource step.
These Outputs will be handled instead during the
RegisterResourceOutputs step.

Co-authored-by: Pat Gavlin <pat@pulumi.com>
2020-12-18 14:45:52 -07:00
Pat Gavlin
9b6a7a4397
Improve resource ref unit tests. (#5960)
- Add component ref coverage to the existing test
- Add coverage for a downlevel SDK communicating with an engine that
  supports resource refs
- Add coverage for a downlevel engine communicating with an SDK that
  supports resource refs

As part of improving coverage, these changes add a knob to explicitly
disable resource refs in the engine without the use of the environment
variable. The environment variable is now only read by the CLI, and has
been restored to its prior polarity (i.e. `PULUMI_ENABLE_RESOURCE_REFERENCES`).
2020-12-16 12:38:20 -08:00
Levi Blackstone
54d6703fee
Temporarily disable resource ref support (#5932)
Disable resource ref support until https://github.com/pulumi/pulumi-kubernetes/issues/1405
is fixed. This bug currently affects Python users with recent versions of the pulumi SDK
who are using the pulumi-kubernetes provider.
2020-12-12 12:02:45 -08:00
Levi Blackstone
4d48ee0517
Enable resource reference feature by default (#5905)
* Enable resource reference feature by default

Unless the PULUMI_DISABLE_RESOURCE_REFERENCES flag
is explicitly set to a truthy value, the resource reference feature is now
enabled by default.

* Set AcceptResources in the language SDKs

This can be disabled by setting the `PULUMI_DISABLE_RESOURCE_REFERENCES` environment variable to a truthy value.

Co-authored-by: Justin Van Patten <jvp@justinvp.com>
2020-12-10 11:21:05 -07:00
Justin Van Patten
ea1b962999
Revert "Enable resource reference feature by default" (#5850)
To de-risk the Pulumi v2.15.0 release, temporarily revert 679d40950f. Use of resource references will require `PULUMI_EXPERIMENTAL_RESOURCE_REFERENCES=1` to be set until the feature has been enabled by default.
2020-12-02 08:39:21 -08:00
Levi Blackstone
679d40950f
Enable resource reference feature by default (#5848)
Unless the PULUMI_DISABLE_RESOURCE_REFERENCES flag
is explicitly set to a truthy value, the resource reference feature is now
enabled by default.
2020-12-01 16:58:49 -07:00
Justin Van Patten
06da84a752
Turn on support for resourceReferences behind feature flag (#5830) 2020-11-25 10:43:46 -08:00
Pat Gavlin
1e0c9efdd7
Respect provider config secretness. (#5742)
Just what it says on the tin. This is implemented by changing the
`GetPackageConfig` method of `ConfigSource` to return a `PropertyMap`
and ensuring that any secret config is represented by a `Secret`.
2020-11-12 12:18:12 -08:00
Justin Van Patten
88f6b4c560
Report feature "resourceReferences" is not supported (#5709)
This feature isn't fully supported yet, so stop reporting it is.
2020-11-06 18:56:23 -08:00
Pat Gavlin
3d2e31289a
Add support for serialized resource references. (#5041)
Resources are serialized as their URN, ID, and package version. Each
Pulumi package is expected to register itself with the SDK. The package
will be invoked to construct appropriate instances of rehydrated
resources. Packages are distinguished by their name and their version.

This is the foundation of cross-process resources.

Related to #2430.

Co-authored-by: Mikhail Shilkov <github@mikhail.io>
Co-authored-by: Luke Hoban <luke@pulumi.com>
Co-authored-by: Levi Blackstone <levi@pulumi.com>
2020-10-27 10:12:12 -07:00
Pat Gavlin
2585b86aa4
Initial support for remote component construction. (#5280)
These changes add initial support for the construction of remote
components. For now, this support is limited to the NodeJS SDK;
follow-up changes will implement support for the other SDKs.

Remote components are component resources that are constructed and
managed by plugins rather than by Pulumi programs. In this sense, they
are a bit like cloud resources, and are supported by the same
distribution and plugin loading mechanisms and described by the same
schema system.

