Commit graph

28 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
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 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 fba783caf9 move pkg/resource -> sdk/go/common/resource, but leave nested resource packages 2020-03-18 13:36:19 -07:00
Evan Boyle 9506b69c8b
error instead of panic when different resources use the same alias (#3457) 2019-11-06 08:49:13 -08:00
CyrusNajmabadi 7b8421f0b2
Fix crash when there were multiple duplicate aliases to the same resource. (#2865) 2019-06-23 02:16:18 -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 db18ee3905 Retain the SecretsManager that was used to deserialize a deployment
We have many cases where we want to do the following:

deployment -> snapshot -> process snapshot -> deployment

We now retain information in the snapshot about the secrets manager
that was used to construct it, so in these round trip cases, we can
re-use the existing manager.
2019-05-10 17:07:52 -07:00
Sean Gillespie 491bcdc602
Add a list of in-flight operations to the deployment (#1759)
* Add a list of in-flight operations to the deployment

This commit augments 'DeploymentV2' with a list of operations that are
currently in flight. This information is used by the engine to keep
track of whether or not a particular deployment is in a valid state.

The SnapshotManager is responsible for inserting and removing operations
from the in-flight operation list. When the engine registers an intent
to perform an operation, SnapshotManager inserts an Operation into this
list and saves it to the snapshot. When an operation completes, the
SnapshotManager removes it from the snapshot. From this, the engine can
infer that if it ever sees a deployment with pending operations, the
Pulumi CLI must have crashed or otherwise abnormally terminated before
seeing whether or not an operation completed successfully.

To remedy this state, this commit also adds code to 'pulumi stack
import' that clears all pending operations from a deployment, as well as
code to plan generation that will reject any deployments that have
pending operations present.

At the CLI level, if we see that we are in a state where pending
operations were in-flight when the engine died, we'll issue a
human-friendly error message that indicates which resources are in a bad
state and how to recover their stack.

* CR: Multi-line string literals, renaming in-flight -> pending

* CR: Add enum to apitype for operation type, also name status -> type for clarity

* Fix the yaml type

* Fix missed renames

* Add implementation for lifecycle_test.go

* Rebase against master
2018-08-10 21:39:59 -07:00
Pat Gavlin a222705143
Implement first-class providers. (#1695)
### First-Class Providers
These changes implement support for first-class providers. First-class
providers are provider plugins that are exposed as resources via the
Pulumi programming model so that they may be explicitly and multiply
instantiated. Each instance of a provider resource may be configured
differently, and configuration parameters may be source from the
outputs of other resources.

### Provider Plugin Changes
In order to accommodate the need to verify and diff provider
configuration and configure providers without complete configuration
information, these changes adjust the high-level provider plugin
interface. Two new methods for validating a provider's configuration
and diffing changes to the same have been added (`CheckConfig` and
`DiffConfig`, respectively), and the type of the configuration bag
accepted by `Configure` has been changed to a `PropertyMap`.

These changes have not yet been reflected in the provider plugin gRPC
interface. We will do this in a set of follow-up changes. Until then,
these methods are implemented by adapters:
- `CheckConfig` validates that all configuration parameters are string
  or unknown properties. This is necessary because existing plugins
  only accept string-typed configuration values.
- `DiffConfig` either returns "never replace" if all configuration
  values are known or "must replace" if any configuration value is
  unknown. The justification for this behavior is given
  [here](https://github.com/pulumi/pulumi/pull/1695/files#diff-a6cd5c7f337665f5bb22e92ca5f07537R106)
- `Configure` converts the config bag to a legacy config map and
  configures the provider plugin if all config values are known. If any
  config value is unknown, the underlying plugin is not configured and
  the provider may only perform `Check`, `Read`, and `Invoke`, all of
  which return empty results. We justify this behavior becuase it is
  only possible during a preview and provides the best experience we
  can manage with the existing gRPC interface.

### Resource Model Changes
Providers are now exposed as resources that participate in a stack's
dependency graph. Like other resources, they are explicitly created,
may have multiple instances, and may have dependencies on other
resources. Providers are referred to using provider references, which
are a combination of the provider's URN and its ID. This design
addresses the need during a preview to refer to providers that have not
yet been physically created and therefore have no ID.

