Use `result.Result` in more places, so when a confirmation prompt is
declined, we just return `result.Bail()` after printing a message
without the `error: ` prefix.
Fixes#2070
* Load default providers deterministically
This commit adds a new algorithm for deriving a list of default
providers from the set of plugins reported from the language host and
from the snapshot. If the language host reports a set of plugins,
default providers are sourced directly from that set, otherwise default
providers are sourced from the full set of plugins, including ones from
the snapshot.
When multiple versions of the same provider are requested, the newest
version of that provider is always select as the default provider.
* Add CHANGELOG.md entry
* Skip the language host's plugins if it reports no resource plugins
* CR feedback
* CR: Log when skipping non resource plugin
When using a dynamic provider, the following messages are printed,
because we did not update the dynamic provider when we added these new
RPCs:
```
Method handler checkConfig for /pulumirpc.ResourceProvider/CheckConfig expected but not provided
Method handler diffConfig for /pulumirpc.ResourceProvider/DiffConfig expected but not provided
```
Given that we don't do anything for the `configure` RPC today, we can
also just no-op these RPCs as well.
`pulumi stack rename` allows you to change the name of an existing
stack. This operation is non-distructive, however it is possible that
the next update will show additional changes to resources, if the
pulumi program uses the value of `getStack()` as part of a resource
name.
* Install missing plugins on startup
This commit addresses the problem of missing plugins by scanning the
snapshot and language host on startup for the list of required plugins
and, if there are any plugins that are required but not installed,
installs them. The mechanism by which plugins are installed is exactly
the same as 'pulumi plugin install'.
The installation of missing plugins is best-effort and, if it fails,
will not fail the update.
This commit addresses pulumi/pulumi-azure#200, where users using Pulumi
in CI often found themselves missing plugins.
* Add CHANGELOG
* Skip downloading plugins if no client provided
* Reduce excessive test output
* Update Gopkg.lock
* Update pkg/engine/destroy.go
Co-Authored-By: swgillespie <sean@pulumi.com>
* CR: make pluginSet a newtype
* CR: Assign loop induction var to local var
Various providers use properties that begin with "__" to represent
internal metadata that should not be presented to the user. These
changes look for such properties and elide them when displaying diffs.
This commit re-uses an error reporting mechanism previously used when
the plugin loader fails to locate a plugin that is compatible with the
requested plugin version. In addition to specifying what version we
attempted to load, it also outputs a command that will install the
missing plugin.
`edit.RenameStack` walks a Snapshot and rewrites all of the parts
where a stack name is present (URNs, the ID of the top level Stack
resource, providers)
These changes take advantage of the newly-added support for returning
inputs from Read to update a resource's inputs as part of a refresh.
As a consequence, the Pulumi engine will now properly detect drift
between the actual state of a resource and the desired state described
by the program and generate appropriate update or replace steps.
As part of these changes, a resource's old inputs are now passed to the
provider when performing a refresh. The provider can take advantage of
this to maintain the accuracy of any additional data or metadata in the
resource's inputs that may need to be updated during the refresh.
This is required for the complete implementation of
https://github.com/pulumi/pulumi-terraform/pull/349. Without access to
the old inputs for a resource, TF-based providers would lose all
information about default population during a refresh.
Originally, `pulumi new` did not run `up` after generating a project. To
help users get a deployed stack as quickly as possible, we changed
`pulumi new` to run an initial deployment at the end of its operation.
Users would first see a preview and get to decide whether to proceed
with an initial deployment, and then continue to iterate from there.
Note that this would only happen for nodejs projects
(TypeScript/JavaScript). We would not run `up` for Python projects as we
require the user to run `pip install` in a virtualenv, so we'd print
instructions with the necessary commands the user must run instead.
Running `up` as part of `pulumi new` for nodejs projects has ended up
being more confusing than helpful for new users, and annoying for
experienced users. New users aren't expecting `pulumi new` to run an
initial deployment after generating the project (they haven't even
looked at the project source yet). Experienced users find it frustrating
as you typically want to just generate the project, and don't want to
have to wait for the preview just to decline running the update.
This change reverts `pulumi new` back to not running `up` automatically
for nodejs projects. Instead, like with Python projects, at the end of
the operation, we print instructions to the user to run `pulumi up` to
deploy the project.
If a provider returns information about the top-level properties that
differ, use those keys to filter the diffs that are rendered to the
user.
Fixes#2453.
Show `brew upgrade pulumi` as the upgrade message when the currently
running pulumi executable is on macOS and running from the brew install
directory.
This update includes several changes to core `@pulumi/pulumi` constructs that will not play nicely
in side-by-side applications that pull in prior versions of this package. As such, we are rev'ing
the minor version of the package from 0.16 to 0.17. Recent version of `pulumi` will now detect,
and warn, if different versions of `@pulumi/pulumi` are loaded into the same application. If you
encounter this warning, it is recommended you move to versions of the `@pulumi/...` packages that
are compatible. i.e. keep everything on 0.16.x until you are ready to move everything to 0.17.x.
### Improvements
- `Output<T>` now 'lifts' property members from the value it wraps, simplifying common coding patterns. Note: this wrapping only happens for POJO values, not `Output<Resource>`s.
- Depending on a **Component** Resource will now depend on all other Resources parented by that
Resource. This will help out the programming model for Component Resources as your consumers can
just depend on a Component and have that automatically depend on all the child Resources created
by that Component. Note: this does not apply to a **Custom** resource. Depending on a
CustomResource will still only wait on that single resource being created, not any other Resources
that consider that CustomResource to be a parent.
These changes add two new methods to the provider interface and extend
the results of three others.
The new methods are `CheckConfig` and `DiffConfig`, which fill out the
set of methods required for a complete implementation of the
first-class provider design. Though these methods are optional for
backwards compatibility, they should be implemented by all future
providers for the best possible user experience.
The adjusted result types are `DiffResponse`, `ReadResponse`, and
`ErrorResourceInitFailed`. The first has been updated to include a list
of the properties that changed (if any). The latter two now include
an estimated set of inputs for the resource as well as the resource's
state. Together, these three changes enable the engine to determine the
set of inputs that should be specified by a user in order to match those
that describe the resource's current state.
This contributes to #2453, #1662, #1635, and #1718.