The construction of a remote component is initiated by a
`RegisterResourceRequest` with the new `remote` field set to `true`.
When the resource monitor receives such a request, it loads the plugin
that implements the component resource and calls the `Construct`
method added to the resource provider interface as part of these
changes. This method accepts the information necessary to construct the
component and its children: the component's name, type, resource
options, inputs, and input dependencies. It is responsible for
dispatching to the appropriate component factory to create the
component, then returning its URN, resolved output properties, and
output property dependencies. The dependency information is necessary to
support features such as delete-before-replace, which rely on precise
dependency information for custom resources.

These changes also add initial support for more conveniently
implementing resource providers in NodeJS. The interface used to
implement such a provider is similar to the dynamic provider interface
(and may be unified with that interface in the future).

An example of a NodeJS program constructing a remote component resource
also implemented in NodeJS can be found in
`tests/construct_component/nodejs`.

This is the core of #2430.
2020-09-07 19:33:55 -07:00
Levi Blackstone
736019f7ce
Add support for streamInvoke during update (#4990)
Previously, streamInvoke was only supported by
the query command. Copied the implementation
into the resource monitor, which will allow
streaming invoke commands to run during updates.

Also fixed a bug with cancellation of streaming
invokes. The check was comparing against a
hardcoded string, which did not match the actual
error string. Instead, we can rely on the error code.
2020-07-10 10:56:35 -06:00
Paul Stack
0824fc9a8b
Revert "Narrow a few interfaces." (#4987) 2020-07-09 15:19:12 +01:00
Pat Gavlin
45d2fa95d6
Narrow a few interfaces. (#4934)
- Remove `Info` from `Source`. This method was not used.
- Remove `Stack` from `EvalSource`. This method was not used.
- Remove `Type` and `URN` from `Step`. These values are available via
  `Res().URN.Type()` and `Res().URN`, respectively. This removes the
  possibility of inconsistencies between the type, URN, and state of the
  resource associated with a `Step`.
- Remove URN from StepEventMetadata.
2020-07-01 15:32:50 -07:00
CyrusNajmabadi
66bd3f4aa8
Breaking changes due to Feature 2.0 work
* Make `async:true` the default for `invoke` calls (#3750)

* Switch away from native grpc impl. (#3728)

* Remove usage of the 'deasync' library from @pulumi/pulumi. (#3752)

* Only retry as long as we get unavailable back.  Anything else continues. (#3769)

* Handle all errors for now. (#3781)


* Do not assume --yes was present when using pulumi in non-interactive mode (#3793)

* Upgrade all paths for sdk and pkg to v2

* Backport C# invoke classes and other recent gen changes (#4288)

Adjust C# generation

* Replace IDeployment with a sealed class (#4318)

Replace IDeployment with a sealed class

* .NET: default to args subtype rather than Args.Empty (#4320)

* Adding system namespace for Dotnet code gen

This is required for using Obsolute attributes for deprecations

```
Iam/InstanceProfile.cs(142,10): error CS0246: The type or namespace name 'ObsoleteAttribute' could not be found (are you missing a using directive or an assembly reference?) [/Users/stack72/code/go/src/github.com/pulumi/pulumi-aws/sdk/dotnet/Pulumi.Aws.csproj]
Iam/InstanceProfile.cs(142,10): error CS0246: The type or namespace name 'Obsolete' could not be found (are you missing a using directive or an assembly reference?) [/Users/stack72/code/go/src/github.com/pulumi/pulumi-aws/sdk/dotnet/Pulumi.Aws.csproj]
```

