We had been using `pandoc` to convert our README.md into a README.rst
for use with `setup.py` and the python package ecosystem. It turns out
that we can use markdown if we set a content type. So let's do that
and make things a little simpler.
While I was in the area, I made the encoding of UTF-8 explicit when
opening README.md.
- Do not use a non-zero-to-zero transition in the number of outstanding
RPCs to determine the completion of a Python program until after the
synchronous piece of the program has finished running is complete
- Instead of using a future to indicate that either a) a zero-to-one
transition in the number of outstanding RPCs has occurred, or b) an
unhandled exception has occurred, a) observe the transition itself,
and b) use an optional exception field to track the presence or
absence of an exception.
Fixes#3162.
Change is 3.6.2 of typescript have caused their code generation to no
longer emit a call to `this` inside an arrow function, so this test is
no longer causing an error to be thrown.
For now, just accept the baseline, but I'll file an issue so we can
actually get a real failing test here.
We intend to replace PULUMI_TEST_MODE with better testing support
that doesn't suffer from all the pitfalls of our current approach.
Unfortunately, we don't yet have complete guidance or validation
that the new approaches will work for all existing end users. So,
until we do, we'll take a lighter touch approach here, and simply
not encourage new usage of PULUMI_TEST_MODE.
Issue #3045 will remain open to track a mroe permanent fix.
In #3071 we made change to the built in provider for `StackReference`
to return additional data about the names of outputs which were
secrets. The SDKs uses this information to decide if it should mark a
stack output as secret when returning it's value from `getOutput`.
When using an older CLI which does not report this data, we hit an
error:
```
TypeError: Cannot read property 'outputs' of undefined
```
This was caused by a refactoring error where we extracted a private
helper out of the StackReference class, but neglected to change one
instance of `this` to `sr`. While we do have tests that exercise this
feature, we would only see this bug when using an older CLI, and we
don't have automated tests here that use the neweset `@pulumi/pulumi`
with an older `pulumi` CLI
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.
When using StackReference, if the stack you reference contains any
secret outputs, we have to mark the entire `outputs` member as a
secret output. This is because we only track secretness on a per
`Output<T>` basis.
For `getSecret` and friends, however, we know the name of the output
you are looking up and we can be smarter about if the returned
`Output<T>` should be treated as a secret or not.
This change augments the provider for StackReference such that it also
returns a list of top level stack output names who's values contain
secrets. In the language SDKs, we use this information, when present,
to decide if we should return an `Output<T>` that is marked as a
secret or not. Since the SDK and CLI are independent components, care
is taken to ensure that when the CLI does not return this information,
we behave as we did before (i.e. if any output is a secret, we treat
every output as a secret).
Fixes#2744
_sync_await was not reentrant with respect to _run_once: the latter
captures the length of the ready list before it iterates it, and the
former drains the ready list by reentering _run_once. Fix this by
tracking the length of the list before pumping the event loop and then
pushing cancelled handles on to the list as necessary after pumping the
loop.
These changes also fix an issue with `export`ing awaitables.
Fixes#3038.
- Ensure that type assertions are guarded, and that incorrectly-typed
properties return errors rather than panicking
- Expand the asset/archive tests in the Node SDK to ensure that eventual
archives and assets serialize and deserialize correctly
Fixes#2836.
Fixes#3016.
These changes fix a bug in the Python runtime that would cause any
awaitable input properties passed to a resource that are missing
from the resource's output properties to be awaited twice. The fix is
straightforward: rather than roundtripping an input property through
serialize/deserialize, just deserialized the already-serialized input
property.
Fixes#2940.
These changes make the `pulumi.runtime.invoke` function invokable in a
synchronous manner. Because this function still needs to perform
asynchronous work under the covers--namely awaiting a provider URN and
ID if a provider instance is present in the `InvokeOptions`--this
requires some creativity. This creativity comes in the form of a helper
function, `_sync_await`, that performs a logical yield from the
currently running event, manually runs the event loop until the given
future completes, performs a logical resume back to the
currently executing event, and returns the result of the future.