All custom resources that are not themselves providers must specify a
single provider via a provider reference. The named provider will be
used to manage that resource's CRUD operations. If a resource's
provider reference changes, the resource must be replaced. Though its
URN is not present in the resource's dependency list, the provider
should be treated as a dependency of the resource when topologically
sorting the dependency graph.

Finally, `Invoke` operations must now specify a provider to use for the
invocation via a provider reference.

### Engine Changes
First-class providers support requires a few changes to the engine:
- The engine must have some way to map from provider references to
  provider plugins. It must be possible to add providers from a stack's
  checkpoint to this map and to register new/updated providers during
  the execution of a plan in response to CRUD operations on provider
  resources.
- In order to support updating existing stacks using existing Pulumi
  programs that may not explicitly instantiate providers, the engine
  must be able to manage the "default" providers for each package
  referenced by a checkpoint or Pulumi program. The configuration for
  a "default" provider is taken from the stack's configuration data.

The former need is addressed by adding a provider registry type that is
responsible for managing all of the plugins required by a plan. In
addition to loading plugins froma checkpoint and providing the ability
to map from a provider reference to a provider plugin, this type serves
as the provider plugin for providers themselves (i.e. it is the
"provider provider").

The latter need is solved via two relatively self-contained changes to
plan setup and the eval source.

During plan setup, the old checkpoint is scanned for custom resources
that do not have a provider reference in order to compute the set of
packages that require a default provider. Once this set has been
computed, the required default provider definitions are conjured and
prepended to the checkpoint's resource list. Each resource that
requires a default provider is then updated to refer to the default
provider for its package.

While an eval source is running, each custom resource registration,
resource read, and invoke that does not name a provider is trapped
before being returned by the source iterator. If no default provider
for the appropriate package has been registered, the eval source
synthesizes an appropriate registration, waits for it to complete, and
records the registered provider's reference. This reference is injected
into the original request, which is then processed as usual. If a
default provider was already registered, the recorded reference is
used and no new registration occurs.

### SDK Changes
These changes only expose first-class providers from the Node.JS SDK.
- A new abstract class, `ProviderResource`, can be subclassed and used
  to instantiate first-class providers.
- A new field in `ResourceOptions`, `provider`, can be used to supply
  a particular provider instance to manage a `CustomResource`'s CRUD
  operations.
- A new type, `InvokeOptions`, can be used to specify options that
  control the behavior of a call to `pulumi.runtime.invoke`. This type
  includes a `provider` field that is analogous to
  `ResourceOptions.provider`.
2018-08-06 17:50:29 -07:00
Sean Gillespie 1a51507206
Delete Before Create (#1365)
* Delete Before Create

This commit implements the full semantics of delete before create. If a
resource is replaced and requires deletion before creation, the engine
will use the dependency graph saved in the snapshot to delete all
resources that depend on the resource being replaced prior to the
deletion of the resource to be replaced.

* Rebase against master

* CR: Simplify the control flow in makeRegisterResourceSteps

* Run Check on new inputs when re-creating a resource

* Fix an issue where the planner emitted benign but incorrect deletes of DBR-deleted resources

* CR: produce the list of dependent resources in dependency order and iterate over the list in reverse

* CR: deps->dependents, fix an issue with DependingOn where duplicate nodes could be added to the dependent set

* CR: Fix an issue where we were considering old defaults and new inputs
inappropriately when re-creating a deleted resource

* CR: save 'iter.deletes[urn]' as a local, iterate starting at cursorIndex + 1 for dependency graph
2018-05-23 14:43:17 -07:00
joeduffy 5967259795 Add license headers 2018-05-22 15:02:47 -07:00
Sean Gillespie 7b7870cdaa
Remove unused stack name from deploy.Snapshot (#1386) 2018-05-18 11:15:35 -07:00
Sean Gillespie 55711e4ca3
Revert "Lift snapshot management out of the engine and serialize writes to snapshot (#1069)" (#1216)
This reverts commit 2c479c172d.
2018-04-16 23:04:56 -07:00
Sean Gillespie 2c479c172d
Lift snapshot management out of the engine and serialize writes to snapshot (#1069)
* Lift snapshot management out of the engine

This PR is a prerequisite for parallelism by addressing a major problem
that the engine has to deal with when performing parallel resource
construction: parallel mutation of the global snapshot. This PR adds
a `SnapshotManager` type that is responsible for maintaining and
persisting the current resource snapshot. It serializes all reads and
writes to the global snapshot and persists the snapshot to persistent
storage upon every write.