* Fix the nullability of config type properties in C# codegen (#4379)
2020-04-14 09:30:25 +01:00
evanboyle
d3f5bbce48 go fmt 2020-03-18 17:27:02 -07:00
evanboyle
c1440e48d4 move pkg/util/result -> sdk/go/common/util 2020-03-18 15:45:42 -07:00
evanboyle
7ff46cb4fa move pkg/util/rpcutil -> sdk/go/common/util/rpcutil 2020-03-18 15:37:13 -07:00
evanboyle
c3f6ae2451 move pkg/util/logging -> sdk/go/common/util/logging 2020-03-18 15:34:58 -07:00
evanboyle
70f386a967 move pkg/tokens -> sdk/go/common/tokens 2020-03-18 14:49:56 -07:00
evanboyle
fccf301d14 move pkg/util/contract -> sdk/go/common/util/contract 2020-03-18 14:40:07 -07:00
evanboyle
8fb3f428b0 move pkg/workspace -> sdk/go/common/workspace 2020-03-18 14:35:53 -07:00
evanboyle
dfab571aac move pkg/resource/plugin -> sdk/go/common/resource/plugin 2020-03-18 14:26:24 -07:00
evanboyle
fba783caf9 move pkg/resource -> sdk/go/common/resource, but leave nested resource packages 2020-03-18 13:36:19 -07:00
Pat Gavlin
137fd54f1c
Propagate inputs to outputs during preview. (#3327)
These changes restore a more-correct version of the behavior that was
disabled with #3014. The original implementation of this behavior was
done in the SDKs, which do not have access to the complete inputs for a
resource (in particular, default values filled in by the provider during
`Check` are not exposed to the SDK). This lack of information meant that
the resolved output values could disagree with the typings present in
a provider SDK. Exacerbating this problem was the fact that unknown
values were dropped entirely, causing `undefined` values to appear in
unexpected places.

By doing this in the engine and allowing unknown values to be
represented in a first-class manner in the SDK, we can attack both of
these issues.

Although this behavior is not _strictly_ consistent with respect to the
resource model--in an update, a resource's output properties will come
from its provider and may differ from its input properties--this
behavior was present in the product for a fairly long time without
significant issues. In the future, we may be able to improve the
accuracy of resource outputs during a preview by allowing the provider
to dry-run CRUD operations and return partially-known values where
possible.

These changes also introduce new APIs in the Node and Python SDKs
that work with unknown values in a first-class fashion:
- A new parameter to the `apply` function that indicates that the
  callback should be run even if the result of the apply contains
  unknown values
- `containsUnknowns` and `isUnknown`, which return true if a value
  either contains nested unknown values or is exactly an unknown value
- The `Unknown` type, which represents unknown values

The primary use case for these APIs is to allow nested, properties with
known values to be accessed via the lifted property accessor even when
the containing property is not fully know. A common example of this
pattern is the `metadata.name` property of a Kubernetes `Namespace`
object: while other properties of the `metadata` bag may be unknown,
`name` is often known. These APIs allow `ns.metadata.name` to return a
known value in this case.

In order to avoid exposing downlevel SDKs to unknown values--a change
which could break user code by exposing it to unexpected values--a
language SDK must indicate whether or not it supports first-class
unknown values as part of each `RegisterResourceRequest`.

These changes also allow us to avoid breaking user code with the new
behavior introduced by the prior commit.

Fixes #3190.
2019-11-11 12:09:34 -08:00
Alex Clemmer
f195cc0d4d Implement StreamInvoke 2019-11-05 10:47:48 -08:00
Alex Clemmer
ae6cd64dc8 Factor queryResmon to share more code with resmon 2019-10-23 15:14:56 -07:00
Alex Clemmer
34093b1361 Allow provider loading in query mode
This commit will introduce the ability to load providers in `query`
mode.

Previously, `query` mode has been effectively a stand-alone execution
environment for language hosts, running without (e.g.) the
`StepExecutor` and similar engine facilities, but with some minimal
constructs hooked up, notably the ability to retrieve stack snapshots
from the backend for querying.

This commit extends this functionality somewhat by allowing `query` to
load Pulumi resource providers, and to run `Invoke` on them. This will
allow us, in the future, to "query" resource providers in the same way
we can query stack snapshots.
2019-10-23 15:14:56 -07:00
Pat Gavlin
834e583c95
Revert "Propagate inputs to outputs during preview. (#3245)" (#3324)
This reverts commit 80504bf0bc.
2019-10-10 10:33:05 -07:00
Pat Gavlin
80504bf0bc
Propagate inputs to outputs during preview. (#3245)
These changes restore a more-correct version of the behavior that was
disabled with #3014. The original implementation of this behavior was
done in the SDKs, which do not have access to the complete inputs for a
resource (in particular, default values filled in by the provider during
`Check` are not exposed to the SDK). This lack of information meant that
the resolved output values could disagree with the typings present in
a provider SDK. Exacerbating this problem was the fact that unknown
values were dropped entirely, causing `undefined` values to appear in
unexpected places.