The code in `_sync_await` is a bit scary, as it relies upon knowledge of
(and functions in) the internals of the `asyncio` package. The necessary
work performed in this function was derived from the implementations of
`task_step` (which pointed out the need to call `_{enter,leave}_task`)
and `BaseEventLoop.run_forever` (which illustrated how the event loop is
pumped). In addition to potential breaking changes to these internals,
the code may not work if a user has provided an alternative implementation
for `EventLoop`. That said, the code is a close enough copy of
`BaseEventLoop.run_forever` that it should be a reasonable solution.
Provides an additional helper function to read outputs from a stack reference in case it is known that the stack output must be present. This is similar to the design for config.get and config.require.
Fixes#2343.
This package's flags conflict with those in google/glog. Replace all
references to this package with references to
pulumi/pulumi/pkg/util/logging, and change that package to explicitly
call `flag.CommandLine.Parse` with an empty slice.
This should make it much easier to consume these packages in downstream
repos that have direct or indirect dependencies on google/glog.
These changes add support for passing `ignoreChanges` paths to resource
providers. This is intended to accommodate providers that perform diffs
between resource inputs and resource state (e.g. all Terraform-based
providers, the k8s provider when using API server dry-runs). These paths
are specified using the same syntax as the paths used in detailed diffs.
In addition to passing these paths to providers, the existing support
for `ignoreChanges` in inputs has been extended to accept paths rather
than top-level keys. It is an error to specify a path that is missing
one or more component in the old or new inputs.
Fixes#2936, #2663.
* Remove pulumi.io reference in tests
* Remove pulumi.io references in Dockerfiles
* Remove pulumi.io references in CONTRIBUTING.md
* Update README.md's
* Use correct logo
Dynamic providers in Python.
This PR uses [dill](https://pypi.org/project/dill/) for code serialization, along with a customization to help ensure deterministic serialization results.
One notable limitation - which I believe is a general requirement of Python - is that any serialization of Python functions must serialize byte code, and byte code is not safely versioned across Python versions. So any resource created with Python `3.x.y` can only be updated by exactly the same version of Python. This is very constraining, but it's not clear there is any other option within the realm of what "dynamic providers" are as a feature. It is plausible that we could ensure that updates which only update the serialized provider can avoid calling the dynamic provider operations, so that version updates could still be accomplished. We can explore this separately.
```py
from pulumi import ComponentResource, export, Input, Output
from pulumi.dynamic import Resource, ResourceProvider, CreateResult, UpdateResult
from typing import Optional
from github import Github, GithubObject
auth = "<auth token>"
g = Github(auth)
class GithubLabelArgs(object):
owner: Input[str]
repo: Input[str]
name: Input[str]
color: Input[str]
description: Optional[Input[str]]
def __init__(self, owner, repo, name, color, description=None):
self.owner = owner
self.repo = repo
self.name = name
self.color = color
self.description = description
class GithubLabelProvider(ResourceProvider):
def create(self, props):
l = g.get_user(props["owner"]).get_repo(props["repo"]).create_label(
name=props["name"],
color=props["color"],
description=props.get("description", GithubObject.NotSet))
return CreateResult(l.name, {**props, **l.raw_data})
def update(self, id, _olds, props):
l = g.get_user(props["owner"]).get_repo(props["repo"]).get_label(id)
l.edit(name=props["name"],
color=props["color"],
description=props.get("description", GithubObject.NotSet))
return UpdateResult({**props, **l.raw_data})
def delete(self, id, props):
l = g.get_user(props["owner"]).get_repo(props["repo"]).get_label(id)
l.delete()
class GithubLabel(Resource):
name: Output[str]
color: Output[str]
url: Output[str]
description: Output[str]
def __init__(self, name, args: GithubLabelArgs, opts = None):
full_args = {'url':None, 'description':None, 'name':None, 'color':None, **vars(args)}
super().__init__(GithubLabelProvider(), name, full_args, opts)
label = GithubLabel("foo", GithubLabelArgs("lukehoban", "todo", "mylabel", "d94f0b"))
export("label_color", label.color)
export("label_url", label.url)
```
Fixes https://github.com/pulumi/pulumi/issues/2902.