As a side-effect of this, the core engine no longer needs to know about
snapshot management at all; all snapshot operations can be handled as
callbacks on deployment events. This will greatly simplify the
parallelization of the core engine.

Worth noting is that the core engine will still need to be able to read
the current snapshot, since it is interested in the dependency graphs
contained within. The full implications of that are out of scope of this
PR.

Remove dead code, Steps no longer need a reference to the plan iterator that created them

Fixing various issues that arise when bringing up pulumi-aws

Line length broke the build

Code review: remove dead field, fix yaml name error

Rebase against master, provide implementation of StackPersister for cloud backend

Code review feedback: comments on MutationStatus, style in snapshot.go

Code review feedback: move SnapshotManager to pkg/backend, change engine to use an interface SnapshotManager

Code review feedback: use a channel for synchronization

Add a comment and a new test

* Maintain two checkpoints, an immutable base and a mutable delta, and
periodically merge the two to produce snapshots

* Add a lot of tests - covers all of the non-error paths of BeginMutation and End

* Fix a test resource provider

* Add a few tests, fix a few issues

* Rebase against master, fixed merge
2018-04-12 09:55:34 -07:00
Pat Gavlin a23b10a9bf
Update the copyright end date to 2018. (#1068)
Just what it says on the tin.
2018-03-21 12:43:21 -07:00
joeduffy c04341edb2 Consult the program for its list of plugins
This change adds a GetRequiredPlugins RPC method to the language
host, enabling us to query it for its list of plugin requirements.
This is language-specific because it requires looking at the set
of dependencies (e.g., package.json files).

It also adds a call up front during any update/preview operation
to compute the set of plugins and require that they are present.
These plugins are populated in the cache and will be used for all
subsequent plugin-related operations during the engine's activity.

We now cache the language plugins, so that we may load them
eagerly too, which we never did previously due to the fact that
we needed to pass the monitor address at load time.  This was a
bit bizarre anyhow, since it's really the Run RPC function that
needs this information.  So, to enable caching and eager loading
-- which we need in order to invoke GetRequiredPlugins -- the
"phone home" monitor RPC address is passed at Run time.

In a subsequent change, we will switch to faulting in the plugins
that are missing -- rather than erroring -- in addition to
supporting the `pulumi plugin install` CLI command.
2018-02-18 08:08:15 -08:00
Joe Duffy 16ade183d8
Add a manifest to checkpoint files (#630)
This change adds a new manifest section to the checkpoint files.
The existing time moves into it, and we add to it the version of
the Pulumi CLI that created it, along with the names, types, and
versions of all plugins used to generate the file.  There is a
magic cookie that we also use during verification.

This is to help keep us sane when debugging problems "in the wild,"
and I'm sure we will add more to it over time (checksum, etc).

For example, after an up, you can now see this in `pulumi stack`:

```
Current stack is demo:
    Last updated at 2017-12-01 13:48:49.815740523 -0800 PST
    Pulumi version v0.8.3-79-g1ab99ad
    Plugin pulumi-provider-aws [resource] version v0.8.3-22-g4363e77
    Plugin pulumi-langhost-nodejs [language] version v0.8.3-79-g77bb6b6
    Checkpoint file is /Users/joeduffy/dev/code/src/github.com/pulumi/pulumi-aws/.pulumi/stacks/webserver/demo.json
```

This addresses pulumi/pulumi#628.
2017-12-01 13:50:32 -08:00
Joe Duffy 5b57950da6
Add automatic integrity checking (#625)
This change introduces automatic integrity checking for snapshots.
Hopefully this will help us track down what's going on in
pulumi/pulumi#613.  Eventually we probably want to make this opt-in,
or disable it entirely other than for internal Pulumi debugging, but
until we add more complete DAG verification, it's relatively cheap
and is worthwhile to leave on for now.
2017-11-30 11:13:18 -08:00
Matt Ellis ade366544e Encrypt secrets in Pulumi.yaml
We now encrypt secrets at rest based on a key derived from a user
suplied passphrase.