By doing this in the engine and allowing unknown values to be
represented in a first-class manner in the SDK, we can attack both of
these issues.

Although this behavior is not _strictly_ consistent with respect to the
resource model--in an update, a resource's output properties will come
from its provider and may differ from its input properties--this
behavior was present in the product for a fairly long time without
significant issues. In the future, we may be able to improve the
accuracy of resource outputs during a preview by allowing the provider
to dry-run CRUD operations and return partially-known values where
possible.

These changes also introduce new APIs in the Node and Python SDKs
that work with unknown values in a first-class fashion:
- A new parameter to the `apply` function that indicates that the
  callback should be run even if the result of the apply contains
  unknown values
- `containsUnknowns` and `isUnknown`, which return true if a value
  either contains nested unknown values or is exactly an unknown value
- The `Unknown` type, which represents unknown values

The primary use case for these APIs is to allow nested, properties with
known values to be accessed via the lifted property accessor even when
the containing property is not fully know. A common example of this
pattern is the `metadata.name` property of a Kubernetes `Namespace`
object: while other properties of the `metadata` bag may be unknown,
`name` is often known. These APIs allow `ns.metadata.name` to return a
known value in this case.

In order to avoid exposing downlevel SDKs to unknown values--a change
which could break user code by exposing it to unexpected values--a
language SDK must indicate whether or not it supports first-class
unknown values as part of each `RegisterResourceRequest`.

These changes also allow us to avoid breaking user code with the new
behavior introduced by the prior commit.

Fixes #3190.
2019-09-30 11:03:58 -07:00
Pat Gavlin
82204230e1
Improve tracing support. (#3238)
* Fix some tracing issues.

- Add endpoints for `startUpdate` and `postEngineEventsBatch` so that
  spans for these invocations have proper names
- Inject a tracing span when walking a plan so that resource operations
  are properly parented
- When handling gRPC calls, inject a tracing span into the call's
  metadata if no span is already present so that resource monitor and
  engine spans are properly parented
- Do not trace client gRPC invocations of the empty method so that these
  calls (which are used to determine server availability) do not muddy
  the trace. Note that I tried parenting these spans appropriately, but
  doing so broke the trace entirely.

With these changes, the only unparented span in a typical Pulumi
invocation is a single call to `getUser`. This span is unparented
because that call does not have a context available. Plumbing a context
into that particular call is surprisingly tricky, as it is often called
by other context-less functions.

* Make tracing support more flexible.

- Add support for writing trace data to a local file using Appdash
- Add support for viewing Appdash traces via the CLI
2019-09-16 14:16:43 -07:00
Pat Gavlin
8745440c1b
Allow users to explicitly disable delete-before-replace. (#3118)
With these changes, a user may explicitly set `deleteBeforeReplace` to
`false` in order to disable DBR behavior for a particular resource. This
is the SDK + CLI escape hatch for cases where the changes in
https://github.com/pulumi/pulumi-terraform/pull/465 cause undesirable
behavior.
2019-08-20 15:51:02 -07:00
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
e1a52693dc
Add support for importing existing resources. (#2893)
A resource can be imported by setting the `import` property in the
resource options bag when instantiating a resource. In order to
successfully import a resource, its desired configuration (i.e. its
inputs) must not differ from its actual configuration (i.e. its state)
as calculated by the resource's provider.

There are a few interesting state transitions hiding here when importing
a resource:
1. No prior resource exists in the checkpoint file. In this case, the
   resource is simply imported.
2. An external resource exists in the checkpoint file. In this case, the
   resource is imported and the old external state is discarded.
3. A non-external resource exists in the checkpoint file and its ID is
   different from the ID to import. In this case, the new resource is
   imported and the old resource is deleted.
4. A non-external resource exists in the checkpoint file, but the ID is
   the same as the ID to import. In this case, the import ID is ignored
   and the resource is treated as it would be in all cases except for
   changes that would replace the resource. In that case, the step
   generator issues an error that indicates that the import ID should be
   removed: were we to move forward with the replace, the new state of
   the stack would fall under case (3), which is almost certainly not
   what the user intends.

