This takes the existing `apitype.Checkpoint` type and renames it to
`apitype.CheckpointV1` locking in the shape. In addition, we introduce
a `apitype.VersionedCheckpoint` type, which holds a version number and
a json document representing a checkpoint at that version. Now, when
reading a checkpoint, the CLI can determine if it's in a format it
understands, and fail gracefully if it is not.
While the CLI understands the older checkpoint version, it always
writes the newest version format, meaning that if you manage a
fire-and-forget stack with this version of the CLI, it will be
un-readable by previous versions.
Stacks managed by Pulumi.com are not impacted by this change.
Fixes: #887
* Improve error messages output by the CLI
This fixes a couple known issues with the way that we present errors
from the Pulumi CLI:
1. Any errors from RPC endpoints were bubbling up as they were to
the top-level, which was unfortunate because they contained
RPC-specific noise that we don't want to present to the user. This
commit unwraps errors from resource providers.
2. The "catastrophic error" message often got printed twice
3. Fatal errors are often printed twice, because our CLI top-level
prints out the fatal error that it receives before exiting. A lot of
the time this error has already been printed.
4. Errors were prefixed by PU####.
* Feedback: Omit the 'catastrophic' error message and use a less verbose error message as the final error
* Code review feedback: interpretRPCError -> resourceStateAndError
* Code review feedback: deleting some commented-out code, error capitalization
* Cleanup after rebase
This adds a `pulumi new` command which makes it easy to quickly
automatically create the handful of needed files to get started building
an empty Pulumi project.
Usage:
```
$ pulumi new typescript
```
Or you can leave off the template name, and it will ask you to choose
one:
```
$ pulumi new
Please choose a template:
> javascript
python
typescript
```
This change uses virtualenv to insulate us from platform differences
in our building of the Python SDK, and to create an isolated Python 2
environment. This includes meaning we don't need to worry about the
specific location and behavior of Pylint. I *think* this will work
no matter whether it's Mac, Ubuntu, ArchLinux, Windows, and so on.
We do install to the --user directory in the install target using
`pip install -e`, however, which enables the machine-wide symlinking
that we need to support various workflows.
This fixespulumi/pulumi#1007.
This special error kind should be used by all Pulumi components as the error type for user input validation errors. Although it can already be referenced via `@pulumi/pulumi/errors`, also explicitly export it directly on `@pulumi/pulumi`.
We were not colorizing a summary in one case. Also, there were
codepaths that would print to the console without first calling
spinner.Reset(), so the spinner would not be cleared from the screen.
When a stack has secrets, we now take the secret values and construct
a regular expression which is just an alternation of all the secret
values. Then, before pushing any string data into an Event, we run the
regular expression and replace all matches with '[secret]'.
Fixes#747
The engine now emits events with richer metadata during the
ResourceOutputs and ResourcePre callbacks. The CLI can then use this
information to decide if it should display the event or not and how
much of the event to display.
Options dealing with what to display and how to display it have moved
into the CLI and the engine now emits all information for each event.
I believe because of the way we have structured the code, it is
impossible to know a resource's parent but not printed it. I've
changed the test which would print the parent resource to an assert
that ensure we have printed it.
The next commit is going to remove the shown array because we no
longer need it, but this commit is here so that if there are display
bugs as part of the larger refactoring in how we display events, we
can bisect back and see this failure.
The `shouldShow` method always marked a step as seen, and having the
side effect there is a little confusing. Because we call shouldShow in
the StepPre, StepPost and Output handlers, its also hard to ensure an
invarant I think we want, which is that in the Post and Output
handlers, we've already seen the event.
So, let's move the marking out of `shouldShow` and into
`OnResourceStepPre` and then assert we've already seen it in
`OnResourceStepPre` and `OnResourceOutputs` handlers.
This means that shouldShow is now a pure function and makes it easier
to move the decision on if we should print information about a step
out of the engine and into the CLI.
As it stands, we allow plugin load requests to race. Not only does this
create a situation in which we may load and then immediately throw away
a plugin (potentially leaking its process), it also creates the
possibility of races when reading from/writing to the various plugin
caches. These changes serialize all plugin loads and cache accesses by
running all accesses for a particular host in a single goroutine.
Fixes#1020.
The engine now unconditionally emits a new type of event, a
PreludeEvent, which contains the configuration for a stack as well as
an indication if the stack is being previewed or updated. The
responsibility for interpreting the --show-config flag on the command
line is now handled by the CLI, which uses this to decide if it should
print the configuration or not, and then writes the "Previewing
changes" or "Deploying chanages" header.
This value was unused across all of our display code. We did thread it
everywhere, but we never actually used the value to make any
decisions. Since we want to move to a model where the engine does not
decide *what* to display, it's helpful to remove this policy stuff
anyway.
This helper method is only really used for testing, but we should not
allow it to create a Key who's namespace has a colon (as ParseKey
would not build something like this).
This API was introduced to aid the refactoring, but it isn't something
we want to support long term. Remove it and for a few places, push
passing config.Key around more, instead of converting to the old type
eagerly.
When serializing config.Key's we now write them as <package>:<name>
instead of <package>:config:<name>. We continue to support reading the
older format for compatability with older files.
We now unify new Config("package") and new Config("package:config"),
printing a warning when the new Config("package:config") form is
used and pointing consumers towards just new Config("package")
I've updated our examples to use the newer syntax, but I've added a
test ot the langhost to ensure both forms work.
Fixes#923
config.Key has become a pair of namespace and name. Because the whole
world has not changed yet, there continues to be a way to convert
between a tokens.ModuleMember and config.Key, however now sometime the
conversion from tokens.ModuleMember can fail (when the module member
is not of the form `<package>:config:<name>`).
I'll be changing the structure of the representation of config.Key, so
let's write some tests first to ensure we can continue to treat
everything as JSON and YAML.
Right now, config.Key is a type alias for tokens.ModuleMember. I did a
pass over the codebase such that we use config.Key everywhere it
looked like the value did not leak to some external process (e.g a
resource provider or a langhost).
Doing this makes it a little clearer (hopefully) where code is
depending on a module member structure (e.g. <package>:config:<value>)
instead of just an opaque type.
This change temporarily disables Pylint. Assuming it is on the path,
and furthermore that the one on the path runs under 2.7, simply won't
work. See pulumi/pulumi#1007 for details; it also tracks reenabling.
While it's safe to publish the tgz that we use internally for other
repositories that are on "the link plan" after the build completes, we
shouldn't publish packages to NPM and PyPi at that point. There are
two reasons for doing this:
1. Publishing packages before they are tested, which means we could
end up publishing packages that don't work.
2. NPM prevents publishing the same package more than once, so if we
had to re-run the job (due to tests failing for transient issues), the
publish step will start failing, preventing us from running the tests
at all.
This change includes a few things:
1) Prefer python2 and pip2 when on the PATH, over the undecorated
names python and pip. This is the standard convention for package
managers like Pip, etc., to support Python2 and Python3 side-by-side.
2) Fail-fast if neither can be found on the PATH.
3) Check the reported version number for python, pip, and pylint, and
fail-fast if it doesn't report back 2.7, just to safeguard against
undecorated binaries with unsupported versions.
Also, we had not listed wheel as a dependency in the requirements.txt
file. This needs to be there to support building bdist_wheels. Fixed.
The change to refactor out where we store configuration data broke our
old strategy, which we discovered when we tried to take this payload
into pulumi-aws.
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.