The system is designed in a way such that we should be able to have a
different decrypter (either using a local key or some remote service
in the Pulumi.com case in the future).

Care is taken to ensure that we do not leak decrypted secrets into the
"info" section of the checkpoint file (since we currently store the
config there).

In addtion, secrets are "pay for play", a passphrase is only needed
when dealing with a value that's encrypted. If secure config values
are not used, `pulumi` will never prompt you for a
passphrase. Otherwise, we only prompt if we know we are going to need
to decrypt the value. For example, `pulumi config <key>` only prompts
if `<key>` is encrypted and `pulumi deploy` and friends only prompt if
you are targeting a stack that has secure configuration assoicated
with it.

Secure values show up as unecrypted config values inside the language
hosts and providers.
2017-10-24 16:48:12 -07:00
Matt Ellis 22c9e0471c Use Stack over Environment to describe a deployment target
Previously we used the word "Environment" as the term for a deployment
target, but since then we've started to use the term Stack. Adopt this
across the CLI.

From a user's point of view, there are a few changes:

1. The `env` verb has been renamed to `stack`
2. The `-e` and `--env` options to commands which operate on an
environment now take `-s` or `--stack` instead.
3. Becase of (2), the commands that used `-s` to display a summary now
only support passing the full option name (`--summary`).

On the local file system, we still store checkpoint data in the `env`
sub-folder under `.pulumi` (so we can reuse existing checkpoint files
that were written to the old folder)
2017-10-16 13:04:20 -07:00
Matt Ellis e7e4e75af3 Don't examine the Checkpoint in the CLI
The checkpoint is an implementation detail of the storage of an
environment. Instead of interacting with it, make sure that all the
data we need from it either hangs off the Snapshot or Target
objects (which you can get from a Checkpoint) and then start consuming
that data.
2017-10-09 18:21:55 -07:00
Joe Duffy f6e694c72b Rename pulumi-fabric to pulumi
This includes a few changes:

* The repo name -- and hence the Go modules -- changes from pulumi-fabric to pulumi.

* The Node.js SDK package changes from @pulumi/pulumi-fabric to just pulumi.

* The CLI is renamed from lumi to pulumi.
2017-09-21 19:18:21 -07:00
joeduffy 35aa6b7559 Rename pulumi/lumi to pulumi/pulumi-fabric
We are renaming Lumi to Pulumi Fabric.  This change simply renames the
pulumi/lumi repo to pulumi/pulumi-fabric, without the CLI tools and other
changes that will follow soon afterwards.
2017-08-02 09:25:22 -07:00
joeduffy 2daea4c3d8 Clarify aspects of using the DCO 2017-06-26 14:46:34 -07:00
joeduffy 3c1041af49 Update license headers 2017-06-23 14:53:41 -07:00
joeduffy d044720045 Make more progress on the new deployment model
This change restructures a lot more pertaining to deployments, snapshots,
environments, and the like.

The most notable change is that the notion of a deploy.Source is introduced,
which splits the responsibility between the deploy.Plan -- which simply
understands how to compute and carry out deployment plans -- and the idea
of something that can produce new objects on-demand during deployment.

The primary such implementation is evalSource, which encapsulates an
interpreter and takes a package, args, and config map, and proceeds to run
the interpreter in a distinct goroutine.  It synchronizes as needed to
poke and prod the interpreter along its path to create new resource objects.

There are two other sources, however.  First, a nullSource, which simply
refuses to create new objects.  This can be handy when writing isolated
tests but is also used to simulate the "empty" environment as necessary to
do a complete teardown of the target environment.  Second, a fixedSource,
which takes a pre-computed array of objects, and hands those, in order, to
the planning engine; this is mostly useful as a testing technique.

Boatloads of code is now changed and updated in the various CLI commands.

This further chugs along towards pulumi/lumi#90.  The end is in sight.
2017-06-13 07:10:13 -07:00
Renamed from pkg/resource/deployment/snapshot.go (Browse further)