Fixes #1662.
2019-07-12 11:12:01 -07:00
Sean Gillespie
2870518a64 Refine resource replacement logic for providers (#2767)
This commit touches an intersection of a few different provider-oriented
features that combined to cause a particularly severe bug that made it
impossible for users to upgrade provider versions without seeing
replacements with their resources.

For some context, Pulumi models all providers as resources and places
them in the snapshot like any other resource. Every resource has a
reference to the provider that created it. If a Pulumi program does not
specify a particular provider to use when performing a resource
operation, the Pulumi engine injects one automatically; these are called
"default providers" and are the most common ways that users end up with
providers in their snapshot. Default providers can be identified by
their name, which is always prefixed with "default".

Recently, in an effort to make the Pulumi engine more flexible with
provider versions, it was made possible for the engine to have multiple
default providers active for a provider of a particular type, which was
previously not possible. Because a provider is identified as a tuple of
package name and version, it was difficult to find a name for these
duplicate default providers that did not cause additional problems. The
provider versioning PR gave these default providers a name that was
derived from the version of the package. This proved to be a problem,
because when users upgraded from one version of a package to another,
this changed the name of their default provider which in turn caused all
of their resources created using that provider (read: everything) to be
replaced.

To combat this, this PR introduces a rule that the engine will apply
when diffing a resource to determine whether or not it needs to be
replaced: "If a resource's provider changes, and both old and new
providers are default providers whose properties do not require
replacement, proceed as if there were no diff." This allows the engine
to gracefully recognize and recover when a resource's default provider changes
names, as long as the provider's config has not changed.
2019-06-03 12:16:31 -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
Matt Ellis
61bff0c3a4 Do not parse version from resource providers
Until we can come up with a solution for #2753, just ignore the
version that comes in as part of a resource monitor RPC.
2019-05-21 19:20:18 -07:00
Matt Ellis
f705dde7fb Remove acceptsSecrets from InvokeRequest
In our system, we model secrets as outputs with an additional bit of
metadata that says they are secret. For Read and Register resource
calls, our RPC interface says if the client side of the interface can
handle secrets being returned (i.e. the language SDK knows how to
sniff for the special signiture and resolve the output with the
special bit set).

For Invoke, we have no such model. Instead, we return a `Promise<T>`
where T's shape has just regular property fields.  There's no place
for us to tack the secretness onto, since there are no Outputs.

So, for now, don't even return secret values back across the invoke
channel. We can still take them as arguments (which is good) but we
can't even return secrets as part of invoke calls. This is not ideal,
but given the way we model these sources, there's no way around
this.  Fortunately, the result of these invoke calls are not stored in
the checkpoint and since the type is not Output<T> it will be clear
that the underlying value is just present in plaintext. A user that
wants to pass the result of an invoke into a resource can turn an
existing property into a secret via `pulumi.secret`.
2019-05-10 17:07:52 -07:00
Matt Ellis
cb59c21c01 Rename SecretOutputs to AdditionalSecretOutputs
This makes the intention of this field clearer.
2019-05-10 17:07:52 -07:00
Matt Ellis
480a2f6c9e Augment secret outputs based on per request options 2019-05-10 17:07:52 -07:00
Matt Ellis
529645194e Track secrets inside the engine
A new `Secret` property value is introduced, and plumbed across the
engine.

- When Unmarshalling properties /from/ RPC calls, we instruct the
  marshaller to retain secrets, since we now understand them in the
  rest of the engine.

- When Marshalling properties /to/ RPC calls, we use or tracked data
  to understand if the other side of the connection can accept
  secrets. If they can, we marshall them in a similar manner to assets
  where we have a special object with a signiture specific for secrets
  and an underlying value (which is the /plaintext/ value). In cases
  where the other end of the connection does not understand secrets,
  we just drop the metadata and marshal the underlying value as we
  normally would.

- Any secrets that are passed across the engine events boundary are
  presently passed as just `[secret]`.

- When persisting secret values as part of a deployment, we use a rich
  object so that we can track the value is a secret, but right now the
  underlying value is not actually encrypted.
2019-05-10 17:07:52 